The mount of holy meditation: or a treatise shewing the nature and kinds of meditation the subject matter and ends of it; the necessity of meditation; together with the excellency and usefulnesse thereof. By William Gearing minister of the gospel at Lymington in the county of Southampton.

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Title
The mount of holy meditation: or a treatise shewing the nature and kinds of meditation the subject matter and ends of it; the necessity of meditation; together with the excellency and usefulnesse thereof. By William Gearing minister of the gospel at Lymington in the county of Southampton.
Author
Gearing, William.
Publication
London :: printed for Francis Tyton at the three Daggers in Fleetstreet,
1662.
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Subject terms
Meditations -- Early works to 1800.
Cite this Item
"The mount of holy meditation: or a treatise shewing the nature and kinds of meditation the subject matter and ends of it; the necessity of meditation; together with the excellency and usefulnesse thereof. By William Gearing minister of the gospel at Lymington in the county of Southampton." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/a42552.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 13, 2024.

Pages

Chap. 10. An Exhortation to Medi∣tation; shewing also the necessity thereof.

Let me now exhort you to set about, and to be frequent in this ne∣cessary duty of meditation: Be often retiring your selves to God, and breathing after him: question him daily about thy salvation: give him thy heart: lift up thy soul to God: cast thine inward eyes on his mer∣cies; give him thy hand as a little Child doth to his Father, that he may lead thee and guid thee: plant him in thy heart, that God may be in all thy thughts: make many mo∣tions in thy soul after him: from every thing in the world, may be presented many pious meditations, and profitable discourses: unhappy

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are they that use he creatures in turn∣ing them to sin, and happy they that turn them to the meditation of God, and his goodnesse. This exercise of meditation is very necessary:

1. Because much of the work of holy devotion consisteth in it: it is that which may stand in stead of ma∣ny other things, but the lack of this can hardly be supplied by any other means; for without this, rest is but idlenesse, pain taking but vexa∣tion.

2. Meditation is necessary to beat down the flesh, and to keep the sen∣suall appetite in subjection to the Law of the Spirit. It is a great mis∣chief, saith Austin, to enjoy those things we should but use, and but use those things we should enjoy; we should enjoy spirituall things, and but use corporall, which when the use is turned into enjoy∣ing, our reasonable soul is turned into a bruitish and beast-like soul.

3. Meditation is necessary to con∣coct the Word of God in our minds: There are some that feel some ten∣dernesse of spirit, that will weep at a Sermon, that one would think their

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hearts full of devotion; but when it comes to the triall, we find that as the sudden showers in the heat of Summer, falling in great drops en∣ter not, but bring forth Toadstools or Mushromps; so these tears falling on a vitious heart, a heart not molli∣fied by constant meditation, the Word works not upon it, but be∣comes unprofitable: meditation softens the heart, and fits it for any holy impression. This made David cry out, O Lord, how sweet are thy words unto my tast; they are sweeter than honey, and the honeycomb: and cer∣tainly the least comforts of the Word, wrought in the heart by holy medi∣tation, are more worth than the most pleasing recreations in the world; they that have tasted of them, hold all other consolations to be but gall and wormwood in com∣parison of them. Oh that now I could perswade men to this necessary duty of meditation: withdraw your selves from your worldly affairs at least once a day, for the exercise of meditation. O holy soul, saith Ber∣nard, shun publick places, and the com∣pany

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of those of thy houshold; knowest thou not that Jesus Christ thy Husband is bashfull, and will not be familiar in company: Come my beloved, let us go forth into the field, there will I give thee my loves, Cant. 7.11.

Notes

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