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The
conclusion. Of the excellency and greatness of a devout
spirit.
I HAVE
now finished what I intended in this treatise. I have
explained the nature of devotion, both as it signifies a
life devoted to God, and as it signifies a regular method
of daily prayer. I have now only to add a word or two, in
recommendation of a life governed by this spirit of
devotion.
For
though it is as reasonable to suppose it the desire of all
Christians to arrive at Christian perfection, as to
suppose that all sick men desire to be restored to perfect
health; yet experience shows us, that nothing wants more
to be pressed, repeated, and forced upon our minds, than
the plainest rules of Christianity.
Voluntary
poverty, virginity, and devout retirement, have been here
recommended as things not necessary, yet highly beneficial
to those that would make the way to perfection the most
easy and certain. But Christian perfection itself is tied
to no particular form of life; but is to be attained,
though not with the same ease, in every state of life.
This has
been fully asserted in another place, where it has been
shown, that Christian perfection calls no one
(necessarily) to a cloister, but to the full performance
of those duties, which are necessary for all Christians,
and common to all states of life. [Christ. Perfect.
p. 2]
So that
the whole of the matter is plainly this: Virginity,
voluntary poverty, and such other restraints of lawful
things, are not necessary to Christian perfection; but are
much to be commended in those who choose them as helps and
means of a more safe and speedy arrival at it.
It is
only in this manner, and in this sense, that I would
recommend any particularity of life; not as if perfection
consisted in it, but because of its great tendency to
produce and support the true spirit of Christian
perfection.
But the
thing which is here pressed upon all, is a life of a great
and strict devotion: which, I think, has been sufficiently
shown to be equally the duty and happiness of all orders
of men. Neither is there anything in any particular state
of life, that can be justly pleaded as a reason for any
abatements of a devout spirit.
But
because in this polite age of ours, we have so lived away
the spirit of devotion, that many seem afraid even to be
suspected of it, imagining great devotion to be great
bigotry: that it is founded in ignorance and poorness of
spirit; and that little, weak, and dejected minds, are
generally the greatest proficients in it:
It shall
here be fully shown, that great devotion is the noblest
temper of the greatest and noblest souls; and that they
who think it receives any advantage from ignorance and
poorness of spirit, are themselves not a little, but
entirely ignorant of the nature of devotion, the nature of
God, and the nature of themselves.
People of
fine parts and learning, or of great knowledge in worldly
matters, may perhaps think it hard to have their want of
devotion charged upon their ignorance. But if they will be
content to be tried by reason and Scripture, it may soon
be made appear, that a want of devotion, wherever it is,
either amongst the learned or unlearned, is founded in
gross ignorance, and the greatest blindness and
insensibility that can happen to a rational creature; and
that devotion is so far from being the effect of a little
and dejected mind, that it must and will be always highest
in the most perfect natures.
And
first, who reckons it a sign of a poor, little mind, for a
man to be full of reverence and duty to his parents, to
have the truest love and honour for his friend, or to
excel in the highest instances of gratitude to his
benefactor?
Are not
these tempers in the highest degree, in the most exalted
and perfect minds?
And yet
what is high devotion, but the highest exercise of these
tempers, of duty, reverence, love, honour, and gratitude
to the amiable, glorious Parent, Friend, and Benefactor of
all mankind?
Is it a
true greatness of mind, to reverence the authority of your
parents, to fear the displeasure of your friend, to dread
the reproaches of your benefactor? And must not this fear,
and dread, and reverence, be much more just, and
reasonable, and honourable, when they are in the highest
degree towards God?
Now as
the higher these tempers are, the more are they esteemed
amongst men, and are allowed to be so much the greater
proofs of a true greatness of mind: so the higher and
greater these same tempers are towards God, so much the
more do they prove the nobility, excellence, and greatness
of the mind.
So that
so long as duty to parents, love to friends, and gratitude
to benefactors, are thought great and honourable tempers;
devotion, which is nothing else but duty, love, and
gratitude to God, must have the highest place amongst our
highest virtues.
If a
prince, out of his mere goodness, should send you a pardon
by one of his slaves, would you think it a part of your
duty to receive the slave with marks of love, esteem, and
gratitude for his great kindness, in bringing you so great
a gift: and at the same time think it a meanness and
poorness of spirit, to show love, esteem, and gratitude to
the prince, who, of his own goodness, freely sent you the
pardon?
And yet
this would be as reasonable as to suppose that love,
esteem, honour, and gratitude, are noble tempers, and
instances of a great soul, when they are paid to our
fellow-creatures; but the effects of a poor, ignorant,
dejected mind, when they are paid to God.
Farther;
that part of devotion which expresses itself in sorrowful
confessions, and penitential tears of a broken and a
contrite heart, is very far from being any sign of a
little and ignorant mind.
For who
does not acknowledge it an instance of an ingenuous,
generous, and brave mind, to acknowledge a fault, and ask
pardon for any offence? And are not the finest and most
improved minds, the most remarkable for this excellent
temper?
Is it not
also allowed, that the ingenuity and excellence of a man's
spirit is much shown, when his sorrow and indignation at
himself rises in proportion to the folly of his crime, and
the goodness and greatness of the person he has offended?
Now if
things are thus, then the greater any man's mind is, the
more he knows of God and himself, the more will he be
disposed to prostrate himself before God, in all the
humblest acts and expressions of repentance.
And the
greater the ingenuity, the generosity, judgment, and
penetration of his mind is, the more will he exercise and
indulge a passionate, tender sense of God's just
displeasure; and the more he knows of the greatness, the
goodness, and perfection of the Divine nature, the fuller
of shame and confusion will he be at his own sins and
ingratitude.
And on
the other hand, the more dull and ignorant any soul is,
the more base and ungenerous it naturally is, the more
senseless it is of the goodness and purity of God; so much
the more averse will it be to all acts of humble
confession and repentance.
Devotion,
therefore, is so far from being best suited to little
ignorant minds, that a true elevation of soul, a lively
sense of honour, and great knowledge of God and ourselves,
are the greatest natural helps that our devotion hath.
And on
the other hand, it shall here be made appear by variety of
arguments, that indevotion is founded on the most
excessive ignorance.
And
first, our blessed Lord, and His Apostles, were eminent
instances of great and frequent devotion. Now if we will
grant (as all Christians must grant) that their great
devotion was founded in a true knowledge of the nature of
devotion, the nature of God, and the nature of man; then
it is plain, that all those that are insensible of the
duty of devotion, are in this excessive state of
ignorance, they neither know God, nor themselves, nor
devotion.
For if a
right knowledge in these three respects produces great
devotion, as in the case of our Saviour and His Apostles,
then a neglect of devotion must be chargeable upon
ignorance.
Again;
how comes it that most people have recourse to devotion,
when they are in sickness, distress, or fear of death? Is
it not because this state shows them more of the want of
God, and their own weakness, than they perceive at other
times? Is it not because their infirmities, their
approaching end, convince them of something, which they
did not half perceive before?
Now if
devotion at these seasons is the effect of a better
knowledge of God and ourselves, then the neglect of
devotion, at other times, is always owing to great
ignorance of God and ourselves.
Farther;
as indevotion is ignorance, so it is the most shameful
ignorance, and such as is to be charged with the greatest
folly.
This will
fully appear to any one that considers by what rules we
are to judge of the excellency of any knowledge, or the
shamefulness of any ignorance.
Now
knowledge itself would be no excellence, nor ignorance any
reproach to us, but that we are rational creatures.
But if
this be true, then it follows plainly, that that knowledge
which is most suitable to our rational nature, and which
most concerns us, as such, to know, is our highest, finest
knowledge; and that ignorance which relates to things that
are most essential to us as rational creatures, and which
we are most concerned to know, is, of all others, the most
gross and shameful ignorance.
If
therefore there be any things that concern us more than
others, if there be any truths that are more to us than
all others, he that has the fullest knowledge of these
things, that sees these truths in the clearest, strongest
light, has, of all others, as a rational creature, the
clearest understanding, and the strongest parts.
If
therefore our relation to God be our greatest relation, if
our advancement in His favour be our highest advancement,
he that has the highest notions of the excellence of this
relation, he that most strongly perceives the highest
worth, and great value of holiness and virtue, that judges
everything little, when compared with it, proves himself
to be master of the best and most excellent knowledge.
If a
judge has fine skill in painting, architecture, and music,
but at the same time has gross and confused notions of
equity, and a poor, dull apprehension of the value of
justice, who would scruple to reckon him a poor ignorant
judge?
If a
bishop should be a man of great address and skill in the
arts of preferment, and understanding how to raise and
enrich his family in the world, but should have no taste
nor sense of the maxims and principles of the saints and
fathers of the Church; if he did not conceive the holy
nature and great obligations of his calling, and judge it
better to be crucified to the world, than to live idly in
pomp and splendour; who would scruple to charge such a
bishop with want of understanding?
If we do
not judge and pronounce after this manner, our reason and
judgment are but empty sounds.
But now,
if a judge is to be reckoned ignorant, if he does not feel
and perceive the value and worth of justice; if a bishop
is to be looked upon as void of understanding, if he is
more experienced in other things than in the exalted
virtues of his apostolical calling; then all common
Christians are to be looked upon as more or less knowing,
accordingly as they know more or less of those great
things which are the common and greatest concern of all
Christians.
If a
gentleman should fancy that the moon is no bigger than it
appears to the eye, that it shines with its own light,
that all the stars are only so many spots of light; if,
after reading books of astronomy, he should still continue
in the same opinion, most people would think he had but a
poor apprehension.
But if
the same person should think it better to provide for a
short life here, than to prepare for a glorious eternity
hereafter; that it was better to be rich, than to be
eminent in piety, his ignorance and dulness would be too
great to be compared to anything else.
There is
no knowledge that deserves so much as the name of it, but
that which we call judgment.
And that
is the most clear and improved understanding, which judges
best of the value and worth of things. All the rest is but
the capacity of an animal, it is but mere seeing and
hearing.
And there
is no excellence of any knowledge in us, till we exercise
our judgment, and judge well of the value and worth of
things.
If a man
had eyes that could see beyond the stars, or pierce into
the heart of the earth, but could not see the things that
were before him, or discern anything that was serviceable
to him, we should reckon that he had but a very bad sight.
If
another had ears that received sounds from the world in
the moon, but could hear nothing that was said or done
upon earth, we should look upon him to be as bad as deaf.
In like
manner, if a man has a memory that can retain a great many
things; if he has a wit that is sharp and acute in arts
and sciences, or an imagination that can wander agreeably
in fictions, but has a dull, poor apprehension of his duty
and relation to God, of the value of piety, or the worth
of moral virtue, he may very justly be reckoned to have a
bad understanding. He is but like the man, that can only
see and hear such things as are of no benefit to him.
As
certain therefore as piety, virtue, and eternal happiness
are of the most concern to man; as certain as the
immortality of our nature and relation to God, are the
most glorious circumstances of our nature; so certain is
it, that he who dwells most in contemplation of them,
whose heart is most affected with them, who sees farthest
into them, who best comprehends the value and excellency
of them, who judges all worldly attainments to be mere
bubbles and shadows in comparison of them, proves himself
to have, of all others, the finest understanding, and the
strongest judgment.
And if we
do not reason after this manner, or allow this method of
reasoning, we have no arguments to prove that there is any
such thing as a wise man, or a fool.
For a man
is proved to be a natural, not because he wants any of his
senses, or is incapable of everything, but because he has
no judgment, and is entirely ignorant of the worth and
value of things. He will perhaps choose a fine coat rather
than a large estate.
And as
the essence of stupidity consists in the entire want of
judgment, in an ignorance of the value of things, so, on
the other hand, the essence of wisdom and knowledge must
consist in the excellency of our judgment, or in the
knowledge of the worth and value of things.
This
therefore is an undeniable proof, that he who knows most
of the value of the best things, who judges most rightly
of the things which are of most concern to him, who had
rather have his soul in a state of Christian perfection,
than the greatest share of worldly happiness, has the
highest wisdom, and is at the farthest distance from men
that are naturals, that any knowledge can place him.
On the
other hand, he that can talk the learned languages, and
repeat a great deal of history, but prefers the indulgence
of his body to the purity and perfection of his soul, who
is more concerned to get a name or an estate here, than to
live in eternal glory hereafter, is in the nearest state
to that natural, who chooses a painted coat, rather than a
large estate.
He is not
called a natural by men, but he must appear to God and
heavenly beings, as in a more excessive state of
stupidity, and will sooner or later certainly appear so to
himself.
But now
if this be undeniably plain, that we cannot prove a man to
be a fool, but by showing that he has no knowledge of
things that are good and evil to himself; then it is
undeniably plain, that we cannot prove a man to be wise,
but by showing that he has the fullest knowledge of
things, that are his greatest good, and his greatest evil.
If,
therefore, God be our greatest good; if there can be no
good but in His favour, nor any evil but in departing from
Him, then it is plain, that he who judges it the best
thing he can do to please God to the utmost of his power,
who worships and adores Him with all his heart and soul,
who would rather have a pious mind than all the dignities
and honours in the world, shows himself to be in the
highest state of human wisdom.
To
proceed: We know how our blessed Lord acted in a human
body; it was His meat and drink, to do the will of His
Father which is in Heaven.
And if
any number of heavenly spirits were to leave their
habitations in the light of God, and be for a while united
to human bodies, they would certainly tend towards God in
all their actions, and be as heavenly as they could, in a
state of flesh and blood.
They
would certainly act in this manner, because they would
know that God was the only good of all spirits; and that
whether they were in the body, or out of the body, in
Heaven, or on earth, they must have every degree of their
greatness and happiness from God alone.
All human
spirits, therefore, the more exalted they are, the more
they know their Divine original, the nearer they come to
heavenly spirits; by so much the more will they live to
God in all their actions, and make their whole life a
state of devotion.
Devotion
therefore is the greatest sign of a great and noble
genius; it supposes a soul in its highest state of
knowledge; and none but little and blinded minds, that are
sunk into ignorance and vanity, are destitute of it.
If a
human spirit should imagine some mighty prince to be
greater than God, we should take him for a poor, ignorant
creature; all people would acknowledge such an imagination
to be the height of stupidity.
But if
this same human spirit should think it better to be
devoted to some mighty prince, than to be devoted to God,
would not this still be a greater proof of a poor,
ignorant, and blinded nature?
Yet this
is what all people do, who think anything better, greater,
or wiser, than a devout life.
So that
which way soever we consider this matter, it plainly
appears, that devotion is an instance of great judgment,
of an elevated nature; and the want of devotion is a
certain proof of the want of understanding.
The
greatest spirits of the heathen world, such as Pythagoras,
Socrates, Plato, Epictetus, Marcus Antonius, etc., owed
all their greatness to the spirit of devotion.
They were
full of God; their wisdom and deep contemplations tended
only to deliver men from the vanity of the world, the
slavery of bodily passions, that they might act as spirits
that came from God, and were soon to return to Him.
Again: To
see the dignity and greatness of a devout spirit, we need
only compare it with other tempers, that are chosen in the
room of it.
St. John
tells us, that all in the world (that is, all the tempers
of a worldly life) is the lust of the flesh, the lust of
the eyes, and the pride of life.
Let us
therefore consider, what wisdom or excellency of mind
there is required to qualify a man for these delights.
Let us
suppose a man given up to the pleasures of the body;
surely this can be no sign of a fine mind, or an excellent
spirit: for if he has but the temper of an animal, he is
great enough for these enjoyments.
Let us
suppose him to be devoted to honours and splendours, to be
fond of glitter and equipage: now if this temper required
any great parts, or fine understanding, to make a man
capable of it, it would prove the world to abound with
great wits.
Let us
suppose him to be in love with riches, and to be so eager
in the pursuit of them, as never to think he has enough:
now this passion is so far from supposing any excellent
sense, or great understanding, that blindness and folly
are the best supports that it hath.
Let us
lastly suppose him in another light, not singly devoted to
any of these passions, but, as it mostly happens, governed
by all of them in their turns; does this show a more
exalted nature, than to spend his days in the service of
any one of them?
For to
have a taste for these things, and to be devoted to them,
is so far from arguing any tolerable parts or
understandings, that they are suited to the dullest,
weakest minds, and require only a great deal of pride and
folly to be greatly admired.
But now
let libertines bring any such charge as this, if they can,
against devotion. They may as well endeavour to charge
light with everything that belongs to darkness.
Let them
but grant that there is a God and providence, and then
they have granted enough to justify the wisdom, and
support the honour of devotion.
For if
there is an infinitely wise and good Creator, in whom we
live, move, and have our being, whose providence governs
all things in all places, surely it must be the highest
act of our understanding to conceive rightly of Him; it
must be the noblest instance of judgment, the most exalted
temper of our nature, to worship and adore this universal
providence, to conform to its laws, to study its wisdom,
and to live and act everywhere, as in the presence of this
infinitely good and wise Creator.
Now he
that lives thus, lives in the spirit of devotion.
And what
can show such great parts, and so fine an understanding,
as to live in this temper?
For if
God is wisdom, surely he must be the wisest man in the
world, who most conforms to the wisdom of God, who best
obeys His providence, who enters farthest into His
designs, and does all he can, that God's will may be done
on earth, as it is done in Heaven.
A devout
man makes a true use of his reason: he sees through the
vanity of the world, discovers the corruption of his
nature, and the blindness of his passion. He lives by a
law which is not visible to vulgar eyes; he enters into
the world of spirits; he compares the greatest things,
sets eternity against time; and chooses rather to be
forever great in the presence of God, when he dies, than
to have the greatest share of worldly pleasure whilst he
lives.
He that
is devout, is full of these great thoughts; he lives upon
these noble reflections, and conducts himself by rules and
principles, which can only be apprehended, admired, and
loved by reason.
There is
nothing therefore that shows so great a genius, nothing
that so raises us above vulgar spirits, nothing that so
plainly declares an heroic greatness of mind, as great
devotion.
When you
suppose a man to be a saint, or all devotion, you have
raised him as much above all other conditions of life, as
a philosopher is above an animal.
Lastly;
courage and bravery are words of a great sound, and seem
to signify an heroic spirit; but yet humility, which seems
to be the lowest, meanest part of devotion, is a more
certain argument of a noble and courageous mind.
For
humility contends with greater enemies, is more constantly
engaged, more violently assaulted, bears more, suffers
more, and requires greater courage to support itself, than
any instances of worldly bravery.
A man
that dares be poor and contemptible in the eyes of the
world, to approve himself to God; that resists and rejects
all human glory, that opposes the clamour of his passions,
that meekly puts up with all injuries and wrongs, and
dares stay for his reward till the invisible hand of God
gives to every one their proper places, endures a much
greater trial, and exerts a nobler fortitude, than he that
is bold and daring in the fire of battle.
For the
boldness of a soldier, if he is a stranger to the spirit
of devotion, is rather weakness than fortitude; it is at
best but mad passion, and heated spirits, and has no more
true valour in it than the fury of a tiger.
For as we
cannot lift up a hand, or stir a foot, but by a power that
is lent us from God; so bold actions that are not directed
by the laws of God, as so many executions of His will, are
no more true bravery, than sedate malice is Christian
patience.
Reason is
our universal law, that obliges us in all places, and at
all times; and no actions have any honour, but so far as
they are instances of our obedience to reason.
And it is
as base and cowardly, to be bold and daring against the
principle of reason and justice, as to be bold and daring
in lying and perjury.
Would we
therefore exercise a true fortitude, we must do all in the
spirit of devotion, be valiant against the corruptions of
the world, and the lusts of the flesh, and the temptations
of the devil; for to be daring and courageous against
these enemies, is the noblest bravery that an human mind
is capable of.
I
have made this digression, for the sake of those who think
a great devotion to be bigotry and poorness of spirit;
that by these considerations they may see, how poor and
mean all other tempers are, if compared to it; that they
may see, that all worldly attainments, whether of
greatness, wisdom, or bravery, are but empty sounds; and
there is nothing wise, or great, or noble, in an human
spirit, but rightly to know and heartily worship and adore
the great God, that is the support and life of all
spirits, whether in Heaven or on earth.
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