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A35684 Pelecanicidium, or, The Christian adviser against self-murder together with a guide and the pilgrims passe to the land of the living : in three books. Denny, William, Sir, 1603 or 4-1676.; Barlow, Francis, 1626?-1702. 1653 (1653) Wing D1051; ESTC R22350 177,897 342

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blows But it is the Office of Meditation in her sober and steady steps alwaies to promote to our view Things that are past and behind us Contemplation is a free perceivance of Things with quicknesse of sight in the glasse of Wisedome with a wary consult Meditation searcheth out things that lay hidden Contemplation admires those things that are perspicuous therefore is she called here ground-eyeing meditation The book in her hand is the Bible the holy Scriptures which is her Rule to mesure by 7. With Reverence enter Reverentia est Virtus aliquâ praelatione sublimitatis debitae honorificationis cultum exhibens sayes Tully Reverence is a kind of Vertue that presenteth the proper Tender of due Worship to some Person in whom its Estimation conceiveth a sublimitie a Being far above it self And to whom is such so justly due as God whose Essence is above the Reach of any Capacity or Understanding whose Holinesse so Pure as not conceiveable by All imagination Whose Power is Infinite beyond all Comprehension And whose Glory is Ineffable and Everlasting dwelling beyond all possibility of Thought in Eternity We must approach him then with Awe and Reverence in our Prayer as he is in himself not only Absolute in Essence but as Relative to us in that he is our Creator and we his Creatures yea the Workmanship of his hands Prostrat lay with the greatest Humiliation of Body and Soule of All that we can to expresse our sense of the Debt we owe to so great a Maker and with shame to acknowledg our vile Transgressions and foolish as much as abominable Rebellions against the Wonderfull Love of so Gracious a Redeemer O come let us Worship and Fall down and kneel before the Lord our Maker Then rise Then raise thy Head thy Hands Dart up thine Eyes Sursum corda And lift up thine Heart on high And to next Altar take thy way Make ready then thy Soul as a Sacrifice upon the Altar of thy Ready Prayer Knock thy Breast Shew contrition for thy sin and indignation against thy self Kneel Shew Humility and Lowness of Spirit with the buckling of thy body Offer with thy Heart what taught to say Offer thy self in that prayer to the Father thatthe Lord of Life his beloved Son in whom he is well pleased hath taught thee to say and doubt not to be accepted 8. Devotion when th' ast breath'd a groan will lead c. When thou hast thus Ejaculated thy Spirit thy Devotion will conduct thy desires to Heaven Six Altars though but one Are six Petitions though but One Prayer All which do hang upon a mighty Corner Stone Depend upon Christ. Because he was it's Author and was and is the All-wise Directer and commander of the same 9. Each Altar has his Censer burn Each Petition has it's proper Virtue That Fires in proper Turn Comes in its due Order inflaming the breast with the Holy Spirit From whose Flames flies a Bird this Prayer thus said hath such an effectual Force and power of obtaining according to our Saviours Word and Promise that it raiseth us up from Death to life in Christ as Phenix from Urn by his death and Resurrection 10 A Burning Lamp with shining Light It is Christs example in Life and Doctrine who not onely taught us to pray but left us the Forms wherewith himself prayed His Prayers were perfect patterns They were short and Full very decent because in Order His Prayers were pure and meek chast and comely clear and lovely grave and weighty Oratio si pura si casta fuerit coelos penetrare vacua non redibit If prayer be clean and undefiled without spot and uncorrupted it returns not back from through-pierced Heaven without a Blessing Hearken to what our Saviour sayes in the sixth of S. Matthew And when thou prayest be not as the Hypocrites for they love to stand and pray in the Synagogues and in the corners of the streets because they would be seen of men Verily I say unto you they have their reward But when thou prayest enter into thy Chamber and when thou hast shut thy Dore pray unto the Father which is in secret and thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly Also when you pray use no vain Repetitions as the Heathen For they think to be heard for their much babling Be ye not like unto them therefore for your Father knoweth whereof ye have need before ye ask him Pray after this manner Our Father Oratio paucis verbis res multiplices comprehendit ut sit citò simplicitas fidei sufficientia suae saluti addisceret prudentia ingeniosorum profunditate Mysteriorum stupesceret This prayer contains many things in few Words that in short there may be preserved simplicity of Faith that we may perfectly learn what is sufficient for our own health and the knowledge of the nicest Wits may be astonished at the Depth of the Mysteries contained therein But mark the Eleventh of Saint Luke And so it was That as He was praying in a certain place when when he ceased one of his Disciples said unto Him Master teach us to pray as Iohn also taught his Disciples And he said unto them when ye pray Say so there was a command Our Father Dicendo Pater Noster veniam peccatorum poenarum interitum justificationem sanctificationem liberationem filiorum adoptionem haereditatem Dei fraternitatem cum Unigenito copulatam Sancti Spiritus dona largissima uno sermone significavit By saying Our Father he signified unto us even in one Word not onely the Pardon of our sins the Death of Punishment our justification our sanctification and our deliverance but his Adoption of us Sons and Co-heirs of God and our being made Brethren and joyned with his onely Sone and so sharers of the most Bountifull Gifts of the Holy Ghost Whose constant eye winks not for day or night His example his Precepts ought to be alwayes before us as they are alwaies in being I' th midst o' th Church Example is c. As Christ is in the midst of his Church so let him be in the midst of our Hearts That is his place So ought our Bodies to be the Temples of the Holy Ghost which is that Fire that has an everlasting brightnesse which irradiateth Spirituall Graces upon our Souls and warmeth them with continual comforts 18. Then on shee does conduct thy Pace c. Here the Emission of our prayers by our Devotion Supplication in the Spirit and the manner of Supplication is further described Here Devotion of the heart as an Ambassador carries our Petitions up towards the Throne of God Orationis purae magna est virtus velut fidelis Nuntius mandatum peragit penetrat quò caro non pervenit saith Saint Austin Great is the Force and efficacy of sincere Prayer Like a trusty Messenger it presents our desires and breaks through the Heavens where Flesh and blood cannot come
disputing and running and kneeling and crying The variety of posture and motion speaks it a Multitude a heap of Waves rouling and tumbling in many sorts of Surges But what was the Matter What dispute ye among your selves Sayes Jesus to the Scribes And one of the company gives the Answer as if he had been the spokesman for the Multitude and the Multitude had been much concern'd in the Question to The Scribes But there might be some excuse for his impatience there was ' an Allay for his incivility he came out of a Multitude and he had a Child there a Son there an onely Child there and he was possest with a Spirit And that Spirit was a Desperate Spirit it was a Dumb one too For so the father sadly relates the matter It was a subtle spirit it surprised him wheresoever it took him A raging Spirit it tore him It brought him into a very sad condition even to foame at the mouth to gnash with his teeth to pine away It seems it was past The Disciples Help They came as short in Faith for which they were sharply rebuked as they were of cure And to make it appear that it was a very Desperate Spirit it cast the Possessed into the fire it cast him into the waters to destroy him So they brought him unto our Saviour And as soon as the Spirit saw him he fell to work he conceived that his time was short he tore him and the possessed must have a fit of falling as if a fit of the Falling Sickness he fell down on the ground wallowing and foaming Jesus askes the man How long it had been thus with his Son He answers Of a Child The Devil had taken early possession and kept a long time and was loath to leave it But what sayes his Father But if thou canst do any thing help us and have compassion upon us But if thou canst discovered a strange diffidence of his power knew him not He prayed help for his Son but with distrust He wanted Faith too For us It seems there is a Compassion without Devotion His son was possessed and he was troubled Jesus will help if he can believe He will help the Son if the Father can believe for all things are possible to him that believeth But must the Fathers Faith stand for Godfather to the sons cure And straightway the Father of the Child crying with tears sayes Lord I believe help mine unbeliefe Much matter is packt in a little room in a narrow content He has a suddaine Illumination and as quick a Repentance he sees himself in a manner in as bad a case as his Son He that commiserateth another calls for compassion for himself the Parent straightway cryes How soon he was taught to speak right He cryes amidst the waters He cryes with tears He cryes as to save from drowning and redeem out of the Fire It was time to cry Fire and with tears to quench the same Lord I believe help thou mine unbelief A short prayer and a weighty What could he have said more in a Volume He had but seven words in his prayer But six had the importunate Widow in the Parable in hers to the unjust Judge Do me justice against mine Enemies No more had the humble Publican in the Parable likewise that stood a far off and would not lift up so much as his eyes to heaven but smote his breast saying O God be merciful to me a sinner In the Original they are rendred fewer yet all were prevalent and most effectual What though the unjust Judge slight the importunate suiter Though he would not hear her for a time It seems she repeated the same short prayer and renewed her request in the same words at several times Though he would not grant her request for a Season notwithstanding that he heard her heard her as though he heard her not ad probationem et magis provocationem ad rogandum whereby Christ teaches that it is to try our Faith to inflame our zeal So he proves us and make us the hotter in the more earnest for the obtaining a gracious grant to our requests that what we obtaine may be worth the valuing when we perceive it is so hard to come by so difficult to attain And he would not for a time But afterward he said with himself though I fear nor God nor reverence man Yet because this woman troubleth me I will do her right lest at the last she come and make me weary And the Lord said Hear what the unrighteous Judge saith Now shall not God avenge his Elect which cry day and night unto him There 's incessant prayer indeed prayer with out ceasing yea though he suffer long for them The injury is done unto himself So he takes it I tell you he will avenge them quickly But when the Son of Man cometh shall he finde Faith on the Earth Luk. 18. 8. How appeareth it that the Publican receiv'd any grant to his short petition I shall tell you says Ego Sum Veritas our Saviour that is the Truth that this man departed to his house justified rather then the other then that Pharisee that was all outside and self justification with his Prayer nine times as long that was gotten up into the Temple that stood and prayed with himself And Iesus gives his reason for it a sound a solid reason for humilities preferment before pride For every man that exalteth himself shall be brought low and he that humbleth himself shall be exalted And mark here how soon the Lord is moved No sooner Lord I believe Help mine unbelief But Iesus hears presently The people come running and Christ hastens his help When Iesus saw that the people came running together he rebuked the unclean spirit saying Thou deaf and dumbe Spirit I charge thee come out of him It was not only a dumbe Spirit that could not pray a deaf spirit that either could not or would not hear For there is such an ungracious Deafness a deafness to the comfortable Tidings of the Gospel a deafness to holy to wholesome Admonition to sound Advice to good Counsel To such wisdom cryeth without she uttereth her voice in the streets She calleth in the high streets among the prease in the entrings of the Gates and uttereth her words in the City saying O ye foolish how long will ye love foolishness and the scornful take their pleasure in scorning and the Fools hate knowledge Turn you at my correction Lo I will poure out my mind unto you and make you understand my words Because I have called and ye refused I have stretched out mine hand and none would regard but ye have despised all my counsel and would none of my correction I will also laugh at your destruction and mock when your fear cometh like suddain desolation and your destruction shall come like a whirlewinde When Affliction and Anguish shall come upon you c. Prov. 1. 20. It was not only a deaf and a dumbe
Spirit but an unclean spirit An unclean spirit in the eyes of unlawful concupiscence an unclean Spirit in the Ears that had the Itch of wantonnes An unclean spirit in the Mouth of foul obscoenity of lying of false of foolish speaking of Oaths of Blasphemy of Perjury and the like abominations An unclean spirit in the stomack of exorbitant Excess of boundless Appetite of surfetting Luxury of sensual Gluttony and beastly Drunkenness that wallows in the Mire An unclean Spirit in the hand of wicked deeds of polluted Actions An unclean spirit in the feet a spirit of committing all kind of evil with greediness a spirit of Cruelty and Oppression whose Feet are swift to shed blood An unclean spirit in the Head of wicked Imaginations An unclean spirit in the heart of ungodly Thoughts and impious Machinations An unclean spirit in the Conscience of delusion and depravation and that is a crooked devil hard to be thrown out I charge thee come out of him There he manifesteth his Command and power And that he enter not into him any more publisheth his protection and Providence whereby the Divel is either chained-up or turned out of the line Then the spirit cryed and rent him sore and came out and he was as one dead in so much that many said He is dead The Father cryed the Spirit cry'd both cry'd but with different voices The Father cryes for help the spirit with horror The Father 's was a clear voice a voice of Faith the Spirit 's a hoarse voice a voice of Infidelity The Father cryes that the Spirit might be cast out the spirit cryes because he must out the Father cryes with tears The spirit cryes with tearing For he rent him sore at his coming out Out he comes but leaves him as dead If he must away he will act his utmost mischief Before he goes he rends him Before he leaves him he endeavors to carry away life and all he leaves him as dead dead to the world dead to Opinion in disconsolation dead to himself So does the Devil So does sin use to take leave of her Favourites But Jesus took took him by the hand There was his assisting Grace O the Infinite Mercy the readiness the certainty of such a Helper He lifted him up that could not else rise There was his restoring Grace And he arose There was his full Recovery But why could not the Disciples do this when they were so intreated Peter and Iames and Iohn were to be supposed Schollars of a higher Form in the School of Faith but they were at the Transfiguration they were not among them at that time The Disciples themselves were very much dissatisfied about their non-performance and disability to the work We do not find them though confess that they wanted Faith whereof they were reproved Yet their silence imploys a consent to the truth of it Fain they would know But they were ashamed to inquire of their master in publick They watch't therfore their next private opportunity For so saith the ' Text And when he was come into the House His Disciples asked Him Secretly Why could not we cast him out He that checked them in the way of his Justice then informeth them to set-forth his Mercy He checked them to stir up to rouze up their Faith He informeth them he teacheth them to satisfie their Question to appease their Doubt And he said unto them This kind can by no other means come forth but by Prayer and Fasting And what is Prayer Oratis est piae mentis humilis ad Deum conversio fide spe et charitate suhnixa Prayer is the turning of a devout and humble mind to God which is underpropped with Faith and Hope and Charity In the 11. Chapter of the same Evangelist Christ speaking of the Power of Faith induceth the Efficacy of prayer in his answer to Peter and the rest of the Disciples concerning the wither'd Figg-tree Have Faith in God For verily I say unto you that whosoever shall say unto This mountain Take thy self away and cast thy self into the Sea and shall not waver in his heart but shall believe that those things which he saith shall come to pass whatsoever he saith shall be done to him Here we may see that Faith calls down the power of God from Heaven and that which made All can order Act and perform any thing Therefore I say unto you whatsoever ye desire when ye pray believe that ye shall have it and it shall be done unto you And what is fasting If we will take Saint Chrysostom's opinion who was able to judge Iejunium non ciborum sed peccatorum abstinentiam efficit Though Fasting for a time and according unto the occasion from meats be a very necessary thing to make it a Fast indeed we must abstain from sin Iejunio passiones corporis oratione pestes sanandae sunt mentis saith Saint Hierom. Fasting tempers the passions tames the Fury and cures the Pestilence of the Mind Fasting cools the Feaver of the Flesh prayer assawgeth the Tumour of the Spirit As Fasting starves the pride of the flesh so prayer takes away all Sustenance from an evil Spirit Prayer is the speaking fasting of the flesh and fasting is the silent prayer of the Spirit Come then hither Thou man of black intentions Or whomsoever thou art that sittest groaning in a melancholy darkness Draw neer the Light Behold thy story in this Arras Thine is onely on the Backside on 't There 's a Person very like thee Thou art very like the Man that was possessed He that was without a name might have had thine In his story thou mai●st read thine own Evil the only means for cure and the Best way for Remedy Thou wert such a Father's Son In sin wert thou conceived and corruption gave thee suck His only Son the Darling of Pleasure that hast been dandled in wantonness Thou art a Child still Thou art not grown up to the strength of Reason Thou hast not conn'd the primier of Religion Or else thy Age has double childed thee that thou hast forgot thy Lesson Thou conversest with a large number of wicked Men and comest with a great Multitude of wickedness The multitude are the Wicked For few shall be saved Legion is thy Companion How canst thou then be without a Spirit In the multitude were the Scribes disputing The Scribes subtle Textmen The Doctors and Expounders of the Law They and the Pharises shak't hands Both were joynt-conspirators against both joynt-accusers of Christ. The Scribes accused Him of Blasphemy The Pharisees of eating with Publicanes and sinners The Scribes Accusation for the breach of the Law The Pharisees for the Breach of Traditions The people came to see wonders The Seribes with them to question the Miracles Beware that thou hast not such a Scribe Such a Pharisaean friend Such a Textman too neer thee He is possest with a spirit also a Question with a spirit of Contradiction He cannot helpe thee He has
good In 's Person Brooks so fill by Floud Of Grace the Covenant call'd Derivative From whence Beleevers Title do derive His Mediatorship did erst atchieve Parties Conditions and their Seals She does Behold Prerogatives by Faith She seeth manifold Such as Saint Iohn Saint Paul have so divinely told 21. Most humbly She Looks up to see Trines Mysterie Father the Creator is New Creatour Son O Blisse Holy Spirit 's Seal to This. In Earnest of Redemption so Regeneration does new flow In such a manner few do know The Church Regenerate the first-born may Those Spirits of Just men so made perfect say Nature divine partake those with allay O' th' Righteousnesse o' th' Kingdom For 't is seal'd To those and those to It with Reverence anneal'd So One with Jesus Christ Mediatour thus reveal'd 26. As Wondrous was Gods free giv'n grace To bring to passe Redemption in Designe The TRINITIE did joyn In Counsell most Divine Interpellation Covenant past For all to be perform'd and last For all were Providences cast Administrations Author FATHER is SON Grand Administrator unto These The Principle of speciall Ordinances The HOLY GHOST Subministrators from Sublime Take Government so ordination claim from Prime Words Sacraments Administration passe through Time 27. Means to save All The Church then call HIERARCHICALL And MINISTERIAL whence Church congregate in Sense Kingdome of God from thence By calling Saints and with Christ One As Hee Apostle was alone Without Whom Government is none As Rivers may divide from out a Lake That 's ever full of which their Streams partake Whose various Courses that vast Floud does make So Government from One to Twelve came whence again Those subdivided into lesser Brooks did vein So from Apostles Bishops influence obtain 28. Her down-cast Eye Sees Man must die Sin 's Wages trie The Bubble of his Breath Must needs be broke by Death His Bodie grav'd beneath Yet 's Soul does flie to place of Rest To Paradise that keepes the Best But wicked Ones with Sin are prest Until the Resurrections Trump does blow When all the teeming Graves their Dead shall show And every One Reward to Deeds shall know The glorious Judge Just Jesus comes to Sentence All. The Righteous then to th'Right shall hear his Blessed Call When Go ye cursed shall be Then the wicked's Fall 29. And now behold Her Locks like gold For us Shee 's told By Angell from Above Whom Seraph wings do move Encircling round with Love Chuse Mortals either here aloft to dwell By Faith by Love by doing well Or desperate leap with Horrour into Hell Chuse Chuse Eternitie of Blisse or Pain E'relasting Losse Or everlasting Gaine Bath i' th' Lambs Blood O wash away your Stain Could ye conceive the Joyes that here are Infinite And glory such as Tongues nor Pens could ere indite To gain this Place All earthly Torments Smiles wu'd slight 30. Hear'st this Away Let 's make no Stay But use our Day Down through the Wildernesse Amidst the Worlds Distresse Let Joyfull Courage Presse When w' are return'd unto our Place Let 's Minde these Things in any Case Life's short Good Life a narrow Space Let 's listen still to hear the silent Feet Of Death who 'l bring home Bliss wrapt in a sheet The blessed Angels then with Joy will greet Then tune we Tongues to Steps with never-failing Praise Let pious Works our Hearts our Souls to Heav'nward raise Let Hands Let Thoughts Let All God magnifie alwayes PERSPECTIVE XII DOwns are an open Place of intermixed Hills and Dals commonly upon the Coast and many times in the Inland Where somtimes they are a rising Ridg of Hills and Valleys whose free and pleasant scope overtop and overlook the neighbouring inferiour Countrey And from the declining and ascending position of the Earth as the high and more swelling Waves in the deeper Seas are not unlikely to have derived their name from their seeming to carry their Passengers over them up and down These for their healthful Ayr by their Loftinesse pleasant prospect by their opennesse and smooth Turf for their Evenesse do often invite in the delightfull seasons of the Year Persons of quality and leisure to take the Ayr upon them and to spend some time in recreation Horsmen choose such places thereupon to make and run races with their swiftest Coursers to try their courage wind and swiftnesse of their Heels Such are Newmarket Heath or Bainstead Downs They are called the Downs of Cogitation Because Thoughts are full of motion and uncertainty that have their erection and dejection upon the Mind as the first Stanza mentions 1. From hill to hill we goe c. Here is a Comparison between the Downs and the Waves of the Sea Both much agreeing in their resemblances with one another And both expressing the manner of Cogitation 2 All ore this flowry place c. The pleasure of Thoughts is compared in this Stanza to Flowers their subtility and quicknesse to the nimble flight of Swallowes And here Swallowes seeme to be matched as Coursers to expresse in a poeticall manner both the pleasure and swiftnesse of Cogitation together 3. Out from Thelema's Cave c. Here is first described the origination and purification of Cogitation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is Voluntas the Will and Affection from whence Thoughts as Waters out of the head of a Spring do take their rise and have their flux As the Heart is such are the Thoughts And that is Thelema's Cave in the side of the Downs the Man This being taken from that vulgar though not true opinion according to Anatomists that the Heart is placed in the left side of the Body A Generous Heart dresseth or setteth forth the Thoughts in Gallantry and Noblenesse So appears Dianoia Cogitation fair and beautifull when Devotion is in the Heart and Charity in the Hand which is an unbound Book the obedience unto Holy Writ ready to be dispensed according to active piety Thoughts seem awaked when drawn out of the sleep of Sin and darknesse of pollution Sitting is a Posture of steadinesse and Recollection Thoughts dwell in a Waggon as the old Scythians that never used Houses but such Receptacles as might more properly be call'd their Moveables than their Habitations Silent wheels is the imperceptibility of Thought Drawn with Dromedaries is their velocity as also the tenacity by Cogitation of things first apprehended For though a Dromedary be a kind of Cammell it differs in dorso The Cammel has a Bunch on his Back the Dromedary two Fins as I may call them the one near his Wallis the other more backward to the Chine both upon the Ridg of his back which fall down loose upon his sides without weight and rise and claspe in an imposed Burden With an unperceived Pace Dromedaries move with great strength and swiftnesse Whereupon Livie reciteth them as very usefull in Warlike expeditions His utebantur praecipuè in bellicis expeditionibus And Curtius in his 7. booke mentions that Polydamus was sent
as to the Method and the matter though not in the Verse and composure He thinketh fit to set now down onely such Animaduersions as may render his Apprehensions as the mater is agreeable to the doctrine of Holy Scriptures and the interpretation of such divine things has been formerly rendred by the late unparalelled Church of England Not but that he does highly honour the noble industry of so worthy a man for his indefatigable pains towards the investigation of any latent Truth as in a Scheam he hath demonstrated 13. Subsistences c. There is much criticisme betwixt the words Emanation and Procession the difference of their sense is left to the Learned The Gospell saith that the Son came forth from the Father which is nearest to Procession as our distressed Mother the Church of England holdeth In this Stanza and the former are set down Speculations concerning the Trinity 14. Her lofty Bower c. This Stanza is a poeticall description of the Soul's rapture by divine Contemplation the Travailer bringing a comparative discourse of the Eagle in his station posture and flight to illustrate the same 15. There thus alone c. Here the Travailer proceeds in shewing to the Pilgrim that divine Contemplation is accompanied with Divine Love resembling it to the spicy Neast of the Phenix as vulgarly related that enfireth with the heat of the Beams of the Sun 16. Her too weak Bow c. Here he sets forth the modesty and humility in the Contemplation of divine Mysteries as also discovering the Soul's imperfection while it is in an earthly Body that God can not be understood but as he hath reveal'd himself in Sacred Scripture 17. With humble bent c. The Travailer makes an humble progression in his discovery of divine Contemplation concerning the All-Sufficiency and All-Efficiency of the Deity 18. Him Absolute c. Here is a Looke before the Creation of the Visible World upon the created Angels and the Fall of Those with Lucifer which the Doctor stiles the first Race of Intellectualls 19. Then Tophet told c. The Place ordained as a Prison for the Damned which the Doctor stateth to be here decreed In this Stanza is mentioned the Creation of the Visible World and Man whom he stileth the Second Race of Intellectualls 20. By Satan's Spell c. In this Stanza is described the Manner of the Fall of Man and his Losse thereby As also the primary meanes of his Restauration 21. T' was co-decreed c. Here is described the manner of man's Restauration in Designe and that the Second Person in the Trinity should take upon Him the Apostleship and Mediatorship for the performance of so great a Work 22. And Those were given c. Here are set down how and to whom the Ordinances and Administrations were delivered and conveyed in former Ages 23. Time did at Full c. Here is related the Revelation of the Gospell and the manifestation of Jesus Christ in the Flesh which also is further related in the 24. Stanza 25. Most humblie Shee c. Here is the Eternall Trinity manifested so far as necessary to Salvation The Creator of the World in the Old Bible is here The Father in the New Testament The Word in that Old is the Son in the New The Spirit in the Old is the Holy Ghost in the New In which is revealed and clearly manifested the mystery of the Trinity so far as in necessary for Salvation 26. As wondrous was c. In this Stanza is deciphered the conveyance down to future times of the Ordinances and Subadministrations 27. Means to save All c. Here is shewn the right Title and true Claim of Episcopacy from the Apostleship Primariely in Christ Derivatively in the Apostles Successively in Episcopacy or Bishops 28. Her downcast Eye c. This Stanza speaks the State of Death and the Resurection 29. And now behold c. This Stanza is a representation of all the former Discourse as an arguing with all Christian Souls after the manner that the Lord by his Prophets put the Case to His peculiar People the Jewes therby the more to convince or to leave the obstinate to punishment inexcusably So Our Christ in the Flesh did manifest the Light and declare what was darkness as in the Gospell and afterwards by his Apostles 30. Hear'st This Away c. Here is the Travailers Application to the Pilgrim his Advise and Invitation to doe thereafter that they may attaine unto Salvation Here is Exhortation and incouragement to betake themselves to their Callings with Cheerfulness to be in the World not of the World to labour dayly for a better Being and to despise all the Miseries of this Life in respect of the Reward the Joy the Happiness that is laid up for All those that love The Lord and expect His Appearing And then concludeth as with the Magnificat My Soul doth Magnifie The Lord My Spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour Gloria Patri Filio et Spiritui Sancto c. In secula seculorum MORAL XII COGITATION is fuller of Care then it is of Businesse and if not reined in by Sanctification is as unruly as a wilde Beast Meditation does no businesse out of her studie and there she must have a Fire her Piety will cool else In meditatione mea exardescit ignis That Fire is the Love of God which must be kindled in our Hearts in our Wills in our Affections Without Grace Cogitation would make us mad Without true Religion Meditation would lead us into a despairing Melancholie And without modest bounds Contemplation may carry us if not into dangerous Errours into much Folly All are excellent in their kindes but not without their qualifications Meditation and Contemplation are much at one yet herein there is some distinction between them Meditatio convenit iis qui cum difficultate labore de rebus divinis cogitant Meditation belongs to those that bestow their Thoughts with no small Pains and no lesse difficultie about divine matters Contemplatio convenit iis qui sunt exercitati in rebus divinis Contemplation is proper to those that are exercised in holy Things In Meditation and Contemplation consist not Perfection sed in amando Deum but in loving God Contemplation is a work of the understanding The way and the means to Perfection not It. In elevando voluntatem nostram in Deum per Divinam Unionem et amorem supremum consistit Perfectio Perfection consists in the Resignation of our Wills in the Elevation of our affections by divine Union and transcendent Love to God The Understanding findes not the Soul Meat but makes it ready S. Gregory in his Morals delivers himself excellently and in part to our Purpose Si à domo mentis ad monumentum ratio discedat quasi absente dominâ cogitationum clamare velut garrula ancillarum turba multiplicat Ut autem ratio ad mentem redierit mox se confusio tumultuosa compescit et quasi ancillae se