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B04377 The spiritual guide which disintangles the soul, and brings it by the inward way, to the getting of perfect contemplation, and the rich treasure of internal peace. / Written by Dr. Michael de Molinos, priest : with a short treatise concerning daily communion, by the same author. Translated from the Italian copy, printed at Venice, 1685. Molinos, Miguel de, 1628-1696.; Molinos, Miguel de, 1628-1696. Brief treatise concerning daily communion. 1685 (1685) Wing M2387A; ESTC R214007 123,380 287

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though he does not without intending so you 'l clearly find besides that this Traveller with one single and explicit of the Will and Intention travels speaks hears sees reasons eats drinks and does several other things without any interruption to his first intention nor yet of his actual journying to Rome 112. It is just so in the contemplative Soul A man having once made the resolution of doing the Will of God and of being in his Presence he still perseveres in that act so long as he recals not the same although he be taken up in hearing speaking eating or in any other external good work or function of his Calling and Quality St Thomas Aquinas expresseth all this in few words Contra Gentiles l. 3. c. 138. Un 2. Non enim Oportet quod qui propter deum aliquod iter arripuit in qualibet parte itineris de Deo cogitet actu 113. Thou 'lt say that all Christians walk in this Exercise because all have Faith and may although they be not internal fulfil this Doctrine especially such as go in the external Way of Meditation and Ratiocination It is true all Christians have Faith and more particularly they who Meditate and Consider But the Faith of those who advance by the inward Way is much different because it is a lively Faith universal and indistinct and by consequent more practical active effectual and illuminated insomuch as the Holy Ghost enlightens the Soul that is best disposed most and that Soul is always best disposed which holds the Mind recollected for proportionably to the Recollection the Holy Ghost Illuminates And albeit it be true that God communicates some light in Meditation yet it is so scanty and different from that which he communicates to the Mind recollected in a pure and universal Faith that the one to the other is no more than like two or three Drops of Water in respect of an Ocean since in Meditatation two or three particular Truths are communicated to the Soul but in the internal Recollection and the Exercise of pure and universal Faith the Wisdom of God is an abundant Ocean which is communicated in that obscure simple general and universal Knowledge 114. In like manner Resignation is more perfect in these Souls because it springs from the internal and infused Fortitude which grows as the in ternal Exercise of pure Faith with Silence and Resignation is continued In the manner that the Gifts of God's Spirit grow in contemplative Souls for though these divine Gifts are to be found in all those that are in a State of Grace nevertheless they are as it were dead without strength and in a manner infinitely different from these which reign in contemplative Persons by reason of their illustration vivacity and efficacy 115. From all which be perswaded that the inward Soul accustomed to go daily at certain hours to Prayer with the Faith and Resignation I have mentioned to thee walks continually in the Presence of God. All holy expert and mystical Masters teach this true and important Doctrine because they have all had one and the same Master who is the Holy Ghost CHAP. XVI A Way by which one may enter into internal Recollection through the most Holy Humanity of our Lord Christ. 116. THere are two sorts of Spiritual Men Diametrically contrary to one another The one say That the Mysteries of the Passion of Christ are always to be Considered and Meditated upon The others running to the opposite extream teach That the Meditation of the Mysteries of the Life Passion and Death of our Saviour is not Prayer nor yet a Remembrance of them but the exalted Elevation to God whose Divinity Contemplates the Soul in quiet and silence ought onely to be called Prayer 117. It is certain that our Lord Christ is the Guide the Door and the Way as he himself hath said in his own Words John 14. I am the way the truth and the life And before the Soul can be fit to enter into the Presence of the Divinity and to be united with it it is to be Washed with the precious Bloud of a Redeemer and Adorned with the rich Robes of his Passion 118. Our Lord Christ with his Doctrine and Example is the Mirrour the Guide of the Soul● the Way and the onely Door by which we enter into those Pastures of Life Eternal and into the vast Ocean of the Divinity Hence it follows that the Remembrance of the Passion and Death of our Saviour ought not wholly to be blotted out nay it is also certain that whatsoever high elevation of Mind the Soul may be raised to it ought not in all things to separate from the most holy Humanity But then it follows not from hence neither that the Soul accustomed to internal recollection that can no longer ratiocinate should always be meditating on and considering as the other Spiritualists say the most holy Misteries of our Saviour It is holy and good to Meditate and would to God that all men of this World practised it And the Soul besides that meditates reasons and considers with facilitie ought to be let alone in that state and not pushed on to another higher so long as in that of Meditation it finds nourishment and profit 119. It belongs to God alone and not to the spiritual Guide to promote the Soul from Meditation to Contemplation because if God through his special Grace call it not to this state of Prayer the Guide can do nothing with all his Wisdom and Instructions 120. To strike a secure means then and to avoid those two so contrary extreams of not wholly blotting out the remembrance of the Humanity and of not having it continually before our eyes we ought to suppose that there are two ways of attending to the holy Humanity that one may enter at the Divine Port which is Christ our well-being The first is by considering the Mysteries and meditating the Actions of the Life Passion and Death of our Saviour The second by thinking on him by the application of the Intellect pure Faith or Memory 121. When the Soul proceeds in perfecting and interiorizing it self by means of internal recollection having for sometime meditated on the Mysteries whereof it hath been already informed then it retains Faith and Love to the Word Incarnate being ready for his sake to do whatever he inspires into it walking according to his Precepts although they be not always before its Eyes As if it should be said to a Son that he ought never to forsake his Father they intend not thereby to oblige him to have his Father always in sight but only to have him always in his Memory that in time and place he may be ready to do his Duty 122. The Soul then that is entered into internal recollection with the opinion and approbation of an expert Guide hath no need to enter by the first door of Meditation on the Mysteries being always taken up in meditating upon them because that is
pray with faith and reverence believing that he is in the divine presence The truth is to take from the Soul the prayer of the senses and of nature is a rigorous martyrdom to it but the Lord rejoyces and is glad in its peace if it be thus quiet and resigned Use not at that time vocal prayer because however it be good and holy in it self yet to use it then is a manifest temptation whereby the enemy pretends that God speaks not to thy heart under pretext that thou hast not sentiments and that thou losest time 78. God hath no regard to the multitude of words but to the purity of the intent His greatest content and glory at that time is to see the Soul in silence desirous humble quiet and resigned Proceed persevere pray and hold thy peace for where thou findest not a sentiment thou 'lt find a door whereby thou mayest en●e● into thine own nothingness knowing thy se●● to be nothing that thou can'st do nothing nay● and that thou hast not so much as a good thought 79. How many have begun this happy practice of Prayer and Internal Recollection and have left it off pretending that they feel no● pleasure that they lose time that their thought trouble them and that that Prayer is not for them whil'st they find not any sentiment of God nor any ability to reason or discourse whereas they might have believed been silent and had patience All this is no more but with ingratitude to hunt after sensible pleasures suffering themselves to be transported with self-love seeking themselves and not God because they cannot suffer a little pain and dryness without reflecting on the infinite loss they sustain whereas by the least act of reverence towards God amidst dryness and sterility they receive an eternal reward 80. The Lord told the venerable Mother Francesca Lopez of Valenza and a religious of the third Order of St. Francis three things of great light and consequence in order to internal recollection In the first place that a quarter of an hour of Prayer with recollection of the senses and faculties and with resignation and humility does more good to the Soul than five days of penitential exercises hair cloaths disciplines fastings and sleeping on bare boards because these are only mortifications of the body and with recollection the Soul is purified 81. Secondly that it is more pleasing to the Divine Majesty to have the Soul in quiet and devote Prayer for the space of an hour than to go in great Pilgrimages because that in Prayer it does good to it self and to those for whom it prays gives delight to God and merits a high degree of glory but in pilgrimage commonly the Soul is distracted and the Senses diverted with a debilitation of vertue besides many other dangers 82. Thirdly that constant Prayer was to keep the heart always right towards God and that a Soul to be internal ought rather to act with the affection of the will than the toyl of the intellect All this is to be read in her Life 83. The more the Soul rejoyces in sensible love the less delight God has in it on the contrary the less the Soul rejoyces in this sensible love the more God delights in it And know that to fix the will on God restraining thoughts and temptations with the greatest tranquillity possible is the highest pitch of praying 84. I 'll conclude this Chapter by undeceiving thee of the vulgar errour of those who say that in this internal recollection or prayer of rest the faculties operate not and that the Soul is idle and wholly unactive This is a manifest fallaey of those who have little experience because although it operate not by means of the memory nor by the second operation of the intellect which is the judgment nor by the third which is discourse or ratiocination yet it operates b● the first and chief operation of the intellect which is simple apprehension enlightened b● holy faith and aided by the divine gifts of th● holy spirit And the will is more apt to continue one act than to multiply many so that a● well the act of the intellect as that of the wi●● are so simple imperceptible and spiritual tha● hardly the Soul knows them and far less reflect upon them CHAP. XIII What the Soul ought to do in Internal Recollection 85. THou oughtest to go to Prayer that th●● mayest deliver thy self wholly up int● the hands of God with perfect resignation exerting an act of faith believing that thou a● in the divine presence afterwards setling i● that holy repose with quietness silence and tranquility and endeavouring for a whole day● a whole year and thy whole life to continue that first act of contemplation by faith and love 86. It is not your businesses to multiply the●● acts nor to repeat sensible affections because they hinder the purity of the spiritual and perfect act of the will whil'st besides that these sweet sentiments are imperfect considering the reflection wherewith they are made the self-content and external consolation wherewith they are sought after the Soul being drawn outwards to the external faculties there is no necessity of renewing them as the mystical Falcon hath excellently expressed it by the following similitude 87. If a Jewel given to a friend were once put into his hands it is not necessary to repeat such a donation already made by daily telling him Sir I give you that Jewel Sir I give you that Jewel but to let him keep it and not take it from him because provided he take it not or design not to take it from him he hath surely given it him 88. In the same manner having once dedicated and lovingly resigned thy self to the will of God there is nothing else for thee to do but to continue the same without repeating new and sensible acts provided thou takest not back the Jewel thou hast once given by committing some notable fault aganist his divine will though thou oughtest still to exercise thy self outwardly in the external works of thy calling and state for in so doing thou do'st the will of God and walkest in continual and virtual oration He always prays said Theophylact who does good works nor does he neglect Prayer but when he leaves off to be just 89. Thou oughtest then to slight all those sensibilities to the end thy Soul may be established and acquire a habit of internal recollection which is so effectual that the resolution only of going to Prayer awakens a lively presence of God which is the preparation to the Prayer that is about to be made or to say better is no other than a more efficacious continuation of continual Prayer wherein the contemplative person ought to be settled 90. O how well did the venerable Mother of Cantal the spiritual daughter of St. Francis of Sales practise this Lesson in whose Life are the following words written to her Master Most dear Father I cannot do any act it seems to
Sequel of the same 19. LET all thy desires be conform to the Will of that God who can bring streams of Water out of the dry Rock who is much displeased with those Souls which in helping others before the time defraud themselves suffering themselves to be transported by indiscreet zeal and vain complacency 20. As it was with the Servant of Elisha 2 Kings c. 4. who being sent by the Prophet that with his Staff he might raise a dead Child because of the complacency he had it had not the effect and he was reproved by Elisha In like manner the Sacrifice of Cain was rejected being the first that was offered to God in the World through the vain-glory he had of being the first and more than his own Father Adam in offering Sacrifice to God. 21. In like manner the Disciples of our Lord Christ were infected with that evil feeling a vain joy when they cast out Devils and therefore were sharply reproved by their heavenly Master Before Paul preached to the Gentiles the Gospel of the Kingdom of Heaven being already a chosen Vessel a Citizen of Heaven and chosen of God for that Ministery it was necessary to try and humble him shutting him up in a close Prison and would'st thou become a Preacher without passing through the tryal of Men and Devils And could'st thou thrust thy self into so great a Ministery and produce Fruit without passing through the fiery tryal of temptation tribulation and passive purgation 22. It concerns thee more to be quiet and resigned in a holy ease than to do many and great things by thy own judgment and opinion think not that the heroick Actions which great Saints have done and do in the Church are Works of their own Industry for all things as well spiritual as temporal to the making of the leas● Leaf are by Divine Providence Decreed from all Eternity He that does the Will of God does all things this thy Soul ought to endeavour resting in a perfect Resignation to whatever the Lord is pleased to dispose of thee acknowledge thy self unworthy of so high a Ministery as the guiding of Souls to Heaven and then thou 'lt put no obstacle to the rest internal peace and heavenly flight of thy Soul. CHAP. V. Light Experience and a divine Call are necessary for guiding Souls in the inward Way 23. THou 'lt think and with great confidence too that thou art in a condition to guide Souls in the way of the Spirit and perhaps that may be secret Vanity spiritual Pride and plain Blindness seeing besides that this high employment requires supernatural light total abstraction and other qualities which I shall mention to thee in the following Chapters the Grace of a Call is also necessary without which all is but vanity confidence and self-conceit because though it be a holy and good thing to guide Souls and conduct them to Contemplation yet how know'st thou that God would have thee so employed And though thou knowest which yet is not easie that thou hast great light and experience yet what Evidence hast thou that the Lord would have thee to be of that Profession 24. This Ministery is of such importance that it is not our parts to take it upon us until i● please God by means of our Superiours and spiritual Guides to place us therein otherwise i● would be a heavy prejudice to us though i● might be profitable to our Neighbour What availeth it us to gain the whole World to God if our own Soul thereby suffer detriment 25. Howsoever evident it may be to thee that thy Soul is endowed with internal light and experience the best thing still that thou canst do is to keep quiet and resigned in thine own nothingness until God call thee for the good of Souls That belongs only to him who knows thy sufficiency and abstraction It is not thy part to make that judgement neither to press into that Ministery because if thou art governed by thine own opinion and judgment in an affair of so high concern self-love will blind undo and deceive thee 26. If then experience light and sufficiency are not sufficient without the grace of a Call to qualifie one for that employment how must it be without sufficiency how must it be without internal light without due experience which are gifts not communicated to all Souls but to abstracted and resigned Souls and to such as have advanced to perfect annihilation by the way of terrible tribulation and passive purgation Be perswaded O blessed Soul that all works which in this profession are not governed by a true zeal springing from pure love and a purged Soul cloath the Soul with vanity self-love and spiritual pride 27. O how many self-confident men by their own judgment and opinion undertake this Ministery and instead of pleasing God emptying and abstracting their own Souls though they may do some good to their Neighbour are filled with Earth Straw and Self-conceit Be Quiet and Resigned renounce thy own Judgement and Desire sink down into the Abyss of thy own Insufficiency and Nothingness for there onely thou 'lt find God the true Light thy Happiness and greatest Perfection CHAP. VI. Instructions and Counsels to Confessors and Spiritual Directors 28. THe highest and most profitable Ministry is that of a Confessor and spiritual Director and irreparable are the damages if it be not well performed 29. It would be prudently done to chuse a Patron for so great a Ministery and that should be the Saint to whom one has greatest Devotion 30. The chief and most secure Document is to endeavour the internal and continual Retirement and so he 'll walk well in all the exercises and employments of his own State and Calling particularly in that of the Confession-seat for when the Soul inwardly Recollected sallies out to be employed in those external and necessary Exercises it is God who Illuminates and Works in them 31. In the Conduct of Souls that are Internal Documents are not to be given to them but with mildness and prudence The Obstacles which hinder the Influences of God are only to be taken out of their way however it may be needful to arm them with that holy Counsel of Secretum meum mihi 32. Many Souls think that all Confessors are capable of internal Matters but besides that that is a mastake it is found by experience to be a great prejudice to communicate them to those who are not so Because though God hath placed them in the inward Way yet they 'll not know these matters nor advise them to Souls for want of experience so that they 'll hinder the Progress to Contemplation enjoyning them to Meditate by force though they cannot and by that means they stun and ruin instead of helping them in their Flight for God will have them to advance to Contemplation and they draw them to Meditation because they know no other way 33. If a Confessor would reap Fruit he is not to look out for any Soul
his Doctor 89. We are all sick of the Disease of self-love and our own judgment we are all full of our selves we are always desiring things hurtful to us and that which does us good is unpleasant and irksom to us 'T is necessary therefore for him that is Sick to use the means of Recovery which is not to believe our own judgments and distemper'd sentiments but the wise Judgment of the spiritual and skilful Physitian without reply or excuse despising the seeming reasons of self-love and so if we obey we shall certainly recover and this love of ours which is the Enemy of our ease and peace and perfection and the spirit will be overcome 90. How often will thine own judgment deceive thee and how much wilt thou change thy judgment with shame when thou hast trusted to thine own self If any man should deceive thee twice or thrice wouldst thou ever trust him more Why therefore dost thou repose confidence in thine own judgment which has so often cozen'd thee O blessed Soul believe it no more believe it not subject thy self with true submission and follow blindfold this Obedience 91. Thou wilt be much satisfied to have an experienced Guide and wilt esteem him a great Happiness but 't will little avail thee if thou valuest thine own judgment more than his Counsel and dost not submit to it in all truth and simplicity 92. Suppose a great man be sick of a dangerous Disease He has in his House a famous and skilful Physitian and he quickly knows the Disease the causes the conditions and the state of it and knowing for certain that that Distemper is to be treated with severe Cauteries he orders Lenitives for it Now is not this a great disorder If he is sure that Lenitives will do little good and that Cauterizing is the proper way why does he not apply it to him Because although the sick person would have his health yet the Physitian knows best and that he is not disposed to take those strong Medicines and therefore like a wise man orders him gentle Lenitives because though he may not presently get up again by 'em yet he keeps the Disease from being mortal 93. What matter is it if you have the best Director in the World if yet notwithstanding you want true submission although he be a man of skill and knows the grievance and the remedy he doth not apply the proper Physick which concerns you most to deny your Will because he knows your very Heart and Spirit that it is not disposed to let the infirmities of your own judgment be removed So you will never be cured and it will be a Miracle if he can keep you in Grace with so fierce an Enemy of your Soul about you 94. Thy Director will scorn all manner of Favours if he be a wise man as if thy Spirit may not be well grounded believe him obey him embrace his Counsel because with this contempt if the Spirit be feigned and of the Evil One the secret Pride formed by him that counterfeits these Spirits will soon be known but if the Spirit be real though thou find'st displeasure in this humiliation it will serve thee for an extraordinary good 95. If the Soul take delight in esteem and in having the favours which it receives from God made open and publick if it doth not obey and believes not its Director which thinks meanly of 'em 't is all a lye and cheat and the Devil is that Angel that transforms himself The Soul seeing that the skilful Director despises these cheats if the Spirit be evil withdraws the feigned affection which it shewed him and indeavours by little and little to get from him seeking some other that its cheats may take with for the proud can never keep company with those that humble 'em but on t'other side if the spirit be true and of God by these means the love and constancy increases by induring 'em desiring much more its own contempt from whence the soundness and sincerity of the Spirit becomes qualified without deceit CHAP. XIII Frequent Communion is an effectual means of getting all Vertues and in particular Internal Peace 96. THere are four things the most necessary to get Perfection and internal Peace The first is Prayer the second Obedience the third frequent Communion the fourth internal Mortification And now since we have treated of Prayer and Obedience it will be fitting to treat also of Communion 97. You ought to know that many Souls there are that deprive themselves of the infinite benefit of this precious Food by judging that they are not sufficiently prepared and that no less than an Angelical Purity is necessary for it If thou hast a pure end a true desire of doing the Will of God without looking at sensible Devotion or thine own Satisfaction come with confidence because thou art well disposed 98. On this Rock of Desiring to do the Divine Will all difficulties must be broken all scruples overcome all temptations doubts fears resistances and contradictions and although the best Preparation for the Soul be often Communicating because one Communion disposes it for another yet I will shew the two ways of Preparation The first for the exteriour Souls which have good Desire and Will and the second for the spiritual Ones which live Internally and have a greater Light and Knowledge of God of his Mysteries of his Operations and Sacraments 99. The Preparation for the exteriour Souls is to be Confessed and retire from the Creatures before the Communion to stand still and consider what is to be received and who it is that receives it and that he goes to do the greatest business in the World which is to receive the great God. What a singular favour is that Purity it self condescends to be received by Filth Majesty by Vileness the Creatour by the Creature 100. The second Preparation in order to the interiour and spiritual Souls must be to endeavour to live with greater Purity and Self-denial with an universal taking ones self off from the World with inward Mortification and continual Retirement and when they walk in this Way they have no need of any actual Preparation because their Life is a continual and perfect Preparation 101. If thou do'st not-know these Vertues in thy Soul for the same reason thou must often draw near to this soveraign Table to get ' em Never let it hinder thee to see thy self dry defective and cold because frequent Communion is the Physick that cures those Diseases and increases Vertue for the same reason that thou art Sick thou must go to the Physician and that thou art Cold to the Fire 102. If thou drawest near with humility with a desire of doing the Divine Will and with the leave of thy Confessor thou mayst receive it every day and every day thou wilt grow better and better Never be afraid for seeing thy self without that affectionate and sensible love which some men say is necessary because this sensible
Sacrament that thou dost not mortifie thy self as thou promisest to God daily that Prayer and Communion without Mortification is meer vanity herewith would he make thee distrust of the Divine Grace telling thee of thy misery and making a gyant of it and putting into thy head that every day thy Soul grows worse instead of better whilest it so often repeats those failings 128. O blessed Soul open thine Eyes suffer not thy self to be carried away by the deceitful and gilded tricks of Satan who seeks thy ruine and cowardise with these lying and seeming reasons Cut off these discourses and considerations and shut the gate against these vain Thoughts and diabolical Suggestions lay aside these vain fears and remove this faint-heartedness knowing thy misery and trusting in the Mercy Divine and if to morrow thou dost fall again as thou did'st to day trust again the more in that supream and more than infinite Goodness so ready to forget our faults and receive us into his Arms as dear Children CHAP. XVIII Treateth of the same Point 129. AT all times therefore thou oughtest when thou seest thy self in fault without loosing time or making Discourses upon the failing to drive away vain Fear and Cowardise without disturbing or chiding thy self but knowing thy fault with Humility looking on thy misery rowling thy self with a loving Confidence on the Lord going into his Presence asking him Pardon heartily and without noise of words keep thy self reposed in doing this without discoursing whether he hath or hath not forgiven thee returning to thy Exercises and Retirements as if thou had'st not Sinned 130. Would not he be a meer Fool which running at Turneament with others and falling in the best of the Carrier should lie weeping on the Ground and afflicting himself with discourses upon his Fall Man they would tell him loose no time get up and take the Course again for he that rises again quickly and continues his Race is as if he had never fallen 131. If thou hast a desire to get to a high degree of Perfection and inward Peace thou must use the Weapon of Confidence in the Divine Goodness night and day and always when thou fallest This humble and loving Conversation and total Confidence in the Mercy Divine thou must exercise in all faults imperfections and failings that thou shalt commit either by advertence or inadvertency 132. And although thou often fallest and seest thy Pusillanimity and endeavour to get courage and afflict not thy self because what God doth not do in forty Years he sometimes doth in an instant with a particular Mystery that we may live low and humble and know that 't is the Work of His powerful Hand to free us from Sins 133. God also is willing of ineffable Wisdom that not onely by Vertues but also by Vices and the Passions wherewith the Devil seeks and pretends to strike us down to the bottomless Pit we make a Ladder to scale Heaven with Ascendamus etiam per vitia passiones nostras says St. Austine Serm. 3. de Ascens That we may not make Poison of Physick and Vices of Vertues by becoming vain by 'em God would have us make Vertues of Vices healing us by that very thing which would hurt us So says S. Gregory Quia ergo nos de medicamento vulnus facimus facit ille de vulnere medicamentum ut qui virtue percutimur vitio curemur Lib. 37. c. 9. 134. By means of small failings the Lord makes us know that his Majesty is that which frees us from great ones and herewith he keeps us humbled and vigilant of which our proud Nature hath most need And therefore though thou oughtest to walk with great care not to fall into any fault or imperfection if thou seest thy self fallen once and a thousand times thou oughtest to make use of the Remedy which I have given thee that is a loving Confidence in the Divine Mercy These are the Weapons with which thou must fight and conquer Cowardise and vain Thoughts this is the means thou oughtest to use not to lose time not to disturb thy self and reap good this is the Treasure wherewith thou must enrich thy Soul and lastly hereby must thou get up the high Mountain of Perfection Tranquility and internal Peace THE Spiritual Guide Which brings the Soul to the getting of Inward Peace The Third Book Of Spiritual Martyrdoms whereby God Purges Souls of Contemplation infused and passive of Perfect Resignation Inward Humility Divine Wisdom True Annihilation and Internal Peace CHAP. I. The Difference between the Outward and Inward Man. 1. THERE are two sorts of Spiritual Persons Internal and External these seek God by without by Discourse by Imagination and Consideration they endeavour mainly to get Vertues many Abstinences Maceration of Body and Mortification of the Senses they give themselves to rigorous Penance they put on Sack-cloth chastise the Flesh by Discipline endeavour Silence bear the Presence of God forming him present to themselves in their Idea of him or their Imagination sometimes as a Pastour sometimes as a Physitian and sometimes as a Father and Lord they delight to be continually speaking of God very often making fervent Acts of Love and all this is Art and Meditation by this way they desire to be great and by the power of voluntary and exteriour Mortifications they go in quest of sensible Affections and warm Sentiments thinking that God resides onely in them when they have ' em This is the External Way and the Way of Beginners and though it be good yet there is no arriving at Perfection by it nay there is not so much as one step towards it as Experience shews in many that after fifty Years of this external Exercise are void of God and full of themselves having nothing of Spiritual Men but just the name of such 2. There are others truely Spiritual which have passed by the beginnings of the Interiour Way which leads to Perfection and Union with God and to which the Lord called 'em by his infinite Mercy from that outward Way in which before they Exercised themselves These men retired in the inward part of their Souls with true Resignation into the Hands of God with a total putting off and forgetting even of themselves do always go with a rais'd Spirit to the Presence of the Lord by the means of pure Faith without Image Form or Figure but with great Assurance founded in tranquility and rest Internal in whose infused meeting and entertainment the Spirit draws with so much force that it makes the Soul contract Inwardly the Heart the Body and all the Powers of it 3. These Souls as they are already passed by the interiour Mortification and have been cleansed by God with the Fire of Tribulation with infinite and horrible Torments all of 'em ordained by his hand and after his way are Masters of themselves because they are intirely subdued and denied which makes 'em live with great Repose and internal Peace and although in
many occasions they feel Resistance and Temptations yet they become presently Victorious because being already Souls of Proof and indued with Divine Strength the motions of Passions cannot last long upon 'em and although vehement Temptations and troublesome Suggestions of the Enemy may persevere a long time about 'em yet they are all conquer'd with infinite gain God being he that Fights within ' em 4. These Souls have already procured themselves a great Light and a true Knowledge of Christ our Lord both of his Divinity and his Humanity They exercise this infused Knowledge with a quiet Silence in the inward entertainment and the superiour part of their Souls with a Spirit free from Images and external Representations with a Love that is pure and stripped of all Creatures they are raised also from outward Actions to the love of Humanity and Divinity so much as they enjoy they forget and in all of it they find that they love their God with all their Heart and Spirit 5. These blessed and sublimated Souls take no pleasure in any thing of the World but contempt and in being alone and in being forsaken and forgotten by every body They live so disinterested and taken off that though they continually receive many supernatural Graces yet they are not changed no not at those inclinations being just as if they had not received 'em keeping always in the in-most of their Hearts a great lowliness and contempt of themselves always humbled in the depth of their own unworthiness and vileness In the same manner they are always quiet serene and possessed with evenness of mind in Graces and Favours extraordinary as also in the most rigorous and bitter Torments There is no News that chears 'em no Success that makes 'em sad Tribulations never disturb 'em nor the interiour continual and divine Communication make 'em vain and conceited they remain always full of holy and filial Fear in a wonderful Peace Constancy and Serenity CHAP. II. Pursues the same 6. IN the external Way they take care to do continual Acts of all the Vertues one after another to get to the attainment of 'em They pretend to purge Imperfections with Industries proportionable to Destruction they take care to root up Interests one after another with a different and contrary Exercise But though they endeavour never so much they arrive at nothing because we cannot do any thing which is not Imperfection and Misery 7. But in the inward Way and loving Entertainment in the Presence Divine as the Lord is he that Works Vertue is established Interests are rooted up Imperfections are destroyed and Passions removed which makes the Soul free unexpectedly and taken off when occasions are represented without so much as thinking of the good which God of his infinite Mercy prepared for ' em 8. It must be known that these Souls though thus Perfect as they have the true Light of God yet by it they know profoundly their own miseries weaknesses and imperfections and what they yet want to arrive at Perfection towards which they are walking they are afflicted and abhor themselves they exercise themselves in a loving Fear of God and contempt of themselves but with a true Hope in God and Disconfidence in themselves The more they are humbled with true contempt and knowledge of themselves the more they please God and arrive at a singular respect and veneration in his Presence Of all the good Works that they do and of all that they continually suffer as well within as without they make no manner of account before that Divine Presence 9. Their continual Exercise is to enter into themselves in God with quiet and silence because there is his Center Habitation and Delight They make a greater account of this interiour Retirement than of speaking of God they retire into that interiour and secret Center of the Soul to know God and receive his Divine Influence with fear and loving reverence if they go out they go out onely to know and despise themselves 10. But know that few are the Souls which arrive at this happy State because few there are that are willing to embrace Contempt and suffer themselves to be Refined and Purified upon which account although there are many that enter into this interiour Way yet 't is a rare thing for a Soul to go on and not stick upon the entrance The Lord said to a Soul This inward Way is tread by few 't is so high a Grace that none deserves it few walk in it because it is no other than a Death of the Senses and few there be that are willing so to Die and be Annihilated in which disposition this so soveraign a Gift is founded 11. Herewith thou wilt undeceive thy self and perfectly know the great difference which there is between the external and internal Way and how different that Presence of God is which arises from Meditation from that which is Infused and Supernatural arising from the interior and infused Intertainment and from passive Contemplation and lastly you will know the great difference which is between the outward and inward Man. CHAP. III. The means of obtaining Peace Internal is not the Delight of Sense nor Spiritual Consolation but the denying of Self-love 12. IT is the saying of S. Bernard That to serve God is nothing else but to do Good and suffer Evil. He that would go to Perfection by the means of Sweetness and Consolation is mistaken You must desire no other Consolation from God than to end your Life for his sake in the state of true Obedience and Subjection Christ our Lord's way was not that of Sweetness and Softness nor did he invite us to any such either by his Words or Example when he said He that will come after me let him deny himself and let him take up his cross and follow me St Matth. 24.26 The Soul that would be United to Christ must be conformable to him following him in the way of suffering 13. Thou wilt scarce begin to relish the sweetness of Divine Love in Prayer but the Enemy with his deceitful Craftiness will be kindling in thy Heart defires of the Desert and Solitude that thou mayest without any bodies hindrance spread the sails to continual delightful Prayer Open thine eyes and consider that this Counsel and Desire is not conformable to the true Counsel of Christ our Lord who has not invited us to follow the sweetness and comfort of our own Will but the denying of our selves saying Abneget semetipsum As if he should say He that will follow me and come unto Perfection let him part with his own Will wholly and leaving all things let him intirely submit to the Yoke of Obedience and Subjection by means of Self-denyal which is the truest Cross 14. There are many Souls dedicated to God which receive from his Hand great Thoughts Visions and mental Elevations and yet for all that the Lord keeps from 'em the Grace of working Miracles understanding hidden Secrets foretelling future
nakedness finds in its superiour part a profound peace and a sweet rest which brings it to such a perfect union of love that 't is joyful all over And such a Soul as this is already arrived to such a happiness that it neither wills nor desires any thing but what its Beloved wills it conforms it self to this Will in all emergencies as well of comfort as anguish and rejoyces also in every thing to do the Divine Good pleasure 207. There is nothing but what comforts it nor doth it want any thing but what it can well want To dye is enjoyment to it and to live is its joy It is as contented here upon Earth as it can be in Paradise it is as glad under privation as it can be in possession in sickness as it can be in health because it knows that this is the will of its Lord. This is its life this its glory its paradise its peace its repose its rest its consolation and highest happiness 208. If it were necessary to such a Soul as this which is gotten up by the steps of annihilation to the region of peace to make its choice it would chuse desolation before comfort contempt before honour because the loving Jesus made great esteem of reproach and pain if it first endured the hunger of the blessings of Heaven if it thirsted for God if it had the fear of losing him the lamentation of heart and the fighting of the devil now things are altered and hunger is turned into satisfying the thirst into satiety the fear into assurance the sadness into joy the weeping into merriment and the fierce fighting into the greatest peace O happy Soul that enjoys here on earth so great a felicity Thou must know that these kind of Souls though few they are be the strong Pillars which support the Church and such as abate the divine indignation 209. And now this Soul that is entered into the heaven of peace acknowledges it self full of God and his supernatural gifts because it lives grounded in a pure love receiving equal pleasure in light and darkness in night and day in affliction and consolation Through this holy and heavenly indifference it never loses its peace in adversity nor its tranquility in tribulations but sees it self full of unspeakable enjoyments 210. And although the Prince of Darkness makes all the assaults of Hell against it with horrible temptations yet it makes head against 'em and stands like a strong Pillar no more happening to it by 'em than happens to a high mountain and a deep valley in the time of storm and tempest 211. The valley is darkned with thick clouds fierce tempests of hail thunder lightning and hail-stones which looks like the picture of Hell at the same time the lofty mountain glitters by the bright beams of the sun in quietness and serenity continuing clear like heaven immovable and full of light 212. The same happens to this blessed soul the valley of the part below is suffering tribulations combats darkness desolations torments martyrdoms and suggestions and at the same time on the lofty mountain of the higher part of the soul the true sun casts its beams it enflames and enlightens it and so it becomes clear peaceable resplendent quiet serene being a meer ocean of joy 213. So great therefore is the quiet of this pure foul which is gotten up the mountain of tranquility so great is the peace of its spirit so great the serenity and chearfulness that is within that a remnant and glimmering of God do redound even to the outside of it 214. Because in the throne of quiet are manifest the perfections of spiritual beauty here the true light of the secret and divine mysteries of our holy faith here perfect humility even to the annihilation of it self the amplest resignation chastity poverty of spirit the sincerity and innocence of the Dove external modesty silence and internal solitude liberty and purity of heart here the forgetfulness of every created thing even of it self joyful simplicity heavenly indifference continual Prayer a total nakedness perfect disinterestedness a most wise contemplation a conversation of heaven and lastly the most perfect and serene peace within of which this happy soul may say what the wise man said of wisdom that all other graces came along in company with her Venerunt mihi omnia bona paritur cum illa Wisd 7.11 215. This is the rich and hidden treasure this the lost groat of the Gospel this is the blessed life the happy life the true life and the blessedness here below O thou lovely greatness that passest the knowledge of the sons of men O excellent supernatural life how admirable and unspeakable art thou for thou art the very draught of blessedness O how much dost thou raise a soul from earth which loses in its view all things of the vileness of earth thou art poor to look upon but inwardly thou art full of wealth thou seemest low but art exceeding high in a word thou art that which makest men live a life divine here below Give me O Lord thou greatest goodness give me a good portion of this heavenly happiness and true peace that the World sensual as it is is neither capable of understanding nor receiving Quem mundus non potest accipere CHAP. XXII A mournful Exclamation and lamentable Moan to God for the small Company of Souls that arrive at Perfection the Loving Union and the Divine Transformation 216. O Divine Majesty in whose presence the Pillars of Heaven do quake and tremble O thou Goodness more than infinite in whose love the Seraphins burn give me leave O Lord to lament our blindness and ingratitude We all live in mistakes seeking the foolish world and forsaking thee who art our God. We all forsake thee the Fountain of Living Waters for the stinking dirt of the world 217. O we children of men how long shall we follow after lying and vanity Who is it that hath thus deceived us that we should forsake God our greatest good Who is it that speaks the most truth to us Who is it that loves us most Who defends us most Who is it that doth more to shew himself a Friend who more tender to shew himself a Spouse and more good to be a Father that our blindness should be so great that we should all forsake this greatest and infinite goodness 218. O Divine Lord what a few Souls are there in the world which do serve thee with perfection how small is the number of those who are willing to suffer that they may follow Christ crucified that they may embrace the Cross that they may deny and contemn themselves O what a scarcity of Souls is there which are disinterested and totally naked how few are those Souls which are dead to themselves and alive to God which are totally resigned to his divine good pleasure how few those who are adorn'd with simple obedience profound knowledge of themselves and true humility How few those
precept of the Church always looks at the benefit of the faithful and so great is our luke-warmness and the frailty of our times that a precept of Daily Communion would be an occasion of sin and ruine and therefore the Church does not injoyn Christians by precept any more than one Communion in a year though the desires that through devotion men would Communicate every day Many men shift off their coming daily to this Divine Banquet that they may not be taken notice of for it and that they may give no occasion to others to grumble and the Ministers hearing this reason hold their tongues and rest satisfied O hurtful silence must they permit for worldly respects that the faithful should lose so great a benefit Is it possible that they should let 'em live at a distance and separate from God and his sweet and loving friendship because the world should not censure ' em if there should be any great account made of what the world says not only the Soul would be lost but also the judgment Is it not known that the world makes it its business to speak ill of what good is and to persecute those that do not take part with it All those that serve great men do make open shew of the degree of their office greatness and dignity and shall a Christian think it a shame to himself to Communicate and be seen in the service of Jesus Christ If it were an evil work to Communicate every day it might breed scandal but if it be the best work that a Christian can do why should he keep from it through an idle fear of offending his neighbour The Jews were offended at the good works of Jesus Christ but for all that his Majesty never left off doing ' em He that doth ill and interprets the good that others do in an evil sense 't is he that gives cause for the scandal but to do well was never a scandal much less can so great a good as Communicating be one If a man should take offence by seeing us eat surely we would not for all that be such fools as to starve our selves We ought to take great heed of following vanities and worldly pleasures that we may not by them offend or scandalize our Neighbour from these vices we ought to keep our selves not from Daily Communion because this cannot cause scandal but will rather edifie our Neighbour and by our good example it may be he may come to change his life and resolve himself to frequent the Sacraments O how many people are there that are cheated by these worldly respects O unhappy men they are not ashamed to be base in their lives and yet they are ashamed to be Christians and to be known for such CHAP. III. Wherein are shewn some of the great benefits of which a faithful man is deprieved by being prohibited the Communion when he is sufflciently disposed for it THat the Minister may see and take good notice of the hurt which he does by deprieving the faithful of the Communion that desire and ask it without the guilt of Mortal Sin it will be necessary to lye before him some of those infinite benefits of which he defrauds 'em onely in one Communion that he may undeceive himself that deprieves 'em of infinite good for mortification sake First he deprieves such a one of the increase of grace and glory which he receives in the Communion whose effect is infallible ex opere operato though he should have venial sins about him He also deprieves him of the mortification of all his five senses and powers which he therein performs whilst his Eyes his Smelling his Tast his Touch his Imagination his Understanding and all his knowledge and capacity do tell him that that Host is Bread by all this he is humbled mortified and subdued whilst he believes that it is not that which he feels and tasts but that his God and Lord is in it He deprieves him also by taking the Communion from him of the cleansing of his sins and evil habits and being preserved from 'em for the time to come of many helps which are therein administred to him for the performance of every good thing and avoiding every evil one and it may happen that the Eternal Salvation or Damnation of a Soul may depend upon one of these helps He deprieves him of the lessening the pains of Purgatory which is participated in every Communion He deprieves him of the high acts of faith hope and charity which he exercises by believing that he receives that God whom he sees not nor feels and hoping in him whom he has not seen and being united with him by love God is goodness it self and he is willing to be communicated through love to Souls by means of the Divine and Sacramental Bread Is there a greater happiness in the world can there be a greater felicity and shall there be any Minister to deprieve the Soul of this benefit In this wonderful Sacrament Christ is united to the Soul and becomes one and the same thing with it In me manet ego in illo St. John 5. which fineness of love is the most profound admirable and worthy of consideration and gratitude because there is no more to give nor to receive and what Minister shall deprieve the Soul of this boundless grace All Blessings do here meet together in this precious Food here all desires of God are fulfilled here is the loving and sacramental Union here 's the Peace the Conformity the Transformation of God with the Soul and the Soul with God. By receiving Jesus in this Sacrament the Eternal Father and the Divine Spirit is also received here are all the Vertues Charity Hope Purity Patience and Humility because Christ our Lord begets all Vertue in the Soul by means of this heavenly Food and what a Heart must the Ministers have to forbid the Soul so great a Happiness If one onely degree of Grace is a gift of inestimable Value and so precious that 't is not to be bought for a thousand Worlds being a particle of God himself and a formal participation of the Divine Nature which makes us his Children and Friends Heirs of Heaven and the Habitation of the most Holy Trinity and if never so little Grace be worth more than all the Vertues Alms and Penances and the removing Mountains as St. Paul says and giving all away to the Poor is a meer Nothing without Grace How then can it be well to deprive the Faithful of the increase of Grace which he might find onely in one Communion How can the Minister deprive him of that and of many others that follow it without giving 'em other things equivalent to those they lose What can be of equal value with habitual Grace which a faithful Man might receive neither can the Humility which he may exercise nor the Reverence nor the Mortification upon the account of which he leaves off the Communion be worth so much
nor are they equivalent to that Grace onely which he loses and which he might have had by receiving that Communion And now le ts make up this Account If Restitution ought to be as all the Doctors say conformable to the Good which was taken from one's Neighbour what can he restore which deprives a faithful Man of God himself Would it not be great want of Charity to take from a Man a Mount of Gold onely to gather up a little Grain Onely for one Grain of Mortification if yet there is any in it the Ministers do deprive a Christian of a whole Mount of Blessings which are heaped up together in the Communion If there were no other way to mortifie and try the Soul but this it ought not to be used because by this Mortification they deprive him of a greater good but there are infinite ways of proving and mortifying the Soul besides without doing it so great a Spiritual Prejudice The Blessings of this Sacrament don't end here because besides the increase of Grace it sustains and gives new strength to the Soul to resist Temptations it satisfies the desires takes away the hunger of temporal things unites with Christ and his Members who are the Just and Righteous breaks the power of Satan gives strength to suffer Martyrdom pardons the Venial Sins to which he that Communicates doth not stand affected and keeps from Mortal Sins by vertue of the aid which it doth contribute The Body of Christ says St. Bernard In Serm. Dom is Medicine to the Sick Provision for the Pilgrim fresh Strength to the Weary it delights the Strong it heals the wounded it preserves the Health of Soul and Body And whoever is a worthy Communicant is made more strong to receive Contempt more patient to suffer Reproof more fit to indure Troubles more ready for Obedience and to return the Lord Thanks St. Leo Pope de praec ser 14. de pass Domini says that when a man is Communicated Christ comes to honour him with his Presence to anoint him with his Grace to cure him with his Mercy to heal him with his Blood to raise him by his Death to illuminate him with his Light to inflame him with his Love to comfort him with his infinite Sweetness to be united and espoused with his Soul to make him partaker of his Divine Spirit and of all the Blessings which he purchas'd us by his Cross Dost thou seek says St. Bonaventure de praec where God is thou must expect to find him in this Divine Sacrament which being worthily received do's pardon Sins mitigate Passions gives light to the Understanding satiates the Soul revives Faith encourages Hope inkindles Charity increases Devotion fills with Grace and is the rick Pledge of Glory This Sacrament says St. Thomas Opusc 58. de Sacr. cap. 21. 22 23. drives away evil Spirits defends us from Concupiscence washes off the Stains of the Heart appeases Gods Anger illuminates the Understanding to know him inflames the Will to love him delights the memory with Sweetness confirms the whole man in Goodness frees him from Punishment Everlasting multiplies the merits of good Life and brings him to his Eternal Country The Body of the Lord as he pursues it cap. 24. produces Three principal Effects First it destroys Sin. Secondly it increases Spiritual Blessings Thirdly it comforts men's Souls and in Chap. 25. he says it satiates the Spirit to follow what is good it comforts and strengthens the Soul to shun what is evil it preserves the Life always to praise the Lord. As it is a Sacrifice it remits the Sins of those who are alive and lightens the punishment of those who are in Purgatory and augments the accidental Glory of those who are in Heaven Lastly the Body of Christ is called the Sacrament of Charity because it makes us partakers of the Spirit Divine of the sweet Abode of Christ himself and the rich Transformation of God. 'T would be an endless thing to relate the Blessings which according to the saying of Saints they do receive from this Sacrament who come to partake of it without Mortal Sin and of all these doth the Minister deprive a Christian when he onely forbids him one Communion But more than this deprieving 'em of the Communion he deprieves all the Saints of Heaven all the Angels the most holy Virgin and Christ himself of that accidental glory which accrues to them by every Communion received in grace If the Saints in Heaven have a special accidental glory by every good work though never so small that is done here below as many pious Authors are of opinion with how much more reason will they have it by a work so sublime as the Communion is wherein there is included an immensity of all the wonderful works of God Memoriam fecit mirabilium suorum Psal 110. And if from one onely Communion there are so many blessings as are specified before to be obtained what will there be of the sacrifice of the Mass the gravest the highest work that is in Heaven or Earth And shall there then be Ministers who under pretence of Penance Mortification or the old way must hinder Priests so great so holy and so fruitful a sacrifice Saint Jerom said in Missis defunct Pavi c. 14 that at the least the Soul suffers not in Purgatory whilst Mass is said for it 't was well the Author did not point to us where this blind passage is in Saint Jeromes Works Saint Austin assures us Ballester in the Book of the Crucifix of S. Saviour f. 207. that the Divine Sacrifice is never Celebrated but one of these two things follow upon it either the Conversion of a sinner or the leting loose of some Soul out of Purgatory this is as much Saint Austins saying as t'other is Saint Jeromes William Altisiodorensis was not contented with one Soul but affirmed that by every Mass there were the Lord knows how many Souls that got away from thence Severus in Saint Martins Life gives an account that he set as many Souls at liberty with his Masses as persons assisted at the hearing of ' em Venerable Bede says that the Priest who being not lawfully hindred doth neglect to say Mass deprieves the most holy Trinity of glory and praise the Angels of joy Sinners of pardon the Righteous of grace and help the Souls in Purgatory of cooling and refreshment the Church of the heavenly benefit of Jesus Christ our Lord and the Priest himself of Medicine and help If every Mass therefore has all this of its own what Minister under the colour of zeal shall be so bold as to hinder and defraud the Trinity the Angels the Virgin the Church the Righteous Sinners the Souls in Purgatory and the Priests themselves that desire to celebrate so much glory and so much good without doubt though this be done with zeal yet 't is want of consideration and it will be well to premeditate and consider it better before any goes about to hinder it THE END THE CONTENTS CHAP. 1. No Minister ought to keep a faithful Person from the Communion that does desire and ask it whilst he doth not know his Conscience defiled with mortal Sin. Page 1 Chap. 2. Answering the Reasons which those Ministers give which hinder the Faithful from Communicating and the Priest from Celebrating having their Consciences free from Mortal Sin. Page 17 Chap. 3. Wherein are shewn some of the great benefits of which a faithful man is deprived by being prohibited the Communion when he is sufficiently disposed for it Page 31