MEMB. II.
SUBSECT. I.—Religious Melancholy in defect; parties affected, Epicures, Atheists, Hypocrites, worldly secure, Carnalists; all impious persons, impenitent sinners, &c.
In that other extreme or defect of this love of God, knowledge, faith,
fear, hope, &c. are such as err both in doctrine and manners, Sadducees,
Herodians, libertines, politicians: all manner of atheists, epicures,
infidels, that are secure, in a reprobate sense, fear not God at all, and
such are too distrustful and timorous, as desperate persons be. That grand
sin of atheism or impiety, [6617]Melancthon calls it monstrosam
melancholiam, monstrous melancholy; or venenatam melancholiam, poisoned
melancholy. A company of Cyclops or giants, that war with the gods, as the
poets feigned, antipodes to Christians, that scoff at all religion, at God
himself, deny him and all his attributes, his wisdom, power, providence,
his mercy and judgment.
[6618]Esse aliquos manes, et subterranea regna,
Et contum, et Stygio ranas in gurgite nigras,
Atque una transire vadum tot millia cymba,
Nec pueri credunt, nisi qui nondum aere lavantur.
That there is either heaven or hell, resurrection of the dead, pain,
happiness, or world to come, credat Judaeus Apella; for their parts they
esteem them as so many poet's tales, bugbears, Lucian's Alexander; Moses,
Mahomet, and Christ are all as one in their creed. When those bloody wars
in France for matters of religion (saith [6619]Richard Dinoth) were so
violently pursued between Huguenots and Papists, there was a company of
good fellows laughed them all to scorn, for being such superstitious fools,
to lose their wives and fortunes, accounting faith, religion, immortality
of the soul, mere fopperies and illusions. Such loose [6620]atheistical
spirits are too predominant in all kingdoms. Let them contend, pray,
tremble, trouble themselves that will, for their parts, they fear neither
God nor devil; but with that Cyclops in Euripides,
Haud ulla numina expavescunt caelitum,
Sed victimas uni deorum maximo,
Ventri offerunt, deos ignorant caeteros.
They fear no God but one,
But belly, and him adore,
For gods they know no more.
Their God is their belly, as Paul saith, Sancta mater saturitas;—quibus
in solo vivendi causa palato est. The idol, which they worship and adore,
is their mistress; with him in Plautus, mallem haec mulier me amet quam
dii, they had rather have her favour than the gods'. Satan is their guide,
the flesh is their instructor, hypocrisy their counsellor, vanity their
fellow-soldier, their will their law, ambition their captain, custom their
rule; temerity, boldness, impudence their art, toys their trading,
damnation their end. All their endeavours are to satisfy their lust and
appetite, how to please their genius, and to be merry for the present,
Ede, lude, bibe, post mortem nulla voluptas.[6621]The same condition is of
men and of beasts; as the one dieth, so dieth the other, Eccles. iii. 19.
The world goes round,
Novaeque pergunt interire Lunae:
[6623]They did eat and drink of old, marry, bury, bought, sold, planted,
built, and will do still. [6624]Our life is short and tedious, and in the
death of a man there is no recovery, neither was any man known that hath
returned from the grave; for we are born at all adventure, and we shall be
hereafter as though we had never been; for the breath is as smoke in our
nostrils, &c., and the spirit vanisheth as the soft air. [6625]Come let us
enjoy the pleasures that are present, let us cheerfully use the creatures
as in youth, let us fill ourselves with costly wine and ointments, let not
the flower of our life pass by us, let us crown ourselves with rose-buds
before they are withered, &c. [6626]Vivamus mea Lesbia et amemus, &c. [6627]
Come let us take our fill of love, and pleasure in dalliance, for this is
our portion, this is our lot.
Tempora labuntur, tacitisque senescimus annis.[6628] For the rest of heaven and hell, let children and superstitious
fools believe it: for their parts, they are so far from trembling at the
dreadful day of judgment that they wish with Nero, Me vivo fiat, let it
come in their times: so secure, so desperate, so immoderate in lust and
pleasure, so prone to revenge that, as Paterculus said of some caitiffs in
his time in Rome, Quod nequiter ausi, fortiter executi: it shall not be
so wickedly attempted, but as desperately performed, whatever they take in
hand. Were it not for God's restraining grace, fear and shame, temporal
punishment, and their own infamy, they would. Lycaon-like exenterate, as so
many cannibals eat up, or Cadmus' soldiers consume one another. These are
most impious, and commonly professed atheists, that never use the name of
God but to swear by it; that express nought else but epicurism in their
carriage, or hypocrisy; with Pentheus they neglect and contemn these rites
and religious ceremonies of the gods; they will be gods themselves, or at
least socii deorum. Divisum imperium cum Jove Caesar habet. Caesar
divides the empire with Jove. Aproyis, an Egyptian tyrant, grew, saith
[6629]Herodotus, to that height of pride, insolency of impiety, to that
contempt of Gods and men, that he held his kingdom so sure, ut a nemine
deorum aut hominum sibi eripi posset, neither God nor men could take it
from him. [6630]A certain blasphemous king of Spain (as [6631]Lansius reports)
made an edict, that no subject of his, for ten years' space, should believe
in, call on, or worship any god. And as [6632]Jovius relates of Mahomet the
Second, that sacked Constantinople, he so behaved himself, that he believed
neither Christ nor Mahomet; and thence it came to pass, that he kept his
word and promise no farther than for his advantage, neither did he care to
commit any offence to satisfy his lust. I could say the like of many
princes, many private men (our stories are full of them) in times past,
this present age, that love, fear, obey, and perform all civil duties as
they shall find them expedient or behoveful to their own ends. Securi
adversus Deos, securi adversus homines, votis non est opus, which [6633]
Tacitus reports of some Germans, they need not pray, fear, hope, for they
are secure, to their thinking, both from Gods and men. Bulco Opiliensis,
sometime Duke of [6634]Silesia, was such a one to a hair; he lived (saith
[6635]Aeneas Sylvius) at [6636]Vratislavia, and was so mad to satisfy his lust,
that he believed neither heaven nor hell, or that the soul was immortal,
but married wives, and turned them up as he thought fit, did murder and
mischief, and what he list himself. This duke hath too many followers in
our days: say what you can, dehort, exhort, persuade to the contrary, they
are no more moved,—quam si dura, silex aut stet Marpesia cautes,
than so many stocks, and stones; tell them of heaven and hell, 'tis to no
purpose, laterem lavas, they answer as Ataliba that Indian prince did
friar Vincent, [6637]when he brought him a book, and told him all the
mysteries of salvation, heaven and hell, were contained in it: he looked
upon it, and said he saw no such matter, asking withal, how he knew it:
they will but scoff at it, or wholly reject it. Petronius in Tacitus, when
he was now by Nero's command bleeding to death, audiebat amicos nihil
referentes de immortalitate animae, aut sapientum placitis, sed levia
carmina et faciles versus; instead of good counsel and divine meditations,
he made his friends sing him bawdy verses and scurrilous songs. Let them
take heaven, paradise, and that future happiness that will, bonum est esse
hic, it is good being here: there is no talking to such, no hope of their
conversion, they are in a reprobate sense, mere carnalists, fleshly minded
men, which howsoever they may be applauded in this life by some few
parasites, and held for worldly wise men. [6638]They seem to me (saith
Melancthon) to be as mad as Hercules was when he raved and killed his wife
and children. A milder sort of these atheistical spirits there are that
profess religion, but timide et haesitanter, tempted thereunto out of that
horrible consideration of diversity of religions, which are and have been
in the world (which argument Campanella, Atheismi Triumphati, cap. 9.
both urgeth and answers), besides the covetousness, imposture, and knavery
of priests, quae faciunt (as [6639]Postellus observes) ut rebus sacris
minus faciant fidem; and those religions some of them so fantastical,
exorbitant, so violently maintained with equal constancy and assurance;
whence they infer, that if there be so many religious sects, and denied by
the rest, why may they not be all false? or why should this or that be
preferred before the rest? The sceptics urge this, and amongst others it is
the conclusion of Sextus Empericus, lib. 3. advers. Mathematicos: after
many philosophical arguments and reasons pro and con that there are
gods, and again that there are no gods, he so concludes, cum tot inter se
pugnent, &c. Una tantum potest esse vera, as Tully likewise disputes:
Christians say, they alone worship the true God, pity all other sects,
lament their case; and yet those old Greeks and Romans that worshipped the
devil, as the Chinese now do, aut deos topicos, their own gods; as Julian
the apostate, [6640]Cecilius in Minutius, Celsus and Porphyrius the
philosopher object: and as Machiavel contends, were much more noble,
generous, victorious, had a more flourishing commonwealth, better cities,
better soldiers, better scholars, better wits. Their gods overcame our
gods, did as many miracles, &c. Saint Cyril, Arnobius, Minutius, with many
other ancients of late, Lessius, Morneus, Grotius de Verit. Relig.
Christianae, Savanarola de Verit. Fidei Christianae, well defend; but
Zanchius, [6641]Campanella, Marinus Marcennus, Bozius, and Gentillettus
answer all these atheistical arguments at large. But this again troubles
many as of old, wicked men generally thrive, professed atheists thrive,
[6642]Nullos esse Deos, inane coelum,
Affirmat Selius: probatque, quod se
Factum, dum negat haec, videt beatum.
There are no gods, heavens are toys,
Selius in public justifies;
Because that whilst he thus denies
Their deities, he better thrives.
This is a prime argument: and most part your most sincere, upright, honest,
and [6643]good men are depressed, The race is not to the swift, nor the
battle to the strong (Eccles. ix. 11.), nor yet bread to the wise, favour
nor riches to men of understanding, but time and chance comes to all.
There was a great plague in Athens (as Thucydides, lib. 2. relates), in
which at last every man, with great licentiousness, did what he list, not
caring at all for God's or men's laws. Neither the fear of God nor laws of
men (saith he) awed any man, because the plague swept all away alike, good
and bad; they thence concluded it was alike to worship or not worship the
gods, since they perished all alike. Some cavil and make doubts of
scripture itself: it cannot stand with God's mercy, that so many should be
damned, so many bad, so few good, such have and hold about religions, all
stiff on their side, factious alike, thrive alike, and yet bitterly
persecuting and damning each other; It cannot stand with God's goodness,
protection, and providence (as [6644]Saint Chrysostom in the Dialect of such
discontented persons) to see and suffer one man to be lame, another mad, a
third poor and miserable all the days of his life, a fourth grievously
tormented with sickness and aches, to his last hour. Are these signs and
works of God's providence, to let one man be deaf, another dumb? A poor
honest fellow lives in disgrace, woe and want, wretched he is; when as a
wicked caitiff abounds in superfluity of wealth, keeps whores, parasites,
and what he will himself: Audis Jupiter haec? Talia multa connectentes,
longum reprehensionis sermonem erga Dei providentiam contexunt. [6645]Thus
they mutter and object (see the rest of their arguments in Marcennus in
Genesin, and in Campanella, amply confuted), with many such vain cavils,
well known, not worthy the recapitulation or answering: whatsoever they
pretend, they are interim of little or no religion.
Cousin-germans to these men are many of our great philosophers and deists,
who, though they be more temperate in this life, give many good moral
precepts, honest, upright, and sober in their conversation, yet in effect
they are the same (accounting no man a good scholar that is not an
atheist), nimis altum sapiunt, too much learning makes them mad. Whilst
they attribute all to natural causes, [6646]contingence of all things, as
Melancthon calls them, Pertinax hominum genus, a peevish generation of
men, that misled by philosophy, and the devil's suggestion, their own
innate blindness, deny God as much as the rest, hold all religion a
fiction, opposite to reason and philosophy, though for fear of magistrates,
saith [6647]Vaninus, they durst not publicly profess it. Ask one of them of
what religion he is, he scoffingly replies, a philosopher, a Galenist, an
[6648]Averroist, and with Rabelais a physician, a peripatetic, an epicure. In
spiritual things God must demonstrate all to sense, leave a pawn with them,
or else seek some other creditor. They will acknowledge Nature and Fortune,
yet not God: though in effect they grant both: for as Scaliger defines,
Nature signifies God's ordinary power; or, as Calvin writes, Nature is
God's order, and so things extraordinary may be called unnatural: Fortune
his unrevealed will; and so we call things changeable that are beside
reason and expectation. To this purpose [6649]Minutius in Octavio, and [6650]
Seneca well discourseth with them, lib. 4. de beneficiis, cap. 5, 6, 7.
They do not understand what they say; what is Nature but God? call him
what thou wilt, Nature, Jupiter, he hath as many names as offices: it comes
all to one pass, God is the fountain of all, the first Giver and Preserver,
from whom all things depend, [6651]a quo, et per quem omnia, Nam quocunque
vides Deus est, quocunque moveris, God is all in all, God is everywhere,
in every place. And yet this Seneca, that could confute and blame them, is
all out as much to be blamed and confuted himself, as mad himself; for he
holds fatum Stoicum, that inevitable Necessity in the other extreme, as
those Chaldean astrologers of old did, against whom the prophet Jeremiah so
often thunders, and those heathen mathematicians, Nigidius Figulus,
magicians, and Priscilianists, whom St. Austin so eagerly confutes, those
Arabian questionaries, Novem Judices, Albumazer, Dorotheus, &c., and our
countryman [6652]Estuidus, that take upon them to define out of those great
conjunction of stars, with Ptolomeus, the periods of kingdoms, or
religions, of all future accidents, wars, plagues, schisms, heresies, and
what not? all from stars, and such things, saith Maginus, Quae sibi et
intelligentiis suis reservavit Deus, which God hath reserved to himself
and his angels, they will take upon them to foretell, as if stars were
immediate, inevitable causes of all future accidents. Caesar Vaninus, in his
book de admirandis naturae Arcanis, dial. 52. de oraculis, is more free,
copious, and open, in this explication of this astrological tenet of
Ptolemy, than any of our modern writers, Cardan excepted, a true disciple
of his master Pomponatius; according to the doctrine of Peripatetics, he
refers all apparitions, prodigies, miracles, oracles, accidents,
alterations of religions, kingdoms, &c. (for which he is soundly lashed by
Marinus Mercennus, as well he deserves), to natural causes (for spirits he
will not acknowledge), to that light, motion, influences of heavens and
stars, and to the intelligences that move the orbs. Intelligentia quae,
movet orbem mediante coelo, &c. Intelligences do all: and after a long
discourse of miracles done of old, si haec daemones possint, cur non et
intelligentiae, coelorum motrices? And as these great conjunctions, aspects
of planets, begin or end, vary, are vertical and predominant, so have
religions, rites, ceremonies, and kingdoms their beginning, progress,
periods, in urbibus, regibus, religionibus, ac in particularibus
hominibus, haec vera ac manifesta, sunt, ut Aristoteles innuere videtur, et
quotidiana docet experientia, ut historias perlegens videbit; quid olim in
Gentili lege Jove sanctius et illustrius? quid nunc vile magis et
execrandum? Ita coelestia corpora pro mortalium beneficio religiones
aedificant, et cum cessat influxus, cessat lex,[6653] &c. And because,
according to their tenets, the world is eternal, intelligences eternal,
influences of stars eternal, kingdoms, religions, alterations shall be
likewise eternal, and run round after many ages; Atque iterum ad Troiam
magnus mittetur Achilles; renascentur religiones, et ceremoniae, res humanae
in idem recident, nihil nunc quod non olim fuit, et post saeculorum
revolutiones alias est, erit,[6654]&c. idem specie, saith Vaninus, non
individuo quod Plato significavit. These (saith mine [6655]author), these
are the decrees of Peripatetics, which though I recite, in obsequium
Christianae fidei detestor, as I am a Christian I detest and hate. Thus
Peripatetics and astrologians held in former times, and to this effect of
old in Rome, saith Dionysius Halicarnassus, lib. 7, when those meteors
and prodigies appeared in the air, after the banishment of Coriolanus, [6656]
Men were diversely affected: some said they were God's just judgments for
the execution of that good man, some referred all to natural causes, some
to stars, some thought they came by chance, some by necessity decreed ab
initio, and could not be altered. The two last opinions of necessity and
chance were, it seems, of greater note than the rest.
[6657]Sunt qui in Fortunae jam casibus omnia ponunt,
Et mundum credunt nullo rectore moveri,
Natura, volvente vices, &c.
For the first of chance, as [6658]Sallust likewise informeth us, those old
Romans generally received; They supposed fortune alone gave kingdoms and
empires, wealth, honours, offices: and that for two causes; first, because
every wicked base unworthy wretch was preferred, rich, potent, &c.;
secondly, because of their uncertainty, though never so good, scarce any
one enjoyed them long: but after, they began upon better advice to think
otherwise, that every man made his own fortune. The last of Necessity was
Seneca's tenet, that God was alligatus causis secundis, so tied to second
causes, to that inexorable Necessity, that he could alter nothing of that
which was once decreed; sic erat in fatis, it cannot be altered, semel
jussit, semper paret Deus, nulla vis rumpit, nullae preces, nec ipsum
fulmen, God hath once said it, and it must for ever stand good, no
prayers, no threats, nor power, nor thunder itself can alter it. Zeno,
Chrysippus, and those other Stoics, as you may read in Tully 2. de
divinatione, Gellius, lib. 6. cap. 2. &c., maintained as much. In all
ages, there have been such, that either deny God in all, or in part; some
deride him, they could have made a better world, and ruled it more orderly
themselves, blaspheme him, derogate at their pleasure from him. 'Twas so in
[6659]Plato's time, Some say there be no gods, others that they care not
for men, a middle sort grant both. Si non sit Deus, unde mala? si sit
Deus, unde mala? So Cotta argues in Tully, why made he not all good, or at
least tenders not the welfare of such as are good? As the woman told
Alexander, if he be not at leisure to hear causes, and redress them, why
doth he reign? [6660]Sextus Empericus hath many such arguments. Thus
perverse men cavil. So it will ever be, some of all sorts, good, bad,
indifferent, true, false, zealous, ambidexters, neutralists, lukewarm,
libertines, atheists, &c. They will see these religious sectaries agree
amongst themselves, be reconciled all, before they will participate with,
or believe any: they think in the meantime (which [6661]Celsus objects, and
whom Origen confutes), We Christians adore a person put to [6662]death with
no more reason than the barbarous Getes worshipped Zamolxis, the Cilicians
Mopsus, the Thebans Amphiaraus, and the Lebadians Trophonius; one religion
is as true as another, new fangled devices, all for human respects;
great-witted Aristotle's works are as much authentical to them as
Scriptures, subtle Seneca's Epistles as canonical as St. Paul's, Pindarus'
Odes as good as the Prophet David's Psalms, Epictetus' Enchiridion
equivalent to wise Solomon's Proverbs. They do openly and boldly speak this
and more, some of them, in all places and companies. [6663]Claudius the
emperor was angry with Heaven, because it thundered, and challenged Jupiter
into the field; with what madness! saith Seneca; he thought Jupiter could
not hurt him, but he could hurt Jupiter. Diagoras, Demonax, Epicurus,
Pliny, Lucian, Lucretius,—Contemptorque Deum Mezentius, professed
atheists all in their times: though not simple atheists neither, as
Cicogna proves, lib. 1. cap. 1. they scoffed only at those Pagan gods,
their plurality, base and fictitious offices. Gilbertus Cognatus labours
much, and so doth Erasmus, to vindicate Lucian from scandal, and there be
those that apologise for Epicurus, but all in vain; Lucian scoffs at all,
Epicurus he denies all, and Lucretius his scholar defends him in it:
[6664]Humana ante oculua foede cum vita jaceret
In terris oppressa gravi cum religione,
Quae caput a coeli regionibus ostendebat,
Horribili super aspectu mortalibus instans, &c.
When human kind was drench'd in superstition,
With ghastly looks aloft, which frighted mortal men, &c.
He alone, like another Hercules, did vindicate the world from that monster.
Uncle [6665]Pliny, lib. 2. cap. 7. nat. hist. and lib. 7. cap. 55, in
express words denies the immortality of the soul. [6666]Seneca doth little
less, lib. 7. epist. 55. ad Lucilium, et lib. de consol. ad Martiam, or
rather more. Some Greek Commentators would put as much upon Job, that he
should deny resurrection, &c., whom Pineda copiously confutes in cap. 7.
Job, vers. 9. Aristotle is hardly censured of some, both divines and
philosophers. St. Justin in Peraenetica ad Gentes, Greg. Nazianzen. in
disput. adversus Eun., Theodoret, lib. 5. de curat. graec. affec., Origen.
lib. de principiis. Pomponatius justifies in his Tract (so styled at
least) De immortalitate Animae, Scaliger (who would forswear himself at
any time, saith Patritius, in defence of his great master Aristotle), and
Dandinus, lib. 3. de anima, acknowledge as much. Averroes oppugns all
spirits and supreme powers; of late Brunus (infelix Brunus, [6667]Kepler
calls him), Machiavel, Caesar Vaninus lately burned at Toulouse in France,
and Pet. Aretine, have publicly maintained such atheistical paradoxes,
[6668]with that Italian Boccaccio with his fable of three rings, &c., ex quo
infert haud posse internosci, quae sit verior religio, Judaica, Mahometana,
an Christiana, quoniam eadem signa, &c., from which he infers, that it
cannot be distinguished which is the true religion, Judaism, Mahommedanism,
or Christianity, &c. [6669]Marinus Mercennus suspects Cardan for his
subtleties, Campanella, and Charron's Book of Wisdom, with some other
Tracts, to savour of [6670]atheism: but amongst the rest that pestilent book
de tribus mundi impostoribus, quem sine horrore (inquit) non legas, et
mundi Cymbalum dialogis quatuor contentum, anno 1538, auctore Peresio,
Parisiis excusum, [6671]&c. And as there have been in all ages such
blasphemous spirits, so there have not been wanting their patrons,
protectors, disciples and adherents. Never so many atheists in Italy and
Germany, saith [6672]Colerus, as in this age: the like complaint Mercennus
makes in France, 50,000 in that one city of Paris. Frederic the Emperor, as
[6673]Matthew Paris records licet non sit recitabile (I use his own words)
is reported to have said, Tres praestigiatores, Moses, Christus, et
Mahomet, uti mundo dominarentur, totum populum sibi contemporaneum se
duxisse. (Henry, the Landgrave of Hesse, heard him speak it,) Si
principes imperii institutioni meae adhaererent, ego multo meliorem modum
credendi et vivendi ordinarem.
To these professed atheists, we may well add that impious and carnal crew
of worldly-minded men, impenitent sinners, that go to hell in a lethargy,
or in a dream; who though they be professed Christians, yet they will
nulla pallescere culpa, make a conscience of nothing they do, they have
cauterised consciences, and are indeed in a reprobate sense, past all
feeling, have given themselves over to wantonness, to work all manner of
uncleanness even with greediness, Ephes. iv. 19. They do know there is a
God, a day of judgment to come, and yet for all that, as Hugo saith, ita
comedunt ac dormiunt, ac si diem judicii evasissent; ita ludunt ac rident,
ac si in coelis cum Deo regnarent: they are as merry for all the sorrow,
as if they had escaped all dangers, and were in heaven already:
[6674]———Metus omnes, et inexorabile fatum
Subjecit pedibus, strepitumque Acherontis avari.
Those rude idiots and ignorant persons, that neglect and contemn the means
of their salvation, may march on with these; but above all others, those
Herodian temporizing statesmen, political Machiavellians and hypocrites,
that make a show of religion, but in their hearts laugh at it. Simulata
sanctitas duplex iniquitas; they are in a double fault, that fashion
themselves to this world, which [6675]Paul forbids, and like Mercury, the
planet, are good with good, bad with bad. When they are at Rome, they do
there as they see done, puritans with puritans, papists with papists;
omnium horarum homines, formalists, ambidexters, lukewarm Laodiceans.
[6676]All their study is to please, and their god is their commodity, their
labour to satisfy their lusts, and their endeavours to their own ends.
Whatsoever they pretend, or in public seem to do, [6677]With the fool in
their hearts, they say there is no God. Heus tu—de Jove quid sentis?
Hulloa! what is your opinion about a Jupiter? Their words are as soft as
oil, but bitterness is in their hearts; like [6678]Alexander VI. so cunning
dissemblers, that what they think they never speak. Many of them are so
close, you can hardly discern it, or take any just exceptions at them; they
are not factious, oppressors as most are, no bribers, no simoniacal
contractors, no such ambitious, lascivious persons as some others are, no
drunkards, sobrii solem vident orientem, sobrii vident occidentem, they
rise sober, and go sober to bed, plain dealing, upright, honest men, they
do wrong to no man, and are so reputed in the world's esteem at least, very
zealous in religion, very charitable, meek, humble, peace-makers, keep all
duties, very devout, honest, well spoken of, beloved of all men: but he
that knows better how to judge, he that examines the heart, saith they are
hypocrites, Cor dolo plenum; sonant vitium percussa maligne, they are not
sound within. As it is with writers [6679]oftentimes, Plus sanctimoniae, in
libello, quam libelli auctore, more holiness is in the book than in the
author of it: so 'tis with them: many come to church with great Bibles,
whom Cardan said he could not choose but laugh at, and will now and then
dare operam Augustino, read Austin, frequent sermons, and yet professed
usurers, mere gripes, tota vitae ratio epicurea est; all their life is
epicurism and atheism, come to church all day, and lie with a courtesan at
night. Qui curios simulant et Bacchanalia vivunt, they have Esau's
hands, and Jacob's voice: yea, and many of those holy friars, sanctified
men, Cappam, saith Hierom, et cilicium induunt, sed intus latronem
tegunt. They are wolves in sheep's clothing, Introrsum turpes, speciosi
pelle decora, Fair without, and most foul within. [6680]Latet plerumque
sub tristi amictu lascivia, et deformis horror vili veste tegitur;
ofttimes under a mourning weed lies lust itself, and horrible vices under a
poor coat. But who can examine all those kinds of hypocrites, or dive into
their hearts? ]f we may guess at the tree by the fruit, never so many as in
these days; show me a plain-dealing true honest man: Et pudor, et
probitas, et timor omnis abest. He that shall but look into their lives,
and see such enormous vices, men so immoderate in lust, unspeakable in
malice, furious in their rage, flattering and dissembling (all for their
own ends) will surely think they are not truly religious, but of an
obdurate heart, most part in a reprobate sense, as in this age. But let
them carry it as they will for the present, dissemble as they can, a time
will come when they shall be called to an account, their melancholy is at
hand, they pull a plague and curse upon their own heads, thesaurisant iram
Dei. Besides all such as are in deos contumeliosi, blaspheme, contemn,
neglect God, or scoff at him, as the poets feign of Salmoneus, that would
in derision imitate Jupiter's thunder, he was precipitated for his pains,
Jupiter intonuit contra, &c. so shall they certainly rue it in the end,
([6681]in se spuit, qui in coelum spuit), their doom's at hand, and hell is
ready to receive them.
Some are of opinion, that it is in vain to dispute with such atheistical
spirits in the meantime, 'tis not the best way to reclaim them. Atheism,
idolatry, heresy, hypocrisy, though they have one common root, that is
indulgence to corrupt affection, yet their growth is different, they have
divers symptoms, occasions, and must have several cures and remedies. 'Tis
true some deny there is any God, some confess, yet believe it not; a third
sort confess and believe, but will not live after his laws, worship and
obey him: others allow God and gods subordinate, but not one God, no such
general God, non talem deum, but several topic gods for several places,
and those not to persecute one another for any difference, as Socinus will,
but rather love and cherish.
To describe them in particular, to produce their arguments and reasons,
would require a just volume, I refer them therefore that expect a more
ample satisfaction, to those subtle and elaborate treatises, devout and
famous tracts of our learned divines (schoolmen amongst the rest, and
casuists) that have abundance of reasons to prove there is a God, the
immortality of the soul, &c., out of the strength of wit and philosophy
bring irrefragable arguments to such as are ingenuous and well disposed; at
the least, answer all cavils and objections to confute their folly and
madness, and to reduce them, si fieri posset, ad sanam mentem, to a
better mind, though to small purpose many times. Amongst others consult
with Julius Caesar Lagalla, professor of philosophy in Rome, who hath
written a large volume of late to confute atheists: of the immortality of
the soul, Hierom. Montanus de immortalitate Animae: Lelius Vincentius of
the same subject: Thomas Giaminus, and Franciscus Collius de Paganorum
animabus post mortem, a famous doctor of the Ambrosian College in Milan.
Bishop Fotherby in his Atheomastix, Doctor Dove, Doctor Jackson, Abernethy,
Corderoy, have written well of this subject in our mother tongue: in Latin,
Colerus, Zanchius, Palearius, Illyricus, [6682]Philippus, Faber Faventinus,
&c. But instar omnium, the most copious confuter of atheists is Marinus
Mercennus in his Commentaries on Genesis: [6683]with Campanella's Atheismus
Triumphatus. He sets down at large the causes of this brutish passion,
(seventeen in number I take it) answers all their arguments and sophisms,
which he reduceth to twenty-six heads, proving withal his own assertion;
There is a God, such a God, the true and sole God, by thirty-five
reasons. His Colophon is how to resist and repress atheism, and to that
purpose he adds four especial means or ways, which who so will may
profitably peruse.
SUBSECT. II.—Despair. Despairs, Equivocations, Definitions, Parties and Parts affected.
There be many kinds of desperation, whereof some be holy, some unholy, as
[6684]one distinguisheth; that unholy he defines out of Tully to be
Aegritudinem animi sine ulla rerum expectatione meliore, a sickness of the
soul without any hope or expectation of amendment; which commonly succeeds
fear; for whilst evil is expected, we fear: but when it is certain, we
despair. According to Thomas 2. 2ae. distinct. 40. art. 4. it is
Recessus a re desiderata, propter impossibilitatem existimatam, a
restraint from the thing desired, for some impossibility supposed. Because
they cannot obtain what they would, they become desperate, and many times
either yield to the passion by death itself, or else attempt
impossibilities, not to be performed by men. In some cases, this desperate
humour is not much to be discommended, as in wars it is a cause many times
of extraordinary valour; as Joseph, lib. 1. de bello Jud. cap. 14. L.
Danaeus in Aphoris. polit. pag. 226. and many politicians hold. It makes
them improve their worth beyond itself, and of a forlorn impotent company
become conquerors in a moment. Una salus victis nullam sperare salutem,
the only hope for the conquered is despair. In such courses when they see
no remedy, but that they must either kill or be killed, they take courage,
and oftentimes, praeter spem, beyond all hope vindicate themselves.
Fifteen thousand Locrenses fought against a hundred thousand Crotonienses,
and seeing now no way but one, they must all die, [6685]thought they would
not depart unrevenged, and thereupon desperately giving an assault,
conquered their enemies. Nec alia causa victoriae, (saith Justin mine
author) quam quod desperaverant. William the Conqueror, when he first
landed in England, sent back his ships, that his soldiers might have no
hope of retiring back. [6686]Bodine excuseth his countrymen's overthrow at
that famous battle at Agincourt, in Henry the Fifth his time, (cui
simile, saith Froissard, tota historia producere non possit, which no
history can parallel almost, wherein one handful of Englishmen overthrew a
royal army of Frenchmen) with this refuge of despair, pauci desperati, a
few desperate fellows being compassed in by their enemies, past all hope of
life, fought like so many devils; and gives a caution, that no soldiers
hereafter set upon desperate persons, which [6687]after Frontinus and
Vigetius, Guicciardini likewise admonisheth, Hypomnes. part. 2. pag.
25. not to stop an enemy that is going his way. Many such kinds there are
of desperation, when men are past hope of obtaining any suit, or in despair
of better fortune; Desperatio facit monachum, as the saying is, and
desperation causeth death itself; how many thousands in such distress have
made away themselves, and many others? For he that cares not for his own,
is master of another man's life. A Tuscan soothsayer, as [6688]Paterculus
tells the story, perceiving himself and Fulvius Flaccus his dear friend,
now both carried to prison by Opimius, and in despair of pardon, seeing the
young man weep, quin tu potius hoc inquit facis, do as I do; and with
that knocked out his brains against the door-cheek, as he was entering into
prison, protinusque illiso capite in capite in carceris januam effuso
cerebro expiravit, and so desperate died. But these are equivocal,
improper. When I speak of despair, saith [6689]Zanchie, I speak not of
every kind, but of that alone which concerns God. It is opposite to hope,
and a most pernicious sin, wherewith the devil seeks to entrap men.
Musculus makes four kinds of desperation, of God, ourselves, our neighbour,
or anything to be done; but this division of his may be reduced easily to
the former: all kinds are opposite to hope, that sweet moderator of
passions, as Simonides calls it; I do not mean that vain hope which
fantastical fellows feign to themselves, which according to Aristotle is
insomnium vigilantium, a waking dream; but this divine hope which
proceeds from confidence, and is an anchor to a floating soul; spes alit
agricolas, even in our temporal affairs, hope revives us, but in spiritual
it farther animateth; and were it not for hope, we of all others were the
most miserable, as Paul saith, in this life; were it not for hope, the
heart would break; for though they be punished in the sight of men,
(Wisdom iii. 4.) yet is their hope full of immortality: yet doth it not
so rear, as despair doth deject; this violent and sour passion of despair,
is of all perturbations most grievous, as [6690]Patritius holds. Some divide
it into final and temporal; [6691]final is incurable, which befalleth
reprobates; temporal is a rejection of hope and comfort for a time, which
may befall the best of God's children, and it commonly proceeds [6692]from
weakness of faith, as in David when he was oppressed he cried out, O
Lord, thou hast forsaken me, but this for a time. This ebbs and flows with
hope and fear; it is a grievous sin howsoever: although some kind of
despair be not amiss, when, saith Zanchius, we despair of our own means,
and rely wholly upon God: but that species is not here meant. This
pernicious kind of desperation is the subject of our discourse, homicida
animae, the murderer of the soul, as Austin terms it, a fearful passion,
wherein the party oppressed thinks he can get no ease but by death, and is
fully resolved to offer violence unto himself; so sensible of his burthen,
and impatient of his cross, that he hopes by death alone to be freed of his
calamity (though it prove otherwise), and chooseth with Job vi. 8. 9. xvii.
5. Rather to be strangled and die, than to be in his bonds. [6693]The part
affected is the whole soul, and all the faculties of it; there is a
privation of joy, hope, trust, confidence, of present and future good, and
in their place succeed fear, sorrow, &c. as in the symptoms shall be shown.
The heart is grieved, the conscience wounded, the mind eclipsed with black
fumes arising from those perpetual terrors.
SUBSECT. III.—Causes of Despair, the Devil, Melancholy, Meditation, Distrust, Weakness of Faith, Rigid Ministers, Misunderstanding Scriptures, Guilty Consciences, &c.
The principal agent and procurer of this mischief is the devil; those whom
God forsakes, the devil by his permission lays hold on. Sometimes he
persecutes them with that worm of conscience, as he did Judas, [6694]Saul,
and others. The poets call it Nemesis, but it is indeed God's just
judgment, sero sed serio, he strikes home at last, and setteth upon them
as a thief in the night, 1 Thes. ii. [6695]This temporary passion made
David cry out, Lord, rebuke me not in thine anger, neither chasten me in
thine heavy displeasure; for thine arrows have light upon me, &c. there is
nothing sound in my flesh, because of thine anger. Again, I roar for the
very grief of my heart: and Psalm xxii. My God, my God, why hast thou
forsaken me, and art so far from my health, and the words of my crying? I
am like to water poured out, my bones are out of joint, mine heart is like
wax, that is molten in the midst of my bowels. So Psalm lxxxviii. 15 and
16 vers. and Psalm cii. I am in misery at the point of death, from my
youth I suffer thy terrors, doubting for my life; thine indignations have
gone over me, and thy fear hath cut me off. Job doth often complain in
this kind; and those God doth not assist, the devil is ready to try and
torment, still seeking whom he may devour. If he find them merry, saith
Gregory, he tempts them forthwith to some dissolute act; if pensive and
sad, to a desperate end. Aut suadendo blanditur, aut minando terret,
sometimes by fair means, sometimes again by foul, as he perceives men
severally inclined. His ordinary engine by which he produceth this effect,
is the melancholy humour itself, which is balneum diaboli, the devil's
bath; and as in Saul, those evil spirits get in [6696]as it were, and take
possession of us. Black choler is a shoeing-horn, a bait to allure them,
insomuch that many writers make melancholy an ordinary cause, and a symptom
of despair, for that such men are most apt, by reason of their ill-disposed
temper, to distrust, fear, grief, mistake, and amplify whatsoever they
preposterously conceive, or falsely apprehend. Conscientia scrupulosa
nascitur ex vitio naturali, complexione melancholica (saith Navarrus cap.
27. num. 282. tom. 2. cas. conscien.) The body works upon the mind, by
obfuscating the spirits and corrupted instruments, which [6697]Perkins
illustrates by simile of an artificer, that hath a bad tool, his skill is
good, ability correspondent, by reason of ill tools his work must needs be
lame and imperfect. But melancholy and despair, though often, do not always
concur; there is much difference: melancholy fears without a cause, this
upon great occasion; melancholy is caused by fear and grief, but this
torment procures them and all extremity of bitterness; much melancholy is
without affliction of conscience, as [6698]Bright and Perkins illustrate by
four reasons; and yet melancholy alone may be sometimes a sufficient cause
of this terror of conscience. [6699]Felix Plater so found it in his
observations, e melancholicis alii damnatos se putant, Deo curae, non sunt,
nec praedestinati, &c. They think they are not predestinate, God hath
forsaken them; and yet otherwise very zealous and religious; and 'tis
common to be seen, melancholy for fear of God's judgment and hell-fire,
drives men to desperation; fear and sorrow, if they be immoderate, end
often with it. Intolerable pain and anguish, long sickness, captivity,
misery, loss of goods, loss of friends, and those lesser griefs, do
sometimes effect it, or such dismal accidents. Si non statim relevantur,
[6700]Mercennus, dubitant an sit Deus, if they be not eased forthwith, they
doubt whether there be any God, they rave, curse, and are desperately mad
because good men are oppressed, wicked men flourish, they have not as they
think to their desert, and through impatience of calamities are so
misaffected. Democritus put out his eyes, ne malorum civium prosperos
videret successus, because he could not abide to see wicked men prosper,
and was therefore ready to make away himself, as [6701]Agellius writes of
him. Felix Plater hath a memorable example in this kind, of a painter's
wife in Basil, that was melancholy for her son's death, and for melancholy
became desperate; she thought God would not pardon her sins, [6702]and for
four months still raved, that she was in hell-fire, already damned. When
the humour is stirred up, every small object aggravates and incenseth it,
as the parties are addicted. [6703]The same author hath an example of a
merchant man, that for the loss of a little wheat, which he had over long
kept, was troubled in conscience, for that he had not sold it sooner, or
given it to the poor, yet a good scholar and a great divine; no persuasion
would serve to the contrary, but that for this fact he was damned: in other
matters Very judicious and discreet. Solitariness, much fasting, divine
meditation, and contemplations of God's judgments, most part accompany this
melancholy, and are main causes, as [6704]Navarrus holds; to converse with
such kinds of persons so troubled, is sufficient occasion of trouble to
some men. Nonnulli ob longas inedias, studia et meditationes coelestes, de
rebus sacris et religione semper agitant, &c. Many, (saith P. Forestus)
through long fasting, serious meditations of heavenly things, fall into
such fits; and as Lemnius adds, lib. 4. cap. 21, [6705]If they be
solitary given, superstitious, precise, or very devout: seldom shall you
find a merchant, a soldier, an innkeeper, a bawd, a host, a usurer, so
troubled in mind, they have cheverel consciences that will stretch, they
are seldom moved in this kind or molested: young men and middle age are
more wild and less apprehensive; but old folks, most part, such as are
timorous and religiously given. Pet. Forestus observat. lib. 10. cap.
12. de morbis cerebri, hath a fearful example of a minister, that through
precise fasting in Lent, and overmuch meditation, contracted this mischief,
and in the end became desperate, thought he saw devils in his chamber, and
that he could not be saved; he smelled nothing, as he said, but fire and
brimstone, was already in hell, and would ask them, still, if they did not
[6706]smell as much. I told him he was melancholy, but he laughed me to
scorn, and replied that he saw devils, talked with them in good earnest,
Would spit in my face, and ask me if 1 did not smell brimstone, but at last
he was by him cured. Such another story I find in Plater observat. lib.
1. A poor fellow had done some foul offence, and for fourteen days would
eat no meat, in the end became desperate, the divines about him could not
ease him, [6707]but so he died. Continual meditation of God's judgments
troubles many, Multi ob timorem futuri judicii, saith Guatinerius cap.
5. tract. 15. et suspicionem desperabundi sunt. David himself complains
that God's judgments terrified his soul, Psalm cxix. part. 16. vers. 8. My
flesh trembleth for fear of thee, and I am afraid of thy judgments.
Quoties diem illum cogito (saith [6708]Hierome) toto corpore
contremisco, I tremble as often as I think of it. The terrible meditation
of hell-fire and eternal punishment much torments a sinful silly soul.
What's a thousand years to eternity? Ubi moeror, ubi fletus, ubi dolor
sempiternus. Mors sine morte, finis sine fine; a finger burnt by chance we
may not endure, the pain is so grievous, we may not abide an hour, a night
is intolerable; and what shall this unspeakable fire then be that burns for
ever, innumerable infinite millions of years, in omne aevum in aeternum. O
eternity!
[6709]Aeternitas est illa vox,
—meta carens et orta, &c.
Tormenta nulla territant,
Auget haec poenas indies,
Centuplicatque flammas, &c.
This meditation terrifies these poor distressed souls, especially if their
bodies be predisposed by melancholy, they religiously given, and have
tender consciences, every small object affrights them, the very
inconsiderate reading of Scripture itself, and misinterpretation of some
places of it; as, Many are called, few are chosen. Not every one that
saith Lord. Fear not little flock. He that stands, let him take heed lest
he fall. Work out your salvation with fear and trembling, That night two
shall be in a bed, one received, the other left. Strait is the way that
leads to heaven, and few there are that enter therein. The parable of the
seed and of the sower, some fell on barren ground, some was choked. Whom
he hath predestinated he hath chosen. He will have mercy on whom he will
have mercy. Non est volentis nec currentis, sed miserentis Dei. These
and the like places terrify the souls of many; election, predestination,
reprobation, preposterously conceived, offend divers, with a deal of
foolish presumption, curiosity, needless speculation, contemplation,
solicitude, wherein they trouble and puzzle themselves about those
questions of grace, free will, perseverance, God's secrets; they will know
more than is revealed of God in his word, human capacity, or ignorance can
apprehend, and too importunate inquiry after that which is revealed;
mysteries, ceremonies, observation of Sabbaths, laws, duties, &c., with
many such which the casuists discuss, and schoolmen broach, which divers
mistake, misconstrue, misapply to themselves, to their own undoing, and so
fall into this gulf. They doubt of their election, how they shall know,
it, by what signs. And so far forth, saith Luther, with such nice points,
torture and crucify themselves, that they are almost mad, and all they get
by it is this, they lay open a gap to the devil by desperation to carry
them to hell; but the greatest harm of all proceeds from those thundering
ministers, a most frequent cause they are of this malady: [6710]and do more
harm in the church (saith Erasmus) than they that flatter; great danger on
both sides, the one lulls them asleep in carnal security, the other drives
them to despair. Whereas, [6711]St. Bernard well adviseth, We should not
meddle with the one without the other, nor speak of judgment without mercy;
the one alone brings desperation, the other security. But these men are
wholly for judgment; of a rigid disposition themselves, there is no mercy
with them, no salvation, no balsam for their diseased souls, they can speak
of nothing but reprobation, hell-fire, and damnation; as they did Luke xi.
46. lade men with burdens grievous to be borne, which they themselves touch
not with a finger. 'Tis familiar with our papists to terrify men's souls
with purgatory, tales, visions, apparitions, to daunt even the most
generous spirits, to [6712]require charity, as Brentius observes, of
others, bounty, meekness, love, patience, when they themselves breathe
nought but lust, envy, covetousness. They teach others to fast, give alms,
do penance, and crucify their mind with superstitious observations, bread
and water, hair clothes, whips, and the like, when they themselves have all
the dainties the world can afford, lie on a down-bed with a courtesan in
their arms: Heu quantum patimur pro Christo, as [6713]he said, what a
cruel tyranny is this, so to insult over and terrify men's souls! Our
indiscreet pastors many of them come not far behind, whilst in their
ordinary sermons they speak so much of election, predestination,
reprobation, ab aeterno, subtraction of grace, preterition, voluntary
permission, &c., by what signs and tokens they shall discern and try
themselves, whether they be God's true children elect, an sint reprobi,
praedestinati, &c., with such scrupulous points, they still aggravate sin,
thunder out God's judgments without respect, intempestively rail at and
pronounce them damned in all auditories, for giving so much to sports and
honest recreations, making every small fault and thing indifferent an
irremissible offence, they so rent, tear and wound men's consciences, that
they are almost mad, and at their wits' end.
These bitter potions (saith [6714]Erasmus) are still in their mouths,
nothing but gall and horror, and a mad noise, they make all their auditors
desperate: many are wounded by this means, and they commonly that are most
devout and precise, have been formerly presumptuous, and certain of their
salvation; they that have tender consciences, that follow sermons, frequent
lectures, that have indeed least cause, they are most apt to mistake, and
fall into these miseries. I have heard some complain of Parson's
Resolution, and other books of like nature (good otherwise), they are too
tragical, too much dejecting men, aggravating offences: great care and
choice, much discretion is required in this kind.
The last and greatest cause of this malady, is our own conscience, sense of
our sins, and God's anger justly deserved, a guilty conscience for some
foul offence formerly committed,—[6715]O miser Oreste, quid morbi te
perdit? Or: Conscientia, Sum enim mihi conscius de malis perpetratis.[6716]
A good conscience is a continual feast, but a galled conscience is as
great a torment as can possibly happen, a still baking oven, (so Pierius in
his Hieroglyph, compares it) another hell. Our conscience, which is a great
ledger book, wherein are written all our offences, a register to lay them
up, (which those [6717]Egyptians in their hieroglyphics expressed by a mill,
as well for the continuance, as for the torture of it) grinds our souls
with the remembrance of some precedent sins, makes us reflect upon, accuse
and condemn our own selves. [6718]Sin lies at door, &c. I know there be many
other causes assigned by Zanchius, [6719]Musculus, and the rest; as
incredulity, infidelity, presumption, ignorance, blindness, ingratitude,
discontent, those five grand miseries in Aristotle, ignominy, need,
sickness, enmity, death, &c.; but this of conscience is the greatest,
[6720]Instar ulceris corpus jugiter percellens: The scrupulous conscience
(as [6721]Peter Forestus calls it) which tortures so many, that either out of
a deep apprehension of their unworthiness, and consideration of their own
dissolute life, accuse themselves and aggravate every small offence, when
there is no such cause, misdoubting in the meantime God's mercies, they
fall into these inconveniences. The poet calls them [6722]furies dire, but it
is the conscience alone which is a thousand witnesses to accuse us, [6723]
Nocte dieque suum gestant in pectore testem. A continual tester to give
in evidence, to empanel a jury to examine us, to cry guilty, a persecutor
with hue and cry to follow, an apparitor to summon us, a bailiff to carry
us, a serjeant to arrest, an attorney to plead against us, a gaoler to
torment, a judge to condemn, still accusing, denouncing, torturing and
molesting. And as the statue of Juno in that holy city near Euphrates in
[6724]Assyria will look still towards you, sit where you will in her temple,
she stares full upon you, if you go by, she follows with her eye, in all
sites, places, conventicles, actions, our conscience will be still ready to
accuse us. After many pleasant days, and fortunate adventures, merry tides,
this conscience at last doth arrest us. Well he may escape temporal
punishment, [6725]bribe a corrupt judge, and avoid the censure of law, and
flourish for a time; for [6726]who ever saw (saith Chrysostom) a covetous
man troubled in mind when he is telling of his money, an adulterer mourn
with his mistress in his arms? we are then drunk with pleasure, and
perceive nothing: yet as the prodigal son had dainty fare, sweet music at
first, merry company, jovial entertainment, but a cruel reckoning in the
end, as bitter as wormwood, a fearful visitation commonly follows. And the
devil that then told thee that it was a light sin, or no sin at all, now
aggravates on the other side, and telleth thee, that it is a most
irremissible offence, as he did by Cain and Judas, to bring them to
despair; every small circumstance before neglected and contemned, will now
amplify itself, rise up in judgment, and accuse the dust of their shoes,
dumb creatures, as to Lucian's tyrant, lectus et candela, the bed and
candle did bear witness, to torment their souls for their sins past.
Tragical examples in this kind are too familiar and common: Adrian, Galba,
Nero, Otho, Vitellius, Caracalla, were in such horror of conscience for
their offences committed, murders, rapes, extortions, injuries, that they
were weary of their lives, and could get nobody to kill them. [6727]Kennetus,
King of Scotland, when he had murdered his nephew Malcom, King Duffe's son,
Prince of Cumberland, and with counterfeit tears and protestations
dissembled the matter a long time, [6728]at last his conscience accused
him, his unquiet soul could not rest day or night, he was terrified with
fearful dreams, visions, and so miserably tormented all his life. It is
strange to read what [6729]Cominaeus hath written of Louis XI. that French
King; of Charles VIII.; of Alphonsus, King of Naples; in the fury of his
passion how he came into Sicily, and what pranks he played. Guicciardini, a
man most unapt to believe lies, relates how that Ferdinand his father's
ghost who before had died for grief, came and told him, that he could not
resist the French King, he thought every man cried France, France; the
reason of it (saith Cominseus) was because he was a vile tyrant, a
murderer, an oppressor of his subjects, he bought up all commodities, and
sold them at his own price, sold abbeys to Jews and Falkoners; both
Ferdinand his father, and he himself never made conscience of any committed
sin; and to conclude, saith he, it was impossible to do worse than they
did. Why was Pausanias the Spartan tyrant, Nero, Otho, Galba, so persecuted
with spirits in every house they came, but for their murders which they had
committed? [6730]Why doth the devil haunt many men's houses after their
deaths, appear to them living, and take possession of their habitations, as
it were, of their palaces, but because of their several villainies? Why had
Richard the Third such fearful dreams, saith Polydore, but for his frequent
murders? Why was Herod so tortured in his mind? because he had made away
Mariamne his wife. Why was Theodoric, the King of the Goths, so suspicious,
and so affrighted with a fish head alone, but that he had murdered
Symmachus, and Boethius his son-in-law, those worthy Romans? Caelius, lib.
27. cap. 22. See more in Plutarch, in his tract De his qui sero a Numine
puniuntur, and in his book De tranquillitate animi, &c. Yea, and
sometimes GOD himself hath a hand in it, to show his power, humiliate,
exercise, and to try their faith, (divine temptation, Perkins calls it,
Cas. cons. lib. 1. cap. 8. sect. 1.) to punish them for their sins.
God the avenger, as [6731]David terms him, ultor a tergo Deus, his wrath
is apprehended of a guilty, soul, as by Saul and Judas, which the poets
expressed by Adrastia, or Nemesis:
[6732]Assequitur Nemesique virum vestigia servat,
And she is, as [6733]Ammianus, lib. 14. describes her, the queen of
causes, and moderator of things, now she pulls down the proud, now she
rears and encourageth those that are good; he gives instance in his
Eusebius; Nicephorus, lib. 10. cap. 35. eccles. hist. in Maximinus and
Julian. Fearful examples of God's just judgment, wrath and vengeance, are
to be found in all histories, of some that have been eaten to death with
rats and mice, as [6734]Popelius, the second King of Poland, ann. 830, his
wife and children; the like story is of Hatto, Archbishop of Mentz, ann.
969, so devoured by these vermin, which howsoever Serrarius the Jesuit
Mogunt. rerum lib. 4. cap. 5. impugn by twenty-two arguments, Tritemius,
[6735]Munster, Magdeburgenses, and many others relate for a truth. Such
another example I find in Geraldus Cambrensis Itin. Cam. lib. 2. cap. 2.
and where not?
And yet for all these terrors of conscience, affrighting punishments which
are so frequent, or whatsoever else may cause or aggravate this fearful
malady in other religions, I see no reason at all why a papist at any time
should despair, or be troubled for his sins; for let him be never so
dissolute a caitiff so notorious a villain, so monstrous a sinner, out of
that treasure of indulgences and merits of which the pope is dispensator,
he may have free pardon and plenary remission of all his sins. There be so
many general pardons for ages to come, forty thousand years to come, so
many jubilees, so frequent gaol-deliveries out of purgatory for all souls,
now living, or after dissolution of the body, so many particular masses
daily said in several churches, so many altars consecrated to this purpose,
that if a man have either money or friends, or will take any pains to come
to such an altar, hear a mass, say so many paternosters, undergo such and
such penance, he cannot do amiss, it is impossible his mind should be
troubled, or he have any scruple to molest him. Besides that Taxa Camerae
Apostolicae, which was first published to get money in the days of Leo
Decimus, that sharking pope, and since divulged to the same ends, sets down
such easy rates and dispensations for all offences, for perjury, murder,
incest, adultery, &c., for so many grosses or dollars (able to invite any
man to sin, and provoke him to offend, methinks, that otherwise would not)
such comfortable remission, so gentle and parable a pardon, so ready at
hand, with so small cost and suit obtained, that I cannot see how he that
hath any friends amongst them (as I say) or money in his purse, or will at
least to ease himself, can any way miscarry or be misaffected, how he
should be desperate, in danger of damnation, or troubled in mind. Their
ghostly fathers can so readily apply remedies, so cunningly string and
unstring, wind and unwind their devotions, play upon their consciences with
plausible speeches and terrible threats, for their best advantage settle
and remove, erect with such facility and deject, let in and out, that I
cannot perceive how any man amongst them should much or often labour of
this disease, or finally miscarry. The causes above named must more
frequently therefore take hold in others.
SUBSECT. IV.—Symptoms of Despair, Fear, Sorrow, Suspicion, Anxiety, Horror of Conscience, Fearful Dreams and Visions.
As shoemakers do when they bring home shoes, still cry leather is dearer
and dearer, may I justly say of those melancholy symptoms: these of despair
are most violent, tragical, and grievous, far beyond the rest, not to be
expressed but negatively, as it is privation of all happiness, not to be
endured; for a wounded spirit who can bear it? Prov. xviii. 19. What,
therefore, [6736]Timanthes did in his picture of Iphigenia, now ready to be
sacrificed, when he had painted Chalcas mourning, Ulysses sad, but most
sorrowful Menelaus; and showed all his art in expressing a variety of
affections, he covered the maid's father Agamemnon's head with a veil, and
left it to every spectator to conceive what he would himself; for that true
passion and sorrow in summo gradu, such as his was, could not by any art
be deciphered. What he did in his picture, I will do in describing the
symptoms of despair; imagine what thou canst, fear, sorrow, furies, grief,
pain, terror, anger, dismal, ghastly, tedious, irksome, &c. it is not
sufficient, it comes far short, no tongue can tell, no heart conceive it.
'Tis an epitome of hell, an extract, a quintessence, a compound, a mixture
of all feral maladies, tyrannical tortures, plagues, and perplexities.
There is no sickness almost but physic provideth a remedy for it; to every
sore chirurgery will provide a slave; friendship helps poverty; hope of
liberty easeth imprisonment; suit and favour revoke banishment; authority
and time wear away reproach: but what physic, what chirurgery, what wealth,
favour, authority can relieve, bear out, assuage, or expel a troubled
conscience? A quiet mind cureth all them, but all they cannot comfort a
distressed soul: who can put to silence the voice of desperation? All that
is single in other melancholy, Horribile, dirum, pestilens, atrox, ferum,
concur in this, it is more than melancholy in the highest degree; a burning
fever of the soul; so mad, saith [6737]Jacchinus, by this misery; fear,
sorrow, and despair, he puts for ordinary symptoms of melancholy. They are
in great pain and horror of mind, distraction of soul, restless, full of
continual fears, cares, torments, anxieties, they can neither eat, drink,
nor sleep for them, take no rest,
[6738]Perpetua impietas, nec mensae tempore cessat,
Exagitat vesana quies, somnique furentes.
Neither at bed, nor yet at board,
Will any rest despair afford.
Fear takes away their content, and dries the blood, wasteth the marrow,
alters their countenance, even in their greatest delights, singing,
dancing, dalliance, they are still (saith [6739]Lemnius) tortured in their
souls. It consumes them to nought, I am like a pelican in the wilderness
(saith David of himself, temporally afflicted), an owl, because of thine
indignation, Psalm cii. 8, 10, and Psalm lv. 4. My heart trembleth within
me, and the terrors of death have come upon me; fear and trembling are come
upon me, &c. at death's door, Psalm cvii. 18. Their soul abhors all
manner of meats. Their [6740]sleep is (if it be any) unquiet, subject to
fearful dreams and terrors. Peter in his bonds slept secure, for he knew
God protected him; and Tully makes it an argument of Roscius Amerinus'
innocency, that he killed not his father, because he so securely slept.
Those martyrs in the primitive church were most [6741]cheerful and merry in
the midst of their persecutions; but it is far otherwise with these men,
tossed in a sea, and that continually without rest or intermission, they
can think of nought that is pleasant, [6742]their conscience will not let
them be quiet, in perpetual fear, anxiety, if they be not yet apprehended,
they are in doubt still they shall be ready to betray themselves, as Cain
did, he thinks every man will kill him; and roar for the grief of heart,
Psalm xxxviii. 8, as David did; as Job did, xx. 3, 21, 22, &c., Wherefore
is light given to him that is in misery, and life to them that have heavy
hearts? which long for death, and if it come not, search it more than
treasures, and rejoice when they can find the grave. They are generally
weary of their lives, a trembling heart they have, a sorrowful mind, and
little or no rest. Terror ubique tremor, timor undique et undique terror.
Fears, terrors, and affrights in all places, at all times and seasons.
Cibum et potum pertinaciter aversantur multi, nodum in scirpo quaeritantes,
et culpam imaginantes ubi nulla est, as Wierus writes de Lamiis lib. 3.
c. 7. they refuse many of them meat and drink, cannot rest, aggravating
still and supposing grievous offences where there are none. God's heavy
wrath is kindled in their souls, and notwithstanding their continual
prayers and supplications to Christ Jesus, they have no release or ease at
all, but a most intolerable torment, and insufferable anguish of
conscience, and that makes them, through impatience, to murmur against God
many times, to rave, to blaspheme, turn atheists, and seek to offer
violence to themselves. Deut. xxviii. 65, 68. In the morning they wish for
evening, and for morning in the evening, for the sight of their eyes which
they see, and fear of hearts. [6743]Marinus Mercennus, in his comment on
Genesis, makes mention of a desperate friend of his, whom, amongst others,
he came to visit, and exhort to patience, that broke out into most
blasphemous atheistical speeches, too fearful to relate, when they wished
him to trust in God, Quis est ille Deus (inquit) ut serviam illi, quid
proderit si oraverim; si praesens est, cur non succurrit? cur non me
carcere, inertia, squalore confectum liberat? quid ego feci? &c. absit a me
hujusmodi Deus. Another of his acquaintance broke out into like
atheistical blasphemies, upon his wife's death raved, cursed, said and did
he cared not what. And so for the most part it is with them all, many of
them, in their extremity, think they hear and see visions, outcries, confer
with devils, that they are tormented, possessed, and in hell-fire, already
damned, quite forsaken of God, they have no sense or feeling of mercy, or
grace, hope of salvation, their sentence of condemnation is already past,
and not to be revoked, the devil will certainly have them. Never was any
living creature in such torment before, in such a miserable estate, in such
distress of mind, no hope, no faith, past cure, reprobate, continually
tempted to make away themselves. Something talks with them, they spit fire
and brimstone, they cannot but blaspheme, they cannot repent, believe or
think a good thought, so far carried; ut cogantur ad impia cogitandum
etiam contra voluntatem, said [6744]Felix Plater, ad blasphemiam erga
deum, ad multa horrenda perpetranda, ad manus violentas sibi inferendas,
&c., and in their distracted fits and desperate humours, to offer violence
to others, their familiar and dear friends sometimes, or to mere strangers,
upon very small or no occasion; for he that cares not for his own, is
master of another man's life. They think evil against their wills; that
which they abhor themselves, they must needs think, do, and speak. He gives
instance in a patient of his, that when he would pray, had such evil
thoughts still suggested to him, and wicked [6745]meditations. Another
instance he hath of a woman that was often tempted to curse God, to
blaspheme and kill herself. Sometimes the devil (as they say) stands
without and talks with them, sometimes he is within them, as they think,
and there speaks and talks as to such as are possessed: so Apollodorus, in
Plutarch, thought his heart spake within him. There is a most memorable
example of [6746]Francis Spira, an advocate of Padua, Ann. 1545, that being
desperate, by no counsel of learned men could be comforted: he felt (as he
said) the pains of hell in his soul; in all other things he discoursed
aright, but in this most mad. Frismelica, Bullovat, and some other
excellent physicians, could neither make him eat, drink, or sleep, no
persuasion could ease him. Never pleaded any man so well for himself, as
this man did against himself, and so he desperately died. Springer, a
lawyer, hath written his life. Cardinal Crescence died so likewise
desperate at Verona, still he thought a black dog followed him to his
death-bed, no man could drive the dog away, Sleiden. com. 23. cap. lib.
3. Whilst I was writing this Treatise, saith Montaltus, cap. 2. de mel.
[6747]A nun came to me for help, well for all other matters, but troubled
in conscience for five years last past; she is almost mad, and not able to
resist, thinks she hath offended God, and is certainly damned. Felix
Plater hath store of instances of such as thought themselves damned, [6748]
forsaken of God, &c. One amongst the rest, that durst not go to church, or
come near the Rhine, for fear to make away himself, because then he was
most especially tempted. These and such like symptoms are intended and
remitted, as the malady itself is more or less; some will hear good
counsel, some will not; some desire help, some reject all, and will not be
eased.
SUBSECT. V.—Prognostics of Despair, Atheism, Blasphemy, violent death, &c.
Most part these kind of persons make [6749]away themselves, some are mad,
blaspheme, curse, deny God, but most offer violence to their own persons,
and sometimes to others. A wounded spirit who can bear? Prov. xviii. 14.
As Cain, Saul, Achitophel, Judas, blasphemed and died. Bede saith, Pilate
died desperate eight years after Christ. [6750]Felix Plater hath collected
many examples. [6751]A merchant's wife that was long troubled with such
temptations, in the night rose from her bed, and out of the window broke
her neck into the street: another drowned himself desperate as he was in
the Rhine: some cut their throats, many hang themselves. But this needs no
illustration. It is controverted by some, whether a man so offering
violence to himself, dying desperate, may be saved, ay or no? If they die
so obstinately and suddenly, that they cannot so much as wish for mercy,
the worst is to be suspected, because they die impenitent. [6752]If their
death had been a little more lingering, wherein they might have some
leisure in their hearts to cry for mercy, charity may judge the best;
divers have been recovered out of the very act of hanging and drowning
themselves, and so brought ad sanam mentem, they have been very penitent,
much abhorred their former act, confessed that they have repented in an
instant, and cried for mercy in their hearts. If a man put desperate hands
upon himself, by occasion of madness or melancholy, if he have given
testimony before of his regeneration, in regard he doth this not so much
out of his will, as ex vi morbi, we must make the best construction of
it, as [6753]Turks do, that think all fools and madmen go directly to
heaven.
SUBSECT. VI.—Cure of Despair by Physic, Good Counsel, Comforts, &c.
Experience teacheth us, that though many die obstinate and wilful in this
malady, yet multitudes again are able to resist and overcome, seek for help
and find comfort, are taken e faucibus Erebi, from the chops of hell, and
out of the devil's paws, though they have by [6754]obligation, given
themselves to him. Some out of their own strength, and God's assistance,
Though He kill me, (saith Job,) yet will I trust in Him, out of good
counsel, advice and physic. [6755]Bellovacus cured a monk by altering his
habit, and course of life: Plater many by physic alone. But for the most
part they must concur; and they take a wrong course that think to overcome
this feral passion by sole physic; and they are as much out, that think to
work this effect by good service alone, though both be forcible in
themselves, yet vis unita fortior, they must go hand in hand to this
disease: —alterius sic altera poscit opem. For physic the like
course is to be taken with this as in other melancholy: diet, air,
exercise, all those passions and perturbations of the mind, &c. are to be
rectified by the same means. They must not be left solitary, or to
themselves, never idle, never out of company. Counsel, good comfort is to
be applied, as they shall see the parties inclined, or to the causes,
whether it be loss, fear, be grief, discontent, or some such feral
accident, a guilty conscience, or otherwise by frequent meditation, too
grievous an apprehension, and consideration of his former life; by hearing,
reading of Scriptures, good divines, good advice and conference, applying
God's word to their distressed souls, it must be corrected and
counterpoised. Many excellent exhortations, phraenetical discourses, are
extant to this purpose, for such as are any way troubled in mind: Perkins,
Greenham, Hayward, Bright, Abernethy, Bolton, Culmannus, Helmingius,
Caelius Secundus, Nicholas Laurentius, are copious on this subject: Azorius,
Navarrus, Sayrus, &c., and such as have written cases of conscience amongst
our pontifical writers. But because these men's works are not to all
parties at hand, so parable at all times, I will for the benefit and ease
of such as are afflicted, at the request of some [6756]friends, recollect
out of their voluminous treatises, some few such comfortable speeches,
exhortations, arguments, advice, tending to this subject, and out of God's
word, knowing, as Culmannus saith upon the like occasion, [6757]how
unavailable and vain men's councils are to comfort an afflicted conscience,
except God's word concur and be annexed, from which comes life, ease,
repentance, &c. Presupposing first that which Beza, Greenham, Perkins,
Bolton, give in charge, the parties to whom counsel is given be
sufficiently prepared, humbled for their sins, fit for comfort, confessed,
tried how they are more or less afflicted, how they stand affected, or
capable of good advice, before any remedies be applied: to such therefore
as are so thoroughly searched and examined, I address this following
discourse.
Two main antidotes, [6758]Hemmingius observes, opposite to despair, good hope
out of God's word, to be embraced; perverse security and presumption from
the devil's treachery, to be rejected; Illa solus animae, haec pestis; one
saves, the other kills, occidit animam, saith Austin, and doth as much
harm as despair itself, [6759]Navarrus the casuist reckons up ten special
cures out of Anton. 1. part. Tit. 3. cap. 10. 1. God. 2. Physic. 3.
[6760]Avoiding such objects as have caused it. 4. Submission of himself to
other men's judgments. 5. Answer of all objections, &c. All which Cajetan,
Gerson, lib. de vit. spirit. Sayrus, lib. 1. cons. cap. 14. repeat
and approve out of Emanuel Roderiques, cap. 51 et 52. Greenham
prescribes six special rules, Culmannus seven. First, to acknowledge all
help come from God. 2. That the cause of their present misery is sin. 3. To
repent and be heartily sorry for their sins. 4. To pray earnestly to God
they may be eased. 5. To expect and implore the prayers of the church, and
good men's advice. 6. Physic. 7. To commend themselves to God, and rely
upon His mercy: others, otherwise, but all to this effect. But forasmuch as
most men in this malady are spiritually sick, void of reason almost,
overborne by their miseries, and too deep an apprehension of their sins,
they cannot apply themselves to good counsel, pray, believe, repent, we
must, as much as in us lies, occur and help their peculiar infirmities,
according to their several causes and symptoms, as we shall find them
distressed and complain.
The main matter which terrifies and torments most that are troubled in
mind, is the enormity of their offences, the intolerable burthen of their
sins, God's heavy wrath and displeasure so deeply apprehended, that they
account themselves reprobates, quite forsaken of God, already damned, past
all hope of grace, incapable of mercy, diaboli mancipia, slaves of sin,
and their offences so great they cannot be forgiven. But these men must
know there is no sin so heinous which is not pardonable in itself, no crime
so great but by God's mercy it may be forgiven. Where sin aboundeth, grace
aboundeth much more, Rom. v. 20. And what the Lord said unto Paul in his
extremity, 2 Cor. xi. 9. My grace is sufficient for thee, for my power is
made perfect through weakness: concerns every man in like case. His
promises are made indefinite to all believers, generally spoken to all
touching remission of sins that are truly penitent, grieved for their
offences, and desire to be reconciled, Matt. ix. 12, 13, I came not to
call the righteous but sinners to repentance, that is, such as are truly
touched in conscience for their sins. Again, Matt. xi. 28, Come unto me
all ye that are heavy laden, and I will ease you. Ezek. xviii. 27, At
what time soever a sinner shall repent him of his sins from the bottom of
his heart, I will blot out all his wickedness out of my remembrance saith
the Lord. Isaiah xliii. 25, I, even I, am He that put away thine iniquity
for mine own sake, and will not remember thy sins. As a father (saith
David Psal. ciii. 13) hath compassion on his children, so hath the Lord
compassion on them that fear him. And will receive them again as the
prodigal son was entertained, Luke xv., if they shall so come with tears in
their eyes, and a penitent heart. Peccator agnoscat, Deus ignoscit. The
Lord is full of compassion and mercy, slow to anger, of great kindness,
Psal. ciii. 8. He will not always chide, neither keep His anger for ever,
9. As high as the heaven is above the earth, so great is His mercy towards
them that fear Him, 11. As far as the East is from the West, so far hath
He removed our sins from us, 12. Though Cain cry out in the anguish of his
soul, my punishment is greater than I can bear, 'tis not so; thou liest,
Cain (saith Austin), God's mercy is greater than thy sins. His mercy is
above all His works, Psal. cxlv. 9, able to satisfy for all men's sins,
antilutron, 1 Tim. ii. 6. His mercy is a panacea, a balsam for an
afflicted soul, a sovereign medicine, an alexipharmacum for all sins, a
charm for the devil; his mercy was great to Solomon, to Manasseh, to Peter,
great to all offenders, and whosoever thou art, it may be so to thee. For
why should God bid us pray (as Austin infers) Deliver us from all evil,
nisi ipse misericors perseveraret, if He did not intend to help us? He
therefore that [6761]doubts of the remission of his sins, denies God's
mercy, and doth Him injury, saith Austin. Yea, but thou repliest, I am a
notorious sinner, mine offences are not so great as infinite. Hear
Fulgentius, [6762]God's invincible goodness cannot be overcome by sin, His
infinite mercy cannot be terminated by any: the multitude of His mercy is
equivalent to His magnitude. Hear [6763]Chrysostom, Thy malice may be
measured, but God's mercy cannot be defined; thy malice is circumscribed,
His mercies infinite. As a drop of water is to the sea, so are thy
misdeeds to His mercy: nay, there is no such proportion to be given; for
the sea, though great, yet may be measured, but God's mercy cannot be
circumscribed. Whatsoever thy sins be then in quantity or quality,
multitude or magnitude, fear them not, distrust not. I speak not this,
saith [6764]Chrysostom, to make thee secure and negligent, but to cheer
thee up. Yea but, thou urgest again, I have little comfort of this which
is said, it concerns me not: Inanis poenitentia quam sequens culpa
coinquinat, 'tis to no purpose for me to repent, and to do worse than ever
I did before, to persevere in sin, and to return to my lusts as a dog to
his vomit, or a swine to the mire: [6765]to what end is it to ask
forgiveness of my sins, and yet daily to sin again and again, to do evil
out of a habit? I daily and hourly offend in thought, word, and deed, in a
relapse by mine own weakness and wilfulness: my bonus genius, my good
protecting angel is gone, I am fallen from that I was or would be, worse
and worse, my latter end is worse than my beginning: Si quotidiae peccas,
quotidie, saith Chrysostom, poenitentiam age, if thou daily offend,
daily repent: [6766]if twice, thrice, a hundred, a hundred thousand times,
twice, thrice, a hundred thousand times repent. As they do by an old house
that is out of repair, still mend some part or other; so do by thy soul,
still reform some vice, repair it by repentance, call to Him for grace, and
thou shalt have it; For we are freely justified by His grace, Rom. iii.
24. If thine enemy repent, as our Saviour enjoined Peter, forgive him
seventy-seven times; and why shouldst thou think God will not forgive thee?
Why should the enormity of thy sins trouble thee? God can do it, he will do
it. My conscience (saith [6767]Anselm) dictates to me that I deserve
damnation, my repentance will not suffice for satisfaction: but thy mercy,
O Lord, quite overcometh all my transgressions. The gods once (as the
poets feign) with a gold chain would pull Jupiter out of heaven, but all
they together could not stir him, and yet he could draw and turn them as he
would himself; maugre all the force and fury of these infernal fiends, and
crying sins, His grace is sufficient. Confer the debt and the payment;
Christ and Adam; sin, and the cure of it; the disease and the medicine;
confer the sick man to his physician, and thou shalt soon perceive that his
power is infinitely beyond it. God is better able, as [6768]Bernard
informeth us, to help, than sin to do us hurt; Christ is better able to
save, than the devil to destroy. [6769]If he be a skilful Physician, as
Fulgentius adds, he can cure all diseases; if merciful, he will. Non est
perfecta bonitas a qua non omnis malitia vincitur, His goodness is not
absolute and perfect, if it be not able to overcome all malice. Submit
thyself unto Him, as St. Austin adviseth, [6770]He knoweth best what he
doth; and be not so much pleased when he sustains thee, as patient when he
corrects thee; he is omnipotent, and can cure all diseases when he sees his
own time. He looks down from heaven upon earth, that he may hear the
mourning of prisoners, and deliver the children of death, Psal. cii. 19.
20. And though our sins be as red as scarlet, He can make them as white as
snow, Isai. i. 18. Doubt not of this, or ask how it shall be done: He is
all-sufficient that promiseth; qui fecit mundum de immundo, saith
Chrysostom, he that made a fair world of nought, can do this and much more
for his part: do thou only believe, trust in him, rely on him, be penitent
and heartily sorry for thy sins. Repentance is a sovereign remedy for all
sins, a spiritual wing to rear us, a charm for our miseries, a protecting
amulet to expel sin's venom, an attractive loadstone to draw God's mercy
and graces unto us. [6771]Peccatum vulnus, poenitentia medicinam: sin made
the breach, repentance must help it; howsoever thine offence came, by
error, sloth, obstinacy, ignorance, exitur per poenitentiam, this is the
sole means to be relieved. [6772]Hence comes our hope of safety, by this
alone sinners are saved, God is provoked to mercy. This unlooseth all that
is bound, enlighteneth darkness, mends that is broken, puts life to that
which was desperately dying: makes no respect of offences, or of persons.
[6773]This doth not repel a fornicator, reject a drunkard, resist a proud
fellow, turn away an idolater, but entertains all, communicates itself to
all. Who persecuted the church more than Paul, offended more than Peter?
and yet by repentance (saith Curysologus) they got both Magisterium et
ministerium sanctitatis, the Magistery of holiness. The prodigal son went
far, but by repentance he came home at last. [6774]This alone will turn a
wolf into a sheep, make a publican a preacher, turn a thorn into an olive,
make a debauched fellow religious, a blasphemer sing halleluja, make
Alexander the coppersmith truly devout, make a devil a saint. [6775]And him
that polluted his mouth with calumnies, lying, swearing, and filthy tunes
and tones, to purge his throat with divine Psalms. Repentance will effect
prodigious cures, make a stupend metamorphosis. A hawk came into the ark,
and went out again a hawk; a lion came in, went out a lion; a bear, a bear;
a wolf, a wolf; but if a hawk came into this sacred temple of repentance,
he will go forth a dove (saith [6776]Chrysostom), a wolf go out a sheep, a
lion a lamb. [6777]This gives sight to the blind, legs to the lame, cures
all diseases, confers grace, expels vice, inserts virtue, comforts and
fortifies the soul. Shall I say, let thy sin be what it will, do but
repent, it is sufficient. [6778]Quem poenitet peccasse pene est innocens.
'Tis true indeed and all-sufficient this, they do confess, if they could
repent; but they are obdurate, they have cauterised consciences, they are
in a reprobate sense, they cannot think a good thought, they cannot hope
for grace, pray, believe, repent, or be sorry for their sins, they find no
grief for sin in themselves, but rather a delight, no groaning of spirit,
but are carried headlong to their own destruction, heaping wrath to
themselves against the day of wrath, Rom. ii. 5. 'Tis a grievous case this
I do yield, and yet not to be despaired; God of his bounty and mercy calls
all to repentance, Rom. ii. 4, thou mayst be called at length, restored,
taken to His grace, as the thief upon the cross, at the last hour, as Mary
Magdalene and many other sinners have been, that were buried in sin. God
(saith [6779]Fulgentius) is delighted in the conversion of a sinner, he sets
no time; prolixitas temporis Deo non praejudicat, aut gravitas peccati,
deferring of time or grievousness of sin, do not prejudicate his grace,
things past and to come are all one to Him, as present: 'tis never too late
to repent. [6780]This heaven of repentance is still open for all distressed
souls; and howsoever as yet no signs appear, thou mayst repent in good
time. Hear a comfortable speech of St. Austin, [6781]Whatsoever thou shall
do, how great a sinner soever, thou art yet living; if God would not help
thee, he would surely take thee away; but in sparing thy life, he gives
thee leisure, and invites thee to repentance. Howsoever as yet, I say,
thou perceivest no fruit, no feeling, findest no likelihood of it in
thyself, patiently abide the Lord's good leisure, despair not, or think
thou art a reprobate; He came to call sinners to repentance, Luke v. 32, of
which number thou art one; He came to call thee, and in his time will
surely call thee. And although as yet thou hast no inclination to pray, to
repent, thy faith be cold and dead, and thou wholly averse from all Divine
functions, yet it may revive, as trees are dead in winter, but flourish in
the spring! these virtues may lie hid in thee for the present, yet
hereafter show themselves, and peradventure already bud, howsoever thou
dost not perceive. 'Tis Satan's policy to plead against, suppress and
aggravate, to conceal those sparks of faith in thee. Thou dost not believe,
thou sayest, yet thou wouldst believe if thou couldst, 'tis thy desire to
believe; then pray, [6782]Lord help mine unbelief: and hereafter thou
shall certainly believe: [6783]Dabitur sitienti, it shall be given to him
that thirsteth. Thou canst not yet repent, hereafter thou shall; a black
cloud of sin as yet obnubilates thy soul, terrifies thy conscience, but
this cloud may conceive a rainbow at the last, and be quite dissipated by
repentance. Be of good cheer; a child is rational in power, not in act; and
so art thou penitent in affection, though not yet in action. 'Tis thy
desire to please God, to be heartily sorry; comfort thyself, no time is
overpast, 'tis never too late. A desire to repent is repentance itself,
though not in nature, yet in God's acceptance; a willing mind is
sufficient. Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness,
Matt. v. 6. He that is destitute of God's grace, and wisheth for it, shall
have it. The Lord (saith David, Psal. x. 17) will hear the desire of the
poor, that is, such as are in distress of body and mind. 'Tis true thou
canst not as yet grieve for thy sin, thou hast no feeling of faith, I
yield; yet canst thou grieve thou dost not grieve? It troubles thee, I am
sure, thine heart should be so impenitent and hard, thou wouldst have it
otherwise; 'tis thy desire to grieve, to repent, and to believe. Thou
lovest God's children and saints in the meantime, hatest them not,
persecutest them not, but rather wishest thyself a true professor, to be as
they are, as thou thyself hast been heretofore; which is an evident token
thou art in no such desperate case. 'Tis a good sign of thy conversion, thy
sins are pardonable, thou art, or shalt surely be reconciled. The Lord is
near them that are of a contrite heart, Luke iv. 18. [6784]A true desire of
mercy in the want of mercy, is mercy itself; a desire of grace in the want
of grace, is grace itself; a constant and earnest desire to believe,
repent, and to be reconciled to God, if it be in a touched heart, is an
acceptation of God, a reconciliation, faith and repentance itself. For it
is not thy faith and repentance, as [6785]Chrysostom truly teacheth, that is
available, but God's mercy that is annexed to it, He accepts the will for
the deed: so that I conclude, to feel in ourselves the want of grace, and
to be grieved for it, is grace itself. I am troubled with fear my sins are
not forgiven, Careless objects: but Bradford answers they are; For God
hath given thee a penitent and believing heart, that is, a heart which
desireth to repent and believe; for such an one is taken of him (he
accepting the will for the deed) for a truly penitent and believing heart.
All this is true thou repliest, but yet it concerns not thee, 'tis verified
in ordinary offenders, in common sins, but thine are of a higher strain,
even against the Holy Ghost himself, irremissible sins, sins of the first
magnitude, written with a pen of iron, engraven with a point of a diamond.
Thou art worse than a pagan, infidel, Jew, or Turk, for thou art an
apostate and more, thou hast voluntarily blasphemed, renounced God and all
religion, thou art worse than Judas himself, or they that crucified Christ:
for they did offend out of ignorance, but thou hast thought in thine heart
there is no God. Thou hast given thy soul to the devil, as witches and
conjurors do, explicite and implicite, by compact, band and obligation
(a desperate, a fearful case) to satisfy thy lust, or to be revenged of
thine enemies, thou didst never pray, come to church, hear, read, or do any
divine duties with any devotion, but for formality and fashion's sake, with
a kind of reluctance, 'twas troublesome and painful to thee to perform any
such thing, praeter voluntatem, against thy will. Thou never mad'st any
conscience of lying, swearing, bearing false witness, murder, adultery,
bribery, oppression, theft, drunkenness, idolatry, but hast ever done all
duties for fear of punishment, as they were most advantageous, and to thine
own ends, and committed all such notorious sins, with an extraordinary
delight, hating that thou shouldst love, and loving that thou shouldst
hate. Instead of faith, fear and love of God, repentance, &c., blasphemous
thoughts have been ever harboured in his mind, even against God himself,
the blessed Trinity; the [6786]Scripture false, rude, harsh, immethodical:
heaven, hell, resurrection, mere toys and fables, [6787]incredible, impossible,
absurd, vain, ill contrived; religion, policy, and human invention, to keep
men in obedience, or for profit, invented by priests and lawgivers to that
purpose. If there be any such supreme power, he takes no notice of our
doings, hears not our prayers, regardeth them not, will not, cannot help,
or else he is partial, an excepter of persons, author of sin, a cruel, a
destructive God, to create our souls, and destinate them to eternal
damnation, to make us worse than our dogs and horses, why doth he not
govern things better, protect good men, root out wicked livers? why do they
prosper and flourish? as she raved in the [6788]tragedy—pellices caelum
tenent, there they shine, Suasque Perseus aureas stellas habet, where is
his providence? how appears it?
[6789]Marmoreo Licinus tumulo jacet, at Cato parvo,
Pomponius nullo, quis putet esse Deos.
Why doth he suffer Turks to overcome Christians, the enemy to triumph over
his church, paganism to domineer in all places as it doth, heresies to
multiply, such enormities to be committed, and so many such bloody wars,
murders, massacres, plagues, feral diseases! why doth he not make us all
good, able, sound? why makes he [6790]venomous creatures, rocks, sands,
deserts, this earth itself the muck-hill of the world, a prison, a house of
correction? [6791]Mentimur regnare Jovem, &c., with many such horrible and
execrable conceits, not fit to be uttered; Terribilia de fide, horribilia
de Divinitate. They cannot some of them but think evil, they are compelled
volentes nolentes, to blaspheme, especially when they come to church and
pray, read, &c., such foul and prodigious suggestions come into their
hearts.
These are abominable, unspeakable offences, and most opposite to God,
tentationes foedae, et impiae, yet in this case, he or they that shall be
tempted and so affected, must know, that no man living is free from such
thoughts in part, or at some times, the most divine spirits have been so
tempted in some sort, evil custom, omission of holy exercises, ill company,
idleness, solitariness, melancholy, or depraved nature, and the devil is
still ready to corrupt, trouble, and divert our souls, to suggest such
blasphemous thoughts into our fantasies, ungodly, profane, monstrous and
wicked conceits: If they come from Satan, they are more speedy, fearful and
violent, the parties cannot avoid them: they are more frequent, I say, and
monstrous when they come; for the devil he is a spirit, and hath means and
opportunities to mingle himself with our spirits, and sometimes more slyly,
sometimes more abruptly and openly, to suggest such devilish thoughts into
our hearts; he insults and domineers in melancholy distempered fantasies
and persons especially; melancholy is balneum, diaboli, as Serapio holds,
the devil's bath, and invites him to come to it. As a sick man frets, raves
in his fits, speaks and doth he knows not what, the devil violently compels
such crazed souls to think such damned thoughts against their wills, they
cannot but do it; sometimes more continuate, or by fits, he takes his
advantage, as the subject is less able to resist, he aggravates,
extenuates, affirms, denies, damns, confounds the spirits, troubles heart,
brain, humours, organs, senses, and wholly domineers in their imaginations.
If they proceed from themselves, such thoughts, they are remiss and
moderate, not so violent and monstrous, not so frequent. The devil commonly
suggests things opposite to nature, opposite to God and his word, impious,
absurd, such as a man would never of himself, or could not conceive, they
strike terror and horror into the parties' own hearts. For if he or they be
asked whether they do approve of such like thoughts or no, they answer (and
their own souls truly dictate as much) they abhor them as much as hell and
the devil himself, they would fain think otherwise if they could; he hath
thought otherwise, and with all his soul desires so to think again; he doth
resist, and hath some good motions intermixed now and then: so that such
blasphemous, impious, unclean thoughts, are not his own, but the devil's;
they proceed not from him, but from a crazed phantasy, distempered humours,
black fumes which offend his brain: [6792]they are thy crosses, the devil's
sins, and he shall answer for them, he doth enforce thee to do that which
thou dost abhor, and didst never give consent to: and although he hath
sometimes so slyly set upon thee, and so far prevailed, as to make thee in
some sort to assent to such wicked thoughts, to delight in, yet they have
not proceeded from a confirmed will in thee, but are of that nature which
thou dost afterwards reject and abhor. Therefore be not overmuch troubled
and dismayed with such kind of suggestions, at least if they please thee
not, because they are not thy personal sins, for which thou shalt incur the
wrath of God, or his displeasure: contemn, neglect them, let them go as
they come, strive not too violently, or trouble thyself too much, but as
our Saviour said to Satan in like case, say thou, avoid Satan, I detest
thee and them. Satanae est mala ingerere (saith Austin) nostrum non
consentire: as Satan labours to suggest, so must we strive not to give
consent, and it will be sufficient: the more anxious and solicitous thou
art, the more perplexed, the more thou shalt otherwise be troubled and
entangled. Besides, they must know this, all so molested and distempered,
that although these be most execrable and grievous sins, they are
pardonable yet, through God's mercy and goodness, they may be forgiven, if
they be penitent and sorry for them. Paul himself confesseth, Rom. xvii.
19. He did not the good he would do, but the evil which he would not do;
'tis not I, but sin that dwelleth in me. 'Tis not thou, but Satan's
suggestions, his craft and subtlety, his malice: comfort thyself then if
thou be penitent and grieved, or desirous to be so, these heinous sins
shall not be laid to thy charge; God's mercy is above all sins, which if
thou do not finally contemn, without doubt thou shalt be saved. [6793]No
man sins against the Holy Ghost, but he that wilfully and finally
renounceth Christ, and contemneth him and his word to the last, without
which there is no salvation, from which grievous sin, God of his infinite
mercy deliver us. Take hold of this to be thy comfort, and meditate withal
on God's word, labour to pray, to repent, to be renewed in mind, keep
thine heart with all diligence. Prov. iv. 13, resist the devil, and he
will fly from thee, pour out thy soul unto the Lord with sorrowful Hannah,
pray continually, as Paul enjoins, and as David did, Psalm i. meditate
on his law day and night.
Yea, but this meditation is that mars all, and mistaken makes many men far
worse, misconceiving all they read or hear, to their own overthrow; the
more they search and read Scriptures, or divine treatises, the more they
puzzle themselves, as a bird in a net, the more they are entangled and
precipitated into this preposterous gulf: Many are called, but few are
chosen, Matt. xx. 16. and xxii. 14. with such like places of Scripture
misinterpreted strike them with horror, they doubt presently whether they
be of this number or no: God's eternal decree of predestination, absolute
reprobation, and such fatal tables, they form to their own ruin, and
impinge upon this rock of despair. How shall they be assured of their
salvation, by what signs? If the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall
the ungodly and sinners appear? 1 Pet. iv. 18. Who knows, saith Solomon,
whether he be elect? This grinds their souls, how shall they discern they
are not reprobates? But I say again, how shall they discern they are? From
the devil can be no certainty, for he is a liar from the beginning; if he
suggests any such thing, as too frequently he doth, reject him as a
deceiver, an enemy of human kind, dispute not with him, give no credit to
him, obstinately refuse him, as St. Anthony did in the wilderness, whom the
devil set upon in several shapes, or as the collier did, so do thou by him.
For when the devil tempted him with the weakness of his faith, and told him
he could not be saved, as being ignorant in the principles of religion, and
urged him moreover to know what he believed, what he thought of such and
such points and mysteries: the collier told him, he believed as the church
did; but what (said the devil again) doth the church believe? as I do (said
the collier); and what's that thou believest? as the church doth, &c., when
the devil could get no other answer, he left him. If Satan summon thee to
answer, send him to Christ: he is thy liberty, thy protector against cruel
death, raging sin, that roaring lion, he is thy righteousness, thy Saviour,
and thy life. Though he say, thou art not of the number of the elect, a
reprobate, forsaken of God, hold thine own still, hic murus aheneus esto,
let this be as a bulwark, a brazen wall to defend thee, stay thyself in
that certainty of faith; let that be thy comfort, Christ will protect thee,
vindicate thee, thou art one of his flock, he will triumph over the law,
vanquish death, overcome the devil, and destroy hell. If he say thou art
none of the elect, no believer, reject him, defy him, thou hast thought
otherwise, and mayst so be resolved again; comfort thyself; this
persuasion cannot come from the devil, and much less can it be grounded
from thyself? men are liars, and why shouldst thou distrust? A denying
Peter, a persecuting Paul, an adulterous cruel David, have been received;
an apostate Solomon may be converted; no sin at all but impenitency, can
give testimony of final reprobation. Why shouldst thou then distrust,
misdoubt thyself, upon what ground, what suspicion? This opinion alone of
particularity? Against that, and for the certainty of election and
salvation on the other side, see God's good will toward men, hear how
generally his grace is proposed to him, and him, and them, each man in
particular, and to all. 1 Tim. ii. 4. God will that all men be saved, and
come to the knowledge of the truth. 'Tis a universal promise, God sent
not his son into the world to condemn the world, but that through him the
world might be saved. John iii. 17. He that acknowledged himself a man in
the world, must likewise acknowledge he is of that number that is to be
saved. Ezek. xxxiii. 11, I will not the death of a sinner, but that he
repent and live: But thou art a sinner; therefore he will not thy death.
This is the will of him that sent me, that every man that believeth in the
Son, should have everlasting life. John vi. 40. He would have no man
perish, but all come to repentance, 2 Pet. iii. 9. Besides, remission of
sins is to be preached, not to a few, but universally to all men, Go
therefore and tell all nations, baptising them, &c. Matt. xxviii. 19. Go
into all the world, and preach the Gospel to every creature, Mark xvi. 15.
Now there cannot be contradictory wills in God, he will have all saved, and
not all, how can this stand together? be secure then, believe, trust in
him, hope well and be saved. Yea, that's the main matter, how shall I
believe or discern my security from carnal presumption? my faith is weak
and faint, I want those signs and fruits of sanctification, [6794]sorrow for
sin, thirsting for grace, groanings of the spirit, love of Christians as
Christians, avoiding occasion of sin, endeavour of new obedience, charity,
love of God, perseverance. Though these signs be languishing in thee, and
not seated in thine heart, thou must not therefore be dejected or
terrified; the effects of the faith and spirit are not yet so fully felt in
thee; conclude not therefore thou art a reprobate, or doubt of thine
election, because the elect themselves are without them, before their
conversion. Thou mayst in the Lord's good time be converted; some are
called at the eleventh hour. Use, I say, the means of thy conversion,
expect the Lord's leisure, if not yet called, pray thou mayst be, or at
least wish and desire thou. mayst be.
Notwithstanding all this which might be said to this effect, to ease their
afflicted minds, what comfort our best divines can afford in this case,
Zanchius, Beza, &c. This furious curiosity, needless speculation, fruitless
meditation about election, reprobation, free will, grace, such places of
Scripture preposterously conceived, torment still, and crucify the souls of
too many, and set all the world together by the ears. To avoid which
inconveniences, and to settle their distressed minds, to mitigate those
divine aphorisms, (though in another extreme some) our late Arminians have
revived that plausible doctrine of universal grace, which many fathers, our
late Lutheran and modern papists do still maintain, that we have free will
of ourselves, and that grace is common to all that will believe. Some
again, though less orthodoxal, will have a far greater part saved than
shall be damned, (as [6795]Caelius Secundus stiffly maintains in his book,
De amplitudine regni coelestis, or some impostor under his name)
beatorum numerus multo major quam damnatorum. [6796]He calls that other
tenet of special [6797]election and reprobation, a prejudicate, envious and
malicious opinion, apt to draw all men to desperation. Many are called, few
chosen, &c. He opposeth some opposite parts of Scripture to it, Christ
came into the world to save sinners, &c. And four especial arguments he
produceth, one from God's power. If more be damned than saved, he
erroneously concludes, [6798]the devil hath the greater sovereignty! for
what is power but to protect? and majesty consists in multitude. If the
devil have the greater part, where is his mercy, where is his power? how is
he Deus Optimus Maximus, misericors? &c., where is his greatness, where
his goodness? He proceeds, [6799]We account him a murderer that is
accessory only, or doth not help when he can; which may not be supposed of
God without great offence, because he may do what he will, and is otherwise
accessory, and the author of sin. The nature of good is to be communicated,
God is good, and will not then be contracted in his goodness: for how is he
the father of mercy and comfort, if his good concern but a few? O envious
and unthankful men to think otherwise! [6800]Why should we pray to God that
are Gentiles, and thank him for his mercies and benefits, that hath damned
us all innocuous for Adam's offence, one man's offence, one small offence,
eating of an apple? why should we acknowledge him for our governor that
hath wholly neglected the salvation of our souls, contemned us, and sent no
prophets or instructors to teach us, as he hath done to the Hebrews? So
Julian the apostate objects. Why should these Christians (Caelius urgeth)
reject us and appropriate God unto themselves, Deum illum suum unicum,
&c. But to return to our forged Caelius. At last he comes to that, he will
have those saved that never heard of, or believed in Christ, ex puris
naturalibus, with the Pelagians, and proves it out of Origen and others.
They (saith [6801]Origen) that never heard God's word, are to be excused for
their ignorance; we may not think God will be so hard, angry, cruel or
unjust as to condemn any man indicta causa. They alone (he holds) are in
the state of damnation that refuse Christ's mercy and grace, when it is
offered. Many worthy Greeks and Romans, good moral honest men, that kept
the law of nature, did to others as they would be done to themselves, as
certainly saved, he concludes, as they were that lived uprightly before the
law of Moses. They were acceptable in. God's sight, as Job was, the Magi,
the queen of Sheba, Darius of Persia, Socrates, Aristides, Cato, Curius,
Tully, Seneca, and many other philosophers, upright livers, no matter of
what religion, as Cornelius, out of any nation, so that he live honestly,
call on God, trust in him, fear him, he shall be saved. This opinion was
formerly maintained by the Valentinian and Basiledian heretics, revi | |