Upon these indications of digested
matter, they proceed to purge.
XX. MEDITATION.
Though counsel seem rather to consist
of spiritual parts than action, yet action is the
spirit and the soul of counsel. Counsels are not
always determined in resolutions, we cannot always
say, this was concluded; actions are always determined
in effects, we can say, this was done. Then have
laws their reverence and their majesty, when we see
the judge upon the bench executing them. Then
have counsels of war their impressions and their operations,
when we see the seal of an army set to them.
It was an ancient way of celebrating the memory of
such as deserved well of the state, to afford them
that kind of statuary representation, which was then
called Hermes, which was the head and shoulders of
a man standing upon a cube, but those shoulders without
arms and hands. Altogether it figured a constant
supporter of the state, by his counsel; but in this
hieroglyphic, which they made without hands, they
pass their consideration no farther but that the counsellor
should be without hands, so far as not to reach out
his hand to foreign temptations of bribes, in matters
of counsel, and that it was not necessary that the
head should employ his own hand; that the same men
should serve in the execution which assisted in the
counsel; but that there should not belong hands to
every head, action to every counsel, was never intended
so much as in figure and representation. For as
matrimony is scarce to be called matrimony where there
is a resolution against the fruits of matrimony, against
the having of children, so counsels are not counsels,
but illusions, where there is from the beginning no
purpose to execute the determinations of those counsels.
The arts and sciences are most properly referred to
the head; that is their proper element and sphere;
but yet the art of proving, logic, and the art of
persuading, rhetoric, are deduced to the hand, and
that expressed by a hand contracted into a fist, and
this by a hand enlarged and expanded; and evermore
the power of man, and the power of God, himself is
expressed so. All things are in his hand; neither
is God so often presented to us, by names that carry
our consideration upon counsel, as upon execution
of counsel; he oftener is called the Lord of Hosts
than by all other names, that may be referred to the
other signification. Hereby therefore we take
into our meditation the slippery condition of man,
whose happiness in any kind, the defect of any one
thing conducing to that happiness, may ruin; but it
must have all the pieces to make it up. Without
counsel, I had not got thus far; without action and
practice, I should go no farther towards health.
But what is the present necessary action? Purging;
a withdrawing, a violating of nature, a farther weakening.
O dear price, and O strange way of addition, to do
it by subtraction; of restoring nature, to violate
nature; of providing strength, by increasing weakness.
Was I not sick before? And is it a question of
comfort to be asked now, did your physic make you
sick? Was that it that my physic promised, to
make me sick? This is another step upon which
we may stand, and see farther into the misery of man,
the time, the season of his misery; it must be done
now. O over-cunning, over-watchful, over-diligent,
and over-sociable misery of man, that seldom comes
alone, but then when it may accompany other miseries,
and so put one another into the higher exaltation,
and better heart. I am ground even to an attenuation
and must proceed to evacuation, all ways to exinanition
and annihilation.
XX. EXPOSTULATION.
My God, my God, the God of order,
but yet not of ambition, who assignest place to every
one, but not contention for place, when shall it be
thy pleasure to put an end to all these quarrels for
spiritual precedences? When shall men leave their
uncharitable disputations, which is to take place,
faith or repentance, and which, when we consider faith
and works? The head and the hand too are required
to a perfect natural man; counsel and action too,
to a perfect civil man; faith and works too, to him
that is perfectly spiritual. But because it is
easily said, I believe, and because it doth not easily
lie in proof, nor is easily demonstrable by any evidence
taken from my heart (for who sees that, who searches
those rolls?) whether I do believe or no, is it not
therefore, O my God, that thou dost so frequently,
so earnestly, refer us to the hand, to the observation
of actions? There is a little suspicion, a little
imputation laid upon over-tedious and dilatory counsels.
Many good occasions slip away in long consultations;
and it may be a degree of sloth, to be too long in
mending nets, though that must be done. He that
observeth the wind shall not sow, and he that regardeth
the clouds shall not reap; that is, he that
is too dilatory, too superstitious in these observations,
and studies but the excuse of his own idleness in
them; but that which the same wise and royal servant
of thine says in another place, all accept, and ask
no comment upon it, He becometh poor that dealeth
with a slack hand, but the hand of the diligent maketh
rich; all evil imputed to the absence, all
good attributed to the presence of the hand.
I know, my God (and I bless thy name for knowing it,
for all good knowledge is from thee), that thou considerest
the heart; but thou takest not off thine eye till thou
come to the hand. Nay, my God, doth not thy Spirit
intimate that thou beginnest where we begin (at least,
that thou allowest us to begin there), when thou orderest
thine own answer to thine own question, Who shall
ascend into the hill of the Lord? thus, He that
hath clean hands, and a pure heart? Dost
thou not (at least) send us first to the hand?
And is not the work of their hands that declaration
of their holy zeal, in the present execution of manifest
idolators, called a consecration of themselves,
by thy Holy Spirit? Their hands are called all
themselves; for even counsel itself goes under that
name in thy word, who knowest best how to give right
names: because the counsel of the priests assisted
David, Saul says the hand of the priest is with
David. And that which is often said by Moses,
is very often repeated by thy other prophets, These
and these things the Lord spake, and the
Lord said, and the Lord commanded, not by
the counsels, not by the voice, but by the hand
of Moses, and by the hand of the prophets.
Evermore we are referred for our evidence of others,
and of ourselves, to the hand, to action, to works.
There is something before it, believing; and there
is something after it, suffering; but in the most
eminent, and obvious, and conspicuous place stands
doing. Why then, O my God, my blessed God, in
the ways of my spiritual strength, come I so slow
to action? I was whipped by thy rod, before I
came to consultation, to consider my state; and shall
I go no farther? As he that would describe a
circle in paper, if he have brought that circle within
one inch of finishing, yet if he remove his compass
he cannot make it up a perfect circle except he fall
to work again, to find out the same centre, so, though
setting that foot of my compass upon thee, I have
gone so far as to the consideration of myself, yet
if I depart from thee, my centre, all is imperfect.
This proceeding to action, therefore, is a returning
to thee, and a working upon myself by thy physic, by
thy purgative physic, a free and entire evacuation
of my soul by confession. The working of purgative
physic is violent and contrary to nature. O Lord,
I decline not this potion of confession, however it
may be contrary to a natural man. To take physic,
and not according to the right method, is dangerous.
O Lord, I decline not that method in this physic,
in things that burthen my conscience, to make my confession
to him, into whose hands thou hast put the power of
absolution. I know that “physic may be
made so pleasant as that it may easily be taken; but
not so pleasant as the virtue and nature of the medicine
be extinguished." I know I am not submitted to
such a confession as is a rack and torture of the
conscience; but I know I am not exempt from all.
If it were merely problematical, left merely indifferent
whether we should take this physic, use this confession,
or no, a great physician acknowledges this to have
been his practice, to minister to many things which
he was not sure would do good, but never any other
thing but such as he was sure would do no harm.
The use of this spiritual physic can certainly do
no harm; and the church hath always thought that it
might, and, doubtless, many humble souls have found,
that it hath done them good. I will therefore take
the cup of salvation, and call upon thy name.
I will find this cup of compunction as full as I have
formerly filled the cups of worldly confections, that
so I may escape the cup of malediction and irrecoverable
destruction that depends upon that. And since
thy blessed and glorious Son, being offered, in the
way to his execution, a cup of stupefaction,
to take away the sense of his pain (a charity afforded
to condemned persons ordinarily in those places and
times), refused that ease, and embraced the whole torment,
I take not this cup, but this vessel of mine own sins
into my contemplation, and I pour them out here according
to the motions of thy Holy Spirit, and any where according
to the ordinances of thy holy church.
XX. PRAYER.
O eternal and most gracious God, who
having married man and woman together, and made them
one flesh, wouldst have them also to become one soul,
so as that they might maintain a sympathy in their
affections, and have a conformity to one another in
the accidents of this world, good or bad; so having
married this soul and this body in me, I humbly beseech
thee that my soul may look and make her use of thy
merciful proceedings towards my bodily restitution,
and go the same way to a spiritual. I am come,
by thy goodness, to the use of thine ordinary means
for my body, to wash away those peccant humours that
endangered it. I have, O Lord, a river in my
body, but a sea in my soul, and a sea swollen into
the depth of a deluge, above the sea. Thou hast
raised up certain hills in me heretofore, by which
I might have stood safe from these inundations of
sin. Even our natural faculties are a hill, and
might preserve us from some sin. Education, study,
observation, example, are hills too, and might preserve
us from some. Thy church, and thy word, and thy
sacraments, and thine ordinances are hills above these;
thy spirit of remorse, and compunction, and repentance
for former sin, are hills too; and to the top of all
these hills thou hast brought me heretofore; but this
deluge, this inundation, is got above all my hills;
and I have sinned and sinned, and multiplied sin to
sin, after all these thy assistances against sin,
and where is there water enough to wash away this
deluge? There is a red sea, greater than this
ocean, and there is a little spring, through which
this ocean may pour itself into that red sea.
Let thy spirit of true contrition and sorrow pass all
my sins, through these eyes, into the wounds of thy
Son, and I shall be clean, and my soul so much better
purged than my body, as it is ordained for better
and a longer life.