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A33464 The little manuel of the poore mans dayly devotion collected out of severall pious and approoved authors / by W.C. W. C. (William Clifford), d. 1670. 1669 (1669) Wing C4712; ESTC R7795 136,664 494

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are from the pernicious maximes of the world which shee ought most carefully to fly BLessed are the poore of spirit for theirs is the kingdome of Heaven Math. 5.8 Marke well how formely opposit to this divine maxime is that of the world which compts them only happy who are every way rich both in wealth and able to make most shew and glory in vaine florishing it But our divine Redeemer begun the publishing of his Ghospel by declaring to his disciples wherein the true Beatitude of this life did consist and therby to disabuse them of the false opinion amongst the people of this world who though they all doe naturally seeke for happinesse yet taking a quite contrary way for it they cannot enjoy it some spending their whole tyme and labour to pourchace vaine worldly honour or deluding pleasures others are as earnest to hurd upp sordid wealth as no lesse pensive afterwards in preserving it All which great follie proceeds from guiding themselves by the false principles of this world and neglecting the counsell of their heavenly Maister Jesus Christ For the world and its concupiscence doth so strongly possesse their harts that they become incapable to give eare to his doctrine which is only to conduct us to Beatitude And therefore it is no wonder if that which Jesus Christ proposeth here for happinesse seeme rather misery to the wordly eyes of Men whose thoughts not going beyond this present life which being but truly misery in it selfe it can no otherwise make us happy but only as it serves to help us to gaine that other of endlesse Blisse Blessed are those who mourne Math. 5. for they shall be comforted This seemes no lesse contrary to the sense of worldlings then the former But to understand how our Beatitude can consist in teares and mourning we must consider that by sin we are banisht people in this world and that all our felicity consists in the hope of our reestablishment and pardon by mourning penance and penitent teares And hence it is that mourning is the ground of our Beatitude Learne yee of me who am milde and humble of hart Matth. 11 and you shall find rest to your soules This mildnesse and humility of hart is esteemed by the vogue of this world to be but dulnesse unmanlinesse and weaknesse of hart They falsly judging that true courage and generosity must shew their Passion for the least offence or disrespect which their selfe esteeme conceives and thereupon engage themselves in great and dangerous quarrels with rest lesse disquiet of mind wheras the contrary is very happily enjoy'd by the meeke and humble of hart Blessed are they who hungar and thirst after justice Math. 5 for they shall be filled that is they who have ardent and earnest desires for the glory of God by accomplishing his Commandements and holy will But according to the maxime of the world we hungar and thirst much rather after our corrupt sensualities which bend all our thoughts and desires much rather to the transgression of his divine law wherby we can never hope to be satiated no more then was the prodigall child with empty huskes the proper food for swine Blessed are the cleane of hart for they shall see God that is Math 5 by a cleare vision in Beatitude But the maximes of the world which tye our harts to creatures by affection make them become defiled and impure and thereby obscure their spirituall sight from behoulding God Blessed are those who suffer persecution for justice for theirs is the kingdome of Heaven Math. 5 But by the maximes of the world quite contrariwise they are accompted to be most miserable and wheras by vertuous patience in suffering such persecution the godly obtayne the reward of eternall felicity the worldlings by seeking unjust revenge with indignation and wrath doe east their soules into the endlesse flames of Hell Give and there shall be given to you Luke 6 ●8 c. for with the same measure that you doe measure it shall be measured to you againe But self-interest being the great maxime of this world its practise is to take and obduratnesse of hart not permitting them to exercise this holy charity in releeving the needy and afflicted pore according to their owne measure they must expect justice without mercy because they shewed no mercy Saith S. James Woe to you that now doe laugh Luke 6.5 because you shall mourne and weepe Blessed 8. Augustin upon due reflexion on this holy maxime did often begg of God here to cutt and burne and not to spare him therby to spare him eternally But the wicked maxime of this world is to passe their dayes in present delight and jolity although in a moment they descend into Hell for ever But J say to you love your enemies doe good to them that hate you Math. 5 43. and pray for them that persecute and abuse you Our divine Redeemer Jesus both by his words and exemple hath recommended to us the practise of this holy maxime his whole life being a continuall exercise of doing good for evill But the wicked maxime of this world now contrariwise for an imaginary honour as they conceive it to revenge a wrong will put all at stake their hody and soule Gods honour and their neighbours damnation by that diabolicall practise of their duels If one strike thee on the right cheeeke turne to him also the other Math. 5.39 What herby we are taught by Christian patience to doe for gayning an enemy the world houlds it great basenesse of mind not to take full reparation by unlawfull revenge To him who will contend with thee in judgment Math. 5 40 and take away thy coates let goe also thy cloake unto him This charitable maxime though given us to avoyde disquiet contention and breach of charity yet worldlings accompt it meere follie and make small scruple to gaine an unlawfull fuite although to the great prejudice of their owne soules and totall temporall unjust ruyne of their poore neighbours livelyhood Why seest thou the mote in thy brothers eye Luke 6 41 but the beame which is in thy owne thou considerest not by this divine maxime we are advertised to looke well to the amendment of our owne faults much rather then to observe those in others But the sinful maxime of the world is to cover and conceale our owne great defects and to discover and publish much lesse in our neighbour But when thou doest an almes deed Math. 6.3 let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doth This holy maxime doth teach us to hope by well doing to obtayne a recompence in Heaven but the Spirit of this world by seeking to be pay'd by the vaine glory of Men their merit can be no other but only the due punishment of their sin When thou doest fast Math. 6 16 annoint thy head and wash thy face that thou appeare not to men to fast This holy maxime gives
certaine and the houre of it most uncertaine all Christian wisdome consists in a good and holy preparation for that moment to the end we neglect not a businesse which is in truth to us the businesse of businesses and the sole and only businesse we have to doe in this world since we are here only to save our soule and loosing it we loose all for what shall it prefit a Man to gaine the whole world Mar. 2. if he loose his owne soule sayes our souveraine Master Jesus Christ O God how great is the blindnesse of the most part of Men who never reflecting upon this so divine and important a truth lead only an earthly sensual and animal life and never elevating their spirit to heavenly things settle their affections so firmely upon this mortal life as to preferre it before that which is eternal Iohn 10. Whosoever loves his life saies our B. Lord shall loose it and whosoever hates it in this world shall gaine it in Eternity O my God we doe not then love our life as we ought when we adhere too close to it since this adherence to our temporal life proceeding from an inordinate love of our selves putts us in danger to loose that which is eternall Since also thou thy selfe asseurest us Luke 14 that whosoever comes to thee and hateth not his owne life can not be thy disciple Grant me such a holy hatred of this mortal life as may cause me continually to aspire and pretend to that which is eternal there to live with thee world without end 2. Point PRecious in the sight of our Lord is the death of his Saints saies the Psalmist Psal 15. If we will dye their life keeping alwayes our affections alienated from the creatures as if we were to dye every moment since there is no moment wherein we may not be surprised by death and wherein we ought not to be prepared to receive it if we will not hazard our salvation We ought to surmont the natural feare we have of it by faith and by a confidence we should have that Jesus Christ who keepes the keyes of life and death and who loves us infinitly more then we love our selves will send it us in such a tyme and manner as in his divine providence he has forseene to be most convenient for us Has he not created us for life eternal Doe we not beleeve that life to be more happy then this which is mortal if we live not in this beleefe we have no faith and consequently no hope since we cannot arrive at this happy life which he has promissed us but by the way of death But what charity can that interessed soule have who loves her owne life more then the will of God and whose feare of dying exceeds her desire of seeing and uniting herselfe to him Ioh. 4. Perfect charity sayes the holy Evangelist drives fourth feare And if we ought to testify our love to God by our hatred of sin where is the hatred we beare it since knowing that we cannot live without daily relapsing into it we have neverthelesse an extreame apprehension of death O if we truly lou'd God with what joy would we embrace death to the end we might be in a state never more to be able to offend his infinite goodnesse since the least sin as the Doctors say is more to be dreaded thendeath if selfe 3. Point IF God should leave the tyme houre and manner of our death to our choyse could we make a better then he himselfe who ordaynes it by his infinite wisedome power and goodnesse and who having made us for himselfe and redeemed us with his blood desires nothing so much as to save us and conduct us to our last end Since our faith teaches us this truth why doe we not entirely abandon the care of our life and death to him What can be more advantageous to us in Heaven in Earth in life and in death then to accomplish his most just and holy will And since we must necessarily undergoe the ordees of his divine will were it not better to doe it meritoriously by an humble submission and filial confidence in his divine goodnesse then to execute it by force like the divels and by our resistance to render this action more worthy of punishment then reward If the feare of our sins cause us to apprchand death and desire prolongation of life to the end to doe penance for them what penance can be more efficacious and acceptable to God then our perfect conformity to his holy will and our entyre submission to the sentence of our death to the end to render him the obedience due from a creature to its Creator and to testify to him that we preferre the honour of pleasing him before our owne life if the merit of our acts beare proportion with the difficulty we find in their execution what can be more difficult then to renounce our life and what better penance can we performe then to give it with a good hart to God since in makeing him this present we not only give him all we are able to give but also all which is most deare and precious to us no Man hath greater charity then he who layes downe his life sayes our divine Saviour and if a God would vouchsafe for us to dye so painfull and grievous a death and loose his life upon a crosse for our salvation shall we dare to refuse him ours shall we esteeme our life more precious or more necessary then his O my soule if we lou'd God ifwe had a true sense and acknowledgment of this soveraine benefit would we not desire to have a thousand lives to give him O my God since I am nothing but by thee I will be nothing but for thee and so as I be what thou desirest I should be it imports me very little whither I live or dye Affections and Resolutions SInce that upon the moment of my death depends my eternall salvation grant me grace O my God to keepe my selfe prepared for this last houre by a true hatred of sin by a perfect contempt of the world with its vaine honours pleasures and riches and by a perfect abnegation of my selfe suffer me not to sleepe in the forgetfulnesse of death least the lampe of chrity being extinguisht and the oyle of good workes spent thou surprise me in this state and pronounce against me as heretofore against those foolish Virgins that dreadfull word I know you not but keeping my selfe alwayes in expection of thy com̄ing grant that I may merit to enter with thee to that eternall marriage where neyther eye has seene nor care hath heard nor the hart of Man comprehended what thou hast prepared for those who love thee Give me O Lord the light of thy holy spirit to the end I suffer not my selfe to be deceived and seduced by my senses in mistaking falshood for truth nor esteeme the things of this mortall life good or evill but
Meditation suggests to them they become by their meditation more humble more patient and conformable to Gods blessed wil and pleasure in all which is the certaine marke of a holy and fruitfull Medication how dry or barren soever it seemed to them and deprived of all sensible or self-satisfaction or forced fervours whilst learneder persons with all high speculations producing no great affections nor resolutions for the practise of vertue all proves but vanity in their owne imagination which produceth no fruit at all But now that the lesse learned people are not uncapable to practise this prositable prayer of Meditation it may be fitly expressed by this familiar example of a pervere and wicked Meditation made by a sinner of whome King David speakes saying and they who sought me evils speakes vanities and mediate evils all the day For the revengfull man pondering and musing with him felfe of some disgrace or injury by memory he calls to mind the disgrace or wrong offered him Then with his understanding he considers the nature and weight of such an injury and therby he provokes his will to hatred to envie to malice and to secke revenge upon the party from whom he received it This now is a most wicked Meditation wholy interiour and all without one word of the mouth Even so in like manner and quite to the contrary a good Man calling to minde his sin and injuries therby which he hath offered unto God he ponders considers and examens the greatnes therof the enormity causes effects and the properties of sin whence he makes a firme resolution out of the hatred therunto to banish the like hereafter and to avoyde all future occasions and this is an interiour and a holy Meditation of sin This briefly in general Here now followes a short meditation for each day in the weeke wherby the vertuous soule may put in practise this holy exercise and it may also serve as a little methode inducing her to make more use of this profitable devotion according to leasure and other helpes for the same Matter of Meditation for ever day in the weeke Sunday of Gods benefits unto mankind FIrst place yourselfe in the presece of God with a profound adoration therof The Preparation and beseech him to inspire you with his grace Which serves as the generall preparation for all the ensuing Meditations 1. Consider the benefit of thy Creation that when thou wast nothing Considerations the Almighty created thee not a stock or a brute beast but a reasonable creature endued with understanding will memory and capable of all vertue 2. Consider the end for which thou wast created namely the service of God and that after a short tyme spent therin thou mightest be partaker of those celestiall joyes which be prepared for thee in the Kingdome of Heaven 3. Consider that all other creatures and what soever thy God hath bestowed upon thee is for the attainement of thy foresaid end and so accordingly to be employed by thee 4. Consider the benefit of thy Redemption of thy Vocation unto the catholike faith such also as concerne thine owne estate in particular For which Affections and all others as wel knowne as unknowne labour to be thankfull Admire with great confusion and be truly sorry for your great ingratitude considering Gods infinit love to so unworthey a creature abusing those his innumerable blissings Resolue to be more carrefull for the future Resolutions preparing your mind with all indifferency to possesse or to be deprived be it of health or sicknesse plenty or want esteeme or contempt so it be conformable to gods blessed will let it be welcome Munday of sin and the grieviousnesse thereof COnsider how odious sin is unto God Which may appeare by the greatness of the punishment First in the Angels Secondly in our first Parents who for eating the forbidden fruit were deprived of that happy estate wherin thy were created in Paradise yea not only they but wee and all their posterity doe beare the burden therof for so much as all the miseries of this life and the next doe spring from that bitter root Consider the malice of sin which in a sort is infinit being against the infinit goodnesse of God And therfore Jefus Christ God and Man was only found worthy and able to accomplish the worke of our Redemption whose actions being of infinit merit were answerable to infinit justice Consider the lamentable effects therof 1. of Gods grace wherof we are deprived 2. of the evils which we incurre as the wrath of God torment of conscience the servitude of sathan and the guilt of eternall damnation Astection All this considered ought not the very name of sin be more horrible to us then is Hell it selfe and yet ô how great is our senslesse carelesnesse in committing it as also Gods infinit mercy to most ungreatefull Man in suffering his wicked bouldnesse in offending so great and so good a God! Resolue therfore and crave his grace Resolutions that thou maist rather dye then offend him mortally recurt to him for mercy as a prodigall child and detest all thy former sins and resolue to fly all dangerous occasions of falling into them againe Tuesday of the miseries of this life 1. COnsider the great frailty of Mans nature subject to so many dangers as no glasse is halfe so brittle and therfore in the holy scripture it is compared to a buble in the water to flowers to grasse to a shadow c. As for the soule so many snares and ginns are laid by the world the flesh and the divel to ruyn it as S. Antony seeing them in a vision cryed out ô Lord who shall be able to avoyde all these nets 2. Consider in respect of temporall things what a misery it is that scarce any one is contented with his owne estate seeme he to others never so prosperous for that in this life we are like unto sick men who tumble and tosse in their beds not considering the cause of their discontent to be their inward infirmity of vexing in minde 3. Consider that for so much as this life is so uncertaine and so fraught with miseries there is no greater madnesse in the world then to set out harts and affections thereupon and with such diligence to cast about for the things therof and so little or not at all to labour for those which concerne our eternal felicity Adore and greatly admire the great goodnesse of God Affections who therfore hath mixed those many miseries with this present life therby to compel us to hate it and to draw us by it to aspire unto our Beatitude Resolution Resolue hereafter to withdraw your hart from such vaine and deceiptful contentments of the world and fix your mind upon what is eternall Wednesday of the houre of death I Magin thy selfe to lie upon thy death bed having a hallowed candle in thy hand a crucifix upon thy breast thy ghostly Father calling
any such backbiting discourse imitate the excellent practise of a holy servant of God who used to desire them who made any such discourse that they much rather would tell him of some fault of his owne whereof he had many for therby said he you will doe me great charity for which I will both hartely thanke you and also endevour to amende Thinke well upon this holy practise for it is of great importance to avoyd much sin to practice true charity towards our neighbour and finally to procure peace and happy quiet to our owne minde therby Of flying the occasion of sin WHo loves danger shall porish therein saith the wise man and who is most carefull to shun the occasion Eccles 1.17 he doubtlesse will least offende for as who stops the fountaine will certainly dry up the brooke so likewise who flyes the occasion will preserve himselfe from sin For as taking away the cause one wil hinder the effect so in the combat with vice no way is so secure to gaine the victory as by flight The holy Ghost assures us that as we cannot touch pitch without being defiled so is it also as difficult to stay voluntarily in the occasion of sin without a defiled conscience The common proverb saith very well that the occasion makes a Thiefe which is but too truly verifi'd in makeing adrunkard a detractor a Luxurious man and the like And who but reflecteth upon his most offending God will finde that his neglect of avoyding the occasion was still the chiefest cause of his sin Salomon David and Sampson did all greatly offend by exposing themselves to the occasion let us take good warning by them who are much inferiour to their perfections To avoyde therfore sin we must beware of all ill company for they serve but as alluring baites to draw soules to offende We must greatly mistrust our owne frailty and place our whole confidence in God craving humbly his celestiall grace to strengthen us against all the dangerous temptations of our three mortall ennemies the world the flesh and the devill The small number of the Elect. THis thruth is exceeding terrible Math. 7. grounded upon the words of Jesus Christ saying that the gate is wide and the way broad which leadeth to death and many walke therein but the gate unto life is narrow and few doe find it many ate cal'd but few are chosen God himselfe hath said it and therefore it must be true The figures of this divine truth doe well confirme it and by the holy Fathers they are soe expounded As that infinit number perishing in the deluge and but eight persons only escaping it in the Arke And secondly of eighteene hundred thousand Israelits who went out of Egipt two only of them lived to goe into the land of promise These are esteemed by the holy Fathers true figures to represent to us the small number of the Elect which ought not to seeme incredible considering the small number of Christians in comparaison of all the rest And secondly amongst the Christians how few are truly vertuous or love God as they ought or live according to their calling This wel considered what horrid feare ought we to have least our unhappy lot should fall out of this little blessed compagnie of the Elect. Phill. 2.21 Which to prevent by S. Pauls advise whorke in feare and trembling your salvation O what would not a damned soule now wish to have donne wherby to have escaped those eternall flames let us doe now what at the houre of our death we should undoubtedly wish to have done And according to S. Peter lett us imploy all our sollicitude and labour to secure our salvation by good workes Let us frequently renew the promise and protestation which we made in Baptisme ●et 1. to renounce the devil and all his workes the pompes and vanities of the world to follow our Christian maxims and to imitate the holy vertues of Jesus Christ Who suffer persecution for justice sake Math. 5. are beatifi'd by Iesus Christ himselfe THe souldier seekes no priviledge above is Prince or General nor is the servant more then his Maister now our divine Redeemer having led us the way through all manner of perfection why should we despicable wormes and criminel offenders be troubled or refuse cheerefully to follow him through so much easier a combat of suffering and persecution in comparison of what this great Lord of glory and in̄ocent lābe of God hath suffered for our sakes for are our persecutors more cruel barbarous or inhumane then were his have they so greatly injured moked scorned or affronted us as they did him have they spitt or struck on our faces as they did on his have they by false calumny taken away our honour and sought our death and destruction as they did his O no not such outrageous injuries have been offered us and therfore it would be most unworthey for the member of so suffering a head to be so very nice and delicate or much troubled at smale and little injuries Finally what other perswasion need we to suffer with all cheerefulnesse then is the very conclusion of this Beatitude Math. 5 in these words exult yee and rojoyce because your reward is very copious in Heaven this reward being the beatificall vision of God for all Eternity To what multitude of miseries Mans life is subject MAns life though but short and very uncertaine yet it is replenisht with a multitude of miseries aswell of body as of soule the holy wiseman calls it a heavy yoake imposed vpon the children of Adam Ecc. 40.1 from the day of their birth till the day of their death and buriall These miseries now being so very great may wel make our life seeme long to us though but short in it selfe by reason of the sad and tedious accidents to which our fraile nature is so subject by feare by paine by griefe by necessity and want which to prevent and to grow rich what paines and industry doe Men use in crossing the dangerous seas undertakeing long painfull journies enduring great distempers of opposit clymats for gayning wealth And having at last quite spent tyred and worne out themselves how properly may that their great toyle and industry be compared to the spinning but à poore spiders webb consuming their whole life and labour as doth that little creature by drawing out the substance of their very bowels to weave their little nett to catch some contemptible fly Which lively represents meere worldly men whose thoughts and industry both day and nigth are to contrive the obtayning wealth honour or some small sensvall pleasure which by a right understanding and vertuous soule ought to be esteemed as vnworthey the occupation of his life and whole industry as is the catching of a silly fly The premisses well considered we must adore the great goodnesse of God who therfore hath mixed these many miseries with this present life therby to compell us to hate
it and to drawe vs to aspire to life everlasting which is so free from all these afflicting miseries For if being thus even overwhelmed with so many daily sufferings we are yet notwhithstanding so unwilling to depart from this wretched world what then would become of us if we enjoyed all here at great case and to our harts full content S. Augustin proves mans life to be a continual misery Li. Con. fes 10 ch 28. because in adversity saith he we desire prosperity and in prosperity we feare adversity nor are we ever quiet or free from the one of these tormenting passions either of desire of what we want or of feare to loose the prosperity which we enjoy Wo be therfore saith he to the prosperity of this life for the feare wherin we are of adversity and for that our joy may be quickly at an end and wo be to the adversity of this life through the desire which we have of prosperity and because adversity is of it selfe a thing hard to be endured And is not therfore the life of Man upon Earth a meere temptation saith S. Augustin without any kinde of intermission and voyde of all true happinesse or content Reflections upon the dreadfull word of Aeternity ONe good consideration of Aeternity makes all temporal felicity but contemptible saith S. Greg. yea that very thought of Aeternity gives courage to beare patiently all persecution and the afflictions of this miserable life and with S. Augustin it will make us say here cutt here burne here doe not spare me Lord so that thou spare me eternally A serious reflection upon Aeternity is a souverainne remedy against all sin for who would presume to offend God if he wel considered that by his sin he forfeits an Aeternity of all beatitude and engageth himselfe to the endlesse torments of Hel. A good reflection upon Aeternity is capable to make us to admire to adore and love Gods mercy as also to dread his justice in rewarding so little service done him in this world with everlasting recompence in the other and for one mortal sin committed by thought or deed to punish eternally in hell O that this wholsome thought of Aeternity could take so deepe a roote in our soules as never to be plucked from our thought For what is Aeternity but the measure of a present and perpetuall during without end Imagin a thousand millions of yeares yea as many milions of yeares as there have been moments from the beginning of the world and shal be till the end therof and then you may truly say how all that is nothing in comparaison of Aetetnity which is to dure so long as God is God and so long shall the just be blest with glory in Paraidse and the wicked remayne no lesse in the tormenting flames of hell alwayes for ever and for Aeternity and this for their foolish choyce here to enjoy but one uncertaine moment of vaine and deluding pleasure O Aeternity Aeternity how is it possible that thou shouldst be no more considered by men he doubtlesse needs must want both faith and all true judgment who doth not tremble at the serious true reflection upon Aeternity Whereupon to make good profit by this wholsome thought of Aeternity consider by an act of faith this certaine truth that you are to be either happy or most miserable for all Eternity and that the last moment of your life is to determine this great affaire and therefore when you finde your selfe solicited to any sin detest that motion which for a moment of false content doth intice you most tray terously unto endlesse misery Which to avoyde resolve with a courageous resolution to suffer both persecution and all affliction whatsoever much rather then to hazard the torments of Hell for all Eternity Fly sin with great horrour much more then death it selfe and from the occasions thereof as the most dangerous serpent it being only which can destroy you eternally In sine he must either want faith or be a foole who is not toucht nor drawes profit by this wholsome thought of Eternity for can we judge him lesse then frantick and quite out of his witts who will venture by committing one mortall sin to expose himselfe to damnation for all Aeternity Here followeth a briefe signification of the Priestly ornaments at Masse as also a short declaration of the other Ceremonies and holy mysteries of that divine sacrifice for the instruction and comfort of the poore and lesse learned people for whom this little manuel is principally intended though not unwelcome I hope to any behoulding so cleerly thereby how perfectly the bitter death and Passion of our divne Redeemer is represented to our memory wherby to stirr us up to love and gratitude for what so loving a Saviour hath suffered to pay our debt And by this meanes to moove us also for his sake and for the expiation of our grievous sins to suffer the afflictions which his blessed order and heavenly providence hath mercifully disposed for us to undergoe in this world therby to avoyde the eternall torments in the other And now as for these ceremonies ordayned for the more solemne celebrating the holy sacrifice of the Masse whereby the peoples devotion is much encreaced God is more glorifi'd and our soules are instructed and drawne unto his love therefore great impiety it is proceeding chieffy from ignorance in such as doe so irreligiously dispise those holy Ceremonies inspired by the holy Ghost into his beloved spouse the Catholik Church for the increace of devotion and greater Majesty in Gods divine service and worship Yet here it is to be observed that we doe not place any true perfection in these holy Ceremonies but only use them as meanes wherby we are induced to true perfection of the love of God à Ceremonie being only an outward religious act no further piously laudable then it is exercis'd for Gods honour and glory by its pious signification And like as we know that chastity and poverty are not true perfection themselves because they may and also often tymes doe happen to be without it yet none can deny them to be good meanes to obtayne contempt of the world and the love of God wherein only true perfection doth consist And as the children of Israel by behoulding the stones which their Fathers had brought with them when they passed dryfoot over the red sea were put in mind of Gods great miracles in their protection and were also mooved by that meanes greatly to love and honour God for it so likewise holy Ceremonies put us in mind of their pious significations and are like savoury sauce which giveth a pleasing relish to the meate although of it selfe it be but of little substance Or as the leaves and barke which although they beare no fruit yet are both ornaments and a needfull defence to preserve the pleasing fruit The poles in the vineyard beare no grapes yet they sustayne and preserve the same So likewise although the