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

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Remember also all the commendations of thys Vertue before sette downe of vs and howe greatly it is commended of God For if there be a liuely desire in thee to please God wilt thou not endeuour to performe thys one thing so acceptable vnto him Consider what the loue of one kinsman is to another for the onely participation of flesh and blood which is betweene them and let it shame thee if the grace of the spirituall vnion be not as forcible in thee as carnall parentage or kindred If thou shalt say that in this there is a communion and a participation in one and the selfe same roote and in the blood of eyther consider howe much more noble that coniunction and communion is which is betweene the faythfull as the Apostle showeth while we haue all the same Father the same mother the same Lorde the same baptisme the same hope the same fayth the same meate and the same spirit who quickneth vs. We haue all the same Father GOD the Church our mother and Christ Iesus our Lord. We haue one fayth which is that supernaturall light of which we all pertake and which seuereth vs and maketh vs differ frō all other Nations one hope which is the very glory of the heauenly inhearitance in which wee all shall be of one hart and one mind We haue one Baptisme by which we are all adopted the sonnes of the same father made one anothers brethren We haue one and the selfe same spirituall meate euen the blessed body of Christ Iesus which incar●ateth vs together and maketh vs one with him no otherwise then as one loafe is made of diuers cornes and one wine of many grapes Besides all thys we participate of one and the selfe-same spirit which is the holy Ghost who dwelleth in all the soules of the faythfull whether it be by faith or by fayth and grace together quickning and sustaining vs in this life If the members of the same body albeit hauing diuers duties and functions and differing also in forme doe so tenderly and mutually loue one another because they liue by one and the selfe same reasonable soule how much more mutually ought faythfull Christians to loue one another who are made aliue by that Diuine Spirit who by how much he is more noble by so much also he is more powerfull to knit and vnite those together in whom he dwelleth If onely the kinred of flesh blood can procure so great loue between kinsfolke how much more shall so great an vnitie procure it and the participation and communion of so noble and excellent things Let that notable rare example of that singuler loue wherewith Christ hath loued vs neuer slip out of thy minde vvho hath loued vs so strongly so sweetly so graciously so perfectly not for any profit or neede to himselfe not for any merrit of ours that we being strengthened by so noble an example and bound by so great a benefit may forth-with prepare our selues and as much as lyeth in vs dispose our selues to loue our neighbour with such loue that we may satisfie and obserue that commaundement which our Sauiour Iesus hath giuen vnto vs and so commended vnto vs when he ascended to his Father left thys earth saying This is my commaundement that yee loue one another as I haue loued you Of that which man oweth vnto God CHAP. XVI AFter that we haue showne and declared what we owe to our selues and to our neighbour now we will set down what we owe vnto God This is the chiefest and noblest part of Christian iustice and righteousnes vpon which three Theologicall vertues doe attend Fayth Hope and Charity which haue God for their obiect with that vertue which of Diuines is called Religion whose obiect is the Diuine worship A man shall satisfie all the bonds and obligations which are contayned vnder this vertue if towards God he hath such an hart as a sonne hath towards his father For euen as a man shall satisfie content himselfe if he hath the hart of a good Iudge and his neighbour if he hath the hart of a mother so after a certaine manner of speaking he shall satisfie God if he loue him with such an hart as a sonne is wont to loue his father for it is one of the especiall functions and operations of the Spirit of Christ to giue to man such an hart towards God Now therfore consider diligently what the hart of a sonne is towards his father what is his loue his feare his reuerence his obedience towards him and the zeale of his fathers honour how he serueth him freely with what affiance and boldnes he runneth vnto him in all his needs how patiently he beareth his correction and chasticement with all other duties and obseruances Of such an hart and mind be thou towards God and thou shalt absolutely fulfill this part of iustice and righteousnes To prepare and procure such an ha●t nine vertues seeme especially necessary vn●o me the first and principall of which is loue the second feare and reue●ence the third trust and confidence the fou●th 〈◊〉 of the honour of God the fift a pure intent in the ●●●rcise of the Di●ine worship the six● prayer and refuge to God in all needs and necessities the seauenth thanksgiuing for Diuine benefits the eight obedience and conformity of our will to Gods will the ninth humility patience in all scourges and tribulations which God sendeth vnto vs. According to this order the first and the especiall thing that we ought to doe is to loue God after that manner as he hath commaunded himselfe to be loued that is with all the hart with all the soule and with all our strength so that whatsoeuer is in man it is to worship and embrace God according to his kind the vnderstanding by meditating vpon him the will by louing him the affections by inclining the●selues vnto that which his loue requireth the strength and vigour of all the members sences by exercising themselues in those things which his loue hath appointed The second thing that is required after this holy loue is feare which springeth of this loue for by how much more we loue any one by so much we feare that we doe not onely not lose him but also that we doe not offend him This is manifest in the loue of a good sonne towards his father and of a wife towards her husband who by how much she more tenderly loueth him so much the more diligently she endeuoureth least any thing be found in the house that may offend her husband This feare is the keeper of innocency and therefore it is necessary that it take deepe rooting in our harts which thing the Prophet Dauid long agoe desired of God when hee sayde Pierce through my flesh with thy feare for I am afrayde of thy iudgments It was not inough for this most holy King to haue feare planted in his hart but also he
respectiue a regard dooth excite and stirre vp in man a great hope and an assured confidence Of the seauenth priuiledge of Vertue that is of the true libertie which the righteous haue and reioyce in and of the misery and vnknowne seruitude and bondage in which sinners liue CHAP. XIX OF all the priuiledges and prerogatiues hetherto spoken of but especially of the second fourth that is of the grace of the holy Ghost and of the Diuine cōsolation another preheminence doth arise no lesse admirable which the righteous enioy and that is the true liberty of the soule which the Sonne of God brought into this world of which priuiledge he hath obtained the name of the Redeemer of mankind Because he hath redeemed man and hath freed him from that wretched miserable seruitude in which he liued and brought him into true libertie This is one of the especiallest blessings which Christ brought into this world one of the most excellent benefits of the Gospell one of the most noble effects of the holy Ghost For where there is the Spirit of the Lord there is libertie sayth the Apostle To be briefe this is one of the richest rewards which in thys world are promised to the worshippers of the true God Thys libertie the Lord promised to certaine that were willing to serue him If saith he yee continue in my word yee are verilie my Disciples and shall knowe the truth and the truth shall make you free that is it shall giue vnto you true libertie They answered him Wee be Abrahams seede and were neuer bounde to any man vvhy sayest thou then ye shall be made free Iesus answered them Verily verily I say vnto you that whosoeuer committeth sinne is the seruant of sinne And the seruant abideth not in the house for euer but the sonne abideth for euer If the sonne therefore shall make you free yee shall be free in deede In which words the Lord plainely intimateth vnto vs that there are two kinds of liberty one false and in a show the other true and reall False liberty is proper vnto them who haue their bodies free but their soules captiuated and subiect to the tiranny of their own passions and sinnes as was the soule of great Alexander who when hee was the Lord of the whole world he was the seruant of his owne vices But true liberty is proper vnto them who haue their soules free from all these tirannies although their bodies be somtimes free and sometimes bond and captiuated as was the soule of the Apostle who although he was captiue and holden in bonds yet in spirit he mounted vp to heauen and by the doctrine of his letters he freed the whole world The reason why this liberty is called properly liberty and not that other is this because as among the two essentiall parts of man the soule is much more noble then the body yea it is as it were the whole man the body is no other thing then a matter or subiect in which the soule is included so he truly is to be called free who hath his more principall part free but hee is falsely called free who hath his soule captiue bond although he carrieth about his body freely whether so euer he pleaseth ¶ Of the seruitude in which wicked men liue IF any man shall aske me whence is this bondage of which we speake I say that it is a seruitude and captiuity vnder the most terrible most direfull and most cruell Tyrant of any that may be named that is vnder Sinne. For amongst all the most abhominable and dreadfull things that be in the world the torment of hell is most dreadfull and abhominable yet much more dreadfull and abhominable is Sinne which is the cause of this torment and also of this seruitude by which sinners are made seruants and bondslaues as you haue vnderstoode by the words of our Lord before aleadged Whosoeuer committeth sinne is the seruant of sinne What seruitude then can be more miserable then this Neyther is he onely a seruant of sinne who committeth sinne but he is a slaue vnto the perswaders and procurers of sinne as are the deuill the world and his owne flesh corrupted of the same sinne and he is a seruant vnto all other inordinate desires which proceede of the flesh For he that is the seruant of the sonne is also a seruant of the father And it is confessed of all that these three are the fathers of sinne and therefore they are called enemies to the soule because they bring procure great mischiefe to the soule as that is that they make it a slaue a Captiue and deliuer it into the hands of this cruell Tyrant And although all these three doe conspire to this end yet they worke by diuers meanes For the two first are serued of the third which is the flesh as another Eue to deceiue Adam or as an instrument very fit to carry and draw vs into all euill For this cause the Apostle doth more manifestly call the flesh sinne putting the effect for the cause for it is it which pricketh forwards to all kind of sin For the same cause the Diuines call it the tinder touchwood of sinne that is the meate and nourishment of sinne By a common name it is called Sensuality Flesh or Concupiscence which also is called by a name more knowne Fleshly or sensuall desire whence all the perturbations of the minde spring in as much as it is corrupt and made disordered through sinne it is the motioner mouer and picker forwards to all sinne Therefore also the two other enemies take singuler aduantage of the flesh and her appetites that they may more strongly assault and wrong vs. Hence it is that Saint Basill sayth that the especiall weapons with which the deuill fighteth against vs are our owne desires For the vehemency of our affection seeketh by right and wrong to enioy those things that it lusteth after neither maketh any regard although it be forbidden by the law of God and from such an affection sinnes doe arise Such an appetite therfore is one of the most cruell Tyrants which man being a sinner is subiect vnto or as the Apostle speaketh vnder which he is sold. Hee calleth him sold vnder sinne because his sensuall appetite is made so mighty that it carrieth him as a bondslaue whether so euer it listeth But what is more lamentable then to see a man who hath a soule made to the image and likenes of God illuminated with heauenly light and an vnderstanding by which hee ascendeth aboue all things created vntill it find out God himselfe yet notwithstanding that hee should contemne and despise all this his nobility and excellency and be subiect and gouerned after a certaine furious and frantick maner of his beastly appetite to be corrupted of sin and moreouer to be led about to be moued and driuen forwards backwards of the deuill What I
doest thou promise that thou thy selfe wilt performe it This question is aunswerrd by the words of Augustine who sayth Lord giue that thou commaundest and commaund what thou wilt So that he be the same vvho commaundeth me what I ought to doe and he that giueth me grace to doe it Therfore in one and the selfe same thing both the commaundement and the promise are found and God and man doe one and the selfe same thing he as the principall and chiefest cause but man as a cause lesse principall So that God in this busines carrieth himselfe to man as a Paynter who guideth the pencill in the hand of his Scholler and so maketh a perfect picture two perfit this worke but more honour belongeth to the one then to the other So also God worketh with vs in this busines after an absolute manner man hath not wherein to glory but to glory with the Prophet and say Lord thou workest all our works in vs. Therefore be thou mindfull of these words for by them thou mayst interpret all the commaundements of God For all that he commaundeth thee to doe he promiseth also that he will doe it with thee When as therfore he commaundeth thee to circumcise thine hart he sayth also that he will circumcise it so when he commaundeth thee that thou shouldest loue him aboue all things he bestoweth grace vpon thee that thou mayst be able so to loue him Hence it is that the yoke of the Lord is sayd to be sweete For there be two that draw it God man and so that which seemed and was difficult vnto nature the Diuine grace doth make it light and sweet Wherefore the Prophet after the fore-sayd words doth proceede further and say This commaundement which I commaund thee this day is not hid from thee neyther is it farre of It is not in heauen that thou shouldest say who shall goe vp for vs to heauen and bring it vs and cause vs to heare it that we may doe it Neyther is it beyond the Sea that thou shouldest say Who shall goe ouer the Sea for vs and bring it us and cause vs to heare it that we may doe it But the word is very neere vnto thee euen in thy mouth and in thine hart for to doe it In which words the holy Prophet would altogether take away that difficulty which carnall men imagine to be in the precepts of the Lord for they onely looking to the law of the Lord without the Gospell that is to those things that are commaunded and not to the grace which is giuen to obey and walk in those commaundements they accuse the law of difficulty saying that it is greeuous heauy difficult not considering that they expresly contradict Saint Iohn who sayth For this is the loue of God that we keepe his commaundements his commaundements are not greeuous for all that is borne of God ouercommeth the world That is all they that haue conceaued the spyrit of God in their soules by meanes of whom they are regenerated and made his sonnes whose spirit they haue receaued all these haue God in them who dwelleth in them by grace and they can doe more then all that that is not God and so neyther the world nor the deuill nor all the power of hell can hurt them And here-vpon it followeth that although the yoke of Gods commaundements be heauy and burthenous yet that newe strength and fortitude which is giuen by grace doth make it light and tollerable ¶ How Charity also maketh the way easie and pleasant which leadeth vnto heauen WHat wilt thou think if to all these precedent another help be ioyned which is deriued in vs from Charity For it is certaine that it is one of the most principall conditions of Charity to make the yoke of the Diuine law most sweet Wherfore as Saint Augustine sayth by no manner of meanes the labours of louers are burthenous or combersome but are delightfull and pleasurable as the labours of Hunters Fowlers and Fishers For in that which is loued eyther there is no labour or the labour is loued And in another place He that loueth sayth he laboureth not For all labour is contrary vnto them that doe not loue It is onely loue that blusheth at the name of difficulty What is it that maketh that a mother doth not feele the continuall labours and troubles which she hath in bringing vp her children but onely loue What is it that maketh an honest and a good vvife to attend night and day vpon her weake and sickly husband but onely loue What doth moue beasts also that they are so carefull to bring vp and foster their young ones and to giue them meate from their owne mouthes that theyr yong may haue to eate what doth moue them I say so to trouble and torment themselues that they may liue safely and what doth moue them so strongly to defend them endangering their owne lifes but true loue What is the cause why Saint Paule sayd with so magnanimous a spirit Who shall seperate vs from the loue of Christ shall tribulation or anguish or persecution or famine or nakednes or perill or sword As it is written For thy sake are we killed all day long we are counted as sheepe for the slaughter Neuertheles in all these things we are more then conquerers through him that loued vs. For I am perswaded that neyther death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor thinges present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to seperate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. What is the cause why the holy Martyrs of Christ so feruently desired martirdome as the hart desireth the water brookes but true loue What is the cause why Saint Lawrence lying vpon the Gridiron in the midst of his torments sayde cheerefully that the flames did comfort and refresh his limbs but that great desire by which he longed for martirdom which was kindled with the flames of this loue For true loue thinketh nothing hard nothing bitter nothing greeuous nothing deadly as Petrus Rauennas sayth What sword what wounds what paynes what death can preuaile against perfect and true loue Loue is an impenetrable coate offence it resisteth darts it beateth backe the sword it tryumpheth ouer dangers it scorneth death if it be loue it ouercommeth all things Therefore ô man loue God loue him wholy that thou mayst ouercome and subdue all sinnes without labour The warre is pleasant and the combat delicate onely by loue to carry the victory ouer all crimes and vices This sayth he Neyther is true loue content if it conquer all labours and troubles but the very nature of loue desireth to sustaine moe labours and troubles for his sake whom it affecteth Hence ariseth that ardent desire of martyrdome which righteous and truly religious men haue that is to shed and poure forth
It with-draweth man from all honest studies and exercises and drowneth him in the sea of carnal pleasures so that miserable man dare not presume nor offer to speake o f +any other thing then of dishonest and carnall delights It maketh young men foolish and reprochful and exposeth old men to the scorne of men Neither is this vice content thus to haue plunged men vnlesse also it ouerthrow and squander abrode his riches and substance There are no riches so aboundant no treasures so infinite which luxury will not exhaust consume in a short time For the belly and the instruments of lust are neere neighbours and very well agree betweene themselues and are faythfull complices confederates in this work Hence it is that men giuen to luxurie are for the most part prodigall and lauishers and delight in banquets and drunkennesse and riches are chiefely consumed through gluttony and sumptuosnesse of apparell Thys also is common to all luxurious persons vnhonest women are neuer satisfied neyther euer cry they hoe albeit very many ouches tablets iewels precious stones rings and such like be giuen them and they take more delight to be honoured with such things then with theyr wretched louers who giue these vnto them All these are proued to be true by the example of the prodigall chyld who spent all his substance by liuing riotously and luxuriously Remember that the oftner thou gyuest thy thoughts thy body for a pray to carnall lust thou shalt finde the lesser satietie in them For the delight doth not bring satietie vnto them but doth procure and increase a further thirst for the loue between a man and a woman is neuer altogether extinguished yea the flame when it is supposed extinct on a suddaine reuiueth and burneth more fiercely Consider moreouer diligently that the pleasure which is reaped of thys vice is short and momentany but the punishment which followeth is eternall Surely this change is too vnequall that for so filthy a pleasure of so short continuance thou shouldest lose in this lyfe the ioy of a good conscience and in that to come euerlasting glory besides to suffer paines vvhich neuer shall haue end Therefore very well said Saint Gregory It is momentany and short sayth he that delighteth but eternal that tormenteth Looke vpon the price of virginity and the dignity of that purity which perisheth and is violated by this filthy vice and thou shalt see that virgins in thys life doe begin to leade an Angels life and by the singuler priuiledge of this purity to be like vnto celestiall spirits For to liue in the flesh without sensual carnality this is to liue rather an Angels life then an humane lyfe Thys is that which Bernard sayth It is onely chastity that in this place and tyme of mortality representeth a certaine state of immortall glory For amongst the solemnities of marriage it onely chalengeth the custome of that blessed Country wherein they doe neyther marry nor are marryed shewing on the earth after a certaine manner an experience of that heauenly conuersation For this cause that singuler priuiledge is giuen to virgins in heauen of which S. Iohn writeth in his Reuelation These are they sayth he which are not defiled with women for they are virgins these follow the Lambe whether soeuer he goeth And because they haue performed better things in the world then others following the Lord Iesus Christ in pure virginity therefore in the world to come they shal come more neere vnto him and shall more familiarly conuerse with him and shall singulerly be delighted with the purity of theyr bodyes Thys vertue maketh men not onely like vnto Christ but also temples of the holy Ghost For the holy Spirit being a louer of purity as hee detesteth the pollution of luxurie more then other vices albeit all vices displease him so in nothing more willingly or with greater ioy he resteth then in a soule pure and cleane from all carnall pleasure Wherefore the sonne of GOD conceaued by the holy Ghost so loued and priced virginity that for the loue of it he did this stupendious miracle that is he would be borne of a Mother being a Virgine But if thou hast lost thy virginitie at least after shipwracke feare the dangers which now thou hast tried and thou who wouldest not keepe the benefit of nature vncorrupted now it is corrupted stryue to repaire it by conuerting thy selfe vnto the Lord and so much the more diligently turne thy good workes vnto God by how much for thy sins thou hast iudged thy selfe woorthy of greater punishment For often-times saith Saint Gregory it commeth to passe that the soule after sinne is more feruent which in the state of greater inn ocencie was luke-warme and altogether negligent And because GOD hath preserued thee albeit thou hast committed so enormous sinnes and offences commit them nowe no more least God chastise thee together both for thy sinnes past and also for those present and so the last errour be worse then the first With these and such like considerations man ought to arme himselfe against this sinne And these be the remedies of the first kinde which we haue gyuen against this sinne of Luxurie ¶ Other kind of remedies against Luxurie BEsides those remedies which commonly are wont to be deliuered against thys vice there are others also more effectuall and more particuler of which wee will also speake in thys place Let thys therefore be the first stay the beginnings kill the Serpent when it is young for if the enemy be not repelled at the first onset he increaseth and becommeth stronger For as Saint Gregory sayth after the desire of pleasure is kindled and encreaseth in the hart it suffereth a man to thinke on nothing els but on filthy pleasures and vncleane lusts Forthwith therefore the motiues of vices must be killed in the mind whilst they are yet but onely in thought for euen as wood preserueth fire so the thought preserueth and nourisheth desires concupiscences and if the thoughts be good they doe kindle the fire of charitie if they be euill they stirre vp the flame of lust It is needfull also that all the outward sences but especially the sight or the eyes be most diligently kept least they see that which may procure danger for oftentimes a man simply seeth that which when it is seene woundeth the soule Therefore vnaduisedly to looke on women eyther peruerteth or weakeneth the constancy of the beholder Therefore Ecclesiasticus doth giue thee very good counsaile Gaze not on a Mayde that thou fall not by that that is precious in her Goe not about gazing in the streetes of the Citty neyther wander thou in the secret places thereof Turne away thine eye from a beautifull woman and looke not vpon others beauty To perswade this that doctrine of holy Iob ought to be sufficient who although he was a most iust man yet neuerthelesse he did keepe his eyes most diligently as he speaketh
these may be entertained as friends and those expelled as enemies They that are negligent and remisse in this respect doe let oftentimes those things enter into their soules which doe not only take away the deuotion and feruour of the spirit but also charity and loue in which the life of the soule consisteth Whilst Isboseth the son of Saul slept on his bed his murdering seruants came in vpon him slew him and tooke away his head In like manner when as discretion lyeth slumbering whose duty it is to purge and seuer the fruite from the chaffe that is profitable and good cogitations from the bad and hurtfull those oftentimes enter into the soule which kill it and depriue it of life This diligence is not onely conducent for the preseruation of life but to keepe silence and it much furthereth prayer For an vnquiet and a troubled imagination doth not suffer a man to pray without variety of cogitations and vagaries of the sences but that which is quiet and reduced into order very easily perseuereth in prayer ¶ Of the reforming of the vnderstanding and of the duties of wisedome AFter that we haue entreated of all the fore-sayd parts powers of man it remayneth that we speake something of the excellentest and noblest of them which is the vnderstanding which amongst other vertues is to be adorned and beautified with the most rare and beautifull vertue of discretion and wisedome The duty and office of this vertue in a spirituall life hath great proportion with that which the eyes are in the body the Pilot in a ship the King in his kingdome and the Charret-man in his Charret who holding his whip in his right hand and the raines of the bridels in his left directeth and driueth his Horses whether he will Without this vertue the spirituall life is altogether blind disordered and full of confusion For this cause a certaine excellent writer doth place this vertue in the first place as the Captayne and guide of all others Wherefore all the louers of vertue before all things ought to cast their eyes hether and diligently behold this vertue that they may proceede with greater fruite in all others This vertue not onely hath one duty and office but many and those diuers for it is not only a perticuler vertue but a generall which concurreth with the exercises of all vertues conueniently and fitly reducing and bringing them into order According to this generall duty we will heere speake of certaine actions which belong vnto it First and formost it belongeth vnto wisedome fayth and charity being presupposed to direct all our actions to God as to the last end by examining subtilly and ingeniously the intent which we haue in working and acting that we may see if we simply and purely seeke God or rather our selues For the nature of our owne selfe-loue as a certaine famous Doctour sayth is very subtill and full of fetches and seeketh it selfe in euery thing yea in the noblest exercises It is also the dutie of Wisedome to know how to conuerse with thy neighbour without quarrell or complaint to helpe him and not to offend him and scandalize him It is needfull therfore wisely to discouer euery mans vaine that is euery mans condition and of what spirit he is and to leade conduct him by those meanes which are most profitable for him It is vvisedome to know how to beare patiently other mens defects and to dissemble them not to take knowledge of them and not to search theyr wounds to the bones remembring that all humane affayres are composed of act and potentiall power that is of perfection and imperfection neyther that it can bee otherwise but that alwayes there must be infinite imperfections and defects in mans life especially after that great and grieuous lapse of nature by sinne And therefore Aristotle sayth that it is not the part of a Wiseman in euery matter to seeke for like certainty and demonstration For some things may be demonstrated and some cannot the truth and certainty of one thing may be found out which of another thing cannot In like manner it is not the part of a wise man to looke that all the affayres of man should be peysed in a like ballance neyther that any thing should bee wanting for some things can carry this and somethings cannot He that stiflie vrgeth the contrary perhaps shall more hurt those meanes that he worketh by then he shall profit by the end hee intendeth albeit the thing take effect according to his minde It is wisedome if a man know himselfe and all things within him that is all his sences cogitations euill appetites and his sinister intents to be briefe his owne ignorance and his small vertues that his soule be not puffed vp with vaine glory to presume any thing of it selfe rashly and that he may better vnderstand with what enemies he is continually to warre vntill hee hath cast them all out of the land of Promise that is out of his soule It is also vvisedome to consider with what great diligence a man ought to prosecute and attend this worke It is wisedome to be able to gouerne the tongue according to the prescript of Gods law and the circumstances before remembred To know also what is to be spoken and what to bee concealed with their due times and seasons For as Salomon sayth There is a time to keepe silence and a time to speake For it is certaine that a wise man may with greater praise hold his peace then speake at the table at bankets and at such like places and oppertunities It is wisedome also not to beleeue euery body not forth-with to poure foorth all the spirit in the beginning heate of disputation neyther to speak rashly or giue iudgment on a suddaine what he thinketh of matters for Salomon sayth A foole vttereth all his minde at once but a wise man keepeth it in till afterward He that trusteth him whom he ought not to trust shall alwayes liue in danger and shall alwayes be his slaue whō he hath trusted and concredited himselfe vnto It is wisedome if a man hath learned to fore-see a farre of dangers comming to diminish blood in the time of health and to discerne warre a farre of That is to preuent and turne away the difficulty or strife that might growe of thys or that matter and to auoyde all euill by prayers or such like remedies Thys is the counsaile of Ecclesiasticus when he sayth Before the griefe be growen vse Phisicke Therfore when thou art to goe to bankets or to any solemnitie when thou art to haue busines vvith litigious or contentious men or with those of a peruerse disposition or if thou art to goe to any other place where perhaps thou mayst be endangered alwayes come aduisedly thether and prepared for all things which may happen It is wisedome to know how to handle the body with discretion and
that vvee should be called but he addeth that we are that the base estate and small confidence of man might euidently know the bountifulnes and liberalitie of God and that we might see that it is not a name of honour or title but rather of the deed and thing it selfe But if it be so great an euill to be hated and reprobated of God what great good will it be to be beloued of him and to remaine in his fauour This truly is an Axiome of the Phylosophers that a thing is so much the better by howe much his contrary is worser And therefore it necessarily followeth that that is the chiefest good whose opposite is the chiefest euill as we haue said that that is to be hated of GOD. But if in this world it be esteemed a matter of great moment if any man bee had in honour estimation amongst his Superiors as with the Emperour King or Prince or such great honorable estates I pray thee what will it be to haue found fauour and grace with the highest Prince the supreame Father with the most glorious excellent and noble Lord in comparison of whom al the principalities and dignities of this worlde are as though they were not Which fauour also is so much the greater by hovve much more it is freely gȳuen for it is certaine that as it is vnpossible for a man to be able to doe any thing before hee vvas created whereby he might deserue to be created for then hee was not any thing so also without all doubt is it that he can do nothing after that he is fallen into sinne whereby hee may deserue Iustification not because he is not but because he is euill and hated of God Another benefit followeth this going before that it deliuereth and freeth a man from the condemnation of euerlasting punishment of which hee was guiltie by reason of his sinnes for sinne doth make a man abhominable vnto God no man can liue without Gods fauour without his owne extreame harme Hence is it that the sinners forsaking God because they sinne and contemne him that they deserue to be contemned to be remoued out of the sight of God beeing banished from his company and from his beautifull dwellings and because they forsaking God doe loue the creatures with an inordinate loue it is meete that they should be punished in all things and be tormented with eternall payne to which visible punishments being compared they rather seeme paynted then true To this so great vnhappines that euerlasting worme doth also come which alwayes gnaweth the bowels and conscience of the wicked But what shall I say of the society of those cursed spirits and of all the damned What shall I speake of that obscure and lamentable Region full of darknes and confusion Where there is no order but where continuall horror abideth where no ioy is found no peace no rest no content no hope but perpetuall complayning and euerlasting gnashing of teeth exceeding outragiousnes and fury continuall blasphemy and eternall malediction From all these euils the Lord hath deliuered all them whom he hath iustified who after that they are reconciled to him and receaued into his fauour they are free from this wrath and from the punishment of his vengeance Behold an other benefit more spirituall which is the reformation and renouation of the inward man which was defiled and polluted through sinne For sinne doth not onely depriue the soule of God but also doth spoile and rob it of all supernaturall strength and fortitude and of all other riches and gifts of the holy Ghost with which it was adorned beautified and enriched by and by after that it is depriued of these graces it is wounded maymed and depriued also of the naturall blessings For seeing that man is a reasonable creature and sinne is a work done against reason and seeing that it is naturall that one contrary should destroy an other the consequent is that by how much more sinnes are multiplied by so much more the faculties of the soule are destroyed and disturbed not in themselues but in their aptnes to worke By these meanes sinnes doe make the soule miserable weake sluggish and instable to euery good worke but procline prompt and ready to all euill weake and feeble to resist temptations and flow to walke in the wayes of Gods commaundements They depriue her also of the true liberty and rule of the spirit and they make her the captaine of the deuill the world the flesh and of her owne appetites And by this meanes shee liueth in captiuity more hard and intollerable then that of Babilon and Aegipt Furthermore all the spirituall powers of the soule are made also sluggish and slothfull so that they doe not heare diuine inspirations and heauenly voyces they doe not see the great euils prepared for them they doe not smell the sweete fauour of Vertue nor the most beautifull paths and examples of the Saints they doe not tast how sweet the Lord is neyther doe they feele the scourgings nor acknowledge the benefits by which they are prouoked vnto his loue and besides all these they take away the peace and ioy of the conscience they doe extinguish the heate and seruour of the spirit and doe leaue a man filthy blemished deformed and abhominable in the sight of God and in the sight of all his Saints From all these euils this benefit doth deliuer vs. For so bottomlesse are the mercies of God that he is not content to haue pardoned our faults and to haue receaued man into fauour vnlesse also hee expell all these euils which sinnes bring with them reforming and renuing our inward man By this maner he healeth our wounds he washeth away our spots blemishes he breaketh the bonds of sinne destroyeth the yoake of euill concupiscences deliuereth vs from the seruitude of the deuill mitigateth and aswageth the fury and rage of our peruerse affections and perturbations and doth restore vnto vs the true liberty beauty of our soule doth giue vs the peace and ioy of a good conscience doth reuiue our inward sences doth make them prompt and fit to euerie good worke and slow to any euill Maketh them strong and valiannto resist the temptations of the deuill and doth inrich vs with all good works To be briefe he doth so absolutely renue and repaire our inward man with all his powers that the Apostle calleth such men iustified renued yea new creatures This renuing is so great that when it is made by Baptisme it is called regeneration but when by repentance it is called a resurrection and rising againe not onely because the soule is raysed from the death of sinne to the life of grace but because after a certaine manner it also imitateth the beauty of the future resurrection This is so true that no tongue of man is sufficient to expresse the beauty of a iustified soule This onely knoweth that Spirit that maketh it beautifull and his Temple
and placeth his seate and mansion in it Wherefore if thou comparest all the riches and honours of this world and all naturall graces with the beauty and riches of a iustified soule all will seeme most obscure and most vild in comparison of it For as great difference as there is betweene heauen and earth betweene a spirit and a body betweene eternity and momentary time so great difference also is there found betweene the life of grace and the life of nature betweene the beauty of the soule and the body betweene the inward riches and the outward betweene the spirituall strength and the naturall For all these are circumscribed within certaine limits they are temporall and appeare onelie beautifull to the corporall eyes to which a generall comming of God is sufficient but to the other a speciall perticuler and supernaturall comming is required Neither can they be called temporall when they bring vs to eternity neyther can they be called altogether finite because they bring the infinite God to vs in whose eyes they are so precious and of such valour that by theyr beauty they prouoke God to loue vs. Furthermore when as God could haue wrought all these things by his helpe and will he would not doe it but it pleased him to adorne the soule with infused vertues and with the gifts of his holy Spirit with which not onely the very Essence of the soule but also all her powers are clothed and adorned with these diuine habites To all these diuine benefits the eternall and infinite goodnes of God doth ioyne another that is the presence and ayde of the holy Ghost and so of all the most sacred Trinity which doth turne into a iustified soule and doth come that he may dwell in her that he may teach her how to vse rightly so great riches as a good father who not content to haue giuen riches to his sonne but doth giue him also a Tutor who well knoweth how to dispose bestow them Insomuch that euen as Vipers Dragons and Serpents doe dwel in the soule of a sinner which are a multitude of ill malignant spirits who chose their habitation and abiding in such a soule as our Sauior saith in Mathew so on the cōtrary part the holy Spirit with the whole blessed Trinity doth enter into a iustified soule casting out al monsters and infernall beasts doth consecrate it for a Temple vnto himselfe and doth place his seate there as the Lord expresly testifieth in the Gospel saying If any man loueth me he will keepe my sayings my Father will loue him and we will come vnto him and will dwell with him By the vertue of these words all the Doctors as wel Ecclesiasticall as Schoolemen confesse that the holy Ghost himselfe by a certaine speciall peculier meanes doth dwel in a iustified soule distinguishing betweene the holy Ghost his gifts saying moreouer not only these gifts to be giuen of the holy ghost but also the holy Ghost to giue himselfe who entring into this soule doth make it his Temple habitation placing his seate in it Therfore he doth purge and sanctifie it doth adorne it with his gifts that it may be an In worthy of such a guest These benefits afore-sayd doe not suffice vnlesse that admirable one come to which is that all the iustified are made the liuely members of our Sauiour which before were dead members for they did not receaue and take their influences from the head Christ. Hence others and those very great prerogatiues and dignities doe proceede for hence it is that the sonne of God loueth them as his owne members and hath no lesser care of them then of himselfe he is no lesse carefull for them then for his owne members without intermission hee poureth his vertue and grace vpon them as the head vpon his members to be briefe the eternall Father doth behold them with fauourable eyes no otherwise then the liuely members of his onely begotten Sonne vnited and incorporated with him by the participation of his spirit Of the same dignity it proceedeth that when those that are iustified doe aske for fauour and grace of God they aske it with great confidence for they know that they doe aske it not onely for themselues but also for the sonne of God himselfe who is honoured in them and with them For seeing that it may not be denied but that which the members doe the head also doth the same it followeth that seeing Christ is their head when they aske any thing for themselues they aske it also for him For if it be true that they as sayth the Apostle who offend against the members of Christ doe offend against Christ himselfe and if Christ doth say that he suffereth persecution when his members doe suffer persecution as he sayde to his Apostle persecuting his Church why doest thou meruaile my brother if I say that when the members are honoured that then Christ himselfe is also honoured Which seeing that it is so how great confidence will a righteous man haue in his prayer when he considereth that desiring fauour and grace for himselfe after a certaine manner he also desireth the same of the eternall Father for his best beloued sonne Is it not true that when fauour is done to any man for the loue of an other that it is done principally for him for whose loue it is done For wee beleeue that he that showeth mercy to a poore man for Gods sake that he not onely doth shew it to the poore man but also to God himselfe Neyther heere yet is an end of the heauenly benefits for to all these benefits afore-sayd this as last is ioyned to which all the other are appoynted and ordayned that is the right and possession of eternall life which is giuen to the iustified For as that our infinite and vnmeasurable Lord in whom together shineth all iustice and mercy adiudgeth to euerlasting payne those that doe not repent so hee taketh to eternall life all those that truly repent And when as he could haue pardoned man of all his sinnes and receaued him into his friendship and fauor with communion and participation of his glory yet he would not doe it but those to whom for his mercies sake he remitteth sinnes he also iustifieth whom he iustifieth those he maketh his sonnes whom he maketh his sonnes those also he maketh heires and pertakers of his celestiall inheritance together with his onely begotten sonne Hence ariseth that liuely hope which maketh the iustified merry and glad in all tribulation by reason of the pledge and earnest of this infinite treasure For although they see themselues brought into straights to be afflicted with infirmities to be oppressed with the miseries of this life yet they know that the afflictions of this present time are not worthy of the glory which shall be shewed vnto them And also they know that this light affliction which is but
for a moment causeth vnto them a farre more excellent and an eternall waight of glory These then are the benefits which this one benefit of iustification comprehendeth in it which iustification Saint Augustine maketh greater account of them he doth of creation for God created heauen and earth with his onely word but that he might sanctifie man he shed his blood and vnder-went many and great torments If therefore we owe so many and so great duties to this Lord for our creation how many moe doe wee owe to him for our iustification Which benefit by how much it was got by greater labours and afflictions by so much it doth more bind vs vnto him Although there be many great notable marks and signes by which a man entring into himselfe may examine and know whether he be iustified or no yet in my iudgement the renouation and renuing of mans life is not the least when a man hath so reformed himselfe that he hath ouerthrowne the regiment of sinne hath cut off the head of it and from day to day still groweth to further purity and perfection of life Hee that is such an one let him be mindfull by how iust a title he is bound to serue such a Sacrificer who hath redeemed him and deliuered him from so many euils and hath heaped so many blessings vpon him which hetherto we haue remembred But if he doth still cleaue and sticke in his corrupt and depraued estate I doe not know howe God may better mooue him to forsake that estate then if he set before his eyes all the euils discommodities and dangers which sinnes bring with them and which we a little before haue reckoned vp and also showe vnto him the treasury of those great blessings which doe arise of this incomparable and vnspeakeable benefit ¶ Of many other effects which the holy Ghost worketh in a iustified soule THose things which hetherto we haue spoken of doe not as yet comprehend all those kinds of benefits which the holy Ghost worketh in the soule of a iustified man neyther is the bountifulnes of GOD circumscribed within those limits For it is not enough that the holy Ghost should haue brought man through the gate of Righteousnesse and entred him into the schoole of Vertue but after that he is entred that he should be ayded of the same Spirit and ledde as it were with the hand in all his wayes vntill all the waues of this stormy sea being ouercome he enter safe and sound into the hauen of saluation For after that the holy Ghost hath entred into a iustified soule by the meditation of the precedent benefit he doth not sitte there idlely for it suffiseth him not to beautifie the soule with his presence but also he sanctifieth it by his vertue working in it and with it whatsoeuer is necessary vnto saluation He sitteth there as an housholder in his house gouerning it he sitteth there as a schoolemaister in his schoole teaching it as a Gardiner in his garden tilling and trymming it as a King in his kingdom ruling it as the Sunne in the world enlightning it to be briefe as the soule in the body giuing to it life sence and motion not as the forme in the matter but as an housholder in an house What then is more happy what more to bee desired then to haue within him such a guest such a guide such a companion such a gouernour and tutor and such an helper Who seeing that he is all things doth worke all things in that soule in which he remaineth and dwelleth Especially as fire hee enlightneth our vnderstanding he enflameth our will and exalteth it from the earth euen to heauen He like a Doue doth make vs simple gentle peaceable and friends to all He as a cloude dooth refresh and coole vs and defend vs from the heate of the flesh doth asswage and moderate our madnes and the furie of our passions To conclude he as a vehement and strong wind doth moue and incline our will to all good seperating it and drawing it from all euill inclinations vntill at length the iustified bee brought to that passe that all vices are odious vnto them which before they loued and they loue all vertues which before they hated as Dauid plainly acknowledgeth that it hapned to him for he sayth in a certaine place That hee did hate and abhorre iniquitie And in another place That hee had as great delight in the way of the testimonies of the Lord as in all riches The reason was because the holy Ghost had instilled and infused into his soule the vvormewood of earthly things and the honny of the heauenly commaundements vvherein thou seest plainly that wee owe all our good to this diuine Spirit insomuch that if we decline from euill he is the cause of it and if we doe good we doe it through him if wee perseuere in goodnesse wee perseuere through him and if a reward be gyuen for our good it is giuen through him Therefore it is euident that it is most truly spoken of Augustine that when as God recompenceth our seruices he rewardeth his owne benefits in vs and so hee rendereth grace for grace seeing the deserts are of grace The holy Patriarch Ioseph was not content to giue to hys brethren corne which they came to buy in Egipt but he moreouer commaunded that the money which they brought to buy the corne should be put in theyr sacke mouthes After the same manner the Lord dealeth with his for he giueth vnto thē life euerlasting and he also gyueth them grace and a lawdable lyfe by which they may come to this eternall life Here-vnto agreeth that which Eusebius Emissenus sayth hee therefore is worshipped that he may haue mercy and hee hath had already mercy that he might be worshipped Therefore let a man diligently examine his life let him consider as the same Doctour admonisheth him what great good hee hath doone from howe many euills adulteries rapines thefts fraudes and sacriledges the Lord hath deliuered him and then he shal know by how many meanes he is bound vnto him For as Saint Augustine sayth all sinnes are to be accounted as forgiuen from the which God doth keepe thee least they be committed Therefore sayth hee doe not loue him a little as from whom a little was forgiuen but rather loue him much from whom much is gyuen vnto thee For if hee loue to whom it is giuen that hee may not repay how much more ought he to loue to whom it is gyuen that he may haue and possesse For whosoeuer from the beginning remaineth honest hee is gouerned of him and whosoeuer of one dishonest is made honest of him he is amended and whosoeuer is dishonest to the end of him he is forsaken Which seeing that it is so what other thing shall we doe then cry out with the Prophet Let my mouth bee filled with thy praise that I may sing of
soule in the midst of tribulations which is the effect of hope which hurleth and casteth foorth all carefulnesse and inordinate anxietie by that fauour which it expecteth of the Diuine mercie Not vnlike to thys is that of Ecclesiasticus Yee that feare the Lord beleeue in him and yee shall not be frustrated of your reward Ye that feare God hope in him and mercy shall come vnto you for pleasure Consider the old generations of men and marke them well was there euer any one confounded that put his trust in the Lorde And Salomon in his Prouerbs sayth Put thy trust in God with all thy hart and leane not vnto thine owne wit In all thy wayes acknowledge him and hee shall order thy goings Surely it is a great furtherance vnto hope to haue knowne the mercie of God not only by reading but much more by experience For a man hopeth through an assured affiance that hee will profit him who often hath profited others Hence is that of the Psalme They that know thy name will put theyr trust in thee for thou Lord hast neuer failed them that seeke thee He saith also in another psalme My trust hath beene in the Lord I will be gladde and reioyce in thy mercie The effect of thys hope the same man declareth when he sayth Who so putteth his trust in the Lord mercy embraceth compasseth him on euery side Hee sayth very well embraceth and compasseth that he might signifie that it shall keepe and garde him on euery side no otherwise then a King is encompassed with his Garde that he may be the more safe In another psalme he teacheth the same thing more at large I waited patiently saith he for the Lord and he enclined vnto mee and heard my calling He brought mee also out of the horrible pitte out of the mire and Clay and sette my feete vpon the Rocke and ordered my goings And hee hath put a newe song in my mouth euen a thanks-giuing vnto our GOD. Many shall see it and feare and shall put theyr trust in the the Lord. Blessed is the man that hath set his hope in the Lorde and turned not vnto the proude and to such as goe about with lies All these be the words of the Prophet in which hee also sheweth another effect of this Vertue that is the mouth and eyes of man are opened that hee may know by experience the goodnes and fatherly prouidence of God It is also a singuler fruite of hope that wee are not onely deliuered from dangers but also that there is a new prayse and a new thanksgiuing put into our mouthes which the Prophet insinuateth when hee sayth And he hath put a new song in my mouth c. He calleth it a new song which is sung for a new deliuerance with an vnusuall and new affection of mirth We shal not easily end this matter if wee should alledge all the verses and sometimes whole Psalmes written of this matter For the ninety and one Psalm and the hundreth and fiue and twenty are wholy imployed in commending this vertue vnto vs and to describe the excellent fruites of it which they enioy and ioy in who haue theyr trust and confidence in the Lord and dwell vnder his protection Saint Bernard writing vpon the ninth verse of the former Psalme Because thou ô Lord art my hope he sayth Whatsoeuer therefore is to be done whatsoeuer is to be eschewed whatsoeuer is to be borne whatsoeuer is to be wished ô Lord thou art my hope This is the onely cause of all my promises this is the whole reason of mine expectation Let one pretend merit let him boast that he hath borne the heate of the day let him say that he hath fasted twice a weeke lastly let him brag that hee is not like other men but it is good for mee to cleaue vnto the Lord and to put my trust in my Lord God If rewards be promised me I will hope that I shall obtaine them by thee if wars rise against me if the world rageth if the wicked fret and sume if the flesh lust against the spirit yet I will trust in thee For to what end are we wise if we doe not sticke and cleaue with all feruour and deuotion of soule and spirit to this solide sound perfect and blessed hope and cast away all other miserable vaine vnprofitable and seducing hopes A little after the same mellifluous Doctour by way of Dialogue doth thus reason Fayth sayth Great and inestimable blessings are prepared of God for those that serue him Hope sayth those are kept for me Charity sayth I runne vnto them Behold my brother thou doost see how great be the fruites of this vertue and profitable for what Hope is as a safe Hauen to which the righteous direct theyr course so often as any storme of the world rageth it is as a most strong shield vpon which all the darts of our enemies are receaued without any wound it is as a Store-house for foode whether in the time of famine all the poore may come haue bread It is that tabernacle couer and shadow which the Lord doth promise in Esay that hee will be to his elect a shadow to defend them from the heate of the day and a defence from the stormy tempest and from raine That is a safegard from all the aduersity and prosperity of the world To conclude it is the medicine and common remedy of all our euils and encumbrances For it is certaine that whatsoeuer we hope for of God iustly faithfully and wisely we shall obtaine it if it be conducent and appertayning to our saluation Therfore Cyprian calleth the mercy of God a fountaine or vvell of all blessings that cannot be drawne dry and our hope and trust a bucket or vessell in which those blessings are receaued and he sayth that according to the quantity of the vessell so is the proportion of the remedy For in respect of the fountaine the water of mercy neuer fayleth The Lord sayd to the children of Israel All the places that the soles of your feete shall tread vpon haue I giuen you So also all the mercy vpon which man shall set his foote shall be his Like to this is that He that taketh his motion or is moued of the Lord hee will hope all things neyther shall he be frustrated of his hope Whereby it is manifest that this hope is an imitation of the vertue and diuine power redounding to the glory of the same God Bernard was not ignorant of this when hee sayd Nothing doth make the omnipotency of the word more cleare then that it doth make all them omnipotent who hope in him Wilt thou know that this is true did not he pertake of the omnipotency of God who being vpon the earth commaunded the Sun that it should stand still in the midst of heauen and that it should not hasten to runne his course for the space of
pray thee at the length is to be expected of this gouernment but ruine downfall destruction incomparable mischiefes But that thou mayst see more manifestly the filthines of this seruitude bondage I will illustrate it by a certaine example Imagine that a man had married a woman of so great beauty nobility wisedom as could possibly fall into any of this sexe being happy through this marriage should haue a Mayd-seruant a Witch or an Inchaunter with whom he is besotted by some preposterous meanes and so dotes on this in chaunting drudge that forsaking his owne wife he giueth himselfe a pray vnto his seruant vsing her in steed of his wife eating sleeping and conferring with her acting executing all his busines with her and with her prodigally consuming and spending all his riches in banquets sports and surfetting and after such like maner yea not content with these to come to that dotage and folly that he forceth his owne wife to wayte on this drudge and to serue her in all things as a slaue which she shall commaund her Who would think that a man should euer come to this madnes And if he shall so fall how shall he be rayled vpon and condemned of those that be wise How great shall the hate and indignation of all be against this seruant And on the contrary part how great will the moane and commiseration be of all towards that good and noble woman With how many sighs will her kinsfolke deplore the madnes of her husband This thing at the first view doth seeme very shamefull yet much more shamefull and filthy is that which heere wee speake of For wee must knowe that these two women that is the spirit and the flesh are found in our soule which the Diuines doe call by another name the superiour part and the inferiour part of the soule The superiour part is that wherein the reason and the will are which are naturall lights with which God in the creation hath marked that part of which part there is so great beauty and noblenes that by reason of it man is sayd to haue the image of God to be capable of God and to be the brother of Angels This is that noble woman which God hath ioyned and coupled to man as his wife with whom he should leade his life ordering all his affaires by her direction that is by the instruction of her heauenlie light In the inferiour part is the sensuall appetite of which we haue lately spoken which is giuen vnto man to desire all things necessary for his life and for conseruation of his kinde This therefore as a Steward receaueth al things by limitation and order appoynted of reason and layeth out and disburseth the goods according to the will of the maister and Lord. This appetite is that Hand-mayde of which wee spake a little before which because it hath not the light of reason it is not made that it should gouerne or rule but that it should be gouerned and ruled These things being thus vnhappy is that man who commeth to that madnes to be giuen as a pray to the loue and lust of this naughty woman which casting reason aside by which she ought to be gouerned commeth to that malapertnes and headstrongnes that shee will rule and dominere ouer reason doing all the mischiefe that this sawcie and peruerse drudge will following and prosecuting all her appetites all her desires and lusts as well carnall as sensuall For we see many men so carnall vnbrideled and subiect to the lusts of their owne hart that in all theyr actions like vnto beasts they obey this malapert and froward woman without respect eyther of law or reason What other thing is this then to giue the whole rule of the life into the hands of an abiect seruant which is the flesh by surfetting in all the delights sports banquettings and pleasures of this world and despising the counsailes and aduices of Reason being the noble and lawfull wife But that is worser and lesse tollerable that it sufficeth not to haue bestowed this rule and dominion vpon the seruant but also this free and noble Lady is compelled to serue her owne seruant being most base vile and abiect by consuming nights and dayes in her seruice and in doing all that shee commaundeth and which her insatiable and inordinate appetite desireth Wherefore when man is busied and his reason and all his vnderstanding occupied about these inuentions as are the ornaments of the body the pride and statelines of buildings the curiosity of houshold-stuffe the variety of meates and the multitude of dainty dishes what other thing doth he then draw the soule from the spirituall exercises of her nobility and make it a seruant a cooke a slaue vnto her that ought to be her seruant in all obsequiousnes A carnall man enamoured with the loue of any woman that he may ouerthrow her chastity when hee hath bestowed and imployed all the strength and sinnowes of his reason and vnderstanding in wryting Letters in compozing Poems in making loue Verses in laying traps and in other endeauours which are required to that Art what other thing doth he if we confesse the truth then that hee forceth the Lady to serue the Hand-mayde whilst he spendeth that diuine and celestiall light in inuenting and deuising meanes by which he may satisfie the appetite of his vild flesh When as King Dauid was wholy occupied in deuising meanes to couer his fault with Bersaba in sending her husband to the Army by inuiting him to supper by making him drunk by giuing him dangerous Letters written to this end that he innocent man should be slaine what other plotted this notable Stratageme but reason and vnderstanding And who pricked forward Reason to this complot but the peeuish Flesh that shee might hasten the wickednes whereby she might more safely and more conueniently enioy her pleasures Seneca although an Ethnick did abhorre such seruitude I am greater sayth he and borne to higher matters then that I should be a bondslaue to mine owne flesh Goe to tell me if he feared so to demeane and debase himselfe least he should be termed a doater and a hopelesse vnthrift how much more ought we to flie such wickednes by which so great blessings are lost and such an heape of mischiefes succeede in their place Which thing seeing that it is partly so natural partly so vsuall we tread on in this old path hauing no regard of so great misgouernment which now euery where in the world is seene Hence it is as S. Bernard sayth that the abhominable sauour of vicious men is not smelt because the multitude of thē is too great For euen as in a country where all are borne Ethiopians it is not an vglie thing to be blacke and as where all are drunk it is no ignominie nor slander to bee drunke so this monstrous seruitude because it is so familiar to the worlde
quietnes in which the vertuous and good doe liue But that this may be vnderstoode the better we must know that there are three kindes of peace one is with God another with our neighbour and the third with our selues Peace with our neighbours is to loue all men and to be loued of all and to haue friendship with all to wish euill to no body to hate no body This had Dauid when he sayd I was peaceable with them that hated peace and when I spake vnto them therof they set themselues of purpose against mee This peace the Apostle commendeth admonishing vs that as much as we may wee should haue peace with all men The other peace which is with God consisteth in this that we haue friendship and fauour with God and it is got by the meanes of iustification which reconcileth man to God maketh man to loue him as hee againe is loued of him so that there is no warre no contention betweene them Of this peace the Apostle speaketh Then being iustified by faith we haue peace toward God The third peace is that which man hath with himselfe Let no man meruaile at this for it is knowne that in one and the selfe same man are found two men and one contrary to the other as be the inward and the outward man or the spirit and the flesh the appetite and the reason Which contrariety doth not onely stirre vp cruell warre against the soule but also doth trouble the whole man with furious passions with burning desires and most turbulent concupiscences And hence the inward peace which is the rest and tranquillity of our spirit is troubled and disturbed ¶ Of the continuall warre and inward trouble of wicked men THis then is the warre this is the contention and this is the continuall trouble and perturbation in which all men commonly liue who follow the flesh For when as on the one side they are depriued of grace which is as a bridle restrayning the passions and mortifying them and on the other side they haue so vnbridled and inordinate appetites and such dissolute affections that they scarcely know what it is to resist any vice it followeth that they liue in infinite lusts desires of diuers things some gape after honours some after dignities some after riches some after the lusts of the flesh and others are moued with other pleasures and concupiscences For our appetite is an vnsatiable sire which neuer fayth it is sufficient or as a greedy and deuouring beast which neuer can be satisfied or as an Horse-leach who hath two daughters crying Bring Bring Giue Giue This Horsleach is the inexpleble and vnsatiable appetite of our hart and the two daughters be Necessity and Greedines or Rauening one of which is as it were true thirst the other as a false and fayned thirst neither doth the one lesse afflict then the other albeit the one be true necessity the other fayned Hence it is that neyther poore men nor rich men if they be euill haue any true quietnes or peace for coueteousnes and wretched desires torment these necessity doth alwayes gnaw vpon the hart of the other saying Giue Giue What tranquillity then what quietnes what peace can that man haue these two troubling and interrupting him crauing infinite things which are not in his power What rest can that mother haue who hath tenne or a dozen hunger-starued children hanging on her crying out through hunger and famine and begging bread neyther hath she whereof to giue them This is one of the chiefest miseries of wicked men who hunger and thirst and whose soule as the Psalmist sayth faynteth in them For when as theyr owne loue hath so great rule and dominion ouer them from whence all these desires flow and they haue placed all their felicity in visible things hence that thirst and dogs famine ariseth which they haue of those things in which they suppose theyr felicity to be placed when as oftentimes they cannot haue those things that they desire for others more greedy and stronger doe many times preuent them forth-with they are troubled and afflicted as a child that hath beene brought vp in a thousand delicacies and cockerings who when those thinges are denied him that he desireth hee weepeth and cryeth out with such a clamour that his parents are afrayd least he should burst in sunder for euen as the satisfying of the desire as the vvise-man sayth is a tree of life so there is not a greater griefe or discruciatement then to desire and not to haue that is desired For that is to dye through hunger neyther to haue that thou mayst eate But that is the greater that by how much the longer that it is denied which is desired so much more the desire doth encrease by how much the desire not satisfied is encreased by so much the more the torment is encreased therfore they are in continuall tribulation This is that most miserable estate which our Sauiour so copiously sheweth in that parable of the prodigall sonne in which it is sayd that there arose a great dearth throughout that Land and he began to be in necessity And through hunger he was constrayned to feede Swine although he was the sonne of a great noble man But this is more miserable that he would haue filled his belly with the huskes that the Swine eate but no man gaue them him With what greater Art I pray thee could the whole discourse and all the miseries of the life of the wicked be more liuely depaynted Who is that prodigall sonne who left his fathers house wandred abroade into a farre Countrey vnlesse a miserable sinner who forsaking God entreth into the way of vices and abuseth all the benefits of God What Countrey is that in which that famine arose vnlesse this wretched world where the hunger of worldlings is so insatiable that they can neuer be satisfied with those things that he present but alwayes walke about like hungry Wolfes alwayes rauening and still seeking further But if thou shalt consider what is their exercise and practise in this life thou shalt finde it be none other then to feede Swine and to fill the bellies of theyr filthy appetites and desires If thou doost not beleeue me obserue each one of their paces and each one of the actions which a carnall man doth from the morning till the euening and thou shalt see that all his study is nothing else but to seeke to seede Swine and to satiate and fill some one of these bestiall sences whether it be the sight or the hearing or the touching or the tasting or some other not as the Disciple of Christ but as a very Epicure as if he had none other thing but a body common with beasts as if he beleeued that he had no other end nor was made for any other vse then to attend vpon the pleasures and delights of his sences thinking vpon none other
mistery of that time it will be counted a ridiculous thing to thinke that these are matters for all times and places which were onely proper for that time We see also in all well ordered common wealths that some things be done ordinarily and alwayes after the same manner and some things that are vsed extraordinarily Ordinary things are common to all but the extraordinary are proper to some certaine The same thing also commeth in vse in the common wealth of God which is his Church And so that of the Apostle is regular and ordinary Whose end shall be according to theyr works signifying that after the common manner of speaking an euill death followeth an euill life and a good death a good life And it is an ordinary thing that those that embrace Vertue and leade a godly life doe enter into an eternal life and those that liue viciously and wickedly to be cast into hell fire This sentence is common and true which the holy Scripture doth beate vpon in many places This the Psalmes doe sing of this the Prophets doe celebrate this the Apostles doe preach of this the Euangelists haue noted The kingly Prophet hath comprehended this in few words when he sayd God spake once and twice I haue also heard the same that power belongeth vnto God And that thou Lord art mercifull for thou rewardest euery man according to his worke This is the summe of all Christian Philosophy Therfore according to this speach of Dauid we say that it is an ordinary thing that as well the righteous as the sinner should receaue a reward at the end of their lifes according to the works which they haue done Yet besides this vniuersall law God can by his especiall grace and fauour bestow mercy vpon some that they should dye the death of the righteous who haue liued the life of sinners as also it may come to passe that he that hath liued like a righteous man in this world by the secret iudgement of God may dye as a sinner As it happeneth vnto them who haue sayled very fortunately in a long voyage and at the very mouth of the Hauen suffer shipwrack Hence it is that Salomon sayth Who knoweth the spirit of man that goeth vpward and the breath of the beast that goeth downe to the earth For although it be alwayes in a manner true that their soules who liue like beasts descend to hell and that theirs that liue like men ascend to heauen yet in the secret and particuler iudgement of God this order may be somtimes inuerted Yet it is safe and generall doctrine that a good liuer shall haue a blessed death Therefore no man ought for the praecedent causes to leane to their examples who haue been saued by especiall and particuler grace and sauour for they make no generall rule nor extend themselues to all men but onely to few and those vnknowne Neyther canst thou know whether thou art contayned in that number But if thou obiectest vnto me the repentance of the Niniuites which proceeded from feare least they should all haue beene destroyed within forty dayes consider thou not onely their sharpe and seuere repentance which they made but also their change of life Change thou also thy life after the same manner and the same mercy shall not forsake thee But I perceaue that thou art scarcely recouered of thine infirmity and scarcely risen out of bed seeing that thou straightwayes runnest to the first kind of life and recallest all that which thou didst purpose when thou wast weake Wherfore I leaue thee to consider what I may think of thy repentance ¶ The conclusion of the former disputation WHatsoeuer hath hetherto beene spoken hath not beene spoken to that end that it should shut the gate of saluation or of hope against any man for neyther hath any of the Saints shut it neyther ought any man to shut it but to this end that the wicked may be recalled turned from that refuge and fortresse in which they lurke and are made mightier to perseuere in their iniquities But tell me I pray thee my brother if all the voyces and iudgements of Doctors and holy men if all reasons if the holy and sacred Scripture pronounce so dangerous and perillous things of it how darest thou hope for saluation in so great danger and hazard In whom doest thou trust that will helpe thee in this ieopardy Perhaps thou placest thy hope in thy preparations in thine almes and in thy prayers Thou vnderstoodest a little before how the fiue foolish virgins with great care would haue prepared made ready thēselues after that they had heard the voyce telling them that the Bridegrome came thou hast learned also with what great instancie they knocked and cryed at the doore yet it profited none of them for it proceeded not of true loue or of true repentance Perhaps thou trustest to thy teares which thou wilt poure forth at that time surely vnfained teares at all times are auailable happy is that man that from his very hart can poure thē foorth but remember I pray thee what teares Esau shedde Who as the Apostle saith found no place of repentance though he sought it with teares For he did not weepe for the loue of GOD but for his owne commoditie Or doost thou put thy hope in thy good purposes which thou then settest before thine eyes These are of force vvhen they are true and sincere but remember the purposes of King Antiochus who when hee was in this danger promised such great and magnificent things that it would make a man amazed that readeth them This wicked man saith that booke prayed vnto the Lord of whom he obtayned no mercy The reason was for all things that he purposed proceeded not of the spirit of loue but of seruill feare which is not acceptable For to feare hell may proceede of the meere naturall loue which man beareth to himselfe But that man loueth himselfe is no reason that the kingdome of heauen should be giuen vnto him Insomuch that as no man entred into the pallace of King Assuerus clothed in Sackcloth so it is lawfull for no man to enter into the pallace of God with a seruill garment but all that will enter must be clothed with wedding garments that is adorned and beautified with true loue and charitie Wherefore my brother I pray and intreate thee that thou wouldest reade and consider of these things with great attention that thou after a very short time without all doubt shalt come to this houre and to this ieopardy For thou seest vvith what great swiftnes heauen is turned about and with what velocitie time slippeth and posteth away how soone the thred of thy life shall be cut off The day of destruction is at hand sayth the Prophet and the times that shall come make hast Therefore a little space of time being ouer-past this prophecie shal be fulfilled Then thou shalt
profit let Angels vtter it and not men For what greater profit can there be then to enioy eternal glory to be freed from euerlasting paine which is the reward of Vertue If the temporall commodities of this world doe rather moue vs what commodities can be more excellent or of greater valuation then those twelue priuiledges and prerogatiues which Vertue and the vertuous doe solace and delight themselues the least of which is of more force and validity to quiet a disturbed mind then al the dignities and treasuries of this world I kow not truly what more may be put into the ballance to weigh and peise those things which are promised to Vertue and to her louers The excuses also cauillations which the men of this world are wont to bring for their defence are so ouerthrowne spoiled of vs that I doe not see where such may find a small hole or crany to escape through vnlesse perhaps of set purpose pretenced malice they shut their eyes and eares that they might not see nor heare this manifest and euident truth What remaineth but that the perfection and beauty of Vertue being seene and knowne thou say with Salomon speaking of Wisedome the companion and sister of Vertue I haue loued her and sought her from my youth I desired to marry her such loue had I vnto her beautie In that she is conuersant with God it commendeth her nobility yea the Lord of all things loueth her For shee is the Schoolemistresse of the knowledge of GOD and the chooser out of his works If riches be a possession to be desired in this lyfe vvhat is richer then wisedome that worketh all thinges For if prudence worketh what is it among all things that worketh better then shee If a man loue righteousnes her labours are vertuous for shee teacheth sobernes and prudence righteousnes and strength which are the most profitable things that men can haue in this life If a man desire great experience shee can tell the things that are past and discerne things to come she knoweth the subtisties of words and the solutions of darke sentences she fore-seeth the signes and wonders or euer they come to passe and the successe of seasons and times Therefore I purposed to take her vnto my company knowing that shee would counsaile mee good things and comfort mee in cares and greefes Hetherto the Wise-man Therefore nothing remayneth but that we conclude this matter with the words of Saint Cyprian taken out of an Epistle to a friend of his written of the contempt of this world Therfore sayth he there is one peaceable and faythfull tranquility one solide firme and perpetuall security that if any one be taken out of the whirle-winds of this turbulent world and be founded and anchored in the hauen of safety he lifteth vp his eyes from the earth to heauen and being admitted to the Lords fellowship and now being neere vnto his God in his minde whatsoeuer amongst humane things seemeth great and lofty vnto others he glorieth that it lyeth within the circumference of his conscience Now he can desire nor couet nothing of the world who is greater then the world How stable and vnfoyled a defence is it how celestiall a gard abounding with perpetuall good things to be deliuered from the snares of this entrapping and enthralling world to be purged from these earthly dregs and incorporated into the light of eternal immortality Let him consider of this and view it well ouer whom the deceitful dangerousnes of this pernicious enemy before raged tirannized we are compelled more to loue when we know and condemne what we were and see what we now are and shal be Neyther is this worke brought to passe by rewards bribes and the power of man but it is the free gift of God and easily obtayned As the sunne shineth of his owne accord the day is enlightned a fountaine streameth and a shower falleth so the heauenly spirit infuseth it selfe Afterwards the soule beholding heauen and knowing her Maker she being higher then the earth and more noble then any earthly power beginneth to be that which she beleeueth her selfe to be Onely thou whom the heauenly warfare hath appoynted a Souldier in these spirituall warres hold and keepe thy standing incorrupt and fenced with religious vertues vse continually eyther praying or reading Somtimes talke thou with God and somtimes God with thee let him instruct thee with his precepts let him haue the guiding and ordering of thee whō he maketh rich no man shal make poore There can be no penury where the heauenly bounty hath filled and blessed Now coffers stuft with crownes now stately Pallaces and gay buildings will seeme base and vild vnto thee when as thou knowest that thou thy selfe are more beautified and adorned being a house in which the Lord sitteth as in his temple and where the holy Ghost dwelleth Let vs trimme vp this house with the ornaments of innocency let vs enlighten it with the sun-shine of righteousnes This house shall neuer decay through age neyther shall the deckings of it waxe old Whatsoeuer things are counterfet are not lasting neyther doe they yeeld any stability to the po●●●ssors which haue not the truth of possession This perpertually continueth with a colour vndecayed with honour vntaynted and with splendour vnobscured it cannot be abolished nor extinguished it may be only conuerted into further perfection the body being glorified Hetherto Cyprian Whosoeuer therfore is moued with the reasons and arguments which copiously we haue handled in this booke the grace of God and Diuine inspiration assisting without which all is done in vaine and desireth to embrace so great a blessing of Vertue let him reade the booke following which deliuereth and handleth the method and order how to come vnto Vertue The end of the first booke of the Sinners Guide the Sinners Guyde Written in the Spanish tongue by the learned and reuerend Diuine F. Lewes of Granada ¶ Since translated into Latine Italian and French And now perused and digested into English by Francis Meres Maister of Arts and student in Diuinitie Romans 12. verse 2. ¶ Fashion not your selues like vnto this vvorld but be yee changed by the renuing of your minde that yee may prooue what is the good will of GOD and acceptable and perfect AT LONDON ¶ Printed by I. R. for Iohn Flasket and Paule Linley Anno Dom. 1598. THE PROLOGVE of the second Booke IT sufficeth not to haue perswaded man to embrace Vertue vnlesse also we teach him the manner way how to come to Vertues pallace Therfore after wee haue in the former Booke deliuered many reasons and those verie forcible and perswasible to moue the harts of men to the loue of Vertue now it is meete that we come to the practise and vse of it and that we set down many counsailes and sundry documents which are profitable and which as with a hand may leade men vnto Vertue It is the first steppe vnto Vertue
displeased count on 〈◊〉 to the slaunderer and that thou with griefe hearest them● which thing also Salomon teacheth more plainly when he saith As the North-winde driueth away the raine so doth an angry countenaunce the slaundering tongue For as S. Ierome sayth An arrow shot from a bow sticketh not in the harde Rocke but with violence reboundeth backe againe and hurteth him that shot it But if thys Buzzer and Detractor be thy subiect or thine inferious without offence thou mayest commaund him to holde his peace for thou art bound to doe so but if thou caust not commaund him silence at least discreetly with some other discourse breake of the course of his speech or show him that countenaunce whereby he may be ashamed to proceed any further Therefore being modestly admonished he will eyther hold his peace or alte r his speech Otherwise if thou entertainest his talke with a merry and cheerefull countenaunce thou ministrest occasion vnto him to persist in his purpose and so thou doost no lesse off●nd in hearing thē he in speaking For euen as he dooth ill that fireth an house so also he doth ill that when he may quench the fire will not but comming to the flame warmeth himselfe by it Amongst all the kindes of murmuring and detraction that is the worst when as any one detracteth from the estimation of a iust and a righteous man for he by this maner of reproching gyueth occasion to the weake and faint-harted to becom more slow in goodnes neyther to goe forward with so great zeale as they were wont Which albeit he offend not the stronger yet it cannot be denied but that he much wrongeth the weake and vnperfect Least that this kinde of scandall seeme small in thine eyes remember the words of the Lord Whosoeuer shall offende one of these little ones which beleeue in me it were better for him that a Mil-stone were hanged about his necke and that hee were drowned in the depth of the sea Wherefore my brother thinke it a kinde of sacriledge to sharpe and whet thy tongue against them who serue the Lord God for albeit it be true that the detractor speaketh of them yet for the title onely which they haue and the office that they beare they are worthy of honour especially seeing that GOD h●th ●ayde o● them Hee ●ha● toucheth you toucheth the apple of 〈◊〉 eye Whatsoeuer we haue hetherto spoken of murmurers detractors and backbyters it is to be vnderstood also of iesten flowters and deriders and much more of them then of the other for this vice hath all the euills and mischiefes in it which before we haue numbred vp and besides those it hath another blemish annexed to it that is pryde arrogancie and contempt of thy neighbour therefore we must eschew and auoyde thys vice more warily then the other as the Lord hath commaunded in his Law when he sayd There shall not bee a tale-carrier or a backebyting whisperer among my people Therefore it is not needfull further to enlarge the vildnes and filthines of thys sinne but let these things suffice which hetherto we haue spoken ¶ Of rash iudgement and the precepts of the Church TO the two precedent sinnes a third is ioyned being very neere vnto them which is to iudge rashly for detracters and slaunderers not o●●ly speake euill of matters past and euident but also of those that are iudged of them and which breed any suspition in them For that they may not want matter of detraction they minister matter vnto themselues interpreting by their peruerse iudgement and peeuish suspition the matter to the worst sence which they ought to haue interpreted to a good meaning Which kinde of iudgement is against the commaundement of the Lord Iudge not that yee be not iudged and condemne not that yee be not condemned With these sinnes which are against God those are numbred which are cōmitted against these foure precepts of the Church which are commended vnto vs vnder commaundement as On the Sabaoth dayes and on certaine other dayes it is thought good by the Church to heare Diuine seruice and sermons to receaue the holy Sacrament of the blessed body and blood of our Sauiour Christ to fast on dayes appoynted and faithfully to pay Tithes For as much as man is bound both by the law of God and man to heare Diuine seruice and sermons he ought not onely to be present in body but also in spirit and to gather vp his spirits that he may heare with vnderstanding and carry away that that may fr●ctifie in him and nourish him vnto eternall life keeping silence and hauing his hart lifted vp to God considering of the high misteries reuealed in his word with great feruency and deuotion praying together with the congregation and attentiuely hearing that which is deliuered vnto him They who haue families children men-seruants and maydes they ought to be carefull that they come to Church and that they spend the Sabaoth daies holily In which thing many Housholders are faulty and worthy of great reprehension who shall render an account to God for this negligence These are the sinnes which men are wont to fall into more vsually and commonly and all these we ought to eschew with great diligence By this meanes we shall remaine in innocency and we shall keepe our garments white and cleane which Salomon commaundeth At all times sayth he let thy garments be white and let not oyle be lacking vpon thine head Which is the vnction of Diuine grace which yeeldeth light and courage in euery matter and teacheth vs all good for this is the fruite of this heauenly oyle ¶ Of other kinde of sinnes which because they seeme small therfore the world maketh no account to commit them ALbeit these sinnes aforesayd are more principall from which we ought to flie with speciall care and diligence yet the raynes it not to be giuen to other sinnes which seeme lesse vnto vs and which we make no scruple to commit yea I beseech thee by the bowels of Gods mercy that thou beest not of their number who when they heare that one sinne is not so great as another forth-with runne into it without any scruple or regard Remember that saying of the Wise-man Hee that contemneth small things shall fall by little and little into greater Remember that Prouerb For the want of a naile the Iron shooe falleth off and for the want of a shooe the Horse falleth and he perisheth that fitteth on him The houses that ruine threatneth through age ●irst giue a token of their decay by the fall of some stone or ●mall peece of timber and the ruine daily increasing at length ●hey come topsey turuey downe Very well sayth Saint Augu●●ne Contemne not sinnes because they be little but feare them because they be many For many times many little beasts kill Are not the co●●es of sand very small and little but if plenty of them
neyghbour the hart of a mother towards himselfe the hart and spirit of a Iudge These be the three parts of iustice or righteousnes in which the Prophet teacheth that all our good consisteth when hee sayth I will showe vnto thee ô man what is good and what the Lord requireth of thee surely to do iustly and to loue mercy and humbly to walke with thy God For of these three kindes of duties the first belongeth vnto vs namely to doe iustly the second to our neighbour to loue mercy the third to God which the words of the Prophet declare when he sayth humbly to walke with thy God Of these three kindes therefore in thys last part we will speake seeing that all our good is contayned in them Of the bond and dutie of man towards himselfe CHAP. XIIII SEeing that loue rightly ordered in man beginneth of himselfe we will begin thys matter from that member which the Prophet hath put in the first place that is To doe iustly Which pertayneth to the spirit and hart of the Iudge and this duty man oweth to himselfe It is the part of a good Iudge to haue his prouince well composed and ordered And because in man as in a little Common-wealth two principall parts are to be reformed that is the body with all his members and sences and the soule with all her affections and powers it is necessarie that these parts should be reformed and well ordered according to the rule of Vertue which we will declare in thys place And so a man shall repay and render that he oweth to himselfe ¶ Of the reforming of the body TO the reformation of the body first an orderly discipline of the exteriour man is required that that may be obserued which Saint Augustine requireth in his rule that is that there be nothing in thy gate in thy state or in thy sitting or in thy clothing that may offend any mans eyes but that all things be agreeable to thy profession Wherefore the seruant of GOD ought especially to be carefull that his conuersation amongst men be graue humble sweet and curteous that as many as do conuerse with him may alwaies be edified and may daylie be bettered through his good example The Apostle would haue vs to be a good sauour which may communicate participate hys sweet smell to euery thing that it partaketh with The hands which haue handled any fragrant and odoriferous thing participate of the smell so the wordes the deedes the iestures and the conuersation of the seruants of God ought to be such that what man soeuer vseth them familiarly may be edified and after a certaine manner be sanctified by their examples and conuersation Thys is the especiallest fruite which springeth of this modestie which is as a silent Preacher for not by the noyse of words but by the examples of vertues he inuiteth man to glorifie GOD and to embrace Vertue Wherefore also our Sauiour himselfe stirreth vs vp vnto thys when he sayth Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorifie your Father which is in heauen To whom agreeth Esay when he sayth that the seruaunt of the Lord is like to beautifull vvood planted of God vvhich whosoeuer seeth will glorifie the Lord. We must heere obserue that a man ought not therefore to doe good workes that hee may be seene but as Saint Gregory sayth Good workes are so to be doone in publique that the intent may remaine in secret that by our good workes wee may giue an example to our neighbour and by our intent to please God onely we may alwaies wish that they may remaine secret The second fruite of thys composition and orderly disposition is that the exteriour man is the best keeper of the interior and notably preserueth deuotion for betweene eyther man there is a great confederacy and neere league that that vvhich is done of one is forthwith cōmunicated to the other and the course being altered that which this doth hee communicateth it to the other that if the spirit be wel disposed immediatly the body is well composed and contrarily if the body be ill ordered the spirit also putteth on the same habit So that one of thē is as it were the glasse of the other For euen as whatsoeuer thou doost that also the glasse opposed to thee doth imitate so also whatsoeuer eyther of these two men dooth forth-with one of them imitateth it and therefore the outward modesty and grauity much helpeth the inward and surely it is a matter of great wonder to finde a modest and a quiet spirit in an immodest vnquiet body Hence it is that Ecclesiasticus saith He that is too hastie in his gate shall offend Insinuating by this kinde of speaking that those to whom that grauitie is wanting which becommeth Christians doe often stumble and fall through many defects as they who lift vp theyr feete too lightly when they goe The thyrd fruite of this vertue is that by it a man preserueth that graue authority which is agreeable both to his person and place especially if hee be a man seated in dignity as holy Iob kept his as he testifieth of himselfe saying The light of my countenaunce did not fall to the earth And a little before When I went out to the gate euen to my iudgement seate and when I caused them to prepare my seate in the streete The young men saw mee and hidde themselues and the aged arose and stoode vp The Princes stayed talke and layd theyr hand on theyr mouth The voyce of Princes was hid and theyr tongue cleaued to the roofe of their mouth So great was their reuerence towards Iob. Which grauity that it might be free from all pride thys holy man had ioyned vnto it so great curtesie that hee sayth of himselfe that sitting in his throne as King his Princes and people standing about him he ceased not to be an eye to the blinde a foote to the lame and a father vnto the poore We must here note that as benignity and curtesie and the good carriage of the outward man is commendable so to affect company and societie too much too much to care for the furniture and accoustrements of the body too much to cherish make of the exteriour man is faulty and immoderate Wherefore Ecclesiasticus sayth A mans garment and his excessiue laughter and going declare what person he is Like to thys is that which Salomon sayd As the face of the lookers are beheld in the waters so the harts of men are manifested to the wise by exterior workes These be the commodities which this modestie bringeth with her and certainly they be very great Neyther is it a thing that should delight any man to loue too much the familiarity and company of men to be too familiar populer which many men doe that because they would not be taken for hypocrites they
thou lyuest not to feede thy belly but that thou must pray and forth-vvith read or studie or some other good worke is to be doone for which thou art vnfit if thou burdenest thy stomacke beyond measure Wherefore when thou commest to eate or drinke d● not respect how much thy mouth delighteth to eate but howe much is sufficient for thy life and to sustaine thy necessity We doe not say that thou shouldest kill thy selfe through fasting but that thou shouldest not pamper thine appetite f●rther then the vse of thy life requireth For thy body as the bodies of all other liuing creatures necessarily requireth nourishment that it faint not but thou must beware that through superfluity of nourishment thou surfet not Hence Bernard The body saith he is to be handled seuerely that it rebell not that it waxe not proude yet so that it may be of sufficient strength to serue because it is giuen to serue the spirit let thy flesh be restrained not consumed let it be pressed but not oppressed let it be humbled that it grow not insolent and let it serue and not rule Hetherto of the vertue of Abstinence ¶ Of the keeping of the Sences AFter that we haue chastened and reformed our bodies according to the rule deliuered it is necessary also that wee should reforme the sences of our bodies in which thing the seruants of God ought carefully to watch and to vse especiall heede and warines least theyr eyes which are as wide gates by which all vanities enter into vs which pierce euen to our soules and often are the windowes of our perdition by which death entreth least I say that they wander and stray abroade too licenciously But especially they that attend prayer ought warily to keepe this sence both that chastitie may be preserued and the hart being fixed may attend his deuoier Otherwise the images and shapes of things which enter into vs by this gate doe leaue many painted toyes and fansies behind them which hinder vs when we pray or meditate and they make vs scarcely think of any other thing then of that impression they haue left For this cause deuout religious men haue beene so carefull to moderate theyr sight that not only they haue not seene those things which might harme them but they haue auoyded costly buildings ●rtificiall pictures and precious and curious workes that they ●ight haue their imaginations pure and free at that ti●e when ●hey were to deale with God For thys exercise is such and so ●elicate that it is not onely hindered through sinnes but also ●●rough the representation of those things which of themselues 〈◊〉 not euill The care and watch of the eares is no lesser then that of the 〈◊〉 for by these gates oftentimes those things enter into our soules which doe hinder and disturbe them destroy pollute them We must not haue our eares onely shut to hurtfull matters but also to the flying brutes rumors of this world which nothing concerne vs. For he that bewareth not of these things o●●entimes when hee woulde gather his spirits together more firmely to meditate on God and heauenly things his hart is so troubled with the remembrance of things heard that they doe not suffer him rightly to meditate Of smelling I haue not much to say seeing that to carry about strange and outlandish smels and fumigations or to be delighted with them besides that it is the property of lasciuious sensuall men it is also infamous not onely for men but also for honest and chast women Of the tast also something were to be added but that wee haue already spoken of it in the precedent Section when we handled Abstinence Of the keeping of the tongue THE tongue is a copious theame to discourse of for as the Wiseman sayth Death and life are in the power of the tongue By which words it is manifest that all the good and ill of man consist in the good or ill keeping of this member Saint Iames the Apostle admonisheth vs of thys watch and guarde saying Behold we put bits into the horses mouthes that they should obey vs and we turne about all theyr body Behold also the shippes vvhich though they be so great and are driuen of fierce windes yet are they turned about with a very small rudder whither soeuer the Gouernour listeth Euen so the tongue is a little member and boasteth of great things beholde howe great a thing a little fire kindleth And the tongue is fire yea a world of wickednes so is our tongue sette amo●g our members that it defileth the whole body That we may gouerne and rule thys member well we must obserue foure things that is what is to be spoken the manner how it is to be spoken the time when it is to be spoken and the cause why it is to be spoken First therfore we will handle what is to be spoken that is the matter which wee would speake of Wherein that of Paule is to be obserued Let no corrupt com●●nication proceed out of your mouthes but that which is good to 〈◊〉 vse of edifying that it may minister grace to the hearers And 〈◊〉 another place showing more plainly what is corrupt communication he sayth But fornication and all vncleannesse or couetousnesse let it not be once named among you as it becommeth Saints neyther filthines neyther foolish talking neither iesting vvhich are things not comely Euen as therefore Saylers are wont to haue all dangerous places noted and deciphered in theyr Mappes by which theyr shyppes might be endangered and hazarded that they may auoyde them So the seruant of God ought to haue all kinde of corrupt speeches noted and sette downe that he may not be endangered by them Neither oughtest thou to be lesse faythfull and silent in these which are commended vnto thee that thou shouldest conceale them then the Saylers doe who knowing of a dangerous Rock are very wary not to discouer it least they should be ieoparded vpon it In the manner of our speaking wee must be circumspect that we speake not too finely delicately too vnaduisedly too affectedly too curiously and with wordes too exquisite but with grauity leysurely and with gentlenes simple and plaine wordes Here he that speaketh is to be admonished that hee be not head-strong obstinate of theyr nūber that would alwaies ouercome for by this oftentimes the peace of conscience is disturbed charitie patience our friends are offended It is the part of a generous and noble minde sometimes to giue place and in disputation to giue the victory to another It is the part of wise and discreet men to follow the counsaile of the VVise-man who sayth In many things be as one that is ignorant be as one that vnderstandeth and yet hold thy tongue If thou be among great men compare not thy selfe vnto them and when an Elder speaketh babble not much The thyrd thing which ought to
which among others we ought to moderate and adorne with three holy affections as are Humility of hart Poorenes of spirit and an holy Hatred of our selues For these three doe make the busines of mortification very easie Humility as Saint Bernard defineth is a contempt of our selues which springeth of a deepe and true knowledge of our selues For it is the property of this vertue to cast out of the soule all the branches and all the daughters of Pride with the whole progeny of ambition and to cast vs downe vnder all creatures and to think that any other creature if so it were giuen vnto him of God to worke well as it is giuen vnto vs would be much more gratefull and would bring forth many moe fruites then we doe Neyther is it sufficient that man hath this contempt of himselfe hid within him but it is necessary that it should appeare and show it selfe in his conuersation so that in all things as much as may be hee show himselfe most humble according to the quality of his estate hauing no regard of the iudgement and estimation of this world which perhaps opposeth her selfe against him Wherfore it is necessary that all our actions and affaires haue a relish of humility and pouerty and that we submit our selues for the loue of God not onely to our elders and equals but also to our inferiours The second thing which is required in this place is the pouerty of spirit which is a voluntary contempt of the things of this world and a minde content with that estate which is alotted of God although it be meane and low At this stroke that roote of all mischiefe is cut vp which they call couetousnes and it bringeth to man so great peace and tranquillity of hart that Seneca is not afraid to say He that hath his gate shut to the lust of his desires may for felicity contend with Iupiter himselfe And in another place No man else is worthy of God but he that hath contemned riches Hath he little that chilleth not for cold that hungreth not that thirsteth not Iupiter hath no more He hath neuer little that hath inough This sayth Seneca By which words he intimateth that the felicity of man consisteth in the satiety and contentednes of the harts desire He that commeth to this stayednes and quiet of desire he may say that he is come to the height of felicity or at least hath attayned a great part of it The third affection is an holy Hatred of our selues of which our Sauiour sayth He that loueth his life shall lose it and he that hateth his life in this world shall keepe it vnto life eternall Which doctrine is not to be vnderstoode of a peeuish and a peruerse hate as the desperate doe hate themselues but it must be vnderstood of an hate which the Saints beare towards their owne flesh as against a thing which was the cause of many and great euils and which hindred much good and therefore they handled it not according to the will and lust of it but according to the prescription of reason which cōmaundeth that we should often handle it not as a Mistres but as a seruant of the spirit otherwise that of the Wise-man will happen vnto vs He that delicately bringeth vp his seruant afterwards shall finde him obstinate and cont●macious Wherefore in another place we are admonished that wee should smite it with clubs as an vntamed beast and bridle it The yoke and the whip sayth Ecclesiasticus bow downe the hard necke so tame thine euill seruant that is thy body with the whips and correction Send him to labour that he goe not idle for idlenes bringeth much euill Send him to worke for that belongeth vnto him if he be not obedient put on moe heauy fetters That he insult not nor waxe proud that he be not idle and rush into open wickednes This holy hatred is much auaileable in the busines of mortification that is it is very conducent to the mortifying and cutting away of our euill desires although it be hard and difficult For without this hatred how can we make incision and draw forth blood and greeuously wound a thing so dearely beloued of vs For the arme and strength of mortification getteth valour not onely from the loue God but also from the hate of our selues by vertue of which strength and valour man doth not excruciate his soule of passion but as a seuere Chirurgian doth cleanse and wipe away the corruption of a member affected and putrified ¶ Of the reforming of the Imagination AFter these two sensuall faculties there are other two which pertaine to knowledge 〈◊〉 Imagination and the Vnderstanding which answer to the two former that both of these appetites may haue his guide and knowledge conuenient and fit Imagination which is the ignobler of these two is called a power of our soule greatly weakened through sinne which is very haggard to be subiected vnto reason For oftentimes as a fugitiue seruant that departeth without licence it rusheth out of dores and wandreth throughout the whole world before we vnderstand where it is It is a faculty also very greedy in excogitating or searching out any matter which it hath a desire to and it imitateth hungry doggs who tosse and turne all things vpside downe and thrust their snowt into euery dish now lapping of this now of that and although they are beate from it yet alwayes they returne to their repast fore-tasted This faculty also is very glib and fleeting as a wild and an vntamed beast flying very swiftly frō one mountaine to another least it should be taken and restrained for it cannot abide a bridle or a bit neyther is it willing to be gouerned or managed of man Notwithstanding this licenciousnes and naturall wildnes there are some that daily make it worser as they that bring vp their children most deliciously daintily permitting them to vage freely whether so euer they list and to doe whatsoeuer pleasure willeth them without any reprehension Wherefore when as man would that this imagination should quietly persist in the contemplation of Diuine things it is disobedient and immorigerous because it hath accustomed to wander licentiously neither acknowledgeth it any moderation Therfore it is needfull that after we haue acquainted our selues with the bad conditions of this beast that we restraine it and that we bind it to a cratch that is to the consideration of good necessary things and that we commaund it perpetuall silence in all-other things So that as a little before we haue bound the tongue that it speaketh not any thing but good words and to the purpose so let vs bind our imagination that it may remaine and continue in good and holy cogitations and to all other that we shut the gate against it Herein we are to vse great discretion to examine what cogitations are to be admitted and what to be excluded that
his neighbour hath fulfilled the Law What greater prayse may be vttered or spoken of any other vertue Besides all thys the most beloued disciple of Christ I meane Iohn in his canonicall Epistles doth repeate nothing so often neyther commendeth any thing so much as this vertue And that he teacheth in his Epistles he confirmeth in his history nothing was so cōmon in his mouth as Bretheren loue one another and that through the whole course of hys lyfe yea when he was conuersant among the Disciples hee would often and sundry times on one day repeate it and when he was demaunded why he repeated it so often he answered the demaunders Because it is the precept of the Lord and if it alone be done it is sufficient ¶ Of the duties of Charitie HE therefore that would satisfie the Diuine will let him assuredly knowe that amongst all the principall matters that GOD commaundeth there is not one so much beate vppon and so often required as this commaundement of loue yet so that we vnderstand not thys to be a bare and a naked affection but to haue annexed vnto it all the effects which are wont to concurre with true loue for otherwise it were not woorthy of the name of loue as the same Euangelist showeth saying Who so hath this worlds good and seeth his brother haue neede and shutteth vp his compassion from him howe dwelleth the loue of God in him My babes let vs not loue in word neyther in tongue but in deed and in verity Therefore vnder the name of loue amongst many other sixe things are comprehended To loue to counsayle to releeue to beare to pardon and to teach by good examples which workes are so ioyned with Charitie that as any one hath moe or fewer of them he hath more or lesse Charitie Thys we say to this end because there are found some who say I loue but theyr loue hath no effect but the name onely There be others who loue and by good admonitions and counsailes doe giue some relish of it but they doe not open theyr coffers neither put theyr hands into theyr Chest that they may releeue the necessities of theyr brethren and neyghbours Againe there be others that helpe theyr neyghbour with theyr aduice releeue hym with that they possesse yet they beare not the iniuries and infirmities of theyr brother nor follow the counsaile of the Apostle who sayth Beare ye one anothers burden so fulfil the law of Christ. Some beare patiently the iniury offered vnto thē but they do not pardon mercifully him that hath iniured them and although in their harts they beare no hate yet outwardly they doe not show forth their loue by benefits by pliantnesse and by fauour These although they doe not faile in the first yet they doe not profit in the second neither doe they come to the perfection of this vertue There be some that haue all the fore-said effects but they edifie theyr neighbor neyther with words nor with good examples which surely is the noblest among the duties of Charitie According to this order euery man may examine himselfe that he may vnderstand what he hath and what is wanting vnto him in this vertue For we may say hee that loueth is in the first degree of charitie hee that loueth and giueth counsell in the second he that loueth counsaileth and releeueth in the third he that loueth counsaileth releeueth and suffereth in the fourth he that loueth counsaileth releeueth suffereth and pardoneth in the fift but he that loueth counsaileth succoureth suffereth pardoneth and teacheth edyfying by examples or godly words which is properly of those that are perfect and who are Apostolike men he hath ascended the sixt steppe and standeth vpon the vpmost staire And these be the positiue or affirmatiue acts which are required in charitie for they showe what we ought to doe for our neighbour There be others negatiue which teach what wee ought not to doe to our neighbour of which sort these are Not to iudge another not to detract another mans estimation not to couet his goods not to lust after the dignity or the wife of our neighbour not to giue him an offence or scandalize him eyther by raylings or vnhonest words or those that are superfluous much lesse by examples or ill counsailes He that diligently obserueth all these he fulfilleth whatsoeuer is required in the perfection of this diuine commaundement And if thou desirest a particuler and a briefe memory of all these comprehended in one worde see that thou hast as wee sayd before the hart of a mother towards thy neighbour and thou shalt altogether fulfill whatsoeuer hath hetherto been spoken Consider how a wise a religious mother louing her sonne admonisheth him if any danger be neere vnto him she succoureth him in need she beareth his errors and faults with patience sometimes chasticing them with iustice some-times couering and concealing them vvith wisedom For all vertues do waite vpon this one as the Queene and mother of all other Vertues Consider also howe the same mother reioyceth at the good and sorroweth at the ill hap of her sonne no otherwise then if they were her owne With vvhat great zeale she affecteth his profit and honour how deuoutly and diligently she alwayes prayeth vnto GOD for him to be short how shee is more carefull for the health and safety of her sonne then for her owne and that shee is cruell and seuere towards herselfe that shee may be gentle and good to her sonne If thou canst come thus farre that thou louest thy neighbour with such an hart then thou art come to the perfection of chatie but if it be not giuen vnto thee to ascend so high yet at least let this be the scope of thy desires and alwayes direct thy lyfe hether that thou maist be lifted higher and higher and that thou mayst not sticke in lower matters But if thou shalt aske mee howe thou mayest be induced with such an hart to loue a forreiner I say that thou oughtest to consider of thy neighbour not as a forreiner or an alian but as the image of GOD the workmanshyp of his hands his sonne and the liuely member of Christ. Hence it is that Saint Paule so often admonisheth vs that all we are the members of Christ therefore by sinning against our neighbour wee sinne against Christ and by dooing good vnto our neighbour vvee do good vnto Christ. So that thou must consider of thy neighbour not as a man or such a man but as of Christ himselfe or a liuely member of him And although thy neighbour be not such an one in respect of the matter of his body yet hee is such an one in regard of the participation of the same spirit and of the greatnes of the reward remuneration seeing that Christ sayth He that receaueth his neighbour receiueth him neyther shall his reward be other then if hee had receiued Christ hymselfe
foorth their young ones doe only nourish them and prouide meate for them but a Father ought to be a father as a man and as a Christian man and as a true seruant of God who educateth traineth vp his chyldren as the chyldren of God and heyres of the kingdome of heauen not that they should be the bond-slaues of sathan and inhabitants of hell Let Maisters of families who haue seruants and other houshold be mi●dfull of the commination of S. Paule who saith If any prouide not for his owne and especially for them of his houshold he hath denied the fayth that is the faithfulnes that he oweth and to which he is bound and is worse then an infidell Let them remember that these are as Lambes of their sh●epefold and that they are the Sheepheards that should care and vvatch ouer them and let them thinke that the time will come vvhen as GOD will exact an account for them saying Where is the flocke that was giuen thee the sheepe glorious and noble Worthelie he calleth them glorious and noble for great is the price by which they are redeemed Noble and glorious is the most sacred humanity of Christ by which they are enobled Therefore there is not any seruant albeit abiect and base who is not free and noble in regard of the blood humanity of Christ. Therfore let a goo● Christian striue and endeuour that those that be in his house may be free from all enormous vices as are quarrels and strifes vnlawfull gaming false and vaine oathes blasphemies fornications c. And furthermore that they haue knowledge and skill in matters of Christianity and that they obserue the orders and constitutions of the Church and that especially vpon the Lords day they be at Church to heare Sermons and Diuine seruice and that they be not contumacious and peruerse inthwarting the good and orderly proceedings of the Church as the Puritans and Precisians of this time are who by their ignorant zeale peeuish singularity disturbe the quiet and peace of the Church The first admonition in what esteeme and price vertues are to be had that this rule may be better vnderstoode CHAP. XVIII AS in the beginning of this rule we set downe certayne preambles agreeable and conuenient for this purpose so now the rule being perfected and absolute for the better vnderstanding of it I take it to be worth the labour if I shall add certaine admonitions For seeing that we haue spoken discoursed of many kinds of vertues it is behoofefull that we teach which is worthier and which lesse worthy that we may estimate matters according to their dignity and assigne a proper place to euery one For he that selleth precious pearles rich Iems ought very well to know them that he be not deceaued in the price and the ouer-seer and gouernour of any Princes house ought to know the deserts of euery one in the house that he may dispose of euery one according to his dignity for otherwise he should commit many errors and offer much inequalitie so a man that dealeth with the worth value of these Iems that is of vertues and he that as a good ouer-seer and gouernour of an house is bound to render and tender to euery one of these vertues the due honour he must most exactly know the price and dignity of them that comparing them betweene themselues he may see which is to be preferred before another least he as it is wont to be sayd be penny wise and pound foolish least he I say gather ashes and cast away flower vvhich many doe Therfore we must know that all the vertues vvhich hetherto we haue spoken of may be reduced into a two-fold order for some of them be spirituall inuisible and internall and some corporall visible and externall In the first order are theologicall vetues with all other which are referred vnto God but especially Charity which among all other vertues possesseth the first and chiefe place as the Queene of all other To this are many other noble vertues ioyned and which are nearest vnto Charity in dignity as are humility chastity mercy patience discretion deuotion poorenes of spirit contempt of the world denying of our owne will the loue of the Crosse and of austerity and very many moe of this kind which by taking largely the signification of this vvord we call vertues They are called spirituall and internall vertues because principally they reside and haue their being in the soule although also they passe into externall works as we see in Charity and deuotion vvhich albeit they are altogether internall yet they produce their external acts to the honour and glory of God Other vertues are more externall and visible as are fasting discipline silence solitarines reading singing preaching a Christian and a religious life For albeit these vertues also reside and haue their being in the soule yet their proper acts are more outward then the former which are often hid and inuisible as are to beleeue to loue to hope to contemplate to be humbled to be inwardly contrite for sinnes to iudge discreetly and so in others Among all these vertues there is no doubt but that the former are farre more excellent and more necessary then the latter For the Lord sayth vnto the vvoman of Samaria Woman beleeue me the houre commeth and now is when the true worshippers shall worship the father in spirit and in the truth for such the father also requireth to worship him God is a spirit and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in the truth The same words fall also into our common speach children in Schooles are wont to learne those verses If God be a spirit as verses record In spirit and truth thy worship afford Wherfore also the Prophet Dauid describing the beauty of the Church and of a soule that is in the fauour of God he saith The Kings daughter is all glorious within her clothing is of wrought gold The same thing the Apostle insinuateth when he sayth to his Disciple Timothy Exercise thy selfe vnto godlines for bodily exercise profiteth little but godlines is profitable vnto all things hauing promises of the life that is now and of that which is to come In which place he vnderstandeth by godlines the worship of God and mercy toward our neighbonr and by bodily exercise abstinence and other corporall austerenes as learned expositers auerre expounding this place This also the Heathen Philosophers vnderstood For Aristotle who albeit he writ very little concerning God yet sayth If humane affaires be regarded of God as we may very probably gather that they are it is very likely that he ioyeth in the best things and in those that are the likest vnto him but those are the mind and spirit of man Therfore they that haue their spirits beautified and adorned vvith the knowledge of the truth and reformed affections are most acceptable vnto God The
same thing Galen the Prince of Phisitians vnderstood for speaking in a certaine booke of the composition and frame of mans body and of the vse and profit of the parts of it when he had come to a certaine place where the greatnes of the wisedome and prouidence of the supreame and omniscient workmaister shyned after a singuler and especiall manner being caried into a most deepe admiration of so great wonders he as one forgetting his Phisick profession on a sodaine flyeth to Diuinity and exclayming sayth Others honor and worship God by Frankensence Hecatombs which is a sacrifice of an hundred beasts but I will worship him by reuealing and publishing the greatnes of his vvisedome which so wisely knew how to order euery thing in the frame fructure of this admirable workmanship and by telling of the greatnes of his power which could effect euery thing so well ordered with the greatnes of his goodnes which hath without any grudging or repining so aboundantly prouided for all creatures necessaries for the preseruation of themselues This a Heathen Philosopher sayd but I pray thee what could a Christian speake more perfectly vvhat could he speake better or more sacredly yea albeit he had reade that of the Prophet I desire mercy and not sacrifice and the knowledge of God more then whole burnt offerings Change the name of Hecatombe into a burnt offering and thou shalt see that an Heathen Philosopher and a Prophet of God doe speake one and the selfe same thing Notwithstanding that we haue spoken so great things of the vertues of the former kind others also which we haue bestowed in the second place although they be of lesser dignity are of great waight moment both to cōpasse those that be greater and also to preserue them also some of thē are necessary because they fal vnder precept This may be proued by running through those vertues which ere-while we spake of For solitarines preserueth a man that he heareth not seeth not speaketh not and that he doth not a thousand things which might giue occasion to incurre danger not only to lose the peace and tranquility of conscience but also to make shipwrack of chastity and innocency Euery one knowes how profitable silence is both to preserue piety and deuotion and also to keepe a man from the sinnes which are committed in much babling For the Wise-man sayth Where much babling is there must needes be offence Fasting besides that it is an act of temperance it also chasticeth the body strengtheneth the spirit weakneth our enemies and disposeth vnto prayer reading and contemplation it spareth and auoydeth superfluous costs and deliuereth from lusts and wanton desires in which gluttons and belly-gods doe liue being louers of trifles contentions quarrels and of all dissolutenes in all which gurmandizing Epicures are wont to be delighted Furthermore to reade godly bookes to heare sermons to attend on prayer to sing Psalmes and to be present at Diuine exercises are plainly inough knowne to be acts and exercises of Religion and motiues vnto piety and meanes further to enlighten the vnderstanding and more and more to inflame the affections with the loue of spirituall things This is conuinced by so manifest experience that if the Heretikes would haue seene to it they had not fallen into so absurd errors as they haue For we daily see with our eyes and feele with our hands and behold in euery place where discipline and obseruance of these exteriour matters are kept and obserued that there vertues florish most and that there is alwayes greater godlines deuotion and charity and that there are seene more excellent persons and that there the feare of the Lord and Christianity her selfe are more perfect But all things runne contrary where no regard is had of them For this obseruance being neglected the conscience also the manners and life are neglected for vvhere there is greater occasion of sinne there also moe and greater sinnes are committed For wee all as one sayth become worser through liberty Euen as in a Vineyard well kept and fenced with a wall or an hedge all things are in safety so in that which is ill kept not fenced all things lye open to the lust and pray of theeues The like happeneth to man that is disordered and will not be contayned within order and rule What argument more manifest I pray thee may be desired for the dilucidation of this matter that we may see the profit of these things then that which proceedeth from experience For a man that desireth to obtayne and preserue that excellent vertue of deuotion which maketh a man prompt and fit for all other vertues and is as a spurre to all good how shall it euer be possible that an affection so supernaturall and so delicate should be obtayned and preserued of that man vvho was neuer carefull for the safegard and keepe of himselfe For this affection is so delicate and if it be lawfull so to speake so fugitiue and fleeting that in the twinkling or turning of an eye it sodainly vadeth and vanisheth For one immoderate laughter one superfluous word one gluttons supper a little wrath contention or other small distraction or curiousnes to see heare or vnderstand a thing not necessary although it be not euill is sufficient to take away a good part of deuotion Therfore not only pallable and grosse sinnes but also any superfluous imployment or other matters which withdraw our minds from God doe extinguish and quench deuotion For he that would haue Iron alwayes to glow and shine it is necessary that he alwayes apply it to the fire For if he take it from the fire forthwith it returneth to his naturall coldnesse So this most noble affection for dependeth of that that man be continually vnited vnto God by actuall loue and contemplation that if he turne himselfe but a little from him forth-with he slideth back to the bosome of his mother that is to the old disposition which before he had Therefore whosoeuer desireth to gette v●̄to hym thys holy affection and beeing got to preserue it he must be diligent in the keeping of himselfe that is of his eares eyes tongue hart he must be modest and temperate in eating and drinking so circumspect and graue in euery word and gesture he must so loue silence and solitarinesse he must so accustome himselfe to diuine exercises that hee may haue all things which may pro●oke a man vnto deuotion that by the meanes of this diligence he may preserue and safely keepe this most precious treasure He that dooth otherwise let him assuredly know that this busines shall neuer prosper well with him All thys doth most manifestly conuince the profit and necessity of these vertues which in the meane time doe not derogate from the dignity and excellencie of them which are greater But by this the difference may be plainly knowne which is betweene these and those for those are as
miracles was the excellentest of all other others also defended the excellencie and prerogatiue of their owne gifts Against this error and abuse there is no remedy more profitable or more effectuall thē that which Saint Paule vseth in his former Epistle sent vnto thē in which first he reduceth all graces to their beginning saying that all graces are riuers of one fountaine that is of the holy Ghost and that therefore they all participate of one equality in theyr cause although they be diuers and sundry among themselues Euen as the members of one body of any King are all members of the King being deriued from one royall blood although they be diuers among themselues so sayth the Apostle By one spirit we are baptized into one body that we may be members of one body And therefore we all participate of one and the selfe same dignity and glory seeing that we are all members of the same head Wherefore the Apostleforth-with addeth If the foote would say Because I am not the hand I am not of the body is it therfore not of the body And if the eare would say Because I am not the eye I am not of the body is it therefore not of the body We all therfore are made equall that among all there might be vnity and brother-hood albeit there is some diuersity betweene vs. This ariseth partly of nature partly of grace We say partly of nature for although grace is the beginning of all our spirituall Being yet grace as water receaued into diuers vessels doth put on diuers figures and shapes according to the disposition and nature of euery one For there are some men by nature modest mild and quiet and therfore very fit for a contemplatiue life Others are cholerick and delighted in practise and action and therfore more fit for an actiue life others are strong and of a sound and healthfull constitution who doe not much tender and affect themselues and these are meete for greater austerity of life In this the goodnes and mercy of God shineth after a singuler manner who willing to deuide and communicate himselfe vnto all he would not doe it onely after one manner but after many and diuers according to the variety of mans condition that the man that is not fit for some one meane and gift might be fit for another The other reason is this diuersity is grace for the holy Spirit the Authour of it would that among his there should be variety to the greater perfection and beauty of the Church For euen as diuers members diuers sences are required to the perfection and beauty of the body so also it is required for the perfection and beauty of the Church that there should be diuers vertues and graces For if all the faithfull were of one and the selfe same condition how should they be called a body If the whole body were an eye sayth Paule where were the hearing if the whole were hearing where were the smelling But nowe hath God disposed the members euery one of them in the body at his owne pleasure But God would that there should be many members and yet one body that when there were a multitude conioyned in vnity there might be a proportion and an harmonious concord of many in one and hence ariseth the perfection beautie of the Church Such a like thing we see in Musick where it behoueth that there be diuersity and multitude of voces vvith vnity and agreeablenes of consent in tune so that there may be sweetnes and melody in it If all the voyces were of one qualitie and stampe they should all be either Baces or Meanes which would make neither musicke nor harmony In naturall things also it is admirable to see so great diuersitie of things as that high and almighty Work-maister hath made who hath deuided and bestowed beauty and perfection vppon all creatures in that order that although euery one of them haue somewhat in themselues in which they excell the rest yet there is no enuy amongst thē because euery one of them hath some prerogatiue which in others is not the same The Peacocke is very beautifull to the sight but maketh a ranke and an vnpleasant noyse The Nightingale singeth sweetly but is not so faire to the sight An Horse is good for the race and profitable for warre but not good for foode or fit for the table The Oxe is profitable for the table and the plough but vnprofitable for other things Fruitefull trees doe serue for the nourishment of men but are vnfit for building contrarily wilde and barren trees are fit for building but vnapt to serue for foode Therfore amongst all things there is both a certaine vnity and a diuision neither in one thing are all things found that by this meanes the variety and beauty of the Vniuerse and the forme and shapes of things might be preserued that one may loue and embrace another for that neede which one standeth of another The same beauty and order which GOD hath ordained and appointed in the works of nature he would that it should be also in the works of grace and therefore hee hath disposed by his Spirit that there should be a thousand kind of vertues graces in Church that of all them there might arise one most sweet harmony one perfect world and one beautifull bodie compounded of diuers and sundry members Hence it is that in the Church some are giuen to a contemplatiue life some to an actiue one is famous and excellent in the works of obedience another in prayer Some in singing others in studying do exercise theyr gifts that they may help further others some attend vpon the weake receaue strangers who deuide theyr goods to the poore and many other such kinde of vertuous exercises there be Therefore there be many members in one body and many voyces in one musick that by this meanes there may be comlines consonancie and proportion in the Church and therefore in one Harpe there are many strings and in one Organ many pipes that by this meanes there may be a consonancie and an harmony of many tunes This is that garment which the Patriarke Iacob commaunded to be made for hys sonne Ioseph of diuers colours These are those Curtaines which by the commaundement of God were made for the vse of the Tabernacle of wonderfull varietie and beautie That the same should be done both the order and beauty of the Church required Therefore why should one eate vp another Why should one iudge and condemne another saying Why is it not lawfull for one to doe that another doth I know not what other thing this is then to goe about to destroy the body of the Church and to teare in peeces Iosephs beauteous garment and to disturbe this heauenly musick and harmony that is to make all the members of the Church feete or hands or eyes c. which certainly were monstrous beyond
they that are newly inaugurated into Gods Church are to be admonished of a notable error which oftentimes happen vnto them Who perchaunce reading in some spirituall booke of the greatnes of the sweetnes and consolations of the holy Ghost and how great the pleasant allurements and enticements of charity be forth-with they suppose that this whole way is plaine full of deliciousnes and that no labour nor trouble is to be found in it wherefore they prepare themselues to walk in this way as to an easie and delectable matter neyther doe they arme themselues as those who goe to warre but they put on a soft and a delicate robe as if they were to goe to a mariage or a banquet They doe not consider that although the loue of God is sweet and pleasant in it selfe and of it owne nature yet that the way vnto it is straight and bitter For it is needfull aboue all things to conquer and ouercome selfe-loue and to striue alwayes against thy selfe which fight is greater then any other Both of them that Euangelicall Prophet insinuateth when he sayth O Ierusalem shake off the dust arise and sit downe It is certaine that in sitting there is neyther labour nor difficulty but it is labour to shake off the dust of earthly and carnall affections and to arise from the sinne in which we sleepe which is necessary to doe before we come to that sitting and rest It is true that God bestoweth many and wonderfull comforts vpon them that faithfully labour and in like manner vpon them who now desire to change the delights of the world for the pleasures of heauen yet if this change be not made and if a man will not leaue the pray he hath taken beleeue me this refreshing and comfort shall not be giuen him as neither Manna was giuen to the children of Israell in the wildernes before the dowe was spent which they brought vvith them out of Egypt Returning therefore to our purpose I say let those seeke for rest as long as they will who are not armed with this fortitude and let them know that vnlesse they first change theyr mindes and purpose they shall not finde it Let them knowe and assuredly beleeue that quietnes is not purchased but by labor that a crowne is obtayned by fighting that ioy is atchiued by sorrowing and that the most sweet loue of God is procured by hatred of our selues For thys cause this idlenes is so often reprehended in the Prouerbs but fortitude and diligence commended because the holy Spirit the Authour of this doctrine knew very well that vertues are very much hindered by la●nes but ayded and perfitted by fortitude and diligence ¶ Of the meanes by which this fortitude is obtained PErhaps some man will aske by what meanes this fortitude may be procured and atchiued seeing that it is no lesse difficult then the other vertues Wherfore not without cause the Wise-man thus beginneth his Alphabet full of spirituall instructions Who shall finde a strong and a valiant woman for her price is farre aboue the pearles As if he should say shee is more precious then all the treasure and Iems which may be brought out of all the Coasts of the world How then may we compasse a thing of so great price and value We shall compasse it first if diligently we consider the dignity excellency of it for that ought to be in great account with vs which openeth vnto vs the treasuries of all vertues If it be otherwise tell me why the louers of thys world doe after that manner flie frō vertue Not for any other cause but because it is hard and difficult vvhich difficulty sluggards doe shunne and flie The slothfull man sayth as the Wise-man speaketh A Lyon is in the way and a Lionesse in the streetes in the midst of the way she will deuoure me And in another place The foole foldeth his handes and eateth vp his owne flesh saying Better is a handfull with quietnes then two handfulls with labour and vexation of spirit Seeing therefore that there is no other thing that hindereth vs from comming vnto vertue but this onely difficultie if wee will embrace this fortitude to ouercome it we haue already obtained the kingdome of vertue together with the kingdome of heauen to which no man shall come but hee that is valiant strong and vndaunted In like manner by this fortitude the loue of our selues is cast vnder foote with the whole Army of her complices and confederats which enemy when it is ouerthrowne and cast foorth behold presently entereth in the loue of God or if you had rather God himselfe For as Saint Iohn sayth God is loue and he that dwelleth in loue dwelleth in God and God in him The manifold examples of the seruants of God doe much auaile and profit vs whom we see heere in the world poore naked bare-foote and bare-legged leaue hungry restlesse hauing not where to lay theyr heads and wanting all those things which are requisite for the maintenaunce of this life Some of them doe so hasten to labours and austerenes of life where they may liue religiously and strictly and not be entangled with the pleasures of this life as a Merchant to some rich mart or a student of the liberall Sciences to some famous Vniuersity What I pray thee can be more contrary to the custome of this world and to the desires of her louers then that a man should seek out those places where his body may be pinched his soule made heauie and his life exposed to many greeuances and troubles These are assuredly most contrary to flesh and blood but very agreeable vnto the Spirit of GOD. But yet more especiallie our pleasures are condemned by the example of the Martyrs who haue entred into the kingdome of heauen by so many so cruell torments Consider howe one of them was rosted another had his skinne pulld ouer his eares the third drowned in the water the fourth cast head-long from a steepe Rocke a fift layde on a peece of vvood with a sharpe ridge his flesh being scraped and rent of with a ragged tormenting Curry-combe and his bowels beeing slitte out yeelded vp the ghost a sixth hath so many Darts sticking in him that he is liker an Hedg-hog then a man the seauenth is fryed in a frying pan or boyled in scalding lead others tormented with other extreame tortures Consider how many of them haue beene tormented not with one kinde of punishment but with all kinde of torments which humane nature hath beene capable of and so haue passed to death For some haue been taken from the filthines vncleannesse of the pryson to be whipped and scourged from whipping scourging to be singed with burning coales from burning coales to the bastinado from the bastinado to yron combes then to the sworde which alone had beene sufficient to take away the life of the Martyrs but not to make them shipwracke theyr fayth or
dangerous blind sinfull and deceiueable and according to these what other thing is the world but as a certaine Phylosopher was wont so say a Casket of sorrowes and grieuances a Schoole of vanitie a Laborinth of errours a dungeon of darknes a market place of cousenages a way beset with theeues a ditch full of mud and a sea continually tost and troubled with stormes and tempests What other thing is the world but a barren Land a fielde full of thistles weedes a vvood full of thornes a florishing garden but bringing foorth no fruite What is the world but a riuer of teares a fountaine of cares a sweet poyson a tragedy pleasantly framed and a delightfull phrensie What good things I pray thee are found in the world which are not counterfeit and what euills which are not so in deed The worlds rest hath labour the securitie of it is without ground the feare of it is without cause the labours of it vvithout fruite the teares without purpose and the purposes vvithout successe the hope of it is vaine the ioy fained and the sorrow true By all which it is no difficult matter to see how great the kindred is between the world and hell for hell is no other thing but a place of punishments and sinnes and what other thing els is seene in this world The Prophet testifieth this whē he saith Day and night iniquitie goeth about it vpon the walls therof both wickednes mischiefe are in the midst of it These be the fruites of the world these the merchandize this is the traffique of it which at all times and in euery place is exercised so that thou seest that the world may iustly be termed hell In thys account Saint Bernard had thys world when he said But for that hope which we haue of the life to come thys world did not much differ from hell ¶ That true rest and tranquilitie is found in God alone NOW wee haue declared and showen how miserable and deceitfull the felicity of this world is it remaineth now that we proue that true felicity tranquility as it is not to be found in the world so it is onely to be found in GOD alone which demonstration if it were rightly vnderstood of the men of thys world they vvould not be so carefull for it nor so tied and fettered ynto it as they are And therefore I thinke that it vvill be worth the labour if I shall adde this manifest truth vnto the precedent and establish it not so much by the authority and testimonies of fayth as by reasons Therfore first we must know that no creature can perfectly rest and be at quiet so long as he commeth not to his last end which is his last perfection agreeable vnto his nature For so long as he commeth not thether he must of necessity be vnquiet as that creature that suffereth violence by reason of some defect Doost thou then demaund what and who is the last end of man in whose hand his felicity is placed vvhat is that that the Diuines call the obiectiue beatitude I cannot deny but that it is God who as he is the first beginning of man so is he also his last end And as it cannot be that there should be two first beginnings so it is imposibble that there should be two last ends For this were to make two Gods Furthermore if God be the last end of man he is also his last beatitude and felicity but it is impossible that there should be two last ends or two felicities Therfore it cannot be that without God there should any felicity be found For euen as a Gloue is made for the vse of the hand and a scaberd that a sword may be sheathed in it So also the hart of man is created for the vse of God neyther without him can any rest be found The reason is because seeing that the principall subiect of felicity is in the vnderstanding and will of man so long as these two faculties are not quiet so long cannot man be quiet But because it is without controuersie that these two faculties cannot be quiet but onely in God therfore these two faculties are neuer at quiet vntill they finde out some vniuersall obiect wherein are all good things Which when it is once knowne and loued then there is nothing further that the vnderstanding desireth to know or the will to loue Hence it is that nothing created although it be the empire and rule of the vniuersall vvorld can satisfie the hart of man he onely being excepted for whom it was created that is God alone Plutarch reporteth of a certaine Souldier who through many degrees of dignity at the length came to be made Emperour Now when he had attayned so great honour and found not that quiet and peace in it which before he promised to himselfe to be in this estate he sayd I haue runned through al the degrees of all dignities but I haue not found quietnes and tranquillity in any of them Neyther is it any meruaile because that which is created for God without him cannot finde any quiet or rest But that thou mayst vnderstand this the better and more manifestly behold the Sea-mans needle and it will teach thee this so necessary Philosophy It is the nature of that Iron that in what part it hath touched the load-stone that that part alwayes looketh towards the North. For God who hath created this stone hath bestowed vpon it this naturall inclination Thou seest the experience of the thing teaching thee how that needle runneth and turneth to and fro and with great vnquietnes moueth to euery corner vntill it hath found that poole then it resteth and standeth vnmoueable no otherwise then if it was fastened downe with a nayle So hath God created man and hath infused into him a certaine naturall inclination and readines that he should alwayes looke to his maker as to the poole and his last end Therefore so long as he is without him like that needle he is vnquiet yea if he was the Lord of the whole vvorld But turning and directing his hart to God forth-with he resteth and as that needle standeth vnmoueable for in him he findeth rest Of this is followeth that he is onely happy who possesseth God and that he commeth the nearer vnto happines who goeth the lesser way from God But because the righteous in this life are the nearer vnto God therefore they are the more happy albeit the world knoweth not their felicity The reason is because this felicity consisteth not in a sensible and corporall pleasure as the Epicures sayde and after them the Moores of Mahometistes and after them the wicked and vngodly Christians who with their mouthes deny the law of Mahomet but in their lifes follow it and diligently obserue it neither seeke for any other Paradice in this life then that of the Saracens Therefore true felicity consisteth not eyther in the body or in
external things but in the Spirit and in spirituall blessings and inuisible as both the Philosophers of sounder iudgement and also good Christians although after a diuers manner doe auouch and affirme The Prophet would signifie the same thing when he sayd The Kings daughter is all glorious within her clothing is of broydered gold In which she hath so great peace and quite as all the Kings of the earth neuer had nor shal haue the like vnlesse we will say that the Princes of this world haue greater peace and quiet then the friends of God which besides that it is false many Princes themselues haue also denied who tasting of the sweetnes of God haue forsaken their dignities and riches amongst whom S. Gregory was one who tried both estates and fortunes vvhen he was promoted to high dignity and to be a Bishop he was wont much to deplore his estate and to wish for his former peaceable quiet and sweete life no otherwise then hee is wont to doe who languisheth for the desire of his Countrey and liberty beeing in seruitude and slauerie ¶ Those things which haue beene spoken are prooued by examples BVt seeing that this errour and deceipt is so great and vniuersall I will adioyne another reason no lesse effectuall then the former by which the louers of this vvorld may easily vnderstand how impossible a thing it is to find that felicity in it which they desire Thou must therefore presuppose that many moe things are required that a thing should be perfect then that it should be vnperfect For that any thing should be perfect two perfections are required together but that it should be vnperfect one onely imperfection is sufficient These things being presupposed proceed after this manner That any man should haue perfect felicity it is required that he should haue all things according to his harts desire and if one onely thing be mixed with the rest which pleaseth not that will be sufficient th●● 〈◊〉 both is and may be called miserable albeit all other things 〈◊〉 make him happy and blessed I haue seene many men of high degree whose Lands ha●e yeelded them large and rich reuenues who notwithstanding haue alwaies liued in heauinesse for that discruciatement was much greater which they had conceiued by the frustration of that they desired then the ioy which they reaped of all other things For it not to be doubted but all that they possessed dyd not so much gladde them as that only appetite afflicted them which had the deniall because to possesse many things maketh not a man quiet but to haue satisfied contended hys will Which thing amongst others Saint Augustine doth excellently declare in a booke of the manners of the Church in these words In my iudgement he is neyther sayd to be happy who hath not that he loueth whatsoeuer it be neyther he that hath that he loueth if it be hurtfull neyther he that loueth not that he hath although it be the best thing For he that desireth that he cannot obtaine is vexed he that hath obtained what was not to be wished is deceaued and he that desireth not that which is to be obtayned hee is not of a well disposed minde Whereupon it is inferred that our felicity consisteth in the possession and loue of the chiefest good neyther any other to be true without it So that these three things possession loue and the chiefest good make a man blessed and happy Without which no man at any time shall be blessed and happy whatsoeuer he be Although I could alledge very many examples for the confirmation of this conclusion yet we will content ourselues with that one of Haman so well beloued of King Assuerus for whē as he was happy in all things in the iudgement and sight of the world he thought great iniury was offered vnto him because Mardocheus dyd not rise vp vnto him when hee pas●ed by Wherefore calling together his friends and his wife he layd open before them the greatnes of his riches and the multitude of his chyldren and what great glory and honour the King had bestowed on him aboue all other Princes and seruants how he had exalted him and sette him aboue them all Yea Hector the Queene sayd he hath called no man in with the King to the banket that shee hath prepared saue me and to morrow am I bidden vnto her also with the King But all this doth nothing auaile mee as long as I see Mardocheus the Iew sitting at the Kings gate not yeelding me that reuerence I desire Marke then thys place thou shalt see that thys one small thing more disturbed and troubled hys hart then all his other prosperities could make it happy Consider also how farre a man is of in this lyfe from that peace and manquilitie of minde and how neere vnto disturbance perturbation Who then in thys world is found who can effect thys that he should not be miserable What Kings or Emperours are found to whom all things succeed according to theyr desire and to whom some thing happeneth not which disturbeth and disquieteth their mindes For although in this respect that a man is a man no aduersity doth touch or come neer vnto him yet who can escape all the mischaunces of fortune vvho can auoyde the infirmities of the body or eschew all the feares fantasies and vaine imaginations of the soule which a man feareth without reason of feare and so is many times afflicted without cause If all these fore-sayd reasons beeing so euident cannot conuince thee and thou requirest moe reasons rather from experience then reason goe to wise Salomon and he as one that hath long sayled in thys Sea with greater prosperity then any other trying and experimenting all kindes of the delicacies and pleasures of thys world he I say will saythfully instruct thee in this matter what he hath seene and what he hath tryed he will tell thee if perhaps he hath other where found that which satisfied his appetite if thou shalt demaund of him what it was hee will aunswer thee saying Vanitie of vanities sayth the Preacher vanitie of vanities all is vanitie Beleeue him thou shalt not be deceaued we may safely trust a man so well experimented For he dooth not speak vnto thee of his theory and speculation but of his experience and practice hee dooth not tell thee of those things he heard but which he saw and proued Doe not think that thou thy selfe or any other can discouer moe nouelties and heretofore vnheard of then he heath discouered and tryed For what Prince euer lyued in the worlde that was wiser or richer or more glorious or famouser then Salomon Who euer tryed moe kindes of delights of sports of huntings of singing of women of ornaments of ridings and of all other things then he dyd And when he had tryed them all hee reaped no other fruite by them then that thou hast heard Why wilt thou now experiment that which