Sacris ordinibus non-rite intiati tenentur ad eos rite ineundos ; Non datur purgatorium pontificium aut Platonicum respondente Mr. Morton.

About this Item

Title
Sacris ordinibus non-rite intiati tenentur ad eos rite ineundos ; Non datur purgatorium pontificium aut Platonicum respondente Mr. Morton.
Author
Morton, David.
Publication
[Cambridge, Cambridgeshire :: s.n.],
1633 [1663]
Rights/Permissions

To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.

Subject terms
Purgatory -- Poetry.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A51413.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Sacris ordinibus non-rite intiati tenentur ad eos rite ineundos ; Non datur purgatorium pontificium aut Platonicum respondente Mr. Morton." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A51413.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 19, 2024.

Pages

Non datur Purgatorium Pontificum m•…•… aut Platonicum.

VEl meritó, Nec enim levia aut ludicra rependen•…•… Fata Deus meritis, & stant sua praemia f••…••… Est Locus aeriis longè semotus ab oris, Quò se proponit manifesta in luce videndum Ipse Deus, propiúsque piis se mentibus infert: Justitia haec immota colit loca, lancibus aequis Expendens quae facta virûm: queîs vivere curae est Haud coeli immemores, & tactos Numine vero Ascribit coelo, quos ipso è fonte voluptas Demulcet, liquidísque uberrima gaudia rivis. At quos foedus amor mundi in peccata volentes Egerit, excipient aeternis Tartara flammis, Et tortor Satanas, tortus magìs omnibus ipse: Nec mora, nec requies: sedet, aeternúmque sedebit Poena illis, precibúsque hoc jus revocabile nullis. At Sancti clamore legunt decreta secundo Justitiae, legésque pias mirantur, & ipso Jura olim edocti, sanctóque oracula libro Inter eos unus, longè celsissimus, omnes Eminet Origines, nec jam transcribit olympo Quicquid id est Erebi: jam nunc juvat esse modestum, Spésque avidas revocare, & tantis parcere votis. Non eadem Romae tamen & sententia coelo est; Vertit Romae Acheronta, atque imo Tartara fundo, Eximit inferno manes, atque inserit astris. Et quisquam stupet, Astronomos ascribere coelo Serpentés{que}, Ursós{que}, & factos astra Leones; Cùm foedi manes & adhuc tortoris olentes Sulphura, & ignitâ latè loca foeta Mephiti, Qui{que} ferunt maculas etiamnum in fronte recentes, Lividá{que} hesterni retinent vestigia flagri, Scilicet exiguo argento, & mox vindice Papâ Elapsi, loca pura colent, & dummodo Romae Sic visum fuerit, nec digna Quiritibus illis? Tantum Relligio? Tu quoque cede Deo, totúm{que} in pectora Numen Accipias, & prona Dei vestigia adores, Infelix Ratio, mundóque haud aequa futuro, Heu nimiùm coeca, & multo notissima lapsu. Túne etiam mussas, ipsos te posse Nerones, Sejanos, & quicquid habent jam Tartara diri Eripere, & licèt haud unum recreare valebat Vel guttâ Abramus, Tu, Tu tamen omnibus una AEternos praestare putas, te vindice, fastos? Pone animos, nec fige Deo temeraria leges. En! Vidén' ut germana Fides tua temperat uni Obsequitúrque Deo, totúmque ità subjicit orbem, Fatorum Regina, volentibus imperat astris. Illa tamen morietur, eris tu sola superstes. Ah! Sapias tandem, & coelo te crede faventi; Nam soli sapuisse Deo prudentia summa est.
Do you have questions about this content? Need to report a problem? Please contact us.