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A88133 The holy desires of death. Or A collection of some thoughts of the fathers of the church to shew how christians ought to despise life, and to desire death. By the R. P. Lalemant, prior of St. Genovese, and Chancellour of the University of Paris. Lalemant, Pierre, 1622-1673. 1678 (1678) Wing L200A; ESTC R231836 79,329 362

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Pains and the beginning of an Eternal Felicity Article II. The Second Principle of St. Augustin That proportionally as the Christian feels his Love for Virtue to encrease he feels also the Desire of Death to encrease within him WHen a man hath a lively and sincere Faith which gives him a sight of the place whether he is to walk during his abode upon Earth and of that where he shall arrive one day after his going forth of this World the Desire of Death ought to encrease in him according to the encrease of his Piety because it sussiceth not that Faith makes him see that Celestial dwelling where he is to be setled for euer but Charity must also make him love it and desire speedily to obtain it Now 't is impossible for him to have this Disposition in his Spirit and in his Heart without being glad to go forth of this Life An Excellent Passage of one of St. Augustins Disciples who made a Collection of his Sentences and of his chief Maxims where the tow precedent Principles are united This Collection is attribution to St. Prosper IF we consult our Faith and have the Sentiments which it ought to inspire into us we shall acknowledg that Sanctity of Life and a Desire of Death are things inseparable For one cannot be truly a Christian if one loves not God and if one aspires not to that Eternal Life which he hath promis'd to all them who love him We see it by Faith we expect it by Hope we love it and we desire it by Charity According as a man advances in the practice of these Virtues he advances also in the exercise of this holy Desire The more ardour he hath for eternal Life the less adhesion he hath to the temporal Life and considering Death as the sole issue out of this World and as the entrance into that Celestial Life which ought to be the object of all our Defires he looks with Joy upon that last moment which is to take him from off the face of the Earth So that when Faith and Charity are perfect in a Soul the Desire of Death is there at the same time so perfect that it raises it-self above that love of Life which blind and material Nature inspires into us But when Virtue is yet imperfect although Faith perswades us that Death is advantagious unto us yet Nature thwart's in us this holy Thought and we then feel that we possess Life with pleasure and should lose it with pain and difficulty whereas perfect Christians endure Life with pain and lose it with pleasure Article III. St. Augustin having establish'd these two Principles proposes to himself the Objection of some persons of Piety who fear the Judgments of God and who say That they do not believe they should do well in desiring Death and that it seems better to them to demand of God Time for Mortification and for becoming more Perfect I Know not upon what they can ground themselves Quaest Evan in Mat. q. 17. who having a sincere Faith can say nevertheless that they would not dye so soon to the end they might have more time to labour for their Salvation and their Perfection For 't is certain that the most infallible Mark which a Soul can have of her advancement in Virtue is when she advances in this holy disposition which makes her desire Death If then these persons will speak according to truth Let them not say I desire not to die so soon to the end I may have time to become more virtuous but let them rather say I desire to live longer because I am not virtuous enough to love Death Thus not to be willing to die so soon is not to the Faithfull a means to acquire more Virtue but 't is a signe that they have not yet acquired any Let them therefore who have hitherto said that they would not die to the end they might become more perfect say henceforth That they desire to die and this will make it appear that they are arrived at Christian Perfection Article IV. The Third Principle of S. Augustin That there are among Christians two sorts of Fear to displease God One of which is destroyed and the Other strengthened by Charity From whence this holy Doctor concludes That Faithful Souls which are the true Spouses of Christ Jesus fear nothing so much as to be for a long time separated from this Divine Bridegroom THere is a Fear which is banish'd by Charity In Psal 127. Tr. 9. n Epist i Joan. pass 1 Joan. 28 according to that word of Saint John Fear is not found with Charity but perfect Charity drives out Fear and he who fears is not perfect in Charity There is another Fear which the Royal Prophet calls the Fear of our Lord that pure and chaste Fear Psa 18 10. which remains for ever and ever Which gives us occasion to observe That there are two forts of the Fear of God one of which will subsist in Heaven with Charity and the other will be banish'd thence the one will perish with Life the other will remain eternally I cannot better explain unto you the Nature and the Properties of these two Fears then in placing before your Eyes a Comparison which seems to me very just and very sensible Figure to your selves two Women One of them chaste and the Other unfaithful to her Husband Is it not true that when their Husbands are absent the unfaithful Woman fears at every hour the return of her Husband and that on the contrary the chaste Woman fears lest her Husband should stay too long from coming Our Souls are the Spouses of Christ Jesus and during the state of this mortal life this Divine Bridegroom is separated from his Spouses Now if you agree to this truth there remains no more my Brethren but to ask your selves concerning the nature of the Fear which you feel to see whether it is either that imperfect Fear which Charity ought to exclude or that other tender and awful Fear which is to remain eternally O Christian Souls do not neglect this occasion which I present unto you to know well your selves Question your Conscience Will you know whether you truly love this Divine Bridegroom Do you desire that he should come presently or that he should yet for some time delay his coming Behold my Brethren and consider how your Heart is thereupon disposed and from thence you shall know what your Fear is and what is your love Alas How many Christians are there to whom if one should tell this News Christ Jesus will come to morrow to take you out of this World they would say Lord stay a little longer I have only begun to taste Life I have Youth and Health about me my House is not yet well established my Children are in their tender age and cannot pass without me I have in my mind great designs for the publick good the Poor have need of my assistance I perform
Love to the end we may behold him face to face in a blessed Eternity S. Isidor Article XXVIII An Instruction of St. Isidore of Damiet to all Christians to excite them to a perfect desire of Death SOme persons even the most pious perswade themselves oftentimes In Epist passim that they have no longer any tye and adhesion to Life nor to any thing of this World But 't is an Errour to fancy that one is entirely untyed from it if he feels not in his Heart a true desire of Death Let him who believes himself to be in so perfect an estate enter seriously into himself and he shall undoubtedly perceive that the Will of Man reigns yet in his Soul and that he is not totally uncloathed of the love of Life Let him severely examin himself let him question himself and ask of his Soul Do we no longer fear Death Doth nothing fasten us any longer to Life If we were to die within one Year within one Month within one Day if we were to die in this Moment should we be ready to render an accompt to God of our Actions And should we have no reluctancy to quit our freinds our relations our dwelling our works For we adhere to all and this adhesion is sometimes more violent for small matters than for the greatest Yet if there remains any thing that chains our Will to the World the Love which we have for God is not perfect Our Life upon Earth is a continual Warfare We bear Arms for the Glory of God He commands us to march to fight to pour forth our blood for him Why shall we not do for an Eternal Recompense that which men do for the reputation of a few days Let us then seriously examin our selves and let us see whether our heart is wholly submitted to this holy discipline of the Warfare of Christ Jesus Let us see whether according to St. Pauls precept we have taken for the Armour of our breast and back Faith and Charity Thes 5.8 and for our Helmet the Hope of Salvation For if our submission is perfect our Love will also be perfect and Death will afford us joy instead of giving us terrour Article XXIX St. Eucherius Arch-Bishop of Lyon exhorts Christians to observe attentively the different agitations of human Passions the shortness of Life and the uncertainty of Death to the end they may never engage themselves in the tumults of the World S. Eucherius and that they may be evermore prepared to die HAve you never contemplated from the Sea-shore Epist ad Valerianum the combat of the Winds disputing among themselves for the Empire of the Waves That dreadfull bellowing of the Billows which rush one upon another and push them with such violence against the Rocks whilst the mountains of Water and of Froth seem to ascend to the skyes and then sodainly to descend to the abysmus Doth not this sight inspire I know not what horrour which is nevertheless accompanyed with some pleasure and which insensibly engages the beholder to meditate upon those mervails This is the most lively and the most resembling Image we can find of the Agitations of the World But to behold them well we must stand upon the Shore and consider according to the spirit of God the joys and the afflictions the hatred and the freindship the quarrells and the reconciliations the fortune and the misfortune of men the flux and the reflux of their interests of their designs and of all their actions how they do and undo how they seek and shun the same things how one generation succeeds another how the Grandfather makes place for the Father and the Father for the Son not any of them thinking seriously during the whole course of their Life of the rapidness of this motion which trails them towards their Death Certainly this spectacle is a learned Lesson for them who know how to make their profit of it and we may say that it also affords some satisfaction when one reflects upon himself and finds that he is exempt from that trouble which overthrows the reason of all the rest of men Happy Tranquillity Adorable Peace of the love of Christ Jesus How sweet is it to them whom you have timely placed in the haven of their Salvation to behold in safety the fury of the Tempest without fearing either the winds or the waves or the rocks or the quick sands But as for us who have escaped Shipwreck by a sincere penance we I say who know the dangers out of which you our good God have delivered us give us we beseech you a holy horrour upon the sight of this terrible spectacle of the Tempests of the World and an ardent desire to be freed from them for ever by a Christian Death And surely we must not expect to enjoy a perfect calm so long as we sojourn upon Earth Should we live longer we should not be more happy The Life of our Fathers is ended our own slides dayly away Let us make place for them who are to follow us a little sooner or a little later the difference is small for they will not long survive us Finally in the same manner as the Surges of the Sea follow push and press upon one another by a precipitated motion and as the Waves which are raysed up highest fall down afterward the lowest to make room for a second the second for a third which is driven away by an infinity of other followers all which in the sequell come to be dissipated upon the shore even so the Life of one man succeeds that of another man one is elevated and the other is humbled according to the capriciousness of fortune But by how much their elevation is higher by so much the abysmus into which they sink is deeper and all terminate in Death Article XXX S. Fulgen St. Fulgentius and S. Paulinus prove That Death is a Recompense for the Just and a Chastisement for the Impious That the length of Life is to be computed by the number of Good Works one hath performed and not by the number of days one hath lived THe bad man trembles at the bare Name of Death Hath he the least indisposition Fulg. Epist 5. ad Gall. He believes 't is a mortal Sickness Paulin. Ep. 37. ad Pam. If one talks to him of God he falls into a fury He complains of the impotency of Remedies He is pierced with the apprehension of the least danger His Soul Prov. 12. and 28. says Solomon is perpetually perplexed with vain terrours Sap. 3. and 4. c. He flies when no one pursues him But the Just looks upon the danger without being affrighted and marches on like a Lion who is secure of his strength and of his courage Nothing that befalls him contristates him and if he were threatned even with Death he would be so far from being afraid that he would rejoyce at it because his Heart is in the
many good Works I render Justice without Passion and without Interest another will possess my place who will not perchance acquit himself so worthily Rather take away from the Earth those Wicked ones who only incommode the good people It concerns the honour of your sacred Name to exterminate those Atheists who contemn you it concerns your Glory to confound that Tyrant who abuses his power Why strike you not with Death that Usurer who heaps up treasures at the charge of the Widow and of the Orphan Why take you not an exemplary chastisement upon that publick Blood sucker who ruines a multitude of families But as for us who continually bless you who give Alms and who spread abroad in all places the effects of our cares and of our Liberalities leave us to live to honour you 'T is thus that the major part of Christians would speak But as for them who are arrived at such a degree of Perfection as to despise Life the World and themselves they I say who aspire to nothing else but to unite themselves to God for evermore they would make use of another manner of language Come they would say Come O thou too long exdected Hour of the Bridegrooms arrival Our Souls always burning with a desire to be with him find that all the moments of this miserable Life which separates us from him are so many ages Why do you stay O Lord Have not our Sighs given you sufficiently to understand that we lang 〈…〉 with the love of your beauty 〈…〉 You need but only knock at the door our Heart watches even whilst our Eyes seem to be shut up by Sleep Article V. Other Principles of St. Augustin That we are not happy in this Life but by the Hope and by the Desire of Eternal Goods That to be worthy to enter into the Celestial Countrey we must be willing to go forth of our Exile That the whole Life of a Christian is but a holy Desire of things to come and a generous Contempt of present Goods In Psal 83. a●os WE are here in the Region of Death but we are not thanks be to God to remain here always We are to pass from the Region of the Dead to that of the Living In the mean while there is nothing in this Region of the Dead but labour sorrow fear affliction temptation The persons who are unhappy in the World are there truly unhappy but they who believe themselves to the there happy do there enjoy but a false happiness and a false happiness is a true unhappiness Thus to speak truth there are none but only they who suffer not themselves to be blinded by the false felicities of this Life who can enjoy in this World a true Comfort and who can hope to enjoy one day a true Felicity in the other You then who agree to this that one is miserable in this Life listen to the Saviour of the World who tells you Mat. 5.5 Happy are they who weep and lament O how mysterious is the Felicity of these Tears Nothing is so agreeable to Misery as to Sigh and to Weep nothing is so opposite to misery as to be Happy Why then O Lord do you speak of a certain kind of men who are afflicted and who at the same time are Happy Let us endeavour my Brethren to comprehend the truth of these Words Why doth Christ Jesus call them Happy who Weep and what Happiness do they possess in lamenting This Happiness O Christians 't is the Contempt of Life 't is the Desire of Death They lament the length of their Banishment they weep out of compassion for the blindness of them who are tyed to the Earth they weep finally out of the impatience they have to come to that dear Countrey which God hath promis'd them and whatever Beauty presents it-self to their eyes upon the banks of the Rivers of Babylon they stay not upon them but to weep Blessed are they who weep in this manner because they shall be comforted Mat. 5.5.12 and because a great recompense is reserved for them in Heaven But the better to know their Happiness let us mark a little the misfortune of such as are in Criminal Joy of Worldlings Their Heart is only sensible of the objects of their Passions they make it their whole study to seek out new Pleasures yet whatever care they employ in it a disgust so closely follows the enjoyment that all their industry cannot soon enough furnish new inventions to entertain this diversity The excess of good Cheer takes away their appetit and ruins their Health a tender and constant Freindship tire's them the best entertainment grows tedious to them their own greatness perplexes and combers them if they are in company they would be alone and yet they cannot endure solitude The Rich envy 's the tranquillity of the Poor the Ambitious wishes for wealth to raise himself to honour the Voluptuous finds that every thing incommodes him and creates to himself a true torment by his solicitude in seeking for his pleasure Finally if we look upon things but only with human aspects they are extremely unhappy But the most terrible of all their miseries is That the disgust they conceive of this Life doth not move them to desire another They languish they sigh they weep sometimes in the middle of their delights but their delights will soon have an end and their tears will never be dried up And after they have wept in this Life they shall be plonged in darkness of Hell where Despair and Rage shall make them weep eternally Consequently to this Maxim St. Augustin teaches moreover elsewhere Ep. ad Probam Tract 4. in Ep. Joan passim in Psal That all the Life of a Christian ought to be but a holy desire of Death and of the goods of Eternity No man says this great Saint going from Earth shall arrive at Heaven to be there satiated with that eternal Justice which makes up all the joy of the Blessed unless he hath had an ardent thirst and an unsatiable hunger thereof whilst he was yet in the world And therefore it is Written That they who have an Hunger and they who have a Thirst of Justice Mat. 5.6 shall be happy because they shall be satiated It is then most certain That all the Justice of Man upon earth is no other thing than a Thirst and an ardent desire of the Eternal Justice But how can one desire that Eternal Justice if one love's Life if one dreads Death and if one doth not even desire to die in order to possess in Heaven this Justice which one cannot possess upon Earth For the Felicity of a Christian cannot be perfect unless his Charity is also perfect and the perfection of Charity is no other thing than this Eternal Justice which consists in knowing God and in possessing him perfectly 'T is for this reason that the true Christians look not upon all the things of the Earth but with
honour and with pomp in their triumph What truer subject of Joy can we have for them than to be the witnesses of their liberty and of their victory What have we else to do or say but bless God for having call'd them to himself and for having crown'd his own Gifts in them by a happy Death Do we not thereby testify the acknowledgment of this favour by Words the most holy that can be found in the Scripture Finally is it not for this reason that we cause our Churches to eccho forth Cantieles of prayse and of jubilation Surely there is nothing in all the Ceremonies which invite you not to a holy alacrity For as Ecclesiasticus says Singing accords not with tears and lamentation Eccle. 91. Believe me my Brethren do not look upon Death as a frightfull thing For if you are solidly Christians if you are perswaded that there is another Life if you believe the Resurrection of the Dead you will easily comfort your selves in the loss of your Freinds and you will wish that your selves may soon pass forth of this Life so full of dangers and of myseries where one doth nothing but suffer and Sin Cor. 6. Do not therefore any longer dishonour your name by such shamefull weaknesses but acting as faithfull Ministers of God render your selves recommendable by a great Patience in Evil and by a couragious Contempt of Death be as if you were always dying although yet living as sad and yet always joyfull as poor and yet possessing all in the possession of God who is promised unto you Article XVIII An Exhortation of St. John Chrysostom where he speaks against remiss and imperfect Christians who dread Death and instructs couragious and perfect Christians to desire it YOu who make profession to believe in Christ Jesus can you love the sweets of this Life Serm. de non timenda morte c. 24. Can you dread the bitterness of Death O you remiss and faithless Christians have you forgotten the example of Christ Jesus our good Master and do you doubt whether you must die as he did The true Christians have made themselves always known by the holy desires of Death but they have not acquired this generous disposition by any other means than by unshackling themselves from all the Goods of the Earth When one hath once with a sincere heart renounced them Life is a small matter and one will consider it rather as a punishment than as a pleasure T is therefore for this unfettering of the Heart that we must labour and 't is that wherein consists the perfection of a Christian For as for Death besides that it is unavoydable it is to be desired by them who have never so little Faith and although at first it is repugnant to Nature yet Grace overcomes by little and little that repugnancy and makes us love at last that which before gave us a horrour Hear what the Apostle St. Paul 1. Et 2. ad Corinth says You who are enrolled in the sacred warfare of Christ Jesus ought to have no other care than to stand to your Arms and to fight upon all occasions A Soldier doth not involve himself in the employs of the Civil life to the end he may he wholly embusied in satisfying him who hath enrolled him Now the Warfare of Christ Jesus is to endure constantly Watchings Fastings Poverty Injuries Imprisonment Wounds and Death it self for the glory of his holy Name 'T is true that the Christian Moral appear's at the first view too severe to senfual men but if one examin's it with a Spirit untyed from the secret interest of self love and of Concupiscence one finds nothing so reasonable and so advantagious to the common good of all men nor even so profitable to particular persons whether it be for their conduct or for their comfort In effect what Religion is there in the world which proposes a more perfect Model than Christ Jesus whose Life is more pure whose Miracles are more evident and whose Doctrine is more wise and more disinterressed Do but compare it with that of the most prudent Philosophers and of the most renowned Law-makers and you will finde that in all the Words and in all the Actions of Christ Jesus there is a Character of Sanctity and of Divinity which his Enemies themselves cannot chuse but aeknowledge whereas in the other Doctrins human Wisdom is always interwoven with some extravagancy with some gross interest with some contradiction or with some errour Since therefore we make profession to follow the Lessons of so good a Master let us endeavour O Christians to imitate him in all things Let 's leave Sensualists to enjoy their Sensuality this enjoyment is so small a matter and lasts so short a time that we ought more to pitty than to envy them Let 's leave the World to reign 't is here it 's Kingdom ours is not yet come What hath our Joy common with the Joy of the Earth The World will lament whilst we laugh and we shall one day mock at it's tears as it this day mocks at ours The difference there is between it and us is That it being in our own power to rejoyce as it doth we do it not because we acknowledg the vanity of all its pleasures but it cannot enjoy the pleasures of Eternity because it hath despised them on the contrary it shall be plonged in dreadfull darkness where pains and gnashings of teeth shall never end but shall be the continuing signes of its sufferings and of its despair Let us weep then my Brethren let 's weep whilst the World rejoyces let 's weep for it's being in joy because Charity so ordains and let us be so far from loving Life as the World doth as to run to Death which it loves not because Death is not unhappy for us as it is for it but on the contrary it will end all our unhappinesses Psal 29. In the Evening we are drowed in tears and in the Morning we shall be in an eternal joy Let us never forget That our true pleasure ought to be to despise all vain pleasures and that our solid happiness is to believe there is none solid but with God Ah Christian if thou considerest thy condition as thou oughtest how wilt thou dare to complain of living without pleasure thou who art obliged to die with pleasure Article XIX As St. Jerome is one of the Doctours of the Church who hath testified the greatest desire of Death so we have few Ecclesiastical Authours who have spoken so clearly as he either of the Advantages which Death brings to Christians or of the obligation they have to prepare themselves for it S. Jerom. and continually to think of it Behold in what manner this great Saint explicates himself concerning it in several places of his Writings THe greatest mark of an irregular Life is never to think of Death and when we think but seldom of it 't is a certain Sign that we
only with wild Roots my Imagination ingenious to persecute me ceased not to entertain it self with the delights of the Roman Citty I pass'd the day in sighing and the night in weeping for my Sins But the more I strove to quench with my Tears the secret fire of my Concupiscence the more that rebell was enkindled even in the marrow of my bones If sometimes the wearinesses of my penance forced me to abandon my self to sleep I paid not that tribute to Nature but against my will and to free my self quickly from it I suffer'd my body to fall to the ground it being extenuated with watchings and as it were broken with all sorts of macerations I had no other Pillow than a Stone no other Garment then a Hayr-cloath no other Drink than Water nor other Food than Herbs and Roots and when the weakness of my Stomack obliged me to eat them boyled for a more easy disgestion I durst not satisfy my hunger fearing to commit an excess in making good cheer This Abstinence and the heat of the Climat joyned to the ardour of my temper had dryed me up like a Skeleton and one might have counted all the Nerfs through a Skin more tawny than that of the Ethiopians In this sad estate I had more horrour of my self than of the Scorpions and of the Serpents which were round about me and yet my Spirit would escape on a sodain even amidst my most holy Meditations and quit Prayer to dream of the Roman Dames running over all the assemblies I had frequented formerly where the Devil had laid his mortall Baits to entrap Chastity Then being irritated at the revolt of my Senses which these thoughts had excited against me I massacred my breast with a thousand blows and I left not off striking it untill the Grace of our Lord had calmed my Passions He knows what my sorrow was after such strange Conflicts I blushed with shame Life was insupportable unto me All the corners of my Grot all the Rocks of my Solitude seem'd to me so many Censurers of my Life and so many Witnesses of my Weaknesses For this cause I often chang'd my habitation hoping to find out some one where I might have more quiet but my evil did not change because I bore every where about me the subject of my disquiet I avouch that in the height of my torments I ardently desired to die and that I could have wished it had been permitted me to go forth of the World When one day I was press'd with this thought more violently than I was wont I took up the Book of the sacred Scripture which was my sweetest comfort and as God would have it I fell upon that passage where the Prophet Amos says these terrible Words Joel 2.11 Accursed be they who inconsiderately desire the day of our Lord. Soph. 1.15 Who urges you thus to desire it That day of our Lord is a day without Light Amos. 1.18 a day of darkness and obscurity When you shall be weary of your misery overwhelm'd with infirmities persecuted with temptations rejected by the injustices of others when you shall be disgusted with the whole World and irksom to your self expect the hour of our Lord with patience Amos. ● 19 For what doth it avail a man to shun the meeting of a Lion if he falls into the paws of a Bear S. Ierom. It is not in his power to hinder his Soul from going forth when that hour shall be come Eccl. 8.8 and he hath no right to hasten or to slacken the day of his Death After this sacred Instruction I suffered Life patiently being resolv'd to employ all the moments thereof in doing good works and being perswaded that we may well desire Death but that it is not permitted us to advance or further it nor even so much as to demand it of God with overmuch impatience because although we ought to contemn Life yet we must not omit to conserve it Article XXI An Excellent Instruction of the same St. Jerome That Death ought to be looked on as an order of the Divine Providence rather than as an effect of human Infirmity and that so we ought to die by Obedience and by Love A True Christian looks upon Death not only as upon a subject of consolation Lib. 9. in Isaiam alibi but moreover as upon an object of love and of respect because it must be granted that it is God who makes us live and die when he pleases and that the end of our days is more an effect of the Divine Will than of human infirmity For if the fall of the least Sparrows happens not without the order of God as himself says in the Gospell we ought to believe by a stronger reason That the last fall of our Body never happens but according to the immutable decree of his Will We should therefore look on Death with Love considering it as an effect of the eternal Providence We must take from it that which Nature finds horrible in it and think that God sends it not to them whom he loves but to the end they should always love him In effect the greatest testimony he can give them of his love is to withdraw them out of the World and to free them from the slavery of their Body and of Sin to render them Saints and make them eternally happy I say yet much more we are in some sort made partakers even upon Earth of this happiness when we submit to his will with this Confidence And as the last mark we can give of our Love towards God is to receive Death with an entire Obedience and even with Joy when it summons us to go forth of the World so the most perfect act of our Faith and of our Piety towards Christ Jesus is to resign our selves before hand to what ever God shall ordain of our Life and of our Death Let us therefore with David say to him Ps 89. Behold we are ready O Lord Cut of the threed of our miserable Life when you please And surely what is the duration of our days They pass away more speedily than the Word We live ordinarily but Seaventy Years and the stronger scarcely pass Fourscore But should our Life endure a Thousand years before your eyes a Thousand years are no more then yesterday which is past and gone Death hurries them away as a Whirlwind and they disappear as a Dream So that how long soever our Life is it will be counted for nothing unless it is pleasing to you Grant then Sap. 3. O Lord that we may count our days by our Good Works and that we may know their shortness to the end we may acquire Wisdom of Heart Article XXII St. Jerome or the Authour of some Epistles attributed to him which are placed at the end of his Works urges this Doctrine yet farther and teaches That a Christian ought not only not to dread Death but that he ought also to
hands of God and for that the torment of Death doth not touch him It seems to the eyes of the unwise that the Just man dies his departure out of the World appears to them an affliction They imagine that the way he takes in separating himself from others will bring him to nothing whereas it is but a passage which leads him to peace and to repose Altho' he endures a cruel Death before men yet God replenishes him with a certain hope of Immortality He suffers a little to gain much Our Lord hath tryed him by these pains of short durance and hath found him worthy of his Love 'T is Gold which he puts into the melting vessell to refine it 'T is a Victime which he sanctifies by the Sacrifice to make it revive one day in Eternity The day will come when the Just shall possess the glory of Heaven and he shall shine more brightly than the Starrs we shall behold him judging Nations and bearing sway over the people for he is the Child of the most High He shall share with him in his Kingdom and the Lord of the Just shall reign Eternally They who have confidence in him will understand this truth they shall repose in his bosom and shall enjoy the Peace which he hath prepared for his Elect. But as for the Wicked who have despised and injured the Just and who have withdrawn themselves from God they shall be chastised according to their crimes How unhappy are they to have abandonned Wisdom and shaken off the yoak of Justice For all their hopes will be vain their labours will be unprofitable and their works will remain imperfect If they have Wives they will be dishonest if they have Children they will be unnatural A curse shall fall upon their families and the posterity of Adulterers shall be exterminated 'T is in vain for them to boast of their Riches of their Power of their Health Should they live longer than other men all the years of their Life shall be counted for nothing at the day of their Death If they die old their old age shall be disquieted with the remorse of their Conscience and the World growing impatient to see them so long upon Earth will look upon them only with contempt and perhaps with indignation If they die Young they shall be deprived of the advantages they might have had in the World and of the hope of the heavenly Good Finally the Death of the wicked is the ruine of their race 't is a desolation without hope a night without light an Abysmus of miseries where nothing dwells but a dismall nothing and an eternal horrour These sentences of the sacred Scripture make us see That only Impious and Infidells need to fear Death but that Christians who are indued with piety should be so far from fearing it that they ought even to desire it Certainly a happy Life doth not consist in living a long time but in living in a perfect submission to the orders of Providence What doth it serve us to continue upon earth even to a decrepit age Is not Innocence of Life to be preferred before the duration of Life and is not purity of manners more worth than old age The Scripture speaking of the Just man who dies young hath sayd That he was snatch'd speedily out of the World Sap. 4.11 lest the Master of errour should seduce his spirit and lest Malice should corrupt his Soul But because he became perfect in a short time v. 13. 't is as if he had lived many Years and God to whom this Soul was agreable hastned to withdraw her from the midst of iniquity wherewith the whole Earth is replenished Article XXXI As St. Gregory the Pope was himself very infirm and sickly so he speaks and writes frequently of Death He is one of the Ecclesiastical Authours who hath fill'd his Works with the strongest reflections upon this subject We have drawn out four or five of them which best relate to our proposed Design I. Reflection of St. Gregory S. Gregory That the Continual view of Death is the most assured means to lead a holy and quiet Life HE who seriously considers what he ought to hope for or to fear at the article of Death Moral in c. 17. Job must needs act with great circumspection and have a continual apprehension of falling into Sin That last hour which he hath evermore present before his Eyes renders him truly living to the Eyes of God He fixes upon nothing that is perishable He desires nothing of all that which men who live without Reflection seek with so much earnestness and the disposition wherein he places himself every hour as if he were then to die makes him to look upon himself as already dead For Life is by so much the more holy and more perfect by how much it hath relation each moment to Death Holy Scripture teaches us Eccles. 7. that the more men study this Lesson and contemplate themselves in this Looking-Glass which flatters not the farther they are from falling into the snares of Sin Article XXXII 2. Reflexion of St. Gregory That naturally all the Desires and all the Actions of man tend to Death That Grace should do that in us which Nature doth of it self That according to the thought of Job Life resembles the day of a hireling a pilgrimage a warfare where no one enroll's himself but to die in fighting against the Enemies of our Salvation THe Sick person who lies languishing in pain and in sadness Lib. 2. Mor. c. 3. Lib. 12. c. 3. expects with impatience the return of the day but the Sun which brings the Light brings no remedy to his misery on the contrary it diminishes one day of his Life The Hireling finds the hours of his labour over-long and blames the Night for coming on so slowly The Covetous man counts with discontent all the moments which retard his revenues The Ambitious man who hath conceiv'd great designs would in order to hasten the success hasten the years of his Life The Husbandman makes vows to see his Harvest ripen Finally it seems that men demand nothing but to be Old altho' they apprehend nothing so much as Old-age In Winter we wish the return of the Spring Scarcely is the season of Flowers past over but we desire that of Fruits In Autumn we say that Winter hath it's pleasures Thus it is that the Spirit of Man unquiet and insupportable to it self carries on its vain desires from one time to another and not enjoying the present anticipates always upon the future and marches by a secret impatience towards his Death What we do by a hidden motion of Nature why shall we not do by the Inspiration and by the Succour of Grace Grace incessantly advertises us that this Life is short and miserable and that we ought to aspire to another Life which is everlasting and happy Sometimes the sacred Scripture teaches us this Verity by comparing Life to a
dead to the World yet the World ceases not to live to them and to ly every where in wait to entrap them sometimes by applauding their Virtues and other times by extolling their Actions It besieges them it pursues them it enchains them by secret confidences by continual visits by an ardent seeking of their freindship All these things seem only to tie an innocent knot and which may have a very good end Nevertheless the danger is great and it is a temerarious confidence to expose ones self thereto without an extreme necessity The World loses nothing in this traffick on the contrary it serves it very frequently for an honest Veil to hide its Vices but the Just man runs a great hazard thereby and sits down always with the loss The Devil who is but too ingenious to deceive us employs a thousand subtil crafts disguises himself into all manner of shapes and even into that of Virtue in order to seduce us At first he distills light distractions little solicitudes vain desires unprofitable curiosities which diminish by little and little the fervour of our devotions and which estrange from our memory the thoughts of Death Then the same Spirit which cools the Love of God enkindles insensibly in our Soul those former affections which repentance and Charity had there as it were stifled and buried Alas how few Just persons are found who entirely imitate S. Paul in this double Death of the Christian to the World and of the World to the Christian Where are they whose Conscience renders to them the same testimony as it did to this great Apostle and who have put themselves into a perfect liberty by breaking not oniy all the Chains which kept them fast tyed to the World but moreover those which tyed the World to them For 't is not enough to have despised and abandoned the World we must so order it that the World may despise and abandon us This is that which the Apostle intends to teach us when he says The World is dead and crucified for me as I am dead and crucified for the World The World was crucified to him because it was dead in his heart and was no more any thing to him but the object of his contempt and of his hatred but besides this he was also crucified to the World because having made appear an insensibility for the concerns of the Earth the world ceased to seek after him and did no longer so much as think of him If we take not heed we shall find that even in the most retired professions in the greatest disgust of the vanities of the infidelities and of the corruptions of the world when we fancy that we are for ever freed from them yet there still remain some roots thereof in our Heart We hold no more of the world but it holds us yet by imperceptible bonds We make a shew of shuning it and yet we are not sorry that it should seek after us and that it should come sometimes to trouble our solitude which would otherwise appear to us dismal and insupportable Finally with a mean Virtue one may forget the world but one must have an extraordinary Virtue to wish to be forgotten by the world This is that which holy Souls aym at which are perfectly unfettered from the world They not only suffer themselves not to be drawn by the World but moreover they draw not the World to themselves And 't is to them that may be applyed the saying of S. Paul Man and the World are reciprocally Crucified one in regard of the other because they not seeking one another nor mutually loving each other are as two dead things which can no longer have any communication But alas how few there are who can come to he happiness of this double Death The greatest Saints all crucified as they are to the World cannot without the succour of an extraordinary Grace crucify the World entirely in themselves Therefore it is that they incessantly mortify themselves and they cry out with David Lord Psal 90. save my Soul from the Ambushes of her Enemies defend her against the cunning of deceitfull Tongues deliver me from the snares of the Hunters and from the corruption of the World For altho' the Just man flies the World and is perfectly disengaged from it he evermore apprehends that he hath something in himself which engages the world to follow him But if God covers him with his Wings to make use of the Royal Prophets words what ever endeavours the world makes to seek him out it will not find him or if it finds him 't will find him Dead as to all earthly concerns doing nothing to please it nor to allure it being deaf to it's prayses insensible to it's blandishments indifferent to its interests without curiosity without pretention without disquiet doing good for goodness sake and little caring to have confederates or admirers of his Virtue On the contrary if in labouring for Gods glory he encreases his own glory he will so far humble himself in his own interiour and before others that the aversion which he will testify against all flatteries will foyl his Flatterers Finally the World which will not entertain any traffick with the Just but upon some motive of interest or of pleasure will cease to seek after him and finding there no more nourishment to live upon will die and crucify it self in him For 't is most certain that the World is in that like unto the Sea which swallows up and detains within its bosom the living Bodies but rejects the dead carkasses and leaves them upon the sands So the World lays hold upon that only which is yet living and sensible for it and abandons that which is devoyd of feeling and of Life for all such things as any way concern it Article XXXV A pithy Description made by the Great St. Gregory of the Necessities and of the Miseries of the Body and of the Soul From whence this holy Man concludes That men should desire to die in order to enjoy a better Life in which they shall be no longer exposed either to Sorrow or to Sin ONe cannot express all the Miseries to which Man is exposed by Sin Lib. Moral in c. 7. Job His Body is subject to a thousand sorts of infirmities it is expos'd to the injuries of the Ayr and of all the Elements to Dangers to Diseases to the ignorance of Physitians which is some times more to be dreaded than the Diseases themselves The natural Heat which sustains his Life devours its proper substance as soon as it wants nourishment If he reposes sloath renders him unweldy if he is employed labour drains him if he eats the meat overcharges him thirst dries him up the excess of drink makes him brutish sleep oppresses him watching wearies him cold pinches him heat stifles him and that which eases him of one incommodity casts him presently into another Finally on which ever side he turns himself he is tormented by the