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A89897 The daily exercises of a Christian life or the interiour spirit with which we ought to animate our actions throughout the whole day With an easy instruction for mentall prayer, translated out of French by I.W. of the Soc. of Jesus.; Exercices de la vie intérieure. English Gonnelieu, Jérôme de, 1640-1715.; I. W.; Nepveu, François, 1639-1708, attributed name. 1689 (1689) Wing N437B; ESTC R230742 75,972 258

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it in the spirit of pennance with all the pains humiliations privations which follow it in satisfaction of all the sins I have committed An offering of our Life to God. 6. Receive ô my Saviour the sacrifice that I make to your divine Majesty of my bo dy my life which I offer as a victime sacrificed to your self Unite it to that you offer'd for me upon the cross consume it with the fire of your divine love A desire to render to Iesus Christ Death for Death 7. O my divine Jesus since that your love to me made you dye upon the cross for my salvation is it not just that with a good will I accept death for love of you in counter-change as far as I am able of that you indured for me O why have I not a thousand lives to give them all for this end to acknowledge therby that you are my God! Spiritual confession With profound humility at the feet of Iesus Christ as if he were present in his sacred humanity accuse your self to him of all your sins taking a short review of them at the end of which excite your soul to a lively tender sorrow for them AN ACT OF CONTRITION O my God prostrate before your soveraign majesty I most humbly beg pardon for the great contempt abuse I have made of your holy graces of all the sins I have committed from my birth in thought word or deed I retract disavow them with my whole heart Yes o my God 't is from my whole heart that I detest disavow them wish I had never committed them not for fear of the punishment they deserve but onely because I have by them offended your infinite goodness which deserves to be loved above all things honoured by all creatures O why is not my heart capable too of an infinit sorrow to blot out their guilt But accept o my God in satisfaction of that sorrow which is wanting in me that which my Saviour had in the garden of Olives upon the cross for the sins of the whole world in generall for mine in particular Accept also for this effect that sorrow contrition which all the Saints have ever had Purifiy me from my secret sins pardon those I have committed by others despise not o my God an humble contrite heart which hopes onely for pardon of its sins from your infinit mercy In the 50. Psalm you have promised that when a sinner laments his sins you will no longer remember his iniquities And if you please o my God to prolong my life I make a firm purpose by the assistance of your holy grace to amend particularly such such faults thereby endeavour to repaire what is past Having made these Acts receive as an absolution that which Jesus Christ the soveraign priest gives you spiritually applying to your self his divine merits after which imagine you hear him say to you as he did to S. Mary Magdelen Your sins are forgiven you go in peace Say the 50. Psalm Miserere mei c in the spirit of pennance Aspirations to the three divine persons O father Eternall since you so loved the world as to give your onely son for its redemption I dare presume to hope from your mercy the salvation of my soul since you gave him not to condemn us but to save us for that end imposed upon him the holy name of Iesus Luk. 1. O divine Jesus be you my Jesus remembcr your own words that you came not for the just but for sinners Luk. 5. O my God you will not the death of a sinner but that he be converted live EZech. 18. Convert me therefore to your self that I may live an Eternall life Come divine spirit repose in my soul with your 7. gifts for to purify justify sanctify it consume in it by the fire of your holy love all that is yet earthly therein fortify it in this its last passage against all the temptations of its enemies An act of Faith. I protest my God before heaven earth that I will dye in the faith union of the holy Catholick church I believe firmly all that it believes teaches because you my God who are the Eternall truth have said revealed it that you are an infinite goodness holiness that cannot deceive any one an infinite wisdom that cannot erre are moreover omnipotent And from this very moment I disavow and detest all temptations contrary to it which the Enemy may suggest in the last moments of my life I return you thanks with my whole heart for the great grace which you have done me in making me of the numbe of the children of your holy Church Recite the Apostles Creed Credo in Deum c And making reflection upon every Article protest that you believe it An act of Hope O my God thô for the enormity inconceivable multitude of my offences I most justly merit hell yet confiding entirely in the merits of my Saviour Jesus Christ in the infinit greatness of your mercy which can pardon more sins then I can committ I cease not to hope for pardon for the grace to persevere in your love to which I consecrate the last moment of my life An act of Charity O my God when shall this soul of mine being separated from my body from all creatures be united perfectly to your self love you with that pure unchangeable affection with which the blessed in heaven love you O what is there I desire in haven or what is it I desire on earth butt you the God of my heart my God everlasting portion of my felicity I have regarded all things as nothing vile contemptible to gain Jesus Christ An act of Love towards our Neighbour O my God I beg of you grace mercy for all the creatures you have redeemed with your precious blood particularly for the true children of your holy Church for those from whom I have received any displeasure whom I pardon my God for love of you as I desire you should pardon me A desire to receive Iesus Christ O my God my Creatour redeemer my beginning my end the onely soveraign object of my heart O what a longing desire have I to receive you for to unite my self to you come then into my soul sanctify it replenish my heart with your graces take possession of all its affections to the end that all the moments of my life that are yet behind may entirely be consecrad to your love The Spirituall communion for the Viatick or the Sacramentall one if permitted to receive it Hearken to your good Angell who invites you to eat the bread of life speaks to you as that of Elias did to him Arise eat because you have a great journey still to make 3. Kings c. 19. Imagine that Jesus Christ accompanied with the blessed Virgin your good
him live such an hidden contemptible life often abandoned forsaken by all men for whose salvation he sacrifices himself upon the Altar wherefore animate your self to bear him company as often as you can sighing longing in your heart after Iesus in the blessed Sacrament when you are absent in body loving and defiring a life like unto his which renders you unKnown neglected and abandoned of all the world Sixthly on frydays honour his love which obliges him to give himself intirely to you without an reserve to the end that you may b● wholly transformed into him Endeavour to express such a disinteresse loue towards him but be sure to manifest the same rather by deeds the●● words Seventhly on Saturdays honour that liberality which he expresse● in those graces he bestows on you in your communions by keeping himself always upon the Altar to appease the wrath of his father which is enkindled against you Thank him for the miracles he works that he may give himself unto you Admire a God who is as it were so prodigall of himself Beg pardon for the ill use you have made of so many graces as he has bestowed on you in your communions The subjects of these visits may oftentimes serve you for the entertainment of your prayer in the afternoon XI EXAMEN A Litle before dinner recollect your self take a view of the ●nfidelitys which you have been guilty of that morning in the practice of the vertue of the month in overcoming ●our own ill humours bad inclinations and natural repugnances beg pardon for them of God by a sigh or two from the bottom of your heart At night before you go to bed make your generall Examen first of your ordinary faults sudden sallies of passion Secondly touching the ill use of divine graces the ill imployment of your time Thirdly touching the spirit intention wherewith you have animated your actions examining whether they proceeded from natural inclination passion or meer custome or else were performed with a good intention and inward fervour then make a solid sincere act of sorrow rather then a sensible one unite it by your intention with that act of contrition which you shall endeavour to make ar your next confession that you may produce this act the better cast your eyes upon Iesus crucified by you for you behold with confusion regret a God expiring through grief loue in your behalf sometimes consider the bounty and Goodness of God in expecting you in seeking after you in receiving you with loue after so many infidelities and offences sometimes hearken to what he says in the bottom of your heart Grow you weary of offending me since you see I do not grow weary of doing what good I can for you Sacrifice to me that vanity that curiosity that humour that sudden motion of anger which has so many years stood in competition with me for the possession of your heart for which ● have sacrificed the very last drop of my blood After your Examen say five Paters and Aves in pennance for your faults When you go to bed think a little on death which may perhaps surprise you that very night XII The spirit of recollection which we ought to preserve during the whole day THe spirit of recollection is the fruit of a good prayer of a communion worthily received you will obtain this recollection by calling to mind the presence of God which you may do first by breathing forth every hour these or the like aspirations My God I am wholly yours O that I might die to my self to live to you die in your loue Secondly say in the beginning of every work or action I do all for you my God all in your presence all for your love ô how glad am I to please you in this action Thirdly entring into company say ô my good Angel guard my ● heart tongue to the end I may neither speak any thing against charity nor hear it with complacence or any other concurrence on my part Fourthly being in pain or trouble as also in aridity or dryness in prayer or at any time out of humour say ô my God be you my strength support let me take a satisfaction in that pleasure which you have that I should suffer for your sake I am confounded in your presence to see how miserable weak I am in the performance of what is good but at the same time I rejoyce at my being nothing since you are all I willingly accept am heartily contented with my weaknesses imbecillities which may serve to destroy all self-loue to establih your most holy pure loue in my heart Fifthly being ready to give way to any sudden anger or other passion cast your eyes on God who looks on you and preserves you from yeilding to the temptation and say let me rather die ô my God then satisfie my self in any thing that displeases you By the frequent use of these aspirations you will conserve your heart in devotion be always diposed for prayer you will easily hinder distractions of mind which at that time are wont to disturb you whatsoever you do will be as I may say full of God you will live with such an equality and stedfastness of mind as will render you superiour to all sallies of passion animate all your actions with interiour life spirit XIII The spirit of mortification for every day YOu shall practice this mortification first in your eyes depriving them of all curiosity and voluntary levity Secondly in your tongue forbearing all words of curiosity anger vanity impatience detraction Thirdly in your taste restraining and moderating its sensuality and the too great desire curiosity of your appetite aboue all by not eating without necessity between meals Fourthly in the sense of hearing avoiding to hearken after news or other unprofitable curiosities touching the life or manners of others such affairs as do not belong to you Fifthly in your body fasting or using some other mortification according to the advice with the permission of your directour Sixthly in your mind cutting off all unprofitable reflections upon your self or others but especially such as disquiet you or proceed from human respects Seventhly in your heart restraining its solicitude hasty eagerness in what it goes about the excessive ardour of its desires the disquiets anxieties that afflict it when it is discontented the vain satisfaction which it takes in any graces received from Almighty God it s too great tie or in ordinate affection to its devotions in fine whatsoever is sensible therein since your heart must die to all these things that it may live intirely to God wherefore by little little you must wholly destroy or at least moderate them Aboue all study to deny your own will by an exact fidelity a constancy in that rule or course of life which you have
That he may become the soul of your soul that he may wean disengage your heart from the loue of of temporall goods to imitate his poverty that he may make you live a life full of humility of obedience simplicity to enter thereby into the true spirit of his Infancy II. 1. EAch day of the Octave renew these sentiments in your prayer in the evening take part in the joy which the Angells and shepheards tefied at the sight of a God become an Infant Acknowledge a God by the markes which heaven gives of him in the crib To witt in the swadling cloths in the extream poverty in which he was born stongly convince your self that you ought to be poor either in effect or in heart to resemble Iesus to save your self 2. Give in the honour of Jesus the Infant some suit or swadling cloths to the child of some poor body visit during this office the children brought up in the Hospitall doing them some service with as much affection as you would to the Infant Iesus 3. Apply your self to keep your heart in an indifferency to all things in a resignation to the divine providence in peace silence before this divine Infant as Infants are wont to live in indifferency to all things without concerning themselves for any thing reposing wholly upon the care of their parents 4. Speak little to creatures during this tyme to be the better able to imploy your self the more in the thoughts loue of the Infant Iesus forget your self to be able to thinK of nothing but him O love ô love how powerfull art thou to make of God an Infant O my heart how ingratefull art thou if thou lovest not this Infant God! This is the aspiration which thou oughtest to renew severall times a day 5. In fine approach often if your Directour rhink fit to holy communion during the Octave to incorporate your self with the Infant Jesus to act nothing but by his spirit to live no more but by his life to love humiliations poverty the interiour renunciation of all satisfaction of the heart or the senses that is the better to conform your self to these inclinations of little Iesus The exercises of Christian life during lent GENERALL ADVICES I. Lent is a time of Sanctitie THe time of lent is a time of sanctity and devotion these are the days of salvation as the scripture stiles them so that we ought to apply our selves more at this time then at any other of the year with an exact fidelity to our perfection tha● is to say 1. To perform our exercises of devotion with more fervour frit our exteriour exercise with a greater interiour To be more upon our guard to resist all the sallys of our humour all the unprofitable reflections or relapses of our minds upon creatures all the extravagancies of our senses 3. To use violence to ones self to overcome ones naturall repugnances to act no longer according to custome or inclination but according to the interiour spirit of grace 4. To entertain ones self more frequently in the presence of God either ones mind by a frequent recourse to him or ones heart by a constant desire to please him 5. To apply ones self with greater zeal to the practise of some vertue every month and in the day to make some interiour or exteriour acts of it 6. To make it o●es study to keep ones self i● time of prayer peaceable humble submissive respectfull before God ●ithout disquieting or troubling ones felf for all the distractions distasts sterilitys that may happen in it seeking nothing else but to please God without minding to please ones self Remembring the advice our Lord gives us not to discourse too much in it with peace of mind to be satisfied with the state of privation insensibility when God puts us therein To labour by means of our examition to know all that is bad or ill in us to correct it that which is human to purifie it that which is unprofitable to elevate it 8. Not to content ones self with an affective devotion which consists onely in good thoughts desires resolutions which one may have to do well but to perswade ones self that true devotion and solid vertue consist in doing what God will have us in spite of all our naturall repugnances 9. In ones spirituall reading to relish well what one reads as in all one 's other actions to expect therefrom all the fruit of gods grace 10 To make ones conf●ssions with more sorrow for what is past mor● confusion for the present more resolution for the future more circumspection ouer ones self the day one has confessed 11. To make ones communion● with more faith confidence loue with a more ardent desire to unite ones self to Iesus Christ with a more profound respect with a greater recollection union to the sacrifice which Christ makes in our hearts to his eternall Father more fervency in our demands more reservedness the rest of the day II. Lent is a tyme of penance PEnance is either interiour which consists in an efficacious sorrow for our sins or exteriour which comprehe●ds satisfactory works For the first one ought all the lent long to have ones heart continually contrite humble before God so perform out of this stock of sorrow state of compunction a continuall mortification during this holy time consecrated intirely to penance So that every hour it were good to make an act of contrition for ones sins rather by a sigh of our heart then by Formall words my God forgive me I 'le sin no more my God I 'le do nothing more to displease thee For the second one ought to observe when at age the fast of the Church But 1. we must perform it with such joy as our saviour instructs us to do as may be so much the greater the more pain we have to do it for then the merit is also greater 2. We must perform it in union with the fast of Iesus Christ for to honour it 3. In the exact privation of all things that may flatter our senses I mean of the curiosity of our eyes our ears or the satisfactions or nice choice of words for we ought to joyn the abstinence of our other sences with our mouths 2. We ought to augment our ordinary austeritys according to the advice of our directour 3. We ought to distribute greate almes then ordinary yet not without our directours advice because w● ought to do penance at this time fo● our whole years sins III. Lent is a time of solitude T Is at this time the better to honour the solitude of Jesus Christ that we ought to form to our selve● an interiour exteriour solitude The first consists in removing from our memorys all ill human unprofit●ble thoughts to let it b● taken up with nothing but God present or his holy will to blot out o●
keeping the spirit of sweetness charity with our neighbour but aboue all we ought to be carefull to joyn thereto an interiour retreat keeping our minds sequestred from all vain curious thoughts or all unprofitable reflections upon our selves or others imploying ones mind heart in frequent aspirations sighs addressed to God to demand his holy spirit which to obtain we must unite them with the interiour dispositions prayers of the holy Virgin the Apostles II. SAy every day the Veni creator at the end of the book make seven elevations of mind to demand the seven gifts of the holy Ghost the disengagement from creatures the victory over our humours which is the life of our own spirit opposed to that of the holy Ghost Make one elevation of mind to the eternall father another to the son a third to the holy Ghost a 4. th to the holy Virgin a 5. th to the Apostles a 6. th to your good Angell the last to S. Phillip Nery who reeived with such fullnessh the oly Ghost upon the day of Pentecost These elevations of mind ought to be made with ardent desires of obtaining this singular grace Aboue all beg a total change of your heart beseech the holy Ghost that he would cause you to live a life wholly supernaturall to die to all the longing hankering appetites of the human sensuall life VENI CREATOR OR The Hymne of the holy Ghost COme Creatour Sp'rit divine Visit now the souls of thine Fill with grace distill'd from heau'n Hearts to whom thou life hast giv'n Whom the comforter we call Gift of God transcending all Living spring fire fervent love Ghostly unction from aboue Sev'nfold grace thou dost impart And Gods right hand finger art Thou the fathers promise which Tongues with language doth enrich Kindle light in every sense Love into our hearts dispence Strengthen what in flesh is fraile With a vertue cannot faile Drive away our mortall foe Peace upon us soon bestow As a guide before us shine That all vice We may decline By thee may it so be done That we father know Son And in thee believe who dost Flow from both the holy Ghost Glorious may the father reign And the Son who rose again So the holy Paraclite During Ages infinite III. ADd a quarter of an hour to your ordinary time of prayer as much to your time of silence to think in the presence of God of the great affects which his spirit works in a well disposed heart in order to the making an absolute charge in it as he did in the hearts of his Apostles the better to entertain your self with a meditation upon some one of the gifts of the holy Ghost as you will find them explicated in some of your book on that subjet Make also a particular visit to the blessed Sacrament every day to demand of Jesus-Christ the fullness of his spirit IV. AVoid tepidity negligence or humour in your actions as faults particularly opposite to the fervour of that divine love which the holy Ghost in kindles in a soul watch over your self to be able to discerne the motions of his grace be faithfull in following them do to thing against the light which God gives you to avoid any thing because that would be to afflict the holy Ghost The practise of your aspirations during this holy time may be done after this or some such like manner Father of mercy send me your comforting spirit that may give peace to my soul my Jesus give me the spirit of understanding wisdome that may make me know you with a lively faith that I may feel your presence within my heart that I may relish nothing but you alone O holy Ghost heart of the blessed Trinity substantiall love of the Father the son come inlighten my mind with the truths of faith animate my heart with the flames of pure love come strengthen me in my weakness raise me up after my fallings purify me from all hankering after or fondness of creatures O love of my God be you the soul of my soul be you my life grant that I may die wholly to my self live wholly to you The seven gifts of the H. Ghost THe gift of Wisdome The gift of Understanding The gift of Knowledge The gift of Counsell The gift of Fortitude The gift of Piety or Godliness The gift of the Fear of God. FOR THE OCTAVE OF WHITSONTIDE Apply your self every day to know demand practise one of the seven gifts of the holy Ghost to the end that he may purifiy and Sanctify with these seven divine habits all the affections of your soul THE I. DAY The gift of Wisdome LEt the subject of your prayer be the qualities of this gift which are 1. to make us relish God all that unites us to him 2. to give us an extreme disgust of all pleasures of the senses all naturall satisfaction 3. to make us esteem love search with passion sufferings disgrace abjection of which we have such a horrour 4. to make an intire separation of a heart from all fondness of creatures as also from all that is sensuall in devotion from all that is not God. Come o holy Ghost come enlighten my mind with this gift of wisdome come destroy in me the love of the world grant that I may take no relish in any thing but in God that God may be all to me creatures may be nothing grant that I may love contempt which my Saviour so esteemed that the cross may be the onely o●ject of my love 2. Beg often during the first day that is the day of Pentecost the gift of wisdome which consists in loving spirituall things make an extraordinary visit to the blessed Sacrament to beg this day as well as throughout the whole Octave the Office of the holy Ghost in the morning after your prayers say veni Creator as in the end of this book give every day of the Octave some little almes to the poor to obtain the gifts of the holy Ghost whom the holy Chruch stiles the Father of the poor THE II. DAY The Gifts of Vnderstanding 1. COnsider in your prayer the effects of this gift which are 1. to make us love what we believe to render our faith so lively strong that it may make such an impression upon our minds as if we saw the objects of what we believe so that a soul inlightened with this gift is lost in the respect love it finds in gods presence in prayer before the blessed Sacrament as if it saw God with its eyes this gift works the same effect in the soul as the light of glory does in the souls of the Blessed It sees God in the bosome of it feels his presence after so intimate certain a manner that it is rather a possession then a knowledge of
all mankind how is it possible that I should dare to receive you within my self who have so often provoked your anger O my God receive your self in me because I am unworthy to approach you o my Saviour offer your self within me to your father at the same time sacrifice to your father to your divine justice all that is criminall or human within me O my judge condemn me not for my tepidity O my God one word alone from you suffices to make me a Saint to heal all the maladies of my soul who am unworthy to receive you within my self O my Saviour how sorry am I that I have ever offended you and caused you to suffer so much for my sake O my judge how does your presence pierce my heart with horrour confusion when I think that I go to receive him who one day will judge me concerning the action I am about to perform who bears in his hands my eternal happiness or misery 2. Endeavour to conceive a firm confidence a fervent love an ardent desire to receive Jesus Christ because you ought to be convinced that 't is the same Saviour who is so charitable so good as to heal all those that approach him with faith have recourse to him with confidence 3. ● Excite in your self an ardent desire to receive your soveraign good your redeemer deliverer who are a slave to your passions your Physician who are sick your Saviour who are in danger of perishing 4. Abou● all remember after you have received your God to recollect your self for some time eith●r casting your self at his feet with S. Magdelen to hear his instructions or adoring him with the Leper in the Gospell saying with him Lord if you please you can cure me or in fine consecrating your self intirely to him begging of him to take possession of your heart of your body to unite transform you into himself to become for the future the soul of all your actions the rule model of your life that it may be he that lives in you by you that all you do may be animated with his spirit If you find your self much transported by the sweetness deliciousness that the presence of Jesus Christ may diffuse in you remain with silence at his feet begging him to receive himself and to thank himself in you be contented to remain with a profound respect in his presence 5. Make your petitions to him with fervency with a firm confidence of being heard in them beg of him the grace never to loose his favour by a mortall sin to die in an act of his love Beseech him earnestly to inspire you with a contempt of the world with a disengagement from all earthly objects patience in the government of your family charity in conversation so as never to be backbiting your neighbours liberality towards the poor fidelity to his graces with the spirit of devotion in your prayers 6. lastly after having returned thanks most affectionately to the goodness of Jesus Christ in vouchsafing to come into your heart offer to him in gratitude the victory you may have gotten over the sallys of your humour or any other imperfection that displeases him in you which is most customary take care till the next communion to be faithfull in this point to correct this imperfection five times a day quell this passion in honour of the five wounds of our Saviour 7. Put your self from time to time during the day in mind of what passed in communion remember the favour you have received of your Jesus to give him thanks for it And keep a guard over your heart tongue that you may not prophane either by any word or inordinate desires of your own a soul that is sanctified by the presence of a God. 13. In fine remember to make reflections from time to time in the day time upon the great truths of Christianity to convince your mind of them engrave them deep in your heart Think often 1. that you have but one soul to loose or save but once to die well or ill 2. that one cannot go to heaven without merit that one cannot merit but by using violence over ones passions 3. that God whom we serve so carelesly is the disposer of our misery or happiness that he has heaven hell at his disposal Alas if we search with so much earnestness the favour of those upon whom depends a good success of our affairs why do we neglect his freindship upon whom depends a happy or miserable Eternity 4. What a blindness is it to regret the loss of what we have here in this world not be concerned at the loss of a God which by a mortall sin we sustain 5. It is impossible to love serve God the world at the same time and to save ones self the broad and easy way we must necessarily renounce either the heavenly or earthly paradise 6. what will it profit you to have gained all the riches of the world if you loose your own soul A SAINT FOR THE YEAR SAINT ROSE THE VERTVE The renouncing of the pleasures of sense curiosity vanity and rallerie THE PRACTICE First to say nothing in passion Secondly not to be so easy as to comply with any that shall backbite others Thirdly to seek nothing out of pure curiosity or self-satisfaction I. Before Communion 1 J go to receive a God who is my judge O grant my Jesus that I may not receive thee to my damnation 2. I am about to receive in my heart a God who is my Saviour o God receive thou thy self there with the love thou deservest 3. O my judge I tremble I am ready to die with confusion grief whilst I approach your majesty O my Saviour I hope in your goodness I abandon my self entirely to you I burn with desire to open my heart to you I will die with love of you breath my last in you I unite my self to all the respect which Angels to all the love which Seraphins bear you to all the confidence of the sick that you have cured o my Jesus during your whole life I hope with them that you will give a speedy remedy to all the diseases of my soul II. During Communion 1. O my Jesus o my love o God of glory o God of goodness o majesty of my God! who are you who am I 2. Receive your self in me thank your self in me Sacrifice your self upon my heart for me I unite my self to all that you are going to do in me 3. In your passage thorough my heart heal all its curiosities all the ill words of my tongue III. After Communion 1. O liberality of my Jesus how am I obliged to you for having given me a God for the nourishment of my soul O that all creatures all the Angels would oyn with me in giving you due
thanks for me 2. I adore you my Jesus as my Creatour who gave me my life as my Saviour who has deliver'd me from death as a God of glory who has designed me for Paradise 3. Pause here in silence look upon ●es●s Christ as your Saviour with confidence as your Judge with fear as your most loving and lovely God with love 4. Beg of him to apply himself to your senses to your mind to your heart to cure your infirmities to purifie them fill them with his love A GENERAL PRACTICE FOR THE VERTUE OF THE MONTH Together with the manner whereby you ought to honour a Saint every month 1. One ought to form a high Idea of this vertue conceive a fervent desire to practise it for this reason it were good to make a meditation of it in the beginning in the middle in the end of the month 2. One ought to receive it from ones Directour as from God himself who inspires him therewith who will exact an account of it ar the day of Judgment it is good to beg it often of God by the intercession of the holy Patron recommended to your choice particularly in the morning at noon at night saying for this end a Pater Ave. 3. The practice of the vertue of the month ought to be in this manner 1. you must offer the first communion of the month to obtain it 2 in the morning when you rise make a firm resolution to practise it that day forecasting to your self the occasions you may have to exercise it 4. Before dinner recollect your self the space of a Pater Ave to consider how you have practised it to see whether that morning you have exercised any acts of it or fallen into the contrary vice if you find you have ask pardon of God purpose to be more faithfull the following part of the day 5. In your examen at night make the same review compare with diligence the faults you have committed after dinner with those committed in the morning noting the number upon a paper or with knots upon a piece of thred to see if your fidelity was greater after dinner then in the morning 6. Take care every dal especially in the morning to make there acts of the month the same after dinner for exteriour acts take care to keep a watch over your self that you fall not upon occasion into the vice contrary to it 7. If you happen to fail impose upon your self immediately some mortification if occasion permits that may be contrary to the fault you committed for example if you have for your vertue to say nothing out of humour or inclination or the mortification of your tongue after you have failed hinder your self from speaking when you have never so much mind to it if it be nothing but unprofitable discourse or keep a greater silence then ordinary by retiring your self the like you may do in respect of other vertues 8. Give an exact account to your Directour of your care or negligence in the practice of the vertue of the month be afraid that God should withdraw his particular grace of which you have great need if you neglect this particular care because God will treat you as you do him 9. Perswade your self that all your spirituall advancement depends upon your practice of this vertue which if you neglect you will never profit in it Remember also to offer some of your alms mortifications to our Lord to obtain this vertue present them to him by the hands of your Directour 10. Honour your monthly Patron invoking him three times a day saying for this end a Pater Ave 2. Have recourse to him in your occurring difficulties 3. Give thanks to our Lord for the graces bestowed upon him 4. Communicate upon his feast 5. Make a Letanie of all the Saints you have every month say them every day AN EXERCISE VERY PROFITABLE TO prepare ones self to die well A prayer to Iesus Christ SAviour of the world word incarnate life of the dying death of the living life of the dying by the glory you bestow upon them purchased by your precious blood death of the living by the grace which you give them to dye to the flesh to live to the spirit animate this exercise with your holy dove to the end that by the ●ractice of it we may find our selves so prepared for death that after this life we ma● live with you eternally in heaven there to bless praise love you with the Father holy Ghost Amen Ever praised be the most holy Sacrament of the Altar ADVICE FOR THE PRACTICE of this Exercise SInce t is a truth of which we have daily but too great an experience which yet for all that we too easily forget that we must dye that a suddain death may perhaps surprise us unawares as we see happens often to those that think least of it or that the extreme pains of our sickness may deprive us of the liberty to make those acts that are necessary for this last hour the hour of all hours most important the hour after which there remains no more hours the hour that decides our Eternall happiness or misery 't is necessary every month to prepare our selves by the exercises of a death in imagination to those which we must really practise when we come actually to dye Watch prepare your selves because the son of man will come at the hour you think least of Says our Saviour in the 13. of S. Mark 's Gospell in the 12. of Ecclesiastes we are warned that where the tree falls there it lyes As near as you can either the day before or upon the day you exercise this devotion make your Sacramentall confession which will not hinder you from making your spirituall confession to Jesus Christ either before or after the sacramentall one according to each ones devotion After confession make a sacramental communion by way of Viaticum as if it were your last in case you actually communicate endeavour to have by you some meddal to which the Pope has applyed a plenary Indulgence to gain one Upon the day of your devotion if possible hear mass to unite your self more particularly in this holy sacrifice which is a reall representation of that upon the cross to Jesus Christ dying offering him to the eternall father together with all the sacrifices which shall be offer'd to the end of the world to obtain the grace of a happy death It will be very profitable to make choice of the last day of every month for this exercise if one be not minded to make it altogether one may begin the first point in the morning the second at some other hour that day or otherwise perform it in two days then one should repeat over again the acts of contrition of faith of hope of charity conteined in the first point observing
✚ E-Libris-F F-Proed-de-Woodchester IHS Ant. Wierx fecit et exend Angele qui meus es custos pietate superiu● Me tibi commissum serua defende aūberna Vt valeam tecum caelestia scandere regna Angele sancte Dei sit tibi cura mei THE Daily exercises of a Christian life OR The interiour spirit with which we ought to animate our actions throughout the whole day WITH An easy instruction for mentall prayer Translated out of French by I. W. of the Soc. of JESUS The 2. Edition with severall additions by the Author Printed at S. OMERS by LUDOVICUS CARLIER in the year 1689. By Permission of Superiours TO THE QUEEN MADAM I First publish'd this treatise for the comfort of English Catholicks then groaning vnder a severe persecution for their Religion whilst their false accusers pretended they suffered for designing the destruction of the late King but now manifest the severity shewed against them was not out of a motive of Loyalty or affection to his Majesty but out of hatred to the Catholick Religion since at present they commit greater treasons against our soveraigne than they accuse the Catholicks to have designed against his Brother and this for no other reason but because he professes and consequently favours that Religion they aime to destroy and now endeavour to depose him because he will not permit them to ruin the same I now publish this second Edition with severall additions made by the same Author whom since your Maiesty's arrival in France you have both heard and approved presume to dedicate it to your Majesty whose sufferings in this second persecution as much exceed what Catholicks vnderwent in the former as your condition does exceed theirs hoping you may finde such a proportionable comfort by the perusall of it as several have own'd they experienc'd and since your Majesty's constant piety prompts you to a daily Exercise of solid vertue these daily Exercises will assist you to an easy performance of your Majestys design and thô your couragious suffering such a change of fortune shewes to how high a pitch of solid vertue you are already arrived yet you will here finde how large pleasant a field vertue is that leads to that Kingdom prepared as a reward for your sufferings not subject to such vicissitudes as you have experienc'd these earthly Kingdoms are and that your Majesty after a long and happy Reign with our King here may arrive to the enjoyment of this everlasting Kingdom hereafter are the hearty wishes and constant prayers of MADAM Your Majesties Most humble and most obedient Subject and Servant J. W. A PREFACE To English Catholicks LIGHTING accidentally upon the ensuing Treatise I was so pleased with its solidity facility and brevity that I was moved to translate it for your use and profit especially for such as understand not french whose present sufferings must needs give you a sight of the vanity and inconstancy of this world and move you to seek a more secure solid and lasting happiness in the next wherunto the instructions you will here meet with will easily and securely lead you For such well disposed persons as you are this Treatise was writ and for such also I translated it who having undergon the sharp tryals of long and severe persecutions are trained up and fitted for a greater combat where you are to become your own adversaries and are to engage with no other enemies then your selves which I call a greater combat because a greater courage and constancy is required thereunto for one blow is sufficient to crown a martyr whereas a war with yourselves is to endure as many years as you live perhaps not so bloody and cruel as the other but yet more irksom and vexatious where you may over-come but can never have truce or peace so much harder is it to live a martyr then to die one and more crowns are due when you die oftner and onely live to add new crowns by dying daily This is a combat common to all Christians to all states and conditions whilst the other has been the happy lot only of a few this reaps a harvest of merits in the toilsome and laborious field of vertue whilst the other is a free gift and favour bestowed somtimes on the greatest sinners Happy therfore and thrice happy are you who are both chosen out for followers of the cross and also continue to follow it by your own free will and election not like those faint hearts who understand not this happiness but turning their backs to glory do comply so much with ease and terrene inclinations as to shrink out of the lists and decline this hard and toilsome enterprise but eouragiously treading that rough yet only secure path to happynesse by which the Eternall Father led his beloved sonne Oportebat Christum pati sic intrare in gloriam are by soe happy a necessity of suffering disposed to such admirable sentiments as this treatis will help you to practis which therfore I hope will be the more acceptable to you who I am sure are so far from shunning the difficulties you will meet with in the exercises here prescribed that you will rather take them for the first copies set to beginners and for easy draughts delineating only the first grounds and out lines of perfection whereby you being daily improved allured to so happy and profitable an enterprise will generously offer at more and greater for the present make it your delight to read a spirituall book to be somtimes retired and to absent and often withdraw your selves from worldly conversation to converse with God become more present to him and your selves to resist corrupted nature and follow Christ in the way of the cross and mortification and hereby become and continue such true pretenders to heaven as I either take you or heartily wish you to be and that I may be one of that happy number and become joynt parraker of what we all pretend to everlasting happiness I humbly beg the assistance of your good prayers THE PREFACE Of the necessity of performing our actions well in order to perfection YOu will not find here either studied discourses or elevated conceits touching the interiour and hidden life and the vertues which it forms in us there are spirituall books enough which give it's maximes teach it's secrets discover it's illusions here are only plaine reflections upon our ordinary actions teaching with what spirit they ought to be animated however I dare affirme that these practices are no less profitable to good souls than all those high and sublime rules which are given them of the severall degrees of prayer interiour abnegation for we want not so much knowledge instruction as the execution and practice thereof we are sufficiently instructed in this age in all spirituall matters but our misery consists in this that we content our selves with the bare knowledge out of books that treat of them it may be with speaKing thereof
in conversation and if sometimes it happens that we find some relish of these truths or penetrate a little deeper then ordinary into them we look on our selves as already great proficients in spirit rest there without passing on to any practice thereof T is enough at present for a devout person to have by him the Treatise called the Interiour Christian now and then to read in it to believe himself a very spirituall person much advanced in perfection We see many souls much addicted to read the latter end of this book where it treats of the most high sublime degrees of prayer but we see very few who exercise themselves in the practice of the love of contempt mortification and suffering whereof the Authour treats in the beginning For my part I am perswaded that we have more need of having our hearts touched then our minds enlightened and that we stand more in need to be animated to practice what is good then to have bare desires of it wherfore I thought it very profitable to instruct good and devout souls how to perform all their exteriour actions with an interiour spirit not to follow their own humour custome or sensuality but to render their actions as I may say full of god and to animate them with the spirit of his grace In effect all who know what belongs to true devotion christian perfection agree that it consists in doing the will of god and that in such manner as he will have it done and that this is the sanctity to which god calls all christians of what condition soever Now it is in the ordinary actions which every one in his state performs that the will of god is marked out to us and therefore all our perfection consists in doing them well All persons are not capable of high and elevated prayer and if they be not called to it they will not at the day of Judgement be accountable for it wherefore 't is not necessary to them to Know the severall degrees of prayer and all that is got by such notions is either vanity if they flatter themselves with a belief that they are carried by those sublime wayes or else discouragement if they find themselves uncapable of them but there are none of how mean a capacity soever they be who are not able to perform their actions with an interiour spirit and therefore 't is not only profitable but necessary to Know how to animate them with it because we shall be examined and judged upon this point and the first head of our examination will be whether we have acted as christians and not as Pagans or barely as men I add that it is very hard to very many souls to penetrate or even to conceive the great maximes of abnegation of relinquishing all humane things of interiour silence of the passive state of the death to all that is sensible of the loss consummation of a soul in god But there is no soul how little soever it be enlightened by god which may not easily learn to perform these ordinary actions with christian sentiments and regulate the conduct of it's life according to the maximes of the Gospel wherefore I here lay down an easy way or method whereby all devout christian souls may arrive to an eminent degree of vertue fulfill the perfection of their state please god in all things they do act in all things according to the spirit of grace and not according to the sentiments of nature gather together in a short time great treasures of merits fly not onely idleness the ordinary fault of the world but the unprofitable passing of their life the common errour even of vertuous persons perform from morning to night the will of god without straying one moment from this way become as David was persons according to gods own heart in fine render themselves by an exact fidelity very great Saints and this by doing nothing else but their ordinary daily actions For my part when I consider that god has annexed our perfection to the exact performance of our daily actions that 't is of these he will require an account at the day of judgement that it is to animate us to perform these that he gives us his graces and that when we have any one of them to do all that he requires of us is nothing but our fidelity in performing it I am surprised to see so few apply themselves to a holy and exact performance of them and that they seek vertue and perfection in things which god requires not at their hands Let us therefore endeavour to make a firm resolution to do all our ordinary actions of the day well and place our perfection in this practice let us avoid all things in them which may be displeasing to god take care to omit nothing in their performance which may be pleasing to him let us perform them after such a manner as that god may be the soul of all our actions and endeavours and that there may be nothing human or unprofitable in all that we do so that we may never be one moment without meriting and tending towards god that Jesus-Christ may live in us as the Apostle says and that the spirit of his grace may animate all our thoughts all our words and all our works I know very well that souls who are after an extraordinary manner carried to prayer ought not to tie themselves to particular motives or reflections for the right performance of their actions and that they ought to content themselves in following with fidelity the impulse of gods grace and to suffer themselves to be led to the performance of them by the spirit which animates them and which will make them avoid the imperfections which are ordinarily committed in such performances even when they do not foresee them But since there are very few such souls and that they as well as others will be able to find in the advice that I give the sources of retirement and recollection that is to say such thoughts as will maKe them enter into themselves even in the midst of their distractive Imployments there are therefore few persons or to say better none who may not reap profit out of these exercises But that they may be able to do so I would councell them to read them often till such time as having so fixed in their minds all these sentiments they may upon all occasions use them as a rule whereby to perform all their actions in an holy manner and it would be good also to run them ouer at the end of the weeK or month thereby to discover and taKe a view of all their faults In the beginning they may also content themselves with the practice of the rules relating to the performance of some particular action as of Masse for example and afterwards endeavour to perfect themselves in the rest For I cannot but affirm that we have not any means more sure easy and
efficacious of making our selves Saints arriving to an eminent degree of vertue then by doing all our actions with an interiour spirit this is that we ought to apply our selves to all the days of our life and we may assure our selves that to die in this exercise is to die the death of Saints THE Daily exercises of a Christian life OR The interiour Spirit with which we ought to animate our actions all the day long I. RISING THE holiness of life and death depending on our passing ouer the day in an holy manner the passing of it well consisting chiefly in a good beginning of it I dare affirm that the action which one ought to perform with the greatest fervour is that of rising in the morning wherefore taKe care to rise every day at a constant and regulated hour and if you find any difficulty in it think of Jesus-Christ hanging upon his crosse to which the love of you fixed him much faster then the nails from whence he reproaches you with your delicacy and sloath and you will be ashamed to give this ease to your body seeing your saviours body torn his blood exhausted for the loue of you You may also sometimes if you please think of that which a soul in Purgatory suffers for the sloath it had in rising whilst it liued and entertaining your self with these good thoughts get up with fervour having first consecrated to god your heart and soul put him into possession of your self You may rise ordinarilie in Summer at five of the clock and at six in the winter When you are up the first thing you are to perform is prayer which consists chiefly in four acts By the first you adore God as present and give him thanKs for having had the goodness to preserve you that night from suddain death By the second you offer to him all your thoughts words and deeds and all your sufferings together with your self in union with the thoughts words deeds sufferings of Jesus Christ praying him to act in you and to animate you to suffer and to Keep you all that day intimately united to him by a faithfull imitation of his life in all that you do By the third act you asK pardon of God for your past sins making a firm resolution of avoiding all mortall veniall sin particularly to take tcare of that imperfection you find your self most subject to and to practice that vertue which you have undertaken that month to practice asking for this end the assistance of that Saint whom you have for your patron protectour By the fourth act you must commit resign your self first to the bounty goodness of God in order to all the graces which he shall please to bestow that day upon you then to his Justice in order to all the pains afflictions which he shall please to send you welcoming them as from his hand accepting them with resignation lastly to his prouidence in order to all the good bad success which he shall permit in what you undertaKe or perform After these Acts say a Pater Ave Creed together with the Confiteor and if you please the Litanies of Jesus three times Gloria Patri c. in honour of the blessed Trinity In fine pray to the blessed Virgin your good Angell Patron to assist and preserve you offer up the Masses that shall be said that day throughout the whole world to obtain of God fidelity to concurr with his grace as also an happy death II. DRESSING HAlf an hour past five or past six according to the time of your rising dress your self 1. with modesty without any satisfaction or complacence in your cloaths remembering that God looks upon you that this body you take so much pains to dress adorn may perhaps the same day become the food of worms consider also that Jesus Christ would die naKed upon the cross to satisfy for the vanity which we take in our cloaths to punish it in himself 2. It will be also good to devest your self of this vanity gratefully to acknowledge the goodness of your dying Jesus in reducing himself to this poor condition for your sake by depriving your self from time to time of some little ornament that pleases you most thô it were but of a riband which you may sacrifice unto him or you may forbear to wear that day some better sute of cloaths or gown for his sake all which will be very pleasing to him 3. Aboue all look not in your glass but for meer necessity that so you may avoid such satisfactions complacences as may happen in that action consider that your soul is as disagreable in the sight of god as naKed of the ornaments of vertue as your dressings ornaments are agreable in your own 4. ● Employ no more time in dressing then is purely necessary remembring that you must give an account to god for the time unnecessarily spent in it After this give order for such things as are to be done about your house III. PRAYER AT seven of the clock or half an hour past it according to the time necessarily required for your dressing and ordering the affaires of your houshold maKe your prayer for the space of half an hour retiring your self in to a Closet if you are not alone in your chamber or if you cannot perform it with convenient recollection at home you may go to the Church but it would be much more to the purpose to maKe it before you quite dress your self if you maKe it at home In prayer follow the advice of your directour without consulting others and aboue all remember to observe three things first often to renew the presence of God sweetly and familiarly entertain your self with him concerning the truths you meditate of to the end you may always remain with due respect and more easily avoid distractions Secondly receive with patience such aridities disgusts distractions or wandrings of the imagination as God permits to happen to you in prayer looking on this as the best way to profit much in a short time in the pure loue of god which is so remote from whatsoever is sensible Moreouer in this condition you ought to do nothing else save onely 1 to humble and annihilate your self before the divine Majesty of God looKing on your self as unworthy to speaK unto him 2. offer up your disabilities and weaKnesses to God resigning your self to his will protesting that you seeK or desire nothing but purely to please him 3. raise your self by frequent elevations of your heart to God chiefly by acts of faith hope charity humility and resignation not troubling your self if you do not this with sweetness or facility being throughly perswaded that the more violence you use towards your self the more pleasing you are to Almighty God. ● in fine you ought in this condition to continue on your Knees with fidelity during the whole
God. 2. This gift makes us see God in all things makes all things carry us to God So that a soul which is enlightened with it considers nothing that is good rich or perfect in creatures but onely i● God as in the source of all bounty goodness It is full of the Idea of th● greatness of God It penetrates chr●stian verities with a supernaturall view It discovers in abjection in th● cross beauties unknown to sensual soules depises all earthly goods 2. O my God dissipate the darkne● of my mind by the light of your holy spirit grant I may judge no more o● things according to their appearances according to sense but according to truth according to the supernaturall view of grace that all things that I understand may carry me to you that all creatures may disappear in the presence of their Creatour to the end that God alone may take up my mind which is made to know him my heart which was created to ove him 3. Observe that which is marked the first day after meditation to wit the frequent aspirations during the whole day taken out of the affections marked in your meditation The visit of the blessed Sacrament The office of the holy Ghost The veni Creator to obtain this Gift do the same the other days of the Octave THE III. DAY The Gift of Knowledge 1. COnsider that the gift of knowledge when it enlightens a soul it makes it judge of things as God himself does that is to say it makes it esteem nothing great but the service of God to fear nothing but his displeasure to love nothing but what makes us more agreable in his eyes 2. This gift enlightens us in the knowledge of the Crucifix that is to say it makes us behold with respect all the crosses that God sends us proceding from the cross deify'd in Jesus-Christ therefore makes us far from complaining of them it receives them with gratefull acknowledgement thanks our Saviour for them as for a singular favour it thinks it self more happy in suffring a contempt an affliction an injury a persecution an affront a refusall a drieness a sensible dereliction of Go● in prayer more then in possessing the whole earth wherefore the so● thus enlightened with the gift o● knowledge when any pain happen to it goes immediately casts i● self on its knees before a Crucifix t● receive its cross as from the hand o● God with respect submission loue 2. O my Jesus O that the beam● of your cross were more known to the world O how do they contemne the holy reliques of your cross which you offer to us shut up in the pain of this life O cross of my Saviour O how often have I adored you i● my Crucifix which is your image despised in my pains which are you● true effects as it were your s● many other selves THE IV. DAY The Gift of Counsell 1. COonsider that this gift carrys us 1. to consult God in all things that we undertake 2. to do nothing but by the motions of grace or according to the maximes of the Gospell 3. never to neglect inspirations interiour admonitions of the holy Ghost but readily faithfully to follw them 4. to give good counsell to such as ask our advice 5. never to follow that which vanity humour or self love counsells us to do but to do that onely which the spirit of grace the love of our abjection inspires us 2. O my God! how much reason have I to fear that I have been the cause of the sin damnation of many persons by my ill counsells Perhaps at this present there are some in hell which would have been in heaven if I had counselled them in their despaire assisted them in their poverty or withdrawn them by my good counsells from the occasion of sin O how many have I ruined by my bad example What reproaches will these damned make me at the day of Iudgement O holy Ghost how sorry am I that I have so often neglected thy counsells to follow the sentiment of self love O that I could be so faithfull for the future as never to do any thing contrary to your ●nspirations but in all things to follow your counsel THE V. DAY The Gift of Fortitude 1. COnsider the effects of this gift which are 1. to render our selves so perfect masters of our humours of our choler of our passions that we may crush stifle their revolts in their birth 2. to give us invincible courage in our pains never to permit our selves to be oppressed by them but to remain faithfull in them 3. to give us stedfastness in our good resolutions courage constantly to follow that which we have undertaken for the glory of God the salvation of souls inspite of all contradictions contempt or oppositions of creatures 4. to establish all our happiness in sufferings or the persecutions that we undergo for the good we would do 2. O Jesus humbled despised o that your affronts would render my contempts pleasing to me And that your annihilations would give me courage to suffer my self to be reduced to nothing for your sake in the esteem of all men Holy spirit grant that my mind may find its strength in the weakness of my body that I may never fall under the burthen of the cross O how I am confounded to see that there needs onely a rude word a contradiction nay a nothing to make me fall into impatience It seems to me when I goe from my prayer that I want no force to do suffer all things but how weak am I when the occasion presents it self Give me grace to suffer all things from others to make me suffer my self THE VI. DAY The Gift of Piety 1. COnsider that this gift inspires a soul with true devotion which consists 1. in performing with fervour promptitude all that God desires of us 2. in loving prayer the exercises of piety the frequenting of the Sacraments solitude reading recollection of mind in the presence of God. This gift imprints in the heart so lively and animated a tenderness for the love of God tha● one is ready to do suffer all things to please him 2. Ought I ô my God so often to bear the cross yet neuer to bear it well O that a soul were as knowing in the science of Saints to esteem love cherish crosses as worldlings shun reject them O Cross ô holy Cross how can you be all my consolation comfort in my life how can I look upon you at the day of judgement with confidence if I receive you not with respect in this world suffering my pains with submission silence love THE VII DAY The Gift of the Fear of God. 1. COnsider that this gift imprints in our hearts a filial respectfull fear of God which makes us apprehend the least sin because 't is displeasing to God
read there also with attention what you will find in the Christian thoughts allotted for that day or a chapter in Thomas a Kempis making from time to time a serious reflection upon what you read beg grace to perform it 8. Be nor of the number of those who sit up allmost all night sleep the next morning till eleven or twelve of the clock but have a certain time allotted for rising going to bed as much as you are able remember that a christian life ought to be regular 9. Flatter not your self too much concerning your almes since you are obliged to give such as may be proportionable to your fortune take care that almes be given to the poor in the Country by giving them corn do the same in town either to prisoners or bashfull poor know for certain that a person who is rich cannot save his soul by doing small almes that one is obliged in conscience under pain of great sin to assist the poor in their pressing necessities which are but too frequent that you may easily know if you will but take the pains a little to inform your self that to defer or lessen the salaries of poor tradesmen is visibly to damn ones self think not that your poor vassalls can give a hundred days work exacted of them did not the fear of their Lords force them to it therefore doubt not but t is your duty to pay them 10. For your devotions perform them at least every 8. th day or even twice a week if your Confessour judge it fit but remember to deprive your self the night before of your ordinary divertisement of play apply your self to make your communions as well as you can according to the following directions 11. For confession endeavour 1. to examine well your conscience to particularise your sins especially those which you commit out of custome as choler detraction consider also the evill that you have not hindred to be committed in your house the good you have not performed as you might have done for example to reconcile your neighbours to give almes to the poor in great necessity to neglect your spirituall exercises out of sloth or to divert or let fall a detraction 2. after this the better to conceive a true sorrow sincere contrition propose to your self all the motives that are capable to excite in you an actuall interiour disengagement from sin without which your confessions ●ave not worth any thing wherefore regard regret your sins as the effects of the greatest ingratitude against the infinite goodness and bounty of God towards you for all the graces favours he has bestowed upon you all the benefits you have received from his hands deplore them as the greatest affronts committed against his supreme majesty as a contempt of his greatness as a trampling under foot his most precious blood casting your eyes upon a crucifix imploy your mind at the same time upon the following thoughts Behold what my sins have made my Jesus suffer See to what extremity his love for me has brought him ought I to have displeased so amiable a Deity ought I to continue to shed his most pretious blood ought I to not leave off affronting him who never leaves off doing me all the good he can O my God! what a regret sorrow have I for having offended you ô that I might ratther undergo a thousand deaths then ever more displease you 2. sincerely confess your sins saying those you remember in short mixing no unprofitable discourse with them taking notice in a few words of the necessary circumstances avoiding all long unprofitable stories by which one makes known rather anothers sins then ones own in which they do ill whilst they think to do well believe it as a certain truth that the shorter more exact clear your confession is the better more perfect it is to make it so forget not as much as you are able to express the number of your sins whether you have committed them with foresight or reflection to take notice also whether you staid long in them or onely a short time or in fine whether you gave full consent to them or were negligent in rejecting or withdrawing your self from them never fail to take notice whether your sins are concerning any light mater or of moment In the third place when you receive absolution recollect your mind as in gods presence renew your sorrow for your sins perswade your self that t is the blood of Jesus Christ that purifies your soul sanctifies it gives it a new force not to committ any more sins In the fourth place after confession retire your self alone put your self in spirit at the feet of Christ crucified consider him all covered with wounds blood expiring with love grief for your sake 1. Give him thanks with all your heart that after having so often pardoned your sins he has had but now once more the bounty for you to pardon them again blush with shame confusion in his presence that you have so often fallen into the same 2. ● Offer to the eternall father the blood sufferings of his son Jesus Christ for pennance satisfaction for your sins for the pain due to them then unite with his the pennance you are about to perform 3. Perform it with attention sorrow confusion as a criminall that acknowledges regrets his crime make an ardent lively resolution to avoid all sin particularly that which you are most subject to remember if you communicate not the same day that you confess not to let loose your mind after confession but to keep an exact watch over your self not to fall into your ordinary imperfections 12. For holy Communion take a particular care to dispose your self very well for it to improve much by it because there is nothing more dangerous then to approach it with indifference out of formality not to grow better by it Therefore from the very minute after your prayer morning night think that you are to receive your God that same day conceive an ardent desire to receive him worthily To prepare your self Well for Communion 1. Endeavour to excite in your self a lively faith of the presence of Jesus Christ in the blessed Sacrament consider very well these three things I go to receive my God my Saviour my judge therefore with what respect ought I to approach my God ywith what love ought I to approach my Saviour with what confusion ought I to present my self before my judge O my God may Soveraign Lord who are you who am I that I should dare to appear in your presence But o my Jesus my amiable Saviour ô how much fervency have I to unite my self so to you as to make you absolute master of my heart O Souveraign judge of
far as is possible from all imperfection 4. That you may obtain these graces of the Infant Iesus say at the end of your prayer for matter whereof you may take these considerations 1. time Pater Ave 3. times Gloria Patri And often in the day time endeavour to produce in your heart most ardent desires that Iesus Christ may be born in you II. Adore Iesus in the bosome of Mary salute Mary in the heart of Iesus THE II EXERCISE For the Evening 1. WE must consider with a profound respect a God inclosed in the womb of a Virgin acknowledge in adoring him that as little as hidden as annihilated as he is in the chast bowells of the Virgin he is the same God who is adored by the Angells in heaven is the absolute Lord and Soveraign of all creatures Then unite our selves in spirit will with those all divine dispositions which he possesses in the bosome of Mary with the most loving designes he has for our salvation 2. Let us take notice of the vertues which this Infant God practised in this prison in which he was shut up for nine months together for our instruction for our good Let us admire the profound humility of an Infant shut up in his mothers womb In effect he there hides his power under weakness he there confines his immensity within the little body of an Infant annihilates all the splendour of his glory in the obscurity lowlyness of Infancy And after all this is it just that pure nothings as we are should desire to elevate our selves aboue others despise them give place to none search after the esteem of men have a high conceit idea of our selves O how far do we fly from annihilated Iesus while we elevate our selves by those sentiments of vanity 3. 3. Let us consider the patience of the same Saviour undergoing the incommodities to which all Infants are subject whilst they are in this condition Alas my Iesus from this very time thou didst foresee my impatience my murmurings my delicacy that would suffer nothing you punish't your self on their score for me from that very time I begun to give you that pain and cause you to suffer for the ungratefull sacrifice your self for miserable creatures who apprehend nothing more then to suffer O Pains ô dolours ô Incommodities of life how dear ought you to be to me since from this very time you became the hearts delight of my Iesus 4. In fine represent to your self how rude severe the mortification was which little Iesus exercised upon his senses in the womb of his mother having deprived them of their exercises of all their naturall satisfaction that so you may do pennance for all the sensuall pleasures you abandon your selves unto O curiosity of my eyes how sensible you are to my Iesus since to make satisfaction for you he remained nine months in his mothers womb without seeing any thing How highly am I obliged to you my Saviour for imposing so long a silence upon your tongue to obtain pardon for all my evil or unprofitable speeches which mine has pronounced O how heartily I renounce for loue of you all the satisfaction of my senses all the delicacys of my body and all the affections I may feel in me that are human curious or unprofitable O Iesus ô amiable Infant ô adorable victim of justice loue I unite my self to the sacrifice you made of your intire self to your eternall Father from the first moment of your life which was a sacrifice of fidelity of sorrow of obedience O grant that I may consummate it with you upon the cross 5 Say Nine Paters Aves every day to honour the nine months that Iesus Christ was in the womb of the Virgin salute Iesus as often in the womb of Mary Mary in the heart of Iesus Retire your self from company as much as you are able increase your mortifications in your time of silence keep your mind sweetly imployed with the thoughts of the profound silence intimate union of the soul of Mary altogether lost swallowed up in the bottomless depth of the heart of Iesus Enter with her into this adorable sanctuary of loue which you will find full of bounty for you wholly taken up with the thoughts of your salvation O how is Mary filled with the loue of Iesus ô how is Iesus replenished with the loue of Mary whith charity for sinners O holy Virgin I conjure you by this admirable favour which you had in the possession of your Iesus to fill my heart with the loue of him For the Feast and Octave of Christmas I. IMploy half an hour in Christmas night or in the day to think upon the most amiable mistery of the birth of Godman Consider all the circumstances of it with admiration loue represent to your self an Infant laid upon straw in a poor stable all trembling with cold bound up in swadling clouts exposed to the winds unknown to men for whose salvation he came into the world both he his holy Mother abandon'd in want of all human succours finding your self astonished at so strange a condition to which you see your Saviour reduced let your heart pierced with compassion filled with gratitude for little Jesus break out in these exclamations ô bounty ô inconceivable loue of my God! is it possible that my soul should be so dear to thee that for loue of it thou shouldst subject thy self to so many miseries O humiliations of my Jesus how do you condemn my pride my vanity O amiable Jesus so much the more lovely by how much the more you have debased your self for my sake What my soul canst thou behold a God who has dispoiled himself of the splendour of his glory embraced an extream poverty to inrich thee with his graces yet endure to take pleasure in the dresses worldly ornaments of your body You see a God which makes himself an Infant as humble poor obedient as an Infant and you can have vanity dissimulation malice repugnance in obeyying 2. Approach with confidence this most lovely Infant beg of the blessed Virgin Saint Ioseph to present you to him Adore him with respect because he is your God Loue him with tenderness because he is a victim of love that offer'd himself for your sake Mix your tears with his weep with compassion ouer his sufferings whilst he weeps for sorrow ouer your sins Fear nothing he is an amiable Infant wholly yours his heart is full of charity for you his eyes are full of sweetness tenderness he is all love Approach him embrace him with all the ardour of your heart loose your self let your self be swallowed up in this bottomless ocean of loue let your self burn consume in this sacred fire beg of this divine Infant to be born live in you