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Phocion' used to a timorous Greek, who was condemned to die with him, "Is it not enough to thee that thou must die with Phocion?" I am sure, he that is most incurious of the issues of his life, is yet willing enough to reign with Jesus, when he looks upon the glories represented without the duty; but it is a very great stupidity and unreasonableness, not to live with Him in the imitation of so holy and so prompt a piety. It is glorious to do what He did, and a shame to decline His sufferings, when there was a God to hallow and sanctify the actions, and a man clothed with infirmity to undergo the sharpness of the passion; so that the glory of the person added excellency to the first, and the tenderness of the person excused not from suffering the latter.

10. Thirdly: Every action of the life of Jesus, as it is imitable by us, is of so excellent merit, that by making up the treasure of grace, it becomes full of assistances to us, and obtains of God grace to enable us to its imitation, by way of influence and impetration. For as in the acquisition of habits, the very exercise of the action does produce a facility to the action, and in some proportion becomes the cause of itself; so does every exercise of the life of Christ kindle its own fires, inspires breath into itself, and makes an univocal production of itself in a different subject. And Jesus becomes the fountain of spiritual life to us, as the prophet Elisha to the dead child; when he stretched his hands upon the child's hands, laid his mouth to his mouth, and formed his posture to the boy, and breathed into him, the spirit returned again into the child at the prayer of Elisha; so when our lives are formed into the imitation of the life of the holiest Jesus, the Spirit of God returns into us, not only by the efficacy of imitation, but by the merit and impetration of the actions of Jesus. It is reported in the Bohemian story, that St. Wenceslaus their king one winter night going to his devotions in a remote church, barefooted in the snow and sharpness of unequal and pointed ice, his servant Podavivus, who waited upon his master's piety, and endeavoured to imitate his affections, began to faint through the violence of the snow and cold, till the king commanded him to follow him, and set his feet in the same footsteps which his feet should mark for him: the servant did so, and either fancied a cure, or found one; for he followed his prince, helped forward with shame and zeal to his imitation, and by the forming footsteps for him in the snow. In the same manner does the blessed Jesus; for, since our way is troublesome, obscure, full of objection and danger, apt to be mistaken and to affright our industry, He commands us to mark His footsteps, to tread where His feet have stood, and not only invites us forward by the argument of His example, but He hath trodden down much of the difficulty, and made the way easier and fit for our feet. For He knows our infirmities, and Himself hath [Plutarch. Vit. Phocion. § 36. vol. iv. Histor. Bohem. [Dubrav., lib. v. p. 357.]

p. 38.]

felt their experience-in all things but in the neighbourhoods of sin; and therefore He hath proportioned a way and a path to our strengths and capacities, and like Jacob, hath marched softly and in evenness with the children and the cattle, to entertain us by the comforts of His company, and the influences of a perpetual guide.

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11. Fourthly: But we must know, that not every thing which Christ did, is imitable by us; neither did He, in the work of our redemption, in all things imitate His heavenly Father. For there are some things which are issues of an absolute power, some are expresses of supreme dominion, some are actions of a judge. And therefore Jesus prayed for His enemies, and wept over Jerusalem, when at the same instant His eternal Father laughed them to scorn; for He knew that their day was coming, and Himself had decreed their ruin. But it became the holy Jesus to imitate His Father's mercies; for Himself was the great instrument of the eternal compassion, and was the instance of mercy; and therefore, in the operation of His Father's design, every action of His was univocal, and He shewed the power of His divinity in nothing but in miracles of mercy, and illustrations of faith, by creating arguments of credibility. In the same proportion we follow Jesus, as Himself followed His Father for what He abated by the order to His intendment and design, we abate by the proportions of our nature; for some excellent acts of His were demonstrations of divinity, and an excellent grace poured forth upon Him without measure was their instrument; to which proportions if we should extend our infirmities, we should crack our sinews, and dissolve the silver cords, before we could entertain the instances and support the burden. Jesus fasted forty days and forty nights; but the manner of our fastings hath been in all ages limited to the term of an artificial day, and in the primitive observations and the Jewish rites men did eat their meal as soon as the stars shone in the firmament. We never read that Jesus laughed, and but once that He rejoiced in spirit; but the declensions of our natures cannot bear the weight of a perpetual grave deportment, without the intervals of refreshment and free alacrity. Our ever blessed Saviour suffered the devotion of Mary Magdalene to transport her to an expensive expression of her religion, and twice to anoint His feet with costly nard; and yet if persons whose conditions were of no greater lustre or resplendency of fortune than was conspicuous in His family and retinue, should suffer the same profusion upon the dressing and perfuming their bodies, possibly it might be truly said, "it might better be sold and distributed to the poor." This Jesus received, as He was the Christ and anointed of the Lord; and by this He suffered Himself to be designed to burial, and He received the oblation as eucharistical for the ejection of seven devils; for "therefore she loved much."

12. The instances are not many. For however Jesus had some extraordinary transvolations and acts of emigration beyond the lines

of His even and ordinary conversation, yet it was out seldom; for His being exemplary was of so great consideration, that He chose to have fewer instances of wonder that He might transmit the more of an imitable virtue. And therefore we may establish this for a rule and limit of our imitations; because Christ our lawgiver hath described all His Father's will in sanctions and signature of laws; whatsoever He commanded, and whatsoever He did, of precise morality, or in pursuance of the laws of nature, in that we are to trace His footsteps; and in these His laws and His practice differ but as a map and a guide, a law and a judge, a rule and a precedent. But in the special instances of action, we are to abate the circumstances, and to separate the obedience from the effect: whatsoever was moral in a ceremonial performance, that is highly imitable; and the obedience of sacrificing, and the subordination to laws actually in being, even now they are abrogated, teach us our duty, in a differing subject, upon the like reason. Jesus's going up to Jerusalem to the feasts, and His observation of the sabbaths, teach us our duty in celebration of festivals constituted by a competent and just authority: for that which gave excellency to the observation of Mosaical rites, was an evangelical duty; and the piety of obedience did not only consecrate the observations of Levi, but taught us our duty in the constitutions of Christianity.

13. Fifthly: As the holy Jesus did some things which we are not to imitate, so we also are to do some things which we cannot learn from His example. For there are some of our duties which presuppose a state of sin, and some suppose a violent temptation and promptness to it; and the duties of prevention, and the instruments of restitution, are proper to us, but conveyed only by precept and not by precedent. Such are all the parts and actions of repentance, the duties of mortification and self-denial. For whatsoever the holy Jesus did in the matter of austerity, looked directly upon the work of our redemption, and looked back only on us by a reflex act, as Christ did on Peter, when He looked him into repentance. Some states of life also there are, which Jesus never led; such are those of temporal governors, kings and judges, merchants, lawyers, and the state of marriage: in the course of which lives many cases do occur, which need a precedent and the vivacity of an excellent example, especially since all the rules which they have have not prevented the subtilty of the many inventions which men have found out, nor made provision for all contingencies. Such persons in all their special needs are to govern their actions by the rules of proportion, by analogy to the holiness of the person of Jesus, and the sanctity of His institution; considering what might become a person professing the discipline of so holy a master, and what He would have done in the like case; taking our heights by the excellency of His innocency and charity. Only remember this, that in such cases we must always judge on the strictest side of piety and charity, if it be a matter con

cerning the interest of a second person; and that in all things we do those actions which are farthest removed from scandal, and such as towards ourselves are severe, towards others full of gentleness and sweetness; for so would the righteous and merciful Jesus have done : these are the best analogies and proportions. And in such cases when the wells are dry, let us take water from a cistern, and propound to ourselves some exemplar saint the necessities of whose life have determined his piety to the like occurrences.

14. But now from these particulars we shall best account to what the duty of the imitation of Jesus does amount: for it signifies that we "should walk as He walked," tread in His steps, with our hand upon the guide, and our eye upon His rule; that we should do glory to Him as He did to His Father; and that whatsoever we do, we should be careful that it do Him honour, and no reproach to His institution; and then account these to be the integral parts of our duty, which are imitation of His actions, or His spirit, of His rule, or of His life; there being no better imitation of Him than in such actions as do Him pleasure, however He hath expressed or intimated the precedent.

15. He that gives alms to the poor, takes Jesus by the hand; he that patiently endures injuries and affronts, helps Him to bear His cross; he that comforts his brother in affliction, gives an amiable kiss of peace to Jesus; he that bathes his own and his neighbour's sins in tears of penance and compassion, washes his master's feet: we lead Jesus into the recesses of our heart by holy meditations; and we enter into His heart, when we express Him in our actions: for so the apostle says, "he that is in Christ, walks as He also walked"." But thus the actions of our life relate to Him by way of worship and religion; but the use is admirable and effectual, when our actions refer to Him as to our copy, and we transcribe the original to the life. He that considers with what affections and lancinations of spirit, with what effusions of love, Jesus prayed, what fervours and assiduity, what innocency of wish, what modesty of posture, what subordination to His Father, and conformity to the divine pleasure, were in all His devotions, is taught and excited to holy and religious prayer; the rare sweetness of His deportment in all temptations and violences of His passion, His charity to His enemies, His sharp reprehensions to the scribes and pharisees, His ingenuity toward all men, are living and effectual sermons to teach us patience, and humility, and zeal, and candid simplicity, and justice in all our actions. I add no more instances, because all the following discourses will be prosecutions of this intendment: and the life of Jesus is not described to be like a picture in a chamber of pleasure, only for beauty, and entertainment of the eye; but like the Egyptian hieroglyphics, whose every feature is a precept, and the images converse with men by sense, and signification of excellent discourses.

n 1 John ii. 6.

16. It was not without great reason advised, that every man should propound the example of a wise and virtuous personage, as Cato, or Socrates, or Brutus; and by a fiction of imagination to suppose him present as a witness, and really to take his life as the direction of all our actions. The best and most excellent of the old lawgivers and philosophers among the Greeks had an allay of viciousness, and could not be exemplary all over: some were noted for flatterers, as Plato and Aristippus; some for incontinency, as Aristotle, Epicurus, Zeno, Theognis, Plato and Aristippus again; and Socrates, whom their oracle affirmed to be the wisest and most perfect man, yet was by Porphyry noted for extreme intemperance of anger, both in words and actions: and those Romans who were offered to them for examples, although they were great in reputation, yet they had also great vices; Brutus dipped his hand in the blood of Caesar, his prince, and his father by love, endearments, and adoption; and Cato was but a wise man all day, at night he was used to drink too liberally; and both he and Socrates did give their wives unto their friends; the philosopher and the censor were procurers of their wives' unchastity: and yet these were the best among the gentiles P. But how happy and richly furnished are Christians with precedents of saints, whose faith and revelations have been productive of more spiritual graces and greater degrees of moral perfections! And this. I call the privilege of a very great assistance, that I might advance the reputation and account of the life of the glorious Jesu, which is not abated by the imperfections of human nature, as they were, but receives great heightenings and perfection from the divinity of His person, of which they were never capable.

17. Let us therefore press after Jesus, as Elisha did after his master, with an inseparable prosecution, even whithersoever He goes; that, according to the reasonableness and proportion expressed in St. Paul's advice, "as we have borne the image of the earthly, we we may also bear the image of the heavenlya;" for "in vain are we called Christians, if we live not according to the example and discipline of Christ, the father of the institution'." When St. Laurence was in the midst of the torments of the gridiron, he made this to be the matter of his joy and eucharist, that he was admitted to the gates

Seneca, Ep. 11. [tom. ii. p. 37.] Athenagoras, lib. iii. et xiii. [Legat. pro Christ. § 17, et passim.] et Theognis de se. [p. 55 ad fin.] Idem testantur Laertius [In vitis philosoph. passim.] et Lactantius. [Div. inst., lib. iii. cap. 14. et passim.] Hoc notat S. Cyrillus, lib. vi. contra Julian. [tom. vi. par. 2. p. 185 sqq.]

Narratur et prisci Catonis

Sæpe mero caluisse virtus.

Horat. [lib. iii. Od. 21. lin. 11.] Majorum et sapientissimorum disci

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