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A92898 The Christian man: or, The reparation of nature by grace. VVritten in French by John Francis Senault; and now Englished.; Homme chrestien. English Senault, Jean-François, 1601-1672. 1650 (1650) Wing S2499; Thomason E776_8; ESTC R203535 457,785 419

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enough above the rest of creatures and though it leave him his liberty considers not sufficiently the dignity of his extraction For it seems God deals with Men as with the Elements that he makes scarce any difference between Angels and Beasts and that this Soveraign governs so absolutely in his State that he much more regards his own glory then the welfare of his subjects He determines also free creatures as well as necessary if he oppresse not their liberty he takes no pains to gain it and more solicitous to make himselfe obeyed then loved he masters the will rather by force then sweetnesse The second passeth into another extream and seems to be so carefull of the salvation of man that it neglects the glory of God makes his grace a bondage opens heaven to all the world makes Mercy sparkle abroad to the detriment of Justice ascribes more to liberty then to grace renders man insolent since his Fall will have him as familiar with God since his rebellion as during his innocence Imagines that nature received no blemishes by sin and that the will under the thraldome of Concupiscence is as vigorous as under the Empire of Originall righteousnesse The third handles Grace a little more respectfully then the second 't is me thinks a bold opinion but not impudent it covers self-love under honourable pretences it bestowes that upon the Mercy of God that it takes from his Justice it intitles not liberty so absolutely to salvation but it preserves the rights of Grace which if it make not victorious it makes at least wel-disposed if it reign not over the will it does over the inclinations and if it offers a sufficient grace to all men it confesseth neverthelesse the effect is not produced but when it agrees with the constitution or humour of Man But after all this it seems to overturn the order of Predestination gives more to merits then to grace imposes Laws upon its Soveraign and obliges him when he means to save a sinner to consult rather their dispositions then his own will and pleasure Let us see what Saint Augustine hath most constantly believed concerning this Subject and lest we mistake our way take him for a guide that hath so generously defended its Cause against the Impiety of Hereticks The Fift DISCOURSE Wherein precisely consists the power of Effectuall Grace THere is no man but may observe that the Loadstone draws iron to it but there is no Philosopher can discover wherein this vertue consists We need but open our eyes to see how this stone which may be called one of the miracles of Nature lifts up the iron assoon as moved towards it that it gives a kind of feeling to this senslesse metal and in despite of its hardness softens it into a tendernesse of affection We behold with astonishment that it leaps from the Earth to follow that which draws it that it steals from it self to embrace it Quid ferri duritia pugnatius sed cedit patitur amores trahitur namque à magnete lapi●e domitrix illa rerum omnium materia ad inane nescio quid currit atque ut propius venit assistit teneturque complexu haeret Pli. lib. 36. cap. 16. and clings so strongly to it that violence must be used to part them But certainly 't is very difficult to comprehend what is that secret vertue that imprints this power in the Loadstone The whole Body of Philosophers have troubled themselves to no purpose to discover it whatever pains they have taken and whatever watchings they have spent in this study they have not to this day been able to find out the occult cause of so evident an effect they are ignorant whence this sympathy between the Loadstone and the Iron grows nor can they render a reason why this stone attracts this metal and not others they know not whether this attraction have more of sweetness or of force whether it draw the Iron by affecting it or by forcing it and whether it complies with its inclination or over-bears its weight and obstinacy What I have said of the Loadstone may as truly be verified of Grace Its power is so publick and its attempts so common that there is no body but knows and admires them It triumphs daily over the liberty of sinners lifts these wretches from the Earth enlightens the blind softens the obdurate converts the obstinate and subdues these rebels But though all the Faithful acknowledge a vertue whose effects they resent they know not precisely wherein it consists they are divided in their opinions and though they all take S. Augustine for their Master they express themselves in such different terms that though taught in the same School it seems they have not all learnt the same Lesson Inasmuch as this incomparable Doctor is pleased in all his Works to break forth in commendations of Grace consacring all his Labours to the glory of that which drew him out of his sin he sometimes admires its Force and seems to place all its vertue in its invincible puissance he will have it the mistress of hearts strongly over-ruling the Will of sinners and like a Soverain more respecting her own Majesty then the Inclination of her subjects Sometimes he changeth his language and meditating rather to preserve the Liberty of Man then the Power of Grace he seems to place its vertue in its compliance he represents it to us as a sweet perswasion flattering man to gain him setting upon him where he is weakest to overcome him studying his inclinations to make him in love entring into his meaning to accommodate it to that of its own and like Lovers who become complacent onely to become absolute stoops to the liberty of the sinner to triumph over it nor is his slave but to become his mistress Sometimes he walks between these two Extremes and joyning force with sweetness he speaks of Grace as of a victorious complacency he describes her as a Queen displaying her Beauty as well as her Power to keep her subjects in obedience and knowing that Nature hath given her as many Allurements as she hath done Forces unites both together to tame the rebels of her State She imitates the conduct of Providence whereof shee is an emanation and mingling Sweetness with Authority executes her designes leading men whither she pleaseth These three manners whereby S. Augustine expresseth himself in his Writings have produced three Opinions in the Church which acknowledge him for Master boasting to be of his minde and to stand to his Doctrine The first is that which is ascribed to S. Thomas which delivering it self in terms very significant but somewhat barbarous placeth the power of Grace in Predetermination Those that hold this Opinion will have God always preserve his Soveraignty when he deals with the Creature Voluntas Dei est prima summa omnium causa Aug. lib. 3. de Trin. applying him as he will and using rather compulsion then fair means discovers a desire
a Virgin This Prerogative hath repaired the scandal of the Crosse and if some impious wretches have thought meanly of him when they knew he suffered upon a Gibbet they could not chuse but highly admire him when they learnt that he was born of a Virgin The Fathers of the Church are of opinion That if the Son honoured * Nobilitas fuit nascentis in Virginitate parientis et nobilitas parientis in Divinitate nascentis Aug. Serm. 30. de Temp. his Mother by his Divinity the Mother honoured her Son by her Virginity Finally they thought if God must have a Mother she must be a Virgin and if a Virgin must have a Son he must needs be a God Though this be so extraordinary a Priviledge that Christ never communicated it to any mortall the greatest Monarchs are born of a woman that purchaseth her condition of a Mother with the expense of that of a Virgin yet hath he been pleased to honour every Christian with the same favour For they are born of the Church who like Mary is pure and teeming together Their Mother is a Virgin and as Age impairs not her fecundity neither doth the number of her Progeny sully her purity She is delivered of them without sorrow as she conceives them without sin and because she engenders the members of Jesus Christ she hath the same priviledge with her that brought forth their Head The Church is a Virgin saith * Et Virgoest et parit Mariam imitatur quae Dominum peperit numquid non virgo sancta Maria et peperit et virgo permansit sic est Ecclesia et parit et virgo est Aug. Ser. 117. de Temp. St Augustine she imitates Mary that conceived Christ Mary is a Virgin though she were delivered of a childe the Church also bears children and continues still a Virgin And if you well weigh her priviledges you shall perceive that even she also brings forth Jesus Christ seeing those that are baptized are his members Thus the Birth of Christians is as glorious by their Mothers side as by their Fathers they have as Christ their elder Brother a God for their Principle a Virgin for their Mother and a Kingdom for their Inheritance To all these Graces we may adde a Third which is common to them with their Head for the Holy Scripture silently hints that the word of the Virgin contributed something to the production of her son she yeelded her consent before she surrendred her wombe she spake to express her intentions and her word had so much vertue that it gave life to Jesus Christ This word * Verbum quod erat in principio apud Deum fiat caro de carne mea secundum verbum fiat mihi verbum non prolatum quod transeat sed conceptum ut maneat Bern. super missus est Hom. 4. Fiat which began the Incarnation was in a manner as powerful in her mouth as that which began the Creation and if we judge of the Cause by the Effects we are more obliged to this then to that which produced the whole world since one Jesus Christ is more worth then the whole Masse of Men and Angels together This Word as efficacious as it was humble glads heaven and earth repairs the disorders of the Universe and giving a product to a Divine * Expectat Angelus responsum expectamus nos verbum miserationis quos premit sententia damnationis Ecce offertur tibi pretium salutis nostrae statim liberabuntur si consentis si ergo tu Deum facias audire vocem tuam ille te faciet videre salutem nostram Bern. ibid. Redeemer laid an obligation upon all creatures But if with our Mysteries we may raise our contemplations let us say that the Virgin imitated the Eternal Father and as He conceived his Son by speaking she conceived him so too she declares his divine Originall and becoming the Mother of him of whom he is the Father she begat him if not by her Thought at least by her Word Her sacred Mouth began the work of our salvation her Virgin-Womb finished it and assoon as the Holy Maid returned her answer and contributed her blood the Word was found Incarnate in her bowels I confess this Miracle would be without a Paralel had Jesus Christ no brethren but since he was willing to honour them with all the Priviledges of his Nativity he was pleased also that his Spouse should be fruitfull as his Mother was Indeed the Church produceth us by speaking the water that regenerates us receives the vertue from her words and did not the Ministers pronounce them when they baptise us this Sacrament would have no power to give us a Being 'T is the lips of the Mother that quickens us her voice that draws us out of the bosome of death neither would all the water of the sea be able to wash away the least sin were it not enlivened with her word Shee acts as her Beloved doth makes things by her speech inspires a secret vertue into the Elements ennobles them above their nature and by a miraculous impression gives them an insluence upon the soul Shee imitates Mary her speech is prolificall and as her production is spirituall she needs only speak to enliven her children What is water saith Saint Augustine without the Word of God in the mouth of the Church but the commonest of the Elements but when quickned with her voice it becomes fruitfull and by the union of these two Principles together the Sacrament is compleated sins are absolved the dead are raised Christians are regenerated and sinners converted Let us adde Miracles upon Miracles to unfold the excellencies of Man a Christian and pronounce this fourth wonder in the Birth of Christ that without losing the quality of the Son of God Idem est in forma Dei qui formam suscepit servi idem est incorporcus manens et corpus assumens idem est in sua virtute inviolabilis in nostra infirmitate passibilis idem est à paterno non divisus throno et ab impiis crucifixus in ligno D. Leo Ser. 10. de Nat. hee assumed that of the Son of Man For having two Natures united in one person he relates to his Father from all Eternity and to his Mother in the fulnes of time from the one he received Divinity from the other humanity The manger that cradled him in his Temporal Birth obscur'd not the Glory of his eternal Birth Greatness was alwaies mixt in his Person with meannesse and as God and Man are never separated since first they were united Nihil ibi ab invicem vacat tota est in majestate humilitas tota in humilitate majestas nec infert unitas confusionem nec dirimit proprietas unitatem aliud est passibile aliud inviolabile tamen ejusdem est contumelia cujus gloria Leo Ser. 3. de passi Dom. in this divine composure may still be discerned an admirable Medley of
Person For if it be true Lord addes Saint Augustine that we can doe nothing without thee 't is in thee onely that we effect all that we bring to pass all our ability is from thee 't is thou that workest what we seem to work and being convinced by these Truths we are obliged to say that thou canst do all things without us but we can doe nothing without thee These words happily express all the obligations of the Faithfull and make them clearly discern that liberty can doe nothing without grace and that the members divided from their Head with all their naturall endowments and advantages are good for nothing but to be eternally burnt in Hel. From this first obligation is derived a second no whit lesse considerable For seeing the members draw life from their Head and their division causeth their ruine they are bound absolutely to depend upon him nor to have any other designes then his As they live by a borrowed life they ought to act by a forain vertue and to abandon themselves so fully to him that inanimates them as to have no other conduct but his Thence it comes to pass that self-deniall is the first vertue recommended to a Christian that renouncing himself he may obey Jesus Christ and conceiving himself in a strange body may act by his motions who is the Head thereof Philosophy hath laid down this position that man ought to purchase his liberty with the expence of his riches that 't is better be poor then be a slave and that 't was a gainfull bargain where parting with the goods of fortune we purchased the quietness of mind she hath also judged very well that the body is to be tam'd when it grows rebellious against reason that nourishment is to be retrencht as provender from an unruly wanton horse and his stomack taken down by the ascetick discipline of Fasts and Watchings But it never enterd into her Theorems that to be happy a man must renounce his understanding unlord his reason to become learned condemn his judgement to become wise Indeed Philosophy knew not that we are the members of a Body whereof the Eternall Word is the Head and that this condition that raiseth us as high as the light of Faith forbids us the pure use of Reason commanding us to soar above our own thoughts to search into his mind who will be the Principle of our Life For there is no body but sees that this obligation is as just as honourable that since Christians are rather Gods then men because of the union they have contracted with the Word Incarnate they ought to act rather by his motion then their own reason and remember that seeing he is the Head that quickens them he ought to be the Principle that guides them The whole drift of the Gospel labours to perswade us this Truth all its commands and counsels insinuate this obligation into us and when the Son of God gives order to us to renounce our own will to combate our inclinations to love our enemies and to hate our friends 't is only to teach us that being no longer at our own disposall we ought to have no other mind but what he inspires into us by his Grace A Third Obligation slows from this which is to be conformable to our Head to imitate his actions having followed his motions and to be made so like him that he may not be ashamed to own us for his members Nature exacts not this condition from the parts that compose mans body she will not have them resemble their Head because there would be insolence and impossibility in the very desire 'T is enough that they receive his influences that they obey his motions and that their whole imitation consist in their meer subjection But Morality and the Politicks will have the members that make up a Mysticall Body adde imitation to their other duties that they be regulated by their Head as by their model that they study his inclinations and be the perfect copies of this first Originall Thus we see that Kings are the inanimate examples of their subjects the living Laws of their States and the prime Masters of their people Every one makes it his glory to imitate them they are perswaded that whatever they doe is lawfull and that those that are the Images of God may very well be the Examplars of men Though this Maxime be true yet it is dangerous For as Greatness does not always inspire Goodness Quid est aliud vitia incendere quam authores illos Deos vel reges inscribere dare morbo exemplo Divinitatis aut Majestatis excusatam lieentiam Senec. nor are Sovereigns the most perfect and those that may doe what they will doe not always what they should it fals out many times that the greatest are the most vicious and the readiest way to corrupt a whole State is to set before it the Examples of the Governours Therefore hath Philosophy invented Ideas of Wisdome and despairing to finde among men models which may be securely transcribed hath made a Romance of Princes by the same artifice discovering their irregularity her own impotency But the Eternall Father giving us Jesus Christ for our Head hath withall propounded him for our Example he will have our life fully conformable to his that his actions be our documents that we be admitted into his School when we are united to his Body that we seek for perfection where we found life and that we be as well his Images as his Members This is it that Saint Bernard acquaints us with Our Head shall not reign in glory without his Members provided they be one with him by Faith and conformable to him in their Manners Both these conditions are necessary Union without Conformity is but meer hypocrisie and Conformity without Union is pure vanity He that is united to Christ and imitates him not cannot escape a fearfull separation one day by an Eternall Anathema and he that imitates him without believing will perceive in time that his imitation was but counterfeit and that he was so much more opposite to Jesus Christ the more he appeard only conformable to him We must therefore joyn these two duties together if we will have them usefull and having been united to our Head by Faith conform to him by good works that we be not reproached to have despised him whom we cannot find in our hearts to imitate But the chiefest obligation the quality of being Members of the Son of God exacts from us is to expose our life for his Glory as he expos'd his for our salvation Nature and Politicks teach us the justice of this duty and we need only consider how the members carry themselves toward the Head and subjects demean themselves towards their Soveraigns to understand what is our duty towards Jesus Christ Though every part of the body love its own preservation carefully avoiding whatever is contrary thereto and by a naturall providence abominates whatever
that murmures even whilst Grace triumphs over his Liberty he hath a sense of Passions that divide his Will and hinder Charity from taking a full possession of that superiour faculty he is convinced even to his damage that as a Needle between two Loadstones though drawn away by the strongest turns notwithstanding towards the weakest so he though mastered by Grace ceaseth not to be tempted by Concupiscence and by woful experience learns that as soon as Charity suspends her vertue and moderates that sweet violence wherewith she so pleasingly ravisheth the heart he is presently trail'd on by the weight of self-love that bends him towards the Creatures I know there are a sort of new Divines that seem to place Concupiscence in man an Innocent not exempting him from that intestine war whereof the Saints complain who are perswaded that original righteousness did not accord the two parts that compose man and that their division contributing to his glory ought also to contribute to his merit But besides that I suspect this Opinion as maintained by the Pelagians Haec quae ab impudentibus impudenter laudata pudenda Concupiscentia nulla esset nisi homo ante peccasset Aug. and S. Augustine hath laid it on the ground as the foundation of their Heresie those that defend it are at least obliged to confess that if Concupiscence were in man in the state of Innocence it was not there with those disorders the Apostle of the Gentiles groaned under but that original sin giving it a new vigour there is requisite a new grace to contest against it Otherwise he had done very unmanly to complain of a revolt which was nothing but an effect of Nature and which he might easily suppress by his Will animated with as much Grace as Jesus Christ refuses not even to his enemies And the Church guided by the holy Spirit would do amiss to intreat so often for her childrens deliverance from an insurrection which cannot be bad if it were born with man in his Innocence If they answer She requests not that the Faithful be delivered from it because bad but because dangerous by the same reason they must desire that they had neither eyes nor hands because both these parts are of sad consequence to sinners If they say they pray not for the full ruine of it but for its diminution they must confess that if what they would pare away be hurtful it ought not to be in Adam nor could now be cured by his grace For as S. Augustine says excellently well the grace of Adam was the grace of a man sound and free and the grace of Jesus Christ of a man a captive and diseased this produceth two effects in his person it restores his health before it give him strength it breaks his fetters before it makes him walk and suppresseth his disorders before it makes him act This Truth will be better conceived if we compare the Liberty of Adam with the Servitude of Man a sinner that by the difference of these two states we may judge more easily of the difference of their graces Adam was as Free as Innocent nothing resisted his Will in his person and the Passions having not as yet shook off the yoke of Reason troubled not his Rest he acted with tranquillity of minde he found his pleasure in his duty nor was he sensible of any internal rebellion impeaching his liberty Thence it came to pass that his grace was subject to his Will that he used it according to his desires and his occasions either to obey his Soveraign to command his Subjects or to resist his Enemies But the sinner fallen from this glorious condition is the slave of him that hath conquered him he serves as many Masters as he hath Passions and he findes to his cost that to punish his disobedience all his subjects rebel against him The grace of Adam would be useless in this condition being not fully free he could not make use of it and being the slave of sin in whose possession he is he would employ it rather to his own ruine then to his salvation Grace must set him free before he can work must break his chains before he can fight and restore him his liberty before he can form one good designe This is it that S. Augustine teacheth us in that Chapter where making the Antithesis of Man a Sinner and Man an Innocent he saith This had a grace great indeed but much different from ours For he lived in the advantages he had received from his Creator and of his goodness held that happie condition that exempted him from all our evils But the Faithful to whom this grace appertains that delivers Captives languish in misfortunes that make them seek after Liberty Adam in the midst of the innocent delights he tasted had no need of the death of Jesus Christ but the Christians cannot be washed from their hereditary or acquired sins but by the blood of the Lamb slain for their salvation Adam stood not in need of that assistance his children require when experiencing the revolt of the Flesh against the Spirit they complain of the Law of Sin that opposeth the Law of God and by the mediation of Jesus Christ beg strength to combat and ability to overcome an enemy whose assaults Adam was never sensible of For he was not divided in Paradise but enjoying a profound peace he saw not his body warring against his soul nor one part of himself unjustly lifting up the heel against the other Proinde etsi non interim laetiore nunc verunratē potentiore gratia indigent isti Aug. Let us say then with that great Doctor that the grace of Adam was happier then ours and ours more powerful then his he might if he would have overcome amidst his delights and we triumph among our sorrows his grace gave him a Power to act ours a Will his was subject to his Will ours is her mistress and by a happie occasion we are the conquerors of Devils because the slaves of Jesus Christ It seems our Redeemer would be revenged of us in avenging us of our enemy that he disposed all things so that our victory should depend upon our overthrow and our liberty should be grounded upon our servitude because Grace tames our Will to make it victorious over sin and subjects her to it self to give her command over the Passions and in this humble submission procures us those advantages we never had possessed in the Empire of Innocence For whatever arts we use to exalt the happie condition of Adam we must confess his grace was weak because it could not maintain the freedom of his Will and leaving him to himself suffered his enemy to foil him But the grace of Jesus Christ makes us victorious in the midst of our infirmities assures our salvation among the many stormings of Temptations and seizing upon our heart makes us triumph over the world When I consider the deplorable condition of a sinner me thinks
and Angels that they resist Grace that they abuse his favours and frustrate his designes This sin is constantly the first Article of their Confession they look upon it as the source of all the rest and these great men that are better acquainted with the motions of Grace then the learnedst Divines never speak thereof without regret for having rejected them I profess this Objection seems one of the strongest can be formed against Effectual Grace because I have taken it for a proof of Grace Sufficient and withal it seems to clash against the Principles of S. Augustine for if Grace always produceth her effect how can we resist it if she make her self mistress of our Will how can she meet with rebellion there and if she manage that faculty with as much force as dexterity how can we oppose her designs or stop the conquests of her that S. Augustine so many times calls victorious I know some Doctors dispatch this difficulty by an Answer that admits of no Reply and say that when the Saints complain of their infidelity towards Grace their meaning is to speak of that which toucheth our Senses or enlightens our Understandings and being so well instructed in the School of S. Augustine they are not ignorant that the true Grace of Jesus Christ infallibly produceth its effect But this Answer never satisfied me and I must acknowledge the language of the Saints seems too strong to be expressed by so weak a grace They speak of their resistance with so much grief that we may judge by their complaints that 't is of the grace of Jesus Christ which they have abused that they intend to speak Some others believe 't is not an actual resistance that they accuse themselves of because that is incompatible with effectual grace but of an habitual resistance that combats the designe of Grace though it hinders not its effect These seem better grounded then the former because 't is true that the greatest Saint in the world hath always an opposition against Grace as long as there is one degree of self-love and is contrary to Jesus Christ as long as he is conformable in any thing to the first Adam The inordinate intentions which insensibly fasten him to the things of the world the revolt of the Passions that trouble the repose of his minde and Concupiscence that weakens Charity are so many enemies heaving at Grace and retarding the accomplishment of her designes But for all this we must confess that this Answer resolves not fully the whole difficulty of the Objection for besides that this resistance to speak properly is not a sin because 't is purely habitual nor renders the Saints more culpable then Concupiscence we know very well that it impedes not the effect of Grace and that when God intends to make himself master of the Will he can as well tame bad Habits as bad Inclinations Therefore have I thought it necessary to adde That there are secret oppositions against Grace that are unknown to us That the Will is not so fully possest by Charity but Concupiscence shares with her That there is no inconvenience that she should be inanimated at the same time with two contrary loves though one be victorious over the other seeing S. Augustine hath so often confessed that his heart being divided between two affections he willed at the same time two things utterly opposite Or we must say that Grace though efficacious in the beginning languisheth in the progress that when the motion that carried the Will grows weak Concupiscence awakes and attempts a victory when she findes least resistance Thus Grace is worsted in her retreat self-love takes courage when the love of God gives ground and this Grace that was victorious in the onset becomes as all things in the world faint and drooping towards the end If this Answer crosseth the principles of S. Augustine I disavow it and if it resolve not the difficulty propounded I intreat those that shall read this Work to consider that Grace is not less wondersul then Nature and if the vertue of the Loadstone hath left so many Philosophers at a loss we need not wonder if the power of Grace put the Divines in a confusion A Prosecution of the same DISCOURSE Wherein some other Objections against Effectual Grace are answered MAns Understanding since the Fall is of the same condition as the Earth This is fruitful onely in thorns and bears nothing but briars if it be not tilled by the labour of the husbandman and that is fertitle onely in errours and is delivered of nothing but doubts which rather fight against Truth then defend it His Ingeny serves him for no other end but to raise difficulties his light is always mixt with darkness and as if he were of the nature of Spiders that distil flowers into poison he changeth truth into errours and extracts nothing from the fairest Maximes of Religion but doubts and suspitions There is nothing more certain in Christianity then that Grace is the Principle of our Salvation that she supports our Will and gives that faculty strength to stand out against Concupiscence In the mean time this Truth is the mother of Errours our understanding hath drawn more darkness thence then light and the doctrine of Saint Augustine that hath ruined the Pelagians hath produced more scruples then resolutions amongst Divines We cannot speak of the dominion of Grace but we are troubled to secure the liberty of man We are well content God should be the Master because we dare not dispute his Soveraignty Non aliud intelligetis arbitrium laudabiliter liberum nisi quod fuerit Dei Gratia liheratum Aug. but we are loth man should be his slave as if we doubted of his Justice or questioned his Mercy whatever depends not upon our wil casts us into a sealousie if Grace be not in subjection to Free-will we cannot be quiet The example of Adam who was foil'd notwithstanding his Sufficient Grace cannot cure us of this apprehension and the violent desire we have to be absolute in all things makes us seek for our safety in our Independency The Objections that are made against the Doctrine of Saint Augustine are proofs of this passion and the number is so great that one Discourse being not large enough to resolve them we must employ this supplement to the same purpose One of the strongest and most remarkable is that Baptisme is a second Birth where the Christian being regenerated seems to have received a new Nature For in that happy moment wherein his sins are remitted he receives Habitual Grace which uniting him to Jesus Christ as to his Head sets him free from the slavery of Satan and entitles him to the felicity of Angels Forasmuch as this Grace is a second nature she hath her faculties whereby she works Faith is her Light Hope her Strength Charity her Love and these three vertues are supernatural habits that elevate her understanding and her will As God refuseth not his
other happily guides us in it The one purifies our soul by Labour the other unites us to God by Prayer The one keeps the Commandments and the other receives the Recompence The one is afflicted with grief because it bewails his sins with the Penitents the other is bathed in pleasure because it participates in the felicity of the Blessed The same Doctor all whose Maximes are Truths gives us another Division of Vertues from the difference of our conditions and being not far from that Principle we are going to explain attributes but one Vertue to the Blessed and leaves all the rest to the Faithful They indeed finde all their happiness in the Supreme Good which they are in possession of their Love makes up the total of their felicity and that ineffable Union that transforms them into him they love is the onely Vertue that for ever takes them up in the fruition of Glory Prudence is not requisite because there is no darkness to be dissipated nor misfortunes to be prevented Fortitude is useless because there are no sorrows to struggle with Temperance serves to no end because all their delights are innocent and lawful Neither is there any employment for their Justice because in the Tabernacle of Glory there are neither miserable to be protected nor criminals to be punished Thus as that incomparable Doctor goes on they practise but one Vertue and by a happie encounter this Vertue is their recompence because uniting them to God it makes them finde their felicity in him 'T is true that as the Supreme Good contains all other Goods we may say also that all the Vertues are comprehended in this and their several denominations may be imposed upon it It is Prudence because it illuminates them with the brightness of God himself Fortitude because it unites them so firmly with him that nothing can separate them Temperance because it makes them chastly embrace the Chief Good and in the delights they taste of they seek not so much their Pleasure as his Glory Justice because it subjects them to their Soveraign making them finde their Happiness in their Submission But as there is some analogie between the condition of the Blessed and that of the Faithful at the same time that S. Augustine separates them he associates them again and confounding their Vertues together saith that during this life Love is the onely vertue of Christians and that there is none other but to love that which is amiable So that to facilitate the acquisition of that object we place our affections upon by chusing sutable and convenient means is Prudence Not to be discouraged or diverted by Grief is Fortitude Not to be drawn away by Pleasures is Temperance and not to be kept off by the vain pomp and grandetza's of the world is Justice He lodgeth these Vertues in Glory which he seems to have banished thence and acknowledgeth that the Blessed enjoy them as well as the Faithful but with this difference That upon the earth they are in Act in heaven in Habit upon the earth they serve for a Defence in heaven for an Ornament upon the earth in Exercise in heaven in their Acquiescence upon the earth they are the sure Land-marks guiding the Faithful to their journeys end in heaven they happily unite the Faithful in an inseparable Bond of Communion But because this Doctrine is not fully conformable to that which is commonly received and that we have borrowed from Philosophers the Division and the Quality of Vertues let us say with them that we judge of their number by our obligations and our necessities We are upon the earth for no other end but to Know and Love to Suffer and to Do our whole life is spent in these two employments and if we be not absolutely unprofitable we must raise our selves to the Knowledge and Love of the Supreme Good and resolve if we be not altogether lazie by our Courage to overcome all the difficulties which occur in the course of our life Thence it comes to pass that we have need of different Vertues Bonam vitam ego puto Deum cognoscere amare mala pati bona facere sic perseverare usque ad mortem Bern. and that according to the designes we form we are obliged sometimes to have recourse to the Divine vertues sometimes to the Moral Inasmuch as God is surrounded with Light that darkens us our Understanding must necessarily be cleared by Faith that we may know him In that he is an Infinite Good our soul must be fortified with Hope that we may search after him and our Will warmed with Charity that we may love him For though Good be amiable and the Supreme Good transcendently amiable yet is it so far above our reach that without Grace we cannot approach unto it and as we must be clarified by his Light that we may know him so must we be warmed by his Calentures that we may affectionately close with him Thus Faith Hope and Charity are the Vertues by means whereof we treat with God But because Man is born for Society in serving God he is bound to assist his Neighbour Charity hath a double respect having united us to the Supreme Good for love of it she unites us to our Like and obligeth us to love them as we do our selves Were this Vertue in its full vigour 't would be sufficient alone Lex venit in subsidium amicitiae Atistot and as Philosophers have observed that Laws would be useless did Friendship raign in mens hearts I dare affirm did Charity set up her throne in ours the Vertues would be idle among Christians or act onely by her orders and directions But whether we have not as yet attained this Perfection or that the number of Subjects contributes to the Greatness of Soveraigns she hath under her command Four Vertues which are called Cardinal that act by her motions and execute her designes Prudence clears our Understandings to act helps us to discern Good from Evil and Truth from Falshood For as there are Evils which under a fair shew deceive us and Lyes that finde more credit then some Truths Prudence must serve us for a Guide and in so important an election secure us from mistakes Justice gives every one his due makes our Interests yeeld to Reason preserves Peace in the inequality of our conditions and taking original righteousness for an example which made a harmony between foul and body this sets Man at union with himself and by a necessary consequence accommodates him with his neighbour Therefore is it that Repentance and Humility are as rivulets flowing from this Fountain and as rays issuing from this Sun For Repentance is nothing but a severe Justice that animates the sinner against himself that obliges him to act the part of a witness in accusing of a judge in condemning of an executioner in punishing himself Humility is nothing but a modest and true Justice which considering the Majestie of the Creator
in her Empire Fortitude combats those things that rise against us defends us from our enemies scatters all those evils whos● pomps hath no other design but to weaken our courage Justice looks after that which is beside or above us makes us render to God our Soveraign and to our neighbour our equal what of due belongs unto them and parting our obligations according to their conditions bindes us to love the former above our selves and the later as our selves If as it is very likely these Vertues respect our rest and quietness they deliver us from four inconveniences which may exceedingly trouble us For many times we prefer an imaginary apparent Good before a real one and from this errour Prudence secures us we desert a Good because difficult and from this cowardise Fortitude rouzeth us we seek after some pleasing but unprofitable or pernicious Good and this pitfal Temperance teacheth us to avoid or lastly we desire something advantageous to our selves but prejudicial to our neighbour and this iniquity Justice forbids obliging us to preserve the interest of another as our own But whatever succour the Christian can draw from these vertues he must confess they reproach him with his miseries and exprobate him with his crimes For Prudence informs him that he is in banishment where Good and Evil are mixt together and where he is in danger to mistake as often as he hath occasion to chuse Temperance teacheth him that he hath inordinate Passions that must be supprest that he nourisheth monsters in his person which must be strangled but that the disease over-tops the remedy because Prudence dissipates not the darkness of his Ignorance nor doth Temperance regulate all the disorders of his Appetite Justice tells him he must submit his spirit to God his body to his spirit but the resistance he findes makes him sadly feel that earth is not the mansion of Peace nor this life the time of Triumph Finally Fortitude which obligeth him to combat Grief is an argument that he is still criminal because he still remains miserable The Eighth DISCOURSE Of the Humility of a Christian IT is a strange thing but withal exceeding true that of all the Vertues there is none more natural nor yet a greater stranger to Man then Humility For she is born with him he carries the principles thereof in his soul and in his body in that the one is drawn out of Nothing the other is formed out of the Slime of the earth He must forget his extraction to give the least admittance to Vain-glory and he need onely study and minde himself to be sensibly affected with Humility Therefore said an Ancient that Pride was a stranger-vice and Humility a natural vertue In the mean time Man was never more arrogant then since he became so wretchedly miserable That which ought to take down his spirit hath raised it and the misery that should have taught him Humility hath made him quite forget so commendable a vertue She was unknown to the Heathen her name which we account so glorious was infamous among them nor was it ever ascribed to any actions but those that deserved blame It was necessary that Christian grace should revive her and that her light should discover the beauties of this unknown vertue Indeed she had no credit with men till the mystery of the Incarnation God must be abased that we may learn this lesson and his examples must perswade humane wilfulness that true greatness consists in lowe deportment Though this Vertue takes her merit from her Master and her glory is very remarkable in having God for her Author yet must we confess that in her own nature she is of very high esteem and that her proper intrinsecal excellency gives worth and value to her For she seems to include all the Cardinal vertues and to comprehend all their advantages in her essence She partakes of Prudence because she is illuminated and knows the greatness of God and the meanness of the Creature She hath something of Temperance because she bridles the pleasure that vanity promiseth and defends her self from that agreeable enemy who makes use of praises onely to deceive us She shares with Fortitude because she combats shame and grief which frequently accompany base and unworthy actions Finally she is an image of Justice because she treats the Creator and the Creature with so much equity and rendering Glory to the one reserves nothing but Contempt for the other But lest we should think her riches are meerly the spoils of another that she hath none but borrowed excellencies nor is at all considerable but for the alms she receives from other vertues we shall do well to consider her nature and to be acquainted with her by weighing her definition Humility according to S. Augustine is a voluntary debasement of the soul before God in the sight of her own condition which representing her Nothingness reads her this lesson that none can preserve her but he that created her This great man expresly joyns the Creature with the Creator in this definition for Man looking onely upon himself might easily grow proud at the sight of his own priviledges when he looks up to God compares the Creature with the Creator confronting two things opposite by such an infinite distance he is obliged to fall lowe upon his face if his Pride exceed not that of the devil Therefore did that afflicted Prince who would perswade his friends that his being miserable was no argument he was criminal change his language when he had compared his own defects with the perfections of God and confess there was no creature so holy that was not guilty before him Now mine eye seeth thee and therefore I abhor my self As if he would have said Whilst I compared my actions with those of men I cherished a high opinion of my vertue but when thy light had cleared my spirit and I beheld that holiness whereby thou art so gloriously separated from thy works I prevent thy arrest and forgetting my innocence pass sentence of condemnation upon my self This is the apprehension of Humility and whenever Man is tempted to Pride this lowliness of minde presents him before God in his nature in his person in his actions in his Nature that he is miserable in his Person that he is criminal in his Actions that he is unconstant and wavering Others define Humility a disesteem that Man conceives of his own excellency inasmuch as he hath not any thing which was not given him by Grace and may not be taken away by Justice For this wretch lives but upon loan In the height of his Innocence he was but many creatures in gross and it seems that God to oblige him to Humility made him up of borrowed pieces He takes his Being from the Elements his Life from Plants his Sense from Animals and his Understanding from Angels So that should he return every Creature what he hath received all that would remain to him would be his Nothingness and
Continence to our relief to defend us from pleasures that tickle us sometimes we demand help of Fortitude to combat griefs that assault us sometimes we throw our selves into the arms of Justice to deliver us from enemies that oppress us But in Heaven all these Vertues are idle onely Charity is active and yet rests in acting her action is to love what she sees her rest to possess what she loves and her felicity to know that she shall never lose what she enjoys If you cannot suffer saith S. Augustine that the Vertues to which we owe Heaven be banished thence imagine them there more for your ornament then defence never conceive that they fight but perswade your selves that they triumph and having vanquished all their enemies enjoy a Peace which shall endure for all Eternity The Ninth DISCOURSE That the Christians Soul and Body shall finde their Perfection in Beatitude MAn is such a hidden Creature that he cannot well be known without Faith He is mistaken as often as he intends to pass judgement upon himself and the errours that have appeared in his own definition have given us occasion to conclude that he was ignorant of his own essence when he consulted his Sense he believed he was nothing but a Body and if there were a spirit that informed him it was perishable and mortal when he consulted his Pride he conceited himself a pure Spirit which either for his penalty or for his trial was included in a Body as in a prison from which he should be delivered by death These two errours produced two grand disorders in the world The first engaged Man in the love of his Body and the oblivion of his Soul he made no account but of sensual Pleasures and knowing no life but the present never troubled himself about the future He was of opinion that Death was the end of his Being and that nothing remaining of him after his dissolution he need fear neither any Punishment nor expect any Recompence The second errour made him so mightily undervalue his Body that he repined at it as a Slave and handled it as a Rebel he had recourse many times to Death that being delivered from this enemy he might mix with pure Intelligences and raign with Gods or Devils Faith which corrects our errours obligeth us to believe that Man is neither an Angel nor a Beast that he is compounded of a Body and a Soul and if he have the First common with Beasts he hath the Second common with Angels The same Faith perswades him that Death deprives him of his body but for a time onely that at the General Resurrection it shall be re-united to the soul to partake of its good or bad fortune Therefore treating here of the felicity of Christians I am necessarily to speak of the two parts that compose them and of the different happiness the Divine Justice prepares for them respectively Inasmuch as the soul is the noblest she is also most happily provided for and her Beatitude infinitely surpasseth that of the body Tunc nec falli nec peccare homines possunt veritate illuminati in bono confirmati Aug. When she quits her prison and is purified of all her imperfections by the grace of Jesus Christ she enters into Glory and receives all the advantages which are due to her dignity and condition Ignorance which is a brand of sin is quite defaced by the brightness that enlightens her her weakness is fortified by a supply which being much more powerful then that of Grace raiseth her to a condition wherein she cannot desert the good nor embrace the evil and where as Saint Augustine saith she is in a happy impotency to wander from her duty and estrange her self from the Supream good Assurance succeeds in the place of fear rest in stead of conflicts triumphs after victories she is no longer constrained to resist the motions of the flesh because this rebell is become obedient and losing in the Resurrection whatever he drew from Adam at his Birth hath now none but just and holy inclinations The Spirit is no longer busied to maintain a war against sin because this Monster cannot enter Heaven he groans not now under the revolt of the passions and as all the vertues are peaceable they finde neither enemies to subdue nor rebels to tame Her knowledge is no longer accompanied with doubts and darkness she learnes without labour is not afraid to forget and drawing light and wisdom from the very Fountain knows all things in their Principles In this happy condition there remains nothing for the Christian to wish for his soul is penetrated by the Divine Essence his understanding clarified with the light of glory his will inflamed with the love of God and all his powers and faculties finding their particular perfection in one object he confesseth that the promises of God exceed his hopes Though his body have been polluted by his birth and corrupted by death it findes life in the Resurrection and Purity in Glory For assoon as the Trumpet of the Angel shall have declared the will of God every soul shal reassume her own body reuniting her self with it shall give it a part in her happiness The greatness of this wonder hath found no belief in the mindes of Philosophers though they were perswaded of the Immortality of the soul they would not consent to the Resurrection of the body and having seen it made a prey to wilde Beasts or fuel for the flames they judged there was no power in the world could restore it again The spirit of man hath favoured this errour and believing his eyes rather then his light could not finde in his heart to place that part of man in heaven which he saw committed to the grave he was afraid to weary the power of the Almighty if he should oblige him to so many miracles and not comprehending how a body reduc'd to powder or smoak could take its primitive form chose rather to leave it in the Earth then draw it thence with so much violence But had he thought of the Creation he had never doubted of the Resurrection and Reason her self had perswaded him that seeing God was able to finde the body in Non-Entity where it was not he might very well finde it in the waters or in the slames where there was yet some remainder thereof If Nothing were not rebellious to him Nature cerrainly will not be disobedient and if he could make that which was not he may as easily repair what now is not Nothing perisheth in respect of the Creator the dead are not less his subjects then those that never were born and if he could make Non-Entity hear him he may well make death obey him The miracle of Resurrection is perhaps attended with more pomp then that of the Creation but there is less difficulty in it and he that could vanquish the distance between Entity and Non-Entity will have no great matter to do to master the opposition
his bounty ought to live for his service Thence he concludes that we offer our members as oblations and employ all that we are for the glory of our Redeemer Slaves in the negotiations of the world could not dispose of their actions they acted by order of their Master they took pains for his Interest they got wealth for his profit and as if nature had lost her right in their persons they got children to increase his family Philosophers acknowledge that servitude fals only upon the body that it fetters only the feet and the hands leaving the slaves more free many times in their irons then the Soveraigns upon their Throne Bondage hath no dominion over their wil and with all her rigours cannot extort the least baseness from them if they be generous they dispute their liberty with fortune they preserve in deed what they have lost in appearance they many times command their oppressour and bearing the hearts of Kings in the bodies of slaves are more free and more happy then their Master But the Christian enters by Redemption into a Thraldome which passeth from his body into his soul fetters his heart with his hands triumphs over his liberty without constraining it confiscates all his goods to his Soveraign and despoiling him of all but Nothingness and Sin obligeth him to confess that he owes all the rest to the Liberaility of his Redeemer For the understanding of this Verity which makes one of the foundations of Christianity we must know that though God be the Soveraign of all men he treats not the innocent and the guilty alike He seems to respect the former to refuse them nothing that they desire preventing their wishes and in that happy state wherein Concupiscence had not disordered them he subjected their salvation to their liberty and made them in some sort the disposers or masters of their good fortune Grace is always at the door of their heart this Divine assistance never fails them and God would think he violated the Laws of his Justice had he not given these Innocents all that is necessary for their salvation But he deals far otherwise with Guilty men It seems Sin gives him more right over these wretches then Nothing does and being fallen from their priviledges by their own fault he owes them nothing but punishments He abandons them to their own conduct leaves them in blindness and weakness and as if they were meerly the objects of his anger he sometimes withdraws from them the assistance of his Grace Thus did the Eternal Father deal with men before the mystery of the Incarnation his Son found them in this deplorable condition when he undertook their deliverance they had no right neither to Grace nor Glory and sin that had deprived them of their innocence had confiscated all their apennages Thus we owe our Salvation to our Redemption we hold that of Mercy which heretofore we held of Justice we are saved rather as men enfranchised then free and acknowledging our salvation an effect rather of Grace then our own freedome we ought to renounce the one to give our selves over to the other This conceit carries me insensibly to another which seems only a consequent of this and the coherence they have will not give me leave to divide them Man in the state of Innocence was the master of his actions the uprightness wherein he was created was the cause that God left him to his liberty having no inordinate motions to regulate no wild passions to subdue no unfaithful senses to correct he had need only of a succour to sustain him His will was the principle of his merit and the good works he did proceeded rather from himself then from God Thus his good fortune was in a manner in his own hands he depended more upon Liberty then upon Grace and being the Director of this he might say without vanity that he was the principal Authour of his own salvation Divine Providence obliged him to take the guidance of himself to determine his own actions that he was the master of his fortune and making use of the advantages she had given him the acknowledgement of the victory was due only to his own courage and dexterity But now that he is faln from his Innocence hath lost half his Light and Liberty carries a Tyrant in his very Essentials which subjects him to his Laws he stands in need of a Grace that may deliver him and exercising a dominion over his will may save him by a more humble but surer way then that of Adam He is no longer the Master of his actions nor the Authour of his salvation he must take direction from Jesus Christ learn to deny himself distrust his own abilities and place his hope in that victorious Grace which subjects whose man captivating his understanding by Faith and his will by Love This Oeconomy of God towards the Christian is mixed with Justice and Mercy 't is Justice to take from him the disposall of his person because he used it so ill in the state of Innocence 'T is Justice to submit his Liberty to Grace because when he was the master thereof he neglected to make use of it 'T is Justice to treat him as a Pupil or a Slave not to trust him any more with the government of himself and to employ for his cure a remedy which reproacheth him with his blindness and infirmity 'T is Mercy also to knock off the fetters of a slave to indulge him the true liberty his sin had deprived him of to unite him to God from whom he was estranged to assure his salvation by a Grace which infallibly produceth its effect to sanctifie him in Jesus Christ whereof he is a Member and to give him an occasion to offer himself an Holocaust to God For it is true that self-denial is a parting with all things a sacrifice wherein man immolates his will by obedience a combat wherein he triumphs over himself where he is the vanquisher and the vanquished where he subdues his passions by reason and subjects his reason to grace After this advantage there is none but he may with Justice hope for because he that hath conquered himself may easily conquer all others 'T is a punishment which in hardship and durance disputes with that of Martyrs It is long because it lasts as long as life may take up the best part of an age nor spares the strength of the penitent but to make him suffer more It is rigorous because there is no cruelties a man given over to grace does not exercise upon his person and being witty to invent torments converts all things into corrections For as Saint Gregory the Great saith he suppresseth vanity by the sword of the Word of God he cuts off his head to ingraffe Jesus Christ upon his body he makes all die that he received from the old Adam to make all live that he hath drawn from the new and if he cut not off his arms and his legs he pares
away his desires and his hopes to give Jesus Christ some testimonies of his love Therefore doth the Scripture inform us that there is no Vertue receives a greater recompence then Self-denial The Man that is knockt off from himself is united to the Son of God the creatures respect him the Sun obeys his word and 't is in this sense that the Scripture to make his Panegyrick is not content to say that he pronounceth Oracles but addes that he gains Battles and bears away victories by speaking All things stoop to his commands and more glorious then the first man who could not use the creatures but according to their inclinations he disorders them to make himself feared and testifies the power he hath in the state of his Master by the command he exerciseth over all the parts of the Universe Thus Self-denial which seems to abase men raiseth them up the Vertue that entertains them in the distrust of their weakness gives them admittance into the power of God and that which obligeth them to renounce their own will makes them find the accomplishment of all their desires The Sixth TREATISE Of the Nourishment and Sacrifice of the Christian The first DISCOURSE Of Three Nourishments answering the Three Lives of a Christian. SOme will wonder perhaps that in the same Treatise I joyn two such different things together and that speaking of Nourishment which preserves the life of a Christian I treat of a Sacrifice that engageth him in Death But the wonder will cease if we consider that these two things are united together in Religion and that the same Sacrament that feeds us obligeth us also to die For the Son of God upon our Altars is as well our Nourishment as our Victim inviting us to a Feast he bids us to a Sacrifice and his Love associating two Subjects which have so small a relation he makes use of one and the same body to destroy our sins and to preserve our souls He offers himself up to his Father as an innocent Sacrifice and gives himself to the Faithful as a delicious Viand His Power which equals his Love takes from this Sacrifice whatever might render it horrid and removes from this Banquet whatever might make it sensual In both of them he satisfies his Father and his Children and exalting us in the light of Faith makes us believe what we cannot conceive Following therefore his intentions I have joyned in the same Treatise what he hath joyned in the same Mystery and resolve to manifest the wonders of this Food and the Prodigies of this Sacrifice Reason that teacheth us that Nourishment is the staff of Life teacheth us also that every living thing hath need of Nourishment and that the Divine Providence whose care is extended over all the Creatures hath left none without aliment This feedeth the Fowls of the air and the Psalmist confesseth it provided for the necessities of their young when forsaken by the dams It maketh Grass to grow in the desarts for the Cattel and Rain which seems unprofitably to fall into the Sea serves for refreshing and meat for the Fishes Inasmuch as Men are Gods master-pieces he takes a particular care to nourish them whole Nature labours to furnish their Table her fruitfulness is onely to satisfie their hunger or content their appetite and every Creature she teems with seems a Victim to be immolated to preserve their life But as they have Three Lives that answer to the Three Orders of Nature of Grace and of Glory God hath given them Three sorts of Food which in the difference of their qualities cease not to have wonderful Correspondencies The Earth is the Nurse that furnisheth us our chiefest nourishment that Divine word Crescite multiplicamini which enricht her with fruitfulness in the very birth hath preserved this prolifical vertue in the succession of so many yeers and if the Justice of God make her not barren for our punishment she returns with usury the laborious pains of the Husbandman Corn which is our principal support is multiplied by its corruption 't is born by death and making us see an image of the Resurrection perswades us our bodies may rise out of the Grave after they have been resolved to dust because the Grain springs not up till it be putrified in the earth This production would pass for a Miracle were it not so common and to observe the wonders thereof would be sufficient to oblige all men to reverence the power and wisdom of the Creator For when the Corn is corrupted it puts forth a bud which cleaves the earth and covers it with a tuft of Grass which preserves its verdure in the midst of the sharpest Winters At the Spring it thrusts forth a stalk which riseth insensibly and from time to time is strengthned with joynts to resist the violence of the windes Upon the top is formed an Ear wherein Nature seems to employ all her industry Seritur solummodo granum sine folliculi teste sine fundamento spicae fine munimento aristae fine superbia culmi Exurgit autem copia faen●ratum compagine aedisicatam ordine structum cultu munitum usquequaque vestitū Tertul. every grain is inclosed in a husk that if one be corrupted the rest may not be infected and the evil prove not a contagion each husk is fenced with a prizly sharp to guard the inclosed fruit from the injury of the air and the rapine of birds The heat of the Summer compleats the whole work gives it Colour in giving it Maturity and gently opening the several cells which lock up the treasure of the Husbandman admonisheth him to prepare for the Harvest If this Wonder ravish us and if we are bound to reverence the Divine Providence which makes the earth fruitful to nourish us we are not less concerned to admire the prodigious alterations it causeth in Nature to increase provision For it makes use onely of Rain to enrich us and from this inexhausted source draws so many different Fruits that if their number please us their qualities astonish us Rain is nothing but a Vapour in the conception the Sun sports with it in the air thickens it into a cloud to take it out of our sight then destroying his own work dissolves it into showers to water the thirsty earth In the mean time this Rain is turned into all things it toucheth takes the nature and quality of those things it bathes and by a miraculous Metamorphosis is changed into Wine falling upon grapes into Oil upon olives It contracts the taste of all Fruits and the colour of all Flowers It grows yellow upon the Marigolds red upon Pinks white upon Lilies and though when it falls it have neither taste nor colour yet may it boast it gives both to all Fruits and all Flowers This prodigious change which is daily wrought upon the earth is but an overture of that which is made upon the Body of Man to maintain it For all the Nourishment he