Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n father_n holy_a spirit_n 8,932 5 5.4539 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A76020 A treatise of adhering to God; written by Albert the Great, Bishop of Ratisbon. Put into English by Sir Kenelme Digby, Kt. Also a conference with a lady about choyce of religion.; De adhærendo Deo. English Albertus, Magnus, Saint, 1193?-1280.; Digby, Kenelm, Sir, 1603-1665. 1653 (1653) Wing A876; Thomason E1529_2; ESTC R25226 62,177 159

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

whereby to give them yet further a supernaturall assurance and infallibility which they may with an humble confidence in his unlimited goodness expect and claim at his divine hand when they are reduced to that state as is convenient for the reception of such a supernaturall gift 14. Our fourteenth conclusion therefore shall be that God hath given to his Church thus composed the holy Ghost to confirm it in the true faith and to preserve it from error and to Illuminate the understanding of it in right discerning the true sense of those Mysteries of faith that are cōmitted to the custody of it and to worke supernaturall effects of devotion and sanctifie in that Church And this I prove thus Considering that the doctrine of Christ is practical and aymeth at the working of an effect which is the reduction of mankind to beatitude and that mankinde comprehendeth not onely those that lived in that age when he preached but also all others that ever were since or shall be till the end of the world It is apparent that to accomplish that end it was necessary Christ should so effectually imprint his doctrine in their hearts whom he delivered it unto as it might upon all occasions and at all times infallibly expresse it selfe in action and in the delivery of it over from hand to hand should in vertue and strength of the first operation produce ever after like effects in all others Now to have this compleatly performed it was to bee done both by exteriour and by interiour means proportionable to the senses without and to the soule within The outward means were the miracles that hee wrought of which himselfe saith If I had not wrought those workes that no man else ever did they were not guilty of sinne but now they have no excuse or to this purpose and he promised the Apostles they should do greater then those And that miracles are the proper instruments to plant a new doctrine and faith withall the Apostle witnesseth when he saith that miracles are wrought for the unfaithfull not for the faithful and God himselfe told Moses that hee would once do some prodigy in his favour that the people might for ever after beleive what he said to them But it is manifest by the fall of the Apostles themselves that onely this exteriour means of miracles is not sufficient to engraft supernatural faith deep enough in mens hearts when as they upon Christs Passion not onely for fear through human frailty denied their master but had even the very conceit and belief of his doctrine exiled out of their hearts and understanding notwithstanding all the miracles they had seen him work in almost four years time they continually conversed with him which appeareth plainly by the discourse of the Disciples going to Emaus when they said we hoped c. and expressed their sadnesse for the contrary successe to their expectation and by saint Thomas his saying that he would not believe his resurrection unless he saw him and put his fingers into his wounds c. And by the rest of the Apostles that were so long before they would believe his resurrection as having given over the thought of his divinity and after his death considered him but as a pure man like other men Therefore it was necessary that some inward light should bee given them so clear and so strong and so powerfull as the senses should not be able to prevail against it but that it should overflowingly possesse and fill all their understandings and their souls and make them break out in exteriour actions correspondent to the spirit that steered them within And the reason is evident for while on the one side the senses discerne apparantly miracles wrought in confirmation of a doctrine and on the other side the same senses doe stifly contradict the very possibility of the doctrine which those miracles testify the soul within having no assistance beyond the natural powers shee hath belonging originally unto her is in great debate and anxiety which way to give her assent and though reason doe prevail to give it to the party of the present miracles yet it is with great timidity But if it happen that the course of those miracles be stopped then the particular seeming impossibilities of the proposed faith remaining alwaies alike lively in their apprehension and the miracles wrought to confirme it residing but in the memory and the representations of them wearing out daily more and more and the present senses and fantasy growing proportionably stronger and stronger and withall objecting continually new doubts about the reality of those miracles it cannot be expected otherwise but that the assent of the soul should range it selfe on the side of the impossibilities appearing to the present senses and renounce the doctrine formerly confirmed by miracles unlesse some inward and supernaturall light be given her to disperse all the mists that the senses raise against the truth of the doctrine Now the infusion of this light and fervour we call the giving of the holy Ghost which Christ himselfe foreknowing how necessary it was promised them assuring them that he would procure his father to send them the holy Ghost the spirit of truth that should for ever remain among them and within them and suggest unto their memory and instruct them in the right understanding of the faith he had preached unto them And this was prophesied long before of the state of the law of grace by Hieremy whose authority S. Paul bringeth to prove that the law of the Gospel was to be written by the holy Ghost in mens hearts and in their mindes and accordingly he calleth the faithful of the Corinthians The faith of Christ not written with inke but with the spirit of God nor graven in stony tables but in the fleshy ones of their hearts And in performance of this prophesy of Christs promise the history telleth us that on the tenth day after the ascension of Christ when all his disciples who were then all his Church and were to preach and deliver it to all the world were assembled together the holy Ghost was given them and that in so full a measure as they not onely were confirmed so perfectly in their faith as they never after admitted the least vacillation therein but they immediately casting away all other desires and thoughts were inflamed with admirable love of God and broke out into his prayses and into a vehement ardor of teaching and converting others and when by reason of that zeal of theirs any thing happened to them contrary to flesh and blood humane nature as persecutions ignominies corporall punishments and even death it selfe they not only shunned it as before but greedily rann to meet and imbrace it and joyed and gloryed in it all which were effects of the holy Ghost residing in them and filling their minds and governing their soules Where upon by the way we may note that in what Church soever we find not a state of
exercises and the top of all perfection in this life and the happinesse of the next And therefore our Saviour told his beloved and loving penitent that the share she had chosen should never bee taken from her Upon these grounds Albert recommendeth the continuall meditation of Christs passion to be alwayes joyned with the other exercise of depuring our imaginations and hearts from the images and affections of all created objects whatsoever Making thereby a ladder of his humanity to climbe up to his divinity which if we should look upon it without that veyle between us and it would strike us blind As when a medicinal simple is too strong for our stomack to bear singly in its own substance physitians use to allay and weaken it with some gentle liquor that is agreeable to our taste and then drinking what delighteth us with pleasure we swallow health But Madam I perceive I engage my selfe before I am aware in a talk I am not able to go through with Nor is it needfull for this little treatise of as great value as it is of little bulk requireth neither commentary nor apologie My sending it to your Ladyship is an action of duty and of affection The first in giving you an account of the expence of my time in this place where I have bin now a just week and intitling you to all I shall ever do or bring to passe in any kind whatsoever during my whole life And the other in communicating to you what hath afforded me so much contentment and may prove so solidly beneficial to me if it please God to give me grace to make right use of it I beseech your Ladyship pray him so to do and to be pleased to give me your blessing Calis the 6th of October the feast of the glorious Patriarke of the Carthusians who most admirably practised and instituted what this treatise recommendeth in the year 1649. Your Ladyships most humble most obedient and most dutiful Sonne K. D. To my Lady Winter the wife of Sr. John Winter late of Liddne in the County of Glocester MADAM THe worthy Author giving me the view of this Translation in Paris at my comming from thence I begged a coppie which he was pleased to bestow and as he performed the work for his private use and recreation and after dedicated it to his vertuous Mother the Lady Digby So I who have no other share then the conveying it to be printed for the publique good do offer up my little industrie therein to your La Yet not for this only but that indeed I willingly take occasion to tell the world how much my Lady Winter is esteemed and valued by her faithfull Friend and Kinsman and most humble servant W Gr A TREATISE OF Adhering to God CHAP. I. Of the utmost and highest perfection that it is possiblefor a man to arrive unto in this life I Have been casting with my selfe how I might frame for my owne use a compleat perfect draught as far forth as our nature is capable of in this lifes banishment and peregrination of what is the highest and noblest action for a man to employ himselfe about And surely this is none other then a ready vigorous constant and immediate adhesion unto God Almighty by a totall abstraction as much as is possible from all creatures whatsoever For the end of Christian perfection is Love and Charity by which a Soule cleaveth to her Creatour And unto this adhesion of Charity every man in particular is undispensably obliged under paine of loosing Heaven so far forth as concerneth the obeying Gods commands and the conforming himselfe to his Divine will which obedience shutteth out whatsoever is repugnant to the essence and habit of Charity and consequently all mortall sinnes But religious persons have a further obligation then this by having bound themselves to Evangelicall perfection and to such duties as though they be but of counsill and superogation yet by them the way is made more ready and more secure to bring the observers of them to their journeys end which is the possession and fruition of God And the observance of these shutteth out not only what is destructive to Charity but also all other obstacles that may in any wise hinder or loose the fervour and activity of Charity or that may retard or slacken the soules union with God Almighty which is in a great measure performed by an intire and efficacious abrenunciation of all creatures whatsoever even of our owne selves Now seeing that God is a spirit and that he ought to be adored in Spirit and in truth Joh. 4. that is to say by knowledge and love by understanding and affection voide of all mixture with any corporeal species or materiall imaginations hence it is that we are thus taught in the Gospel when thou shalt pray enter into thy chamber that is into the inner roome of thy heart and shutting the doore Mat. 6. to wit of thy senses there with a pure heart a good conscience and a firme faith pray to thy father in spirit and in truth in secret All which is done when a man laying aside all other affaires and thoughts withdraweth himselfe wholy into himself then shutting out and forgetting all created objects whatsoever the superiour part of his soule onely powreth out before Jesus Christ her desires to her Lord God in deepe silence and with confident security and in so doing dilateth diffuseth drowneth inflameth and resolveth herself into him through the violence of love with the whole weight of her heart and with the utmost straining of all her faculties and powers CHAP. II. How one may cleave and intend wholy to Christ despising all other things BUt he who desireth and is resolved to apply himselfe to such a state must lay downe for an absolutely necessary ground that he must shut his eyes and all his senses to all manner of outward implications and affaires that may cause any trouble and must cast from him all cares sollicitudes as being altogether unconcerned in any creature whatsoever or rather looking upon them as hurtfull and pernicious to him And then he must retire his whole life into himselfe and there have no other object to entertaine his thoughts withall but Jesus Christ wounded and crucified And that with a continuall attention and with all earnestnesse and straining himself to his utmost power he must make it his onely businesse to passe by him into him that is to say by his Manhood into his Godhead by the wounds of his humanity into his glory and Divinity and there readily and securely commit himselfe and all that concerneth him to his unwearied and al-seeing providence according to St Peters expression when he saith casting all your care and solicitude upon him 1 Pet. 5. who ruleth and disposeth all things And to St Paul when he biddeth us bee solicitous for nothing Phil. 4. And to that direction of the Psalme which adviseth us to settle all our thoughts upon the Lord
and temper with any spirit of disputation or siding humor which few have avoided upon this subject but I have given you a true picture of my seriousest and saddest thoughts resolutions to my selfe in this most important businesse wherein you will believe I would take the greatest pains I was able to be sure not to be deceived I have not sought to shew wittinesse or acutenesse of learning in the debating of these points or have affected polished language in the committing them to paper for this matter should not be handled for ostentation but for use and though peradventure if this discourse should fall into the view of some learned man he may at the first sight set but a slight valew upon it yet I perswade my selfe whosoever he be if he will ponder it seriously leasurely and with alike interiour recollection as I at the first setled the groundes of it in my owne soule he will then find it toucheth the life of the matter and though I have not delivered my conceptions smoothly and well yet he will not thinke his time lost in reading them and having stronger parts then I hee will make cleerer use of them then I have done This I am sure of that although I have set this downe for your Ladyship in two or three dayes for it is not longer since you commanded me to doe it yet it is the production and result of many howers meditations by my selfe or rather of some yeeres and how dry soever they may appeare to your Ladyship at the first yet I dare promise you that upon your second and third readings and reflections upon them they will gaine more credit with you and you will I know by such application of your thoughts upon them enlarge and refine what dependeth of the maine heads farr beyond any thing I have said For such is the nature of notions that are wrought like the silke wormes ball of ones owne substance they alford fine and strong threads for a good workman to weave into a faire peece of stuffe whereas they that like bees doe gather hony from severall authors or that like Ants doe make up their store by what they picke up in the originall crude substance from others labours may peradventure in their workes seeme more pleasant at the first tast or appeare to have a fairer heape at the first view but the others web is more usefull more substantiall and more durable I beseech God of his grace and goodnesse in this life to enlighten your Ladyships understanding that you may discerne truth and to dispose your will that you may imbrace it and in the next to give you part among those glorious Apostles Fathers Doctors and Martyrs that deriving the same truth from him have from hand to hand delivered it over to our times The Table CHAP. 1. Of the utmost and highest perfection that it is possible for a man to arrive unto in this life pag. 1. CHAP. 2. How one may cleave and intend wholy to Christ despising all other things p. 3. CHAP. 3. In what the perfect conformity of man with God consisteth in this life P. 6. CHAP. 4. How our operations ought to be in the intellectuall part of our soule onely and not in our senses P. 8. CHAP. 5. Of the purity of heart which above all things is to be aymed at P. 14. CHAP. 6. That true devotion consisteth in adhering to God by the understanding and will depured from all commerce with materiall objects P. 20. CHAP. 7. In what manner ones heart is to be recollected within ones selfe P. 24. CHAP. 8. How in all chances a spirituall man ought to resigne himselfe to God P. 29. CHAP. 9. That the contemplation of God is to be preferred before all other exercises P. 32. CHAP. 10. That actuall and sensible devotion is not so much to be regarded as to adhere to God with ones will P. 38. CHAP. 11. In what manner we are to resist temptations and to beare tribulations P. 42. CHAP. 12. Of the love of God and of the great power it hath P. 44. CHAP. 13. Of the quality and utility of prayer and how ones heart is to be recollected within ones selfe P. 49. CHAP. 14. That in all judgements we ought to resort to the witnesse of our consciences P. 52. CHAP. 15. How the contempt of ones selfe may be caused in a man and how profitable that is p. 56. CHAP. XVI How the Providence of God extendeth it selfe to all things P. 6● FINIS