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THE FIRST CENTURY
1 An empty book is like an infant's soul
2 Do not wonder that I promise to fill it with those Truths you love but know not
3 I will open my mouth in Parables
4 I will not by the noise of bloody wars and the dethroning of kings advance you to glory: but by the gentle ways of peace and love
5 The fellowship of the mystery that hath been hid in God since the creation is not only the contemplation of the work of His Love in the redemption
6 True Love as it intendeth the greatest gifts intendeth also the greatest benefits
7 To contemn the world and to enjoy the world are things contrary to each other
8 What is more easy and sweet than meditation? Yet in this hath God commended His Love
9 Is it not easy to conceive the World in your Mind? To think the Heavens fair? The Sun Glorious? The Earth fruitful? The Air Pleasant? The Sea Profitable? And the Giver bountiful? Yet these are the things which it is difficult to retain
10 To think well is to serve God in the interior court: To have a mind composed of Divine Thoughts
11 Love is deeper than at first it can be thought
12 Can you be Holy without accomplishing the end for which you are created? Can you be Divine unless you be Holy? Can you accomplish the end for which you were created
13 To be Holy is so zealously to desire
14 When things are ours in their proper places
15 Such endless depths live in the Divinity
16 That all the World is yours
17 To know GOD is Life Eternal
18 The WORLD is not this little Cottage of Heaven and Earth
19 You never know yourself till you know more than your body
20 The laws of GOD
21 By the very right of your senses you enjoy the World
22 It is of the nobility of man's soul that he is insatiable
23 The noble inclination whereby man thirsteth after riches and dominion
24 Is it not a sweet thing to have all covetousness and ambition satisfied
25 Your enjoyment of the World is never right
26 Theservices of things and their excellencies are spiritual: being objects not of the eye
27 You never enjoy the world aright
28 Your enjoyment of the world is never right
29 You never enjoy the world aright
30 Till your spirit filleth the whole world
31 Yet further
32 Can any ingratitude be more damned than that which is fed by benefits? Or folly greater than that which bereaveth us of infinite treasures? They despise them merely because they have them: And invent ways to make themselves miserable in the presence of riches
33 The riches of darkness are those which men have made
34 Would one think it possible for a man to delight in gauderies like a butterfly
35 The riches of the Light are the Works of God which are the portion and inheritance of His sons
36 The common error which makes it difficult to believe all the World to be wholly ours
37 The brightness and magnificence of this world
38 You never enjoy the World aright
39 Your enjoyment is never right
40 Socrates was wont to say--They are most happy and nearest the gods that needed nothing
41 As pictures are made curious by lights and shades
42 This is very strange that God should want
43 Infinite Wants satisfied produce infinite Joys
44 You must want like a God that you may be satisfied like God
45 This is a lesson long enough: which you may be all your life in learning
46 It was His wisdom made you need the Sun
47 To have blessings and to prize them is to be in Heaven
48 They that would not upon earth see their wants from all Eternity
49 The misery of them who have and prize not
50 They are deep instructions that are taken out of hell
51 Wants are the bands and cements between God and us
52 Love has a marvellous property of feeling in another
53 O the nobility of Divine Friendship! Are not all His treasures yours
54 He that is in all
55 The contemplation of Eternity maketh the Soul immortal
56 There are we entertained with the wonder of all ages
57 As eagles are drawn by the scent of a carcase
58 The Cross is the abyss of wonders
59 Of all the things in Heaven and Earth it is the most peculiar
60 The Cross of Christ is the Jacob's ladder by which we ascend into the highest heavens
61 Here you learn all patience
62 LORD JESUS what love shall I render unto Thee
63 Why, Lord Jesus
64 These wounds are in themselves orifices too small to let in my sight
65 Had I been alive in Adam's stead
66 But this is small
67 But what creature could I desire to be which I am not made? There are Angels and Cherubim
68 Being made alone
69 O Adorable Trinity! What hast Thou done for me? Thou hast made me the end of all things
70 But what laws O my Soul wouldst thou desire
71 But what life wouldst thou lead? And by what laws wouldst thou thyself be guided? For none are so miserable as the lawless and disobedient
72 There is in love two strange perfections
73 His nature requireth that thou love all those whom He loveth
74 Miraculous are the effects of Divine Wisdom
75 Being to lead this Life within
76 And now
77 Now O Lord I see the greatness of Thy love wherewith Thou diedst
78 Lord I lament and abhor myself that I have been the occasion of these Thy sufferings
79 My Lord
80 My excellent friend
81 My goodness extendeth not to Thee
82 But there are a sort of Saints meet to be your companions
83 They will praise our Saviour with you
84 Yet you must arm yourself with expectations of their infirmities
85 With all their eyes behold our Saviour
86 O Jesu, Thou King of Saints
87 O how do Thine affections extend like the sunbeams unto all stars in heaven and to all the kingdoms in the world
88 O Thou Sun of Righteousness
89 Is this He that was transfigured upon Mount Tabor? Pale
90 This Body is not the cloud
91 O Jesu, Lord of Love and Prince of Life!
92 It is an inestimable joy that I was raised out of nothing to see and enjoy this glorious world: It is a Sacred Gift whereby the children of men are made my treasures
93 As my body without my Soul is a Carcase
94 Thy will, O Christ, and Thy Spirit in essence are one
95 O Thou who ascendedst up on high
96 O Thou who hast redeemed me to be a Son of God
97 O Jesu, who having prepared all the joys
98 Wisely, O Jesu, didst Thou tell Thy disciples
99 Wisely doth St
100 Christ dwelling in our hearts by Faith is an Infinite Mystery
THE SECOND CENTURY
1 THE Services which the world doth you
2 If you desire directions how to enjoy it
3 Till you see that the world is yours
4 The misery of your fall ariseth naturally from the greatness of your sin
5 The counsel which our Saviour giveth in the Revelation to the Church of Ephesus
6 The consideration also of this truth
7 Place yourself therefore in the midst of the world
8 It raiseth corn to supply you with food
9 Did the Sun stand still that you might have perpetual day
10 Were there two suns
11 Had the Sun been made one infinite flame it had been worse than it is
12 Entering thus far into the nature of the sun
13 Could the seas serve you were you alone more than now they do? Why do you not render thanks for them? They serve you better than if you were in them: everything serving you best in its proper place Alone you were lord over all: bound to admire His eternal love who raised you out of nothing into this glorious world which He created for you
14 The Sun is but a little spark of His infinite love: the Sea is but one drop of His goodness
15 The world serves you
16 Those services are so great
17 Besides these immediate pleasures here beneath
18 You shall be glorified
19 They that quarrel at the manner of God's revealing Himself are troubled because He is invisible
20 Hence we may know why God appeareth not in a visible manner
21 When Amasis the King of Egypt sent to the wise men of Greece
22 His power is evident by upholding it all
23 Above all, man discovereth the glory of God
24 That you are a man should fill you with joys
25 You are able to see His righteousness
26 You are able therein to see the infinite glory of your high estate
27 As Love is righteous in glorifying itself and making its object blessed: so is it in all its dealings and dispensations towards it
28 But God being infinite is infinitely righteous
29 Love further manifests itself in joining righteousness and blessedness together: for wherein can Love appear more than in making our duty most blessed
30 Yet Love can forbear
31 By how much the greater His love was
32 Whoever suffereth innocently and justly in another's stead
33 One great cause why no Angel was admitted to this office
34 How vile are they
35 Another reason for which our Redemption was denied to Angels and reserved only to be wrought by our Saviour
36 Yet further, another reason why this office was delegated
37 Finally another reason was the dignity of our Saviour's person
38 How then should we be saved? since eternal righteousness must be paid for our temporal iniquity since one must suffer by His own strength on our behalf
39 God by loving begot His Son
40 In all Love there is a love begetting
41 Love in the fountain and Love in the stream are both the same
42 Where Love is the Lover
43 This Person is the Son of God: who as He is the Wisdom of the Father
44 This Person differs in nothing
45 How wonderful is it that God by being Love should prepare a Redeemer to die for us? But how much more wonderful
46 In all Love there is some Producer
47 What life can be more pleasant
48 Love is so divine and perfect a thing
49 Love is so noble that it enjoyeth others' enjoyments
50 God is present by Love alone
51 Love is a far more glorious Being than flesh and bones
52 The true WAY we may go unto His Throne
53 And He will so love us
54 Love is infinitely delightful to its object
55 God by Love wholly ministereth to others
56 By Loving a Soul does propagate and beget itself
57 Love is so vastly delightful in the Lover
58 Love is so vastly delightful to Him that is Beloved
59 Though no riches follow
60 By this we may discern what strange power God hath given to us by loving us infinitely
61 How happy we are that we may live in all
62 Love is the true means by which the world is enjoyed: Our love to others
63 See causes also wherefore to be delighted in your love to men
64 When you love men
65 You are as prone to love
66 That violence wherewith sometimes a man doteth upon one creature
67 Suppose a river
68 Suppose a curious and fair woman
69 The sun and stars please me in ministering to you
70 In one soul we may be entertained and taken up with innumerable beauties
71 Creatures are multiplied
72 Here is a glorious creature! But that which maketh the wonder infinitely infinite
73 Here upon Earth perhaps where our estate is imperfect this is impossible: but in Heaven where the soul is all Act it is necessary: for the soul is there all that it can be: Here it is to rejoice in what it may be
74 The world serveth you therefore
75 That all the powers of your Soul shall be turned into Act in the Kingdom of Heaven is manifest by what Saint John writeth
76 These things shall never be seen with your bodily eyes
77 Were all your riches here in some little place: all other places would be empty
78 The Heavens and the Earth serve you
79 Objective treasures are always delightful: and though we travail endlessly
80 Infinite Love cannot be expressed in finite room: but must have infinite places wherein to utter and shew itself
81 Few will believe the soul to be infinite: yet infinite* is the first thing which is naturally known
82 What shall we render unto God for this infinite space in our understandings? Since in giving us this He hath laid the foundation of infinite blessedness
83 He therefore hath not only made us infinite treasures only in extent: and souls infinite to see and enjoy them
84 Your soul being naturally very dark
85 You know that Love receives a grandeur of value and esteem from the greatness of the person
86 Since therefore Love does all it is able
87 God hath made it easy to convert our soul into a Thought containing Heaven and Earth
88 [This number is omitted in the original MS
89 Being that we are here upon Earth turmoiled with cares
90 We could easily show that the idea of Heaven and Earth in the Soul of Man
91 Once more, that I might close up this point with an infinite wonder
92 As it becometh you to retain a glorious sense of the world
93 The world does serve you
94 As the world serves you by shewing the greatness of God's love to you
95 The World serves you
96 The World is a pomegranate indeed
97 This visible World is wonderfully to be delighted in
98 It makes him sensible of the reality of Happiness: it feeds him with contentment
99 Varro citeth opinions of philosophers concerning happiness: they were so blind in the knowledge of it
100 Felicity is a thing coveted of all
THE THIRD CENTURY
1 WILL you see the infancy of this sublime and celestial greatness? Those pure and virgin apprehensions I had from the womb
2 All appeared new
3 The corn was orient and immortal wheat
4 Upon those pure and virgin apprehensions which I had in my infancy
5 Our Saviour's meaning
6 Every one provideth objects
7 The first Light which shined in my Infancy in its primitive and innocent clarity was totally eclipsed insomuch that I was fain to learn all again
8 Had any man spoken of it
9 It was a difficult matter to persuade me that the tinseled ware upon a hobby-horse was a fine thing
10 Thoughts are the most present things to thoughts
11 By this let nurses
12 By this you may see who are the rude and barbarous Indians: For verily there is no savage nation under the cope of Heaven
13 You would not think how these barbarous inventions spoil your knowledge
14 Being swallowed up therefore in the miserable gulf of idle talk and worthless vanities
15 Yet sometimes in the midst of these dreams
16 Once I remember (I think I was about 4 years old when) I thus reasoned with myself
17 Sometimes I should be alone
18 Sometimes I should soar above the stars
19 In making bodies Love could not express
20 The excellencies of the Sun I found to be of another kind than that splendour after which I sought
21 His Power bounded
22 These liquid, clear satisfactions
23 Another time in a lowering and sad evening
24 When I heard of any new kingdom beyond the seas
25 When I heard any news I receivd it with greediness and delight
26 ON NEWS
2 As if the tidings were the things
3 What sacred instinct did inspire
27 Among other things there befel me a most infinite desire of a book from Heaven
28 Had some Angel brought it miraculously from heaven
29 This put me upon two things: upon enquiring into the matter contained in the Bible
30 Upon this I had enough
31 This taught me that those fashions and tinseled vanities
32 In respect of the matter
33 Had the Angels brought it to me alone
34 To talk now of the necessity of bearing all calamities and persecutions in preaching is little
35 You will not believe what a world of joy this one satisfaction and pleasure brought me
36 Having been at the University
37 Nevertheless some things were defective too
38 The manner is in everything of greatest concernment
39 The best of all possible ends is the Glory of God
40 It is the Glory of God to give all things to us in the best of all possible manners
41 Many men study the same things which have not the taste of
42 By humanity we search into the powers and faculties of the Soul
43 In Divinity we are entertained with all objects from everlasting to everlasting: because with Him whose outgoings from everlasting: being to contemplate God
44 Natural philosophy teaches us the causes and effects of all bodies simply and in themselves
45 Ethics teach us the mysteries of morality
46 When I came into the country
47 A life of Sabbaths here beneath!
48 Thus you see I can make merry with calamities
49 Sin!
50 THE RECOVERY
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