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and whatsoever may minister to the flesh or any of its ungodly desires; that now Thy holy name is called upon me, I may do no dishonour to the name nor scandal to the institution, but may do Thee honour and worship and adorations of a pure religion, O most holy and ever blessed Jesu. Amen.

DISCOURSE II.

Of the virtue of obedience.

1. THERE are certain excellencies, either of habit or consideration, which spiritual persons use to call general ways; being a dispersed influence into all the parts of good life, either directing the single actions to the right end, or managing them with right instruments, and adding special excellencies and formalities to them, or morally inviting to the repetition of them: but they are like the general medicaments in physic, or the prime instruments in mathematical disciplines. Such as are the consideration of the divine presence, the example of Jesus, right intention; and such also is the virtue of obedience, which perfectly unites our actions to God and conforms us to the divine will; which is the original of goodness, and sanctifies and makes a man a holocaust to God; which contains in it eminently all other graces, but especially those graces whose essence consists in a conformity of a part or the whole, (such are faith, humility, patience, and charity;) which gives quietness and tranquillity to the spirit, and is an antepast of paradise, where their jubilee is the perpetual joys of obedience, and their doing is the enjoying the divine pleasure; which adds an excellency and lustre to pious actions, and hallows them which are indifferent, and lifts up some actions from their unhallowed nature to circumstances of good and of acceptation. If a man says his prayers or communicates, out of custom, or without intuition of the precept and divine commandment, the act is like a ship returning from her voyage without her venture and her burden, as unprofitable as without stowage. But if God commands us either to eat or to abstain, to sleep or to be waking, to work or to keep a sabbath, these actions, which are naturally neither good nor evil, are sanctified by the obedience, and ranked amongst actions of the greatest excellency. And this also was it which made Abraham's offer to kill his son, and the Israelites' spoiling the Egyptians, to become acts laudable and not unjust; they were acts of obedience, and therefore had the same formality and essence with actions of the most spiritual devotions. God's command is all our rule for practice; and our obedience, united to the obedience of Jesus, is all our title to acceptance.

2. But by obedience I do not here mean the exterior execution of the work; for so obedience is no grace, distinct from the acting any

or all the commandments: but besides the doing of the thing (for that also must be presupposed), it is a sacrifice of our proper will to God, a choosing the duty because God commands it. For beasts also carry burdens and do our commands by compulsion; and the fear of slaves, and the rigour of task-masters, made the number of bricks to be completed, when Israel groaned and cried to God for help but sons, that labour under the sweet paternal regiment of their fathers and the influence of love, they love the precept, and do the imposition with the same purposes and compliant affections with which the fathers made it. When Christ commanded us to renounce the world, there were some that did think it was a hard saying, and do so still; and the young rich man forsook Him upon it: but Ananias and Sapphira, upon whom some violences were done by custom, or the excellent sermons of the apostles, sold their possessions too; but it was so against their will that they retained part of

But St. Paul did not only forsake all his secular fortunes, but "counted all to be dross, that he might gain Christ;" he gave his will, made an offertory of that, as well as of his goods, choosing the act which was enjoined. This was the obedience the holy Jesus paid to His heavenly Father, so voluntary, that it was "meat to Him to do His Father's will."

3. And this was intended always by God, "My son, give Me thy heart;" and particularly by the holy Jesus: for in the saddest instance of all His precepts, even that of suffering persecution, we are commanded to "rejoice, and to be exceeding glad." And so did those holy martyrs in the primitive ages, who upon just grounds, when God's glory or the edification of the church had interest in it, offered themselves to tyrants, and dared the violence of the most cruel and bowelless hangmen. And this is the best oblation we can present to God; "to offer gold, is a present fit to be made by young beginners in religion, not by men in Christianity; yea, Crates the Theban threw his gold away, and so did Antisthenes: but to offer our will to God, to give ourselves, is the act of an apostle, the proper act of Christians." And therefore when the apostles made challenge of a reward for leaving all their possessions, Christ makes no reply to the instance, nor says, "you who have left all," but "you who have followed Me in the regeneration, shall sit upon twelve thrones, and judge the twelve tribes of Israel:" meaning that the quitting the goods was nothing, but the obedience to Christ, that they followed Jesus in the regeneration, going themselves in pursuit of Him, and giving themselves to Him, that was it which entitled them to a throne.

4. And this therefore God enjoins, that our offerings to Him may be entire and complete; that we pay Him a holocaust; that we do Idem in Matt. xix. 28. [tom. iv. par. i. col. 89.]

John iv. 34. S. Hieron. Epist. ad Lucin. Hispan. [Ep. lii. tom. iv. par. 2. col. 578.]

His work without murmuring; and that His burden may become easy, when it is borne up by the wings of love and alacrity of spirit: for in effect this obedience of the will is, in true speaking and strict theology, nothing else but that charity which gives excellency to alms, and energy to faith, and acceptance to all graces. But I shall reduce this to particular and more minute considerations.

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5. First We shall best know that our will is in the obedience, by our prompt undertaking, by our cheerful managing, by our swift execution; for all degrees of delay are degrees of immorigerousness and unwillingness. And since time is extrinsecal to the act, and alike to every part of it, nothing determines an action but the opportunity without, and the desires and willingness within. And therefore he who deliberates beyond his first opportunity and exterior determination and appointment of the act, brings fire and wood, but wants a lamb. for the sacrifice; and unless he offer up his Isaac, his beloved will, he hath no ministry prepared for God's acceptance. He that does not repent to-day, puts it to the question whether he will repent at all or He that defers restitution when all the circumstances are fitted, is not yet resolved upon the duty; and when he does it, if he does it against his will, he does but do honorary penance with a paper upon his hat and a taper in his hand; it may satisfy the law, but not satisfy his conscience; it neither pleases himself, and less pleases God. sacrifice without a heart was a sad and ominous presage in the superstition of the Roman augurs, and so it is in the service of God; for what the exhibition of the work is to man, that the presentation or the will is to God. It is but a cold charity to a naked beggar to say, "God help thee," and do nothing; give him clothes, and he feels your charity. But God, who is the searcher of the heart, His apprehension of actions relative to Him is of the inward motions and addresses of the will; and without this our exterior services are like the paying of a piece of money in which we have defaced the image; it is not current.

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6. Secondly: But besides the willingness to do the acts of express command, the readiness to do the intimations and tacit significations of God's pleasure is the best testimony in the world that our will is in the obedience. Thus did the holy Jesus undertake a nature of infirmity, and suffer a death of shame and sorrow, and became obedient from the circumcision even unto the death of the cross; not staying for a command, but because it was His Father's pleasure mankind should be redeemed. For before the susception of it, He was not a person subjicible to a command; it was enough that He understood the inclinations and designs of His Father's mercies. And therefore

Fidelis obediens, nescit moras, fugit crastinum, ignorat tarditatem, præcipit præcipientem, parat oculos visui, aures auditui, linguam voci, manus operi, itineri pedes: totum se colligit, ut impe

rantis colligat voluntatem.-S. Bernard. [Serm. de Virtut. Obedient. col. 1714.]

Et barbaris cunctatio servilis, statim exsequi regium.-Tac. Annal., lib. vi. 32. [tom. i. p. 525.]

God hath furnished us with instances of uncommanded piety to be a touchstone of our obedience. He that does but his endeavour about the express commands hath a bridle in his mouth, and is restrained by violence; but a willing spirit is like a greedy eye, devours all it sees, and hopes to make some proportionable returns and compensations of duty for his infirmity by taking in the intimations of God's pleasure. When God commands chastity, he that undertakes a holy celibate hath great obedience to the command of chastity. God bids us give alms of our increase; he obeys this with great facility that "sells all his goods and gives them to the poor." And provided our hastiness to snatch at too much does not make us let go our duty, like the indiscreet loads of too forward persons, too big, or too inconvenient and uncombined, there is not in the world a greater probation of our prompt obedience than when we look farther than the precise duty, swallowing that and more with our ready and hopeful purposes; nothing being so able to do miracles as love, and yet nothing being so certainly accepted as love, though it could do nothing in productions and exterior ministries.

7. Thirdly: But God requires that our obedience should have another excellency to make it a becoming present to the divine acceptance; our understanding must be sacrificed too, and become an ingredient of our obedience; we must also believe that whatsoever God commands is most fitting to be commanded, is most excellent in itself, and the best for us to do. The first gives our affections and desires to God, and this also gives our reason, and is a perfection of obedience not communicable to the duties we owe to man; for God only is lord of this faculty, and being the fountain of all wisdom, therefore commands our understanding because He alone can satisfy it. We are bound to obey human laws, but not bound to think the laws we live under are the most prudent constitutions in the world: but God's commandments are not only "a lantern to our feet, and a light unto our paths," but a rule to our reason, and satisfaction to our understandings; as being the instruments of our address to God, and conveyances of His grace, and manuductions to eternity. And therefore St.John Climacus' defines obedience to be "an unexamined and unquestioned motion, a voluntary death and sepulture of the will, a life without curiosity, a laying aside our own discretion in the midst of the riches of the most excellent understandings."

8. And certainly there is not in the world a greater strength against temptations than is deposited in an obedient understanding; because that only can regularly produce the same affections, it admits of fewer degrees and an unfrequent alteration: but the actions proceeding from the appetite, as it is determined by any other principle than a satisfied understanding, have their heightenings and their declensions, and their changes and mutations, according to a thousand accidents. Reason is more lasting than desire, and with fewer

T [Scal. Parad. Grad. iv. p. 41.]

means to be tempted; but affections and motions of appetite, as they are procured by any thing, so may they expire by as great variety of causes and therefore to serve God by way of understanding is surer, and in itself (unless it be by the accidental increase of degrees) greater, than to serve Him upon the motion and principle of passions and desires; though this be fuller of comfort and pleasure than the other. When Lot lived amongst the impure Sodomites where his righteous soul was in a continual agony, he had few exterior incentives to a pious life, nothing to enkindle the sensible flame of burning desires toward piety; but in the midst of all the discouragements of the world, nothing was left him but the way and precedency of a truly-informed reason and conscience. Just so is the way of those wise souls, who live in the midst of "a crooked and perverse generation:" where piety is out of countenance, where austerity is ridiculous, religion under persecution, no examples to lead us on; there the understanding is left to be the guide, and it does the work the surest; for this makes the duty of many to be certain, regular, and chosen, constant, integral, and perpetual: but this way is like the life of an unmarried or a retired person, less of grief in it, and less of joy. But the way of serving God with the affections, and with the pleasures and entertainments of desires, is the way of the more passionate and imperfect, not in a man's power to choose or to procure; but comes by a thousand chances, meeting with a soft nature, credulous or weak, easy or ignorant, softened with fears, or invited by forward desires.

9. Those that did live amidst the fervours of the primitive charity and were warmed by their fires, grew inflamed by contact and vicinity to such burning and shining lights; and they therefore grew to high degrees of piety, because then every man made judgment of his own actions by the proportions which he saw before him, and believed all descents from those greater examples to be so many degrees from the rule and he that lives in a college of devout persons will compare his own actions with the devotion and customs of that society, and not with the remissness of persons he hears of in story, but what he sees and lives with. But if we live in an age of indevotion, we think ourselves well assoiled if we be warmer than their ice; every thing which is above our example being eminent and conspicuous, though it be but like the light of a glow-worm, or the sparkling of a diamond, yet if it be in the midst of darkness it is a goodly beauty. This I call the way of serving God by desires and affections: and this is altered by example, by public manners, by external works, by the assignment of offices, by designation of conventions for prayer, by periods and revolutions of times of duty, by hours and solemnities; so that a man shall owe his piety to these chances, which although they are graces of God and instruments of devotion, yet they are not always in our power; and therefore they are but accidental ministries of a good life, and the least constant or durable.

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