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A38590 Catechistical discovrses in vvhich, first, an easy and efficacious way is proposed for instruction of the ignorant, by a breife summe of the Christian doctrine here delivered and declared : secondly, the verity of the Romane Catholike faith is demonstrated by induction from all other religions that are in the world : thirdly, the methode of the Romane catechisme, which the Councell of Trent caused to be made, is commended to practice of instructing in doctrine, confirming in faith, and inciting to good life by catechisticall sermons / by A. E. Errington, Anthony, d. 1719? 1654 (1654) Wing E3246; ESTC R8938 430,353 784

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alleadge against them the authority of the Church of Christ and will tell them Not the Iewes but the Church holdeth the books of Machabees to be canonical And his owne reason will tell him that to deny the authority of the Church is to deny all Scriptures and to confounde the order of the whole world Tertul. Tert. l. de coron militi● c. 3. Amb. orat pro Theod. Aug. l. 8. de Genes con Manichaeos Oblationes pro defunctis facimus We make offerings for the dead S. Ambrose in his speech of the Emperour Theodosius prayeth for him Thou o Lord giue rest vnto thy seruant Theodosius S. August speaking of him that dyeth in sinne saith after this life he shall haue either the fire of Purgatory or eternal fire And in Psal 87. In this life purge mee and make mee soe that I may not neede the purging fire The doctrine of Purgatory is soe planely deliuered by the auncient fathers of the Church that Caluin could not deny or conceale it but l. 3. Instit c. 5. § 10. calleth it a most auncient obseruation of the Church and saith that the fathers as humane were deceiued But who can endure this saying in him were the auncient fathers of the Church and both the Church which was aunciently and which was when Caluin came into the world deceided and Caluin not deceiued shall Caluin take vpon him to correct the auncient fathers and present obseruations of the Church And shall any hazard his soule with Caluin against them He asketh what authority of Scriptures they had Must the whole Church be examined by him in the Scriptures And shall not he be thought an haeretike for this and to abuse the Scriptures in condemning of the Church S. Augustine shall answere him Aug. l. de cura pro mortuis Jn the books of the Machabees we read that sacrifice was offered for the dead but although in the auncient Scriptures it were not at all to be read the authority of the vniuersal Church is noe small matter which is cleere for this custome where in the prayers of the priest which to our Lord God are powered forth at his altare the commendation of the dead hath its place S. Augustins argument was good in which he prooued Purgatory both hy the Scriptures and the Church But if this be not enough for Caluin to whom nothing will serue but his owne will and word We will also produce his owne words against him l. 4. Instit c. 2. num 3. he saith that without controuersy nothing from the beginning untill that age was changed in doctrine To wit vntill the times of Tertullian Origen and Augustine of whom he was speaking If therfor this were the doctrine of the Church in those times it was the doctrine of Christ and of the Apostles euer from the beginning And soe Caluin is condemned by Scriptures fathers Church and by his owne words and Purgatory is prooued to be the true Catholike Apostolike doctrine There for pennances are rightly enioyned prayers may be said almes deeds giuen indulgences granted and many voluntary afflictions haue bene vndergone by the Saints and faithfull of the Catholike Church to escape the paines of Purgatory which although they be but temporal yet they are most greeuous and vehement more then can be spoken And because the Catholike doctrine of Indulgences by many is not vnderstoode I wil say somethinge of them in this which is also their propper place An Indulgence is as much as to say a fauourable remission or pardoning of some due punishment Such are the indulgences of the Church either absolute remissions without exchange or imposing of any other taske or exchanges of a greater into a lesser penalty The power of granting indulgences or absoluing from punishment which is all one was granted by Christ vnto his Apostles and especially to S. Peter to whom he promised the keyes of the kingdome of heauen Mat. 16. and told him whatsoeuer thou shalt loose vpon earth shall be loosed in heauen What can be vnderstoode by the keyes of heauen and the words following but power soe to open heauen gates as to take away all that hindereth for entring in at them to wit sinne and punishment He gave also the like authority to the rest of the Apostles saying whatsoeuer you shall loose vpon earth shal be loosed in heauen Mat. 18. If whatsoeuer they loose be loosed then punishment loosed by them on earth is loosed also in the sight of God in heauen Neither is there any good connexion in those words if they be not vnderstoode of absoluing as well from punishment as from sinne Now if any aske how it can be that sinnes of which the diuine iustice requireth soe much satisfaction should be satisfyed for with soe litle as some indulgences require and some indulgences require nothing at all to be done for the gaining of them he may vnderstande that indulgence or pardon of punishment is neuer granted but full satisfaction is made to God for the sinne For there is in the Church a treasury of Satisfactions soe great that it can neuer be exhausted by satisfying for sinnes There are in this treasury the satisfactions of Christ infinitly more then all the sinnes in the world can require There are also the good works of our B. Lady that had nothing of her owne to satisfy for There are the good works of S. Iohn Baptist of the Apostles and of many others whose works were much more satisfactory then their owne sinnes needed and may be applyed by the pastors of the Church to those that stande neede of them For the Church is a body and all the members of it haue a Communication and participation of good works with one another as we professe in the Creede saying I beleeue the Communion of Saints And the psalmist sayeth Ps 118. Col. 1. I am partaker of all that feare thee And S. Paul I now reioyce in suffering for you and doe accomplish those thinges that want of the passions of Christ in my flesh for his body which is the Church He did not fullfill the passions of Christ for any defect or want which was in them but that by his sufferings the passion of Christ was applyed actually to the Colossians as it is by the suffrages and good works which are done in the Church for others and by them their punishments are fully satisfyed for If any aske why the Pope onely and bishops giue indulgences I answere that the words of Christ before alleadged were spoken onely to S. Peter who was to be the Pope and to the Apostles who were at first the onely bishops of the Church And the practise of the vniuersal Church which ought to be our rule in all things hath bene allwais for the Pope and bishops and not for priests to grant Indulgences S. Augustine speaking of the obseruations of the Church saith If the Church through out the World frequent any of these things to dispute of
repeateth and inculcateth ouer againe the necessity of instruction also in that particular point that it is a thinge very remarkeable to see the great zeale of this holy Councell in soe often commending and recommending to Pastors the instruction of their people In the explication of the Sacraments beginning to speake of Baptisme it sayth that Pastors should neuer thinke that they had said enough in declaration of that Sacrament and exhorteth them that not onely on the Eues of Easter and whitsunday when it is administred with greater solemnity but also at other times that they take occasion when they see a good number of people together at the baptizing of any to say something if not of all the cheife parts of it at least of some one or other point of it as opportunity shall permitte And in another place as I remember it exhorteth them to haue certaine commune places in their memory for the explicating of any part of the Christian doctrine as neede shall requite This was the first thinge which I could not but obserue in the Romane Catechisme and which ought to be a great incitement especially to the Pastoral Clergy to whom it was directed and who haue by office the charge of soules to attende earnestly to doctrine And indeede he that before God hath vndertaken this charge and considereth on one side the dignity and necessity of the Christian Doctrine in it selfe and on the other side the ignorance of many and the stupid neglect of their soules which is caused by it will easily see what obligation he hath to vse his vtmost endeauours by all methods and wayes possible to attende to it but especially in that which by the sanctity wisdome and autority of a Generall Councell is commended I will not here omitte to propose the Clergy of France for an example and especially those about Paris in all Ecclesiasticall perfections the glory of Christendome who considering the Christian Doctrine to be the first ground of spirituality haue sett themselues soe earnestly to instruct in it as though the words of the Apostle were allwais in their eares Attende to thy selfe and to doctrine be earnest in them c. Tim. 1.4 And the sentence of God menacing Ezec. 34. Woe to the pastors of Israel which fedd themselues c. But my flocke you fedd not How many seuerall institutions haue of late yeares bene there erected for this purpose How many congregations of Priests are now established in the Parish Churches of the citty for education of the Pastoral Clergy and with speciall care to the Christian doctrine What methods haue they deuised what a number of books haue they settforth How many litle papers haue they dispersed amongst the people and what extreme and continuall paines doe they take to inculcate that by word of mouth which they deliuer in writing It is an admirable thinge and full of aedification to see the sweat and toile which I haue seene in those graue and excellent men Nay that nothing might be left vnessayed by them they haue caused the cheife points of the Christian doctrine to be put into verse for the easyer learning of it without booke But that which is yet of more moment and most worthy to be practised all ouer the Catholike Church is an exercise confirmed by authority as I perceiue all ouer France which they call the Prone or Pronaum as being deliuered in the Naue or open of the Church in which euery Sunday at High Masse the Creede being ended the Celebrant or some other for him ascendeth the pulpit and ioyning prayer with the people for the necessitys of the Catholike Church for the Popes Holinesse the soules in Purgatory and particular affaires that occurre the Christian doctrine is then read to them and a speech or Sermon is commonly made vpon some part of it Is not this a zeale worthy of Catholike Priests of the soules of Christians which they must answere for of the dignity of that doctrine which they professe Why doe not all then imitate this zeale in them That which they doe in this Prone is but in prosecution of the Councell of Trents desire and that which I here labour for For what is my Summe of the Christian doctrine but the Creede Sacraments Praecepts of the Church and the other most necessary points which first they reade and what my Discourses but as theirs vpon some of them Truely it was noe small satisfaction to mee when comming into France I saw that which for some yeares I had practised in priuate to be see publikely and generally there professed allthough vnknowne to mee And besides the profit which I had experienced in it and the authority of the Romane Catechisme their example did not a litle encourage mee to publish it and to commende the like practise to our countrey which standeth much more neede of it then they And yet for all this care and paines which they take I haue heard them sometimes complaine to their people that many of them were ignorant euen in the first principles and most necessary points of doctrine and I know by some experience that it was not alltogether without cause But if in France and about Paris where such care is taken and where the common people generally are to be thought more knowing then in any place of the Christian world there was reason to complaine what shall we say of other places where that care is wanting and where those methods of Catechizing are not soe much as thought of By all which we may see the dignity and necessity of Catechizing in the iudgment of the wise and how great a falt it is in some of the weaker sort of Christians who sleight it as a thinge for children onely and when themselues perhaps remaine in damnable ignorance The Christian doctrine is the ground and foundation of religion and the Catholike Church continueth allwais in the world by continuall instructing in it Christ the Sonne of God laid that foundation the Apostles after him buildded vpon it the Fathers and Doctors of the Catholike Church from time to time haue raised vp the structure and by their preachings and writings mainteined it and for all that they haue said and written there will still remaine for others to write vntill it come to that perfection to which God hath ordained it in this world This is that doctrine which plane humble and outwardly despicable but grounded vpon the promises of Iesus-Christ auncient Philosophy could not withstande it This doctrine deliuereth the principles of diuinity it hath beaten downe infidelity dispersed haeresys like smoke it abolisheth sinne and inflameth vnto vertue the harts of those that faithfully imbrace it Finally this is the knowledge of saluation in which the Orient from on high hath visited vs. And it should suffize to say that it is the knowledge of saluation What esteeme then ought all to haue of it with what dilligēce to study it and to be perfect in it And therefor
the Councell of Trent after the decision of controuersys in faith and declaratiō of the diuine truth in the next place would prouide for Catechizing that the true doctrine declared might be deliuered to the people And for this end they caused the Romane Catechisme to be made and that not to incite Pastors howsoeuer to instruct but to propose such a manner of instuction as was most propper for times of heresy as it declareth of purpose in the Preface where speaking of the suttelty of haeretiks in insinuating of their new and poysonsome doctrines it hath these words Wherefore to apply some remedy to these pernicious euills the Fathers of the Oecumenicall Councell of Trent haue thought it not sufficient onely to determine the cheife points of the Catholike doctrine against the haeresys of these times but haue also deemed it necessary to setiforth a certaine forme and manner of instructing of Christian people which in all Churches should be followed by those who haue the office of a lawfull Pastour and teacher Now for the forme and manner of instructing which it deliuereth it is by Discourses Speeches or Sermons made vpon seuerall parts of the Christian doctrine such as the auncient fathers of the Church haue left of the same subiect and haue called Homilys which in Greeke also is the same as to say Discourses or Sermons And for the methode which it hath obserued in those Discourses it is such that a more profitable can not be deuised for by it Catholiks are soe taught in doctrine that they are also confirmed in faith and piously excited to holinesse of life Three principall thinges then are intended in the Romane Catechismes Discourses The first is Instruction of the ignorant the second is Confirmation of the Catholike faith the third Aedification to good life As for instruction it performeth it very abundantly and more at large in those subiects which it treateth of then other Catechismes commonly doe As for the second it confirmeth the Catholike doctrine especially against moderne heresys soe as in that breuity is very sufficient for the satisfaction of any that would haue a care of his soule As for the third which is Aedification to good life it sometimes threateneth with such zeale the iudgments of God to make vs to feare him and againe when the subiect requireth it layeth open soe efficaciously the bowels of his loue and mercy to draw vs to loue him that we haue in it not onely a Catechisme for instruction but also soe many Sermons and exhortations to vertue and Pastors by following of that methode in these three things may well be said to pay the debt which they owe both to the wise and vnwise The same methode of discourse I desire to obserue and the same three things I will labour to imitate with that spirit that it shall please God to giue mee For the first which is instruction considering that in the opinion of authors some expresse and explicite knowledge of the mysterys of faith is absolutly necessary for euery one to haue so● necessary that to those that are come to the vse of reason there can be noe saluation without it I haue therefor collected a short and easy Summe or abbreuiation of the Christian doctrine conteined in the answeres to a few questions which moe doubt but compriseth as much as is absolutly necessary for Lay people to know and more then authors in rigour exact of them The learning then and indifferent vnderstanding of that Summe shall satisfy the obligation which all haue to learne the Christian doctrine and shall excuse them from the sinne of ignorance which they might incurre In which answeres I doe not intende the rigorous definitions of those things which are there asked but onely to declare soe much as is necessary for the vnderstanding and in breife for the remembring of that point This I often explicate to the people and procure that they haue it with them to get without booke for I finde by experience that neither explication onely withour getting somethinge without booke nor the getting without booke onely without explication is sufficient for the people to learne the christian doctrine I haue explicated the same things ouer and ouer againe many times and vntill I gaue them somethinge in breife for their memory I perceiued that my labour was in a manner lost especially with the yong and ruder sort who when I came to examine againe were as farre to seeke as at first And on the other side I haue knowne some children who through their parents care haue knowne all Cardinal Bellarmins litle Catechisme without booke yet for want of explication haue bene litle or nothing better for it Wherfor to bring the people both to vnderstande and to remember the christian doctrine I was forced to vse these meanes to giue them that Summe to gett without booke for their memory and to expounde it to them as they doe in their ●rones in France onely with this difference that where as there the people haue onely the cheife parts of the Christian doctrine read to them before the explication I require that they say it themselues answering all together alowde to the questions of the Summe for by this meanes the most rude and ignorant hearing others answere and answering with them come in time to learne the answeres whether they will or noe and that much more easily in their owne language then those who gett without booke whole psalmes in Latine by onely hearing and singing them with others in the Church As for explication I sometimes expounde all the Summe in breife for the ignorant and sometimes for the good of all I make a discourse after the manner of some of the following Discourses either of Faith or of the Signe of the Cros or of some article of the Creede or other part as occasion shall serue and as is most agreeable to that dayes solemnity The second thinge which I labour for is to confirme in the Catholike faith by such proofs of the Catholike doctrine as may suffize for that purpose And that you may better vnderstande how I proceede in this I desire you to take good notice in the Creede For in the other Discourses there is noe difficulty For the vnderstanding of which you are to minde well the methode which the Apostles haue obserued in composing of it which they carried with them in their liues and left behinde them at their deaths as a rule of diuine faith First against Atheists who would perswade themselues that there is noe God they laid this ground I beleeue in God Secondly against Pagans who on the contrary beleeue in many Gods they professe their beleefe in one onely God the maker of heauen and earth Thirdly against Iewes and Turks and all such as they foresaw might beleeue in one God yet deny Christ they professe their beleefe in Iesus Christ the onely Sonne of God Yet all this was not sufficient finally to resolue in point of faith For being
And in another place Slacke not to be conuerted to our Lord and differre not from day to day Eccl. 5. For his wrath shall come suddainly and in the time of vengeance he will destroy thee Let bold praesumptuous men remember these words and learne to feare God Deere Reader whosoeuer thou art as thou hast a soule which must last for euer apply this booke to the good of thy soule so as shall most concerne it for a happy eternity I excuse noe falts my goodwill shall mende all God can and I hope will honour himselfe euen in my falts Combine thou with mee that we may honour him for euer and euer Amen I submitte all that is conteined in this booke and all whatsoeuer I shall sa●●r thinke as long as I liue to the authority of the Holy Catholike Church A SVMME OF THE CHRISTIAN Doctrine expounded in the follovving Discourses QVAESTION What obligation haue Christians to learn● the Christian Doctrine Answer Euery Christian is bounde vnder a mortal sinne to know the cheife points of the Christian faith 7. Q. What is faith A. Faith is a supernaturall light and gift of God by which we beleeue and firmely adhare to the Doctrine of the Church 11. Q. Make the Signe of the Cros. A. In the Name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy G●ost Amen 49. Q. What is the Signe of the Cros A. The Signe of the Cr●● is a profession of the Christian faith 51. Q. How is the Signe of the Cros a profession of the Christian faith 51 A. Because in the Signe of the Cros we professe the mystery of the blessed Trinity and of the Incarna●i●n which are the two cheife mysterys of the Ch●stian faith 51 Q. What is the B. Trinity A. The B. Trinity is God the Father God the Sonne and God the Holy Ghost One and the same God in three distinct Persons 51 Q. What meane you by the mystery of the Incarnation A. We meane that the Sonne of God was incarnated that is became man to redeeme vs. 52 Q. Say the Creede A. I beleeue in God the Father Allmighty Maker of heauen and earth And in Iesus Christ his onely Sonne our Lord Who was conceiued by the Holy Ghost borne of the Virgin Mary Suffered vnder Pontius Pilate was crucifyed dead and buried He des●en●ed into hell the third day he arose againe from death He ascended into heauen sitteth at the right hand of God the Father allmighty From thence he shall come to iudge vs all both the quicke and the dead I beleeue in the Holy Ghost The holy Catholike Curch the Communion of Saints The forgiuenesse of sinnes The Resurrection of the flesh Life euerlasting Amen 76. Q Who is Christ A. Christ is the Sonne of God incarnated true God and true Man Our Redeemer Iudge and Glorifyer 109. Q. What doe we gett by Christ redeeming vs A. We gett the forgiuenesse of our sinnes and the acceptance of our good works by the merits of Christs passion applyed vnto vs in the Catholike Church 156. Q. What is the Chatholike Church A. The Catholike Church is the Congregation of all faithfull people and Pastors vnited together as a body with its head 176. Q. Giue mee a difference betwixt the true and all false Churches A. The true Church keepeth allwais in vnion and obedience to its Head and Pastors all false Churches beginne in dissentions and disobedience to the Head and Pastors of the Church 214. Q. Say the seauen Sacraments A. Baptisme Confirmation Eucharist Pennance Extreme Vnction Holy Orders Matrimony 281. Q What is a Sacrament A. A Sacrament is an outward signe which causeth grace in vs. 266. Q. What is Grace A Grace is a supernaturall gift which maketh vs gratefull and acceptable to God 268. Q. What is the Blessed Sacrament of Eucharist A. The Blessed Sacrament of Eucharist is the true body and blood of our Lord vnder the signes of bread and wine 298. Q. It shere any bread or wine in the Eucharist A. Noe it seems but soe The bread and wine are conuerted at the words of consecration into the true body and blood of our Lord. 305. Q. What is the Sacrament of Pennance A. The Sacrament of Pennance is that by which we receiue the forgiuenesse of sinnes in Confession 322. Q. Say the tenn Commandements A. Thou shalt not haue strange Gods before mee Thou shalt not take the name of God in vaine Remember thou keepe holy the Sabaoth day Honour thy Father and Mother Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not commit adultery Thou shalt not beare false witnesse against thy neighbour Thou shalt not desire thy neighbors wife Thou shalt not couet thy neighbors goods 378 Q. Say the Pater Noster A. Our Father which art in heauen Hallowed b● thy name Thy Kingdome come Thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen Giue vs this day our daily bread And forgiue vs our trespasses as we forgiue them their trespasses against vs. And lead vs not into temptation But deliuer vs from euill Amen 449. Q. Say the Haile Mary A. Haile Mary full of grace our Lord is with thee Blessed art thou among woemen Blessed is the fruit of thy wombe Iesus Holy Mary Mother of God pray for vs sinners now and in the hower of of our death Amen 509. Q. What is the Masse A. The Masse is the continuall Sacrifice of the Law of Christ in which his true body and blood is offered vnder the signes of bread and wine 576. Q. Say the fiue cheife Precepts of the church A. To fast fasting dayes To keepe holy dayes To confesse our sinnes to our ordinary Pastour or to another with his leaue at least once a yeare To receiue the Eucharist at Easter time To pay tithes 640. Q. How doe the Precepts of the church oblige A. The Praecepts of the church oblige vnder a Mortal sinne 641. Q. What is sinne A. Sinne is that by which we depart from the diuine Law and are separated from God 673. Q. Ho many kindes of sinne are there A. There are two kindes of sinne Original and Actual sinne 715. Q. What is the difference betwixt Original and Actuall sinne A. Original sinne is that which we are borne in Actuall sinne is that which ●e committe 615. Q. How many kinds of sinne doe we committe A. We committee two kindes of sinnes Mortal sinne and venial sinne 717 Q. What is the difference betwixt Mortal and venial sinne A. Mortal sinne quite depriueth vs of Gods grace venial sinne onely lesseneth and deminisheth the feruour of the loue of God in vs. 717. THE FIRST DISCOVRSE Of the education and instruction of children and of the obligation which all haue to learne the christian doctrine I INTENDE now to speake of two thinges First vnto all those who haue charge ouer children and especially to parents to commende vnto them the care which they ought to haue of their good education and instruction Secondly to declare vnto all the
scriptures and that in innumerable places which for breuity I omitte and will mention onely the words of our Sauiour which he spoke to his disciples at his last farewell from them Christ in his Ascension being to leaue his Apostles with a hard taske and difficult worke which they were to performe in founding of the Catholike Church amongst soe many enemys he told them for their comfort Mat. 2● Behold I am with you a●l dayes euen to the consummation of the world He spoke then to the Apostles and would not onely comfort them but all others who were to haue the gouernment of the Church for euer after promising to be with them as long as the world should endure As long then as Christ was to be with them their doctrine was for euer to be true and their authority diuine and he being to be with them vnto the consummation of the world their doctrine was to be true and their authority diuine vnto the consummation of the world as the doctrine and authority of Christ who promised allwais to assist them in their worke and soe their worke was his worke and their doctrine and authority were his Christ therfor is allwais with the Pastors of the Church when they represent and haue the authority of the whole Church not with euery one of them particularly but with all of them together and therefor although any one particular bishop as he is onely a particular member of the Church may erre yet all bishops cannot possibly erre at any time because Christ hath promised to be with them all dayes It is not needfull to produce the sentences of fathers for the diuine authority of the Church both because these words of the Creede made by the Apostles and at all times consented vnto by the fathers I beleeue the Catholike Church may stande for their sentences and also because their sentences to this purpose will frequently occurre in that which I haue to say of the Church Scriptures and fathers are easily misconstrued by haeretiks who make them to speake as they will vnderstande them or if they be too plane against them they discarde the sentence or the whole booke For those that are soe bold as to contradict the whole Church haue lost their shame and neede regard noe authority at all But because they pretende reason as building all their doctrines vpon their owne witts and because this point is soe necessary for the deciding of all controuersys and to the true and lawfull condemnation of all haeresys we will make it euident by plane and easy reasons which all may vnderstande To thinke to haue religion without the diuine authority of an infallible Church is to thinke to build without a foundation or as we commonly say to build castles in the ayre the foundation of all true religion being the authority of the Church which professeth it Grant once that a Church may erre as it may if it be not supported by the diuine authority and we can not be certaine of any doctrine which it teacheth and being vncertaine of the truth of its doctrine we are not bound to beleeue vncertaintys and it can not be the true religion if it be professed by a Church which we are not bounde to beleeue And therefor the first thinge which is to be established as the foundation of true religion is the infallible and consequently diuine authority of the Church that professeth it Take once away the authority of the Church and absolue men from the obedience of it and you make euery man his owne master and leauing him to himselfe to beleeue what he listeth all is brought into vncertainty and confusion for there is noe point of faith soe certaine nor any thinge soe cleere but by prowde and contentious men it might be brought into question This is declared by particular instances If the Church of Christ were not of diuine authority and infallible certainty in all which it teacheth we could not be certaine either of the Creede or of the scriptures or of the sense of either of them or of any article of faith whatsoeuer nay the very foundation of all religion would be destroyed the diuine existence becomming also vncertaine to vs and insteede of gouernment vnion and order in the worship of God we should haue noe diuine worship nor God at all but a horrible confusion and more then hellish disorder would dwell vpon earth First the Creede is not receiued but for the authority of the Church We beleeue that euery article of the Creede was made by diuine inspiration and authority and as such we will defende them with our liues yet this we know not but by the Church for of our selues we could not certainely know it nor should we beleeue it of the Creede more then of other writings which we receiue not as of faith but that the Church commandeth vs soe to beleeue of it and not of them Againe we doe not know the sense of any article of the Creede but by the authority of the Church take away this and we had the sense of them to seeke we knew not where euery one might follow his owne sense and we should be certaine of nothing but of vncertainty and confusion Take away the diuine and infallible authority of the Church in the Apostles times and you bring all into vncertainty whatsoeuer they taught and ruine the foundation of the whole christian faith and it had bene noe matter what they had deliuered in the Creede or whether they had made any Creede at all Take away that authority from the Church of Christ that is at all times and it is noe matter what Creede it deliuer or what sense of the Creede seeing it may erre in that which it sayeth and those thinges may be false which it deliuereth for true The same appeareth in the scriptures We beleeue that such and such scriptures were written by some that had the spirit of God to write nothing but truth in them that all those bookes which we receiue were written with that spirit and that all those bookes passing through soe many hands and handwritings as must necessarily haue bene before printing was inuented haue remained vncorrupted vntill our times How doe we know all this to be soe but by the authority of the Church deny this as all haeretiks doe to follow their owne phansys and you may admitte of what Scriptures you will or if you will you may deny all scriptures And this we see by experience to be true that haeretiks reiecting the authority of the Church and disobeying it reiect also the scriptures and receiue but what they will The Carpocratites Seuerians and Manichees reiected all the old Testament and all the foure ghospels of the new except that of S. Luke Cerdon and Cerinthus reiected S. Luke The Seuerians reiected the acts of the Apostles and all the Epistles of S. Paul Luther and some Protestants reiect the Epistle of S. Iames. The Alogians and some Protestants reiect
the Apocalypse And Suencfeldius seeing such a strife about the scriptures cleered himselfe readily in a word reiecting all Soe that if we might contradict the Church and follow either our owne or the conceits of any priuate men we might reiect the true scriptures as these haue done and receiue false scriptures as the Apocryphi did or deny all scriptures as Suencfeldius Quintinus the Libertines and other haeretiks haue done The authority of the Church bindeth vs to receiue scriptures and appointeth what scriptures we should receiue and for that authority we receiue the ghospell which S. Marke wrote who was noe Apostle and not that of S. Thomas who was an Apostle and we reiect the ghospell of Nicodemus who had seene Christ and receiue the ghospell of S. Luke who neuer saw him Therfor we must ground our selues vpon the authority of the Church and obey it or els we should not know what scriptures to receiue S. Augustine hath said this in plane termes Epis fund c. 5. when he said that he would not beleeue the ghospell but for the authority of the Church And addeth that for the same authority he would not beleeue Manichaeus the haereticke Further more the word of the scriptures is not profitable to vs but in its true sense and that true sense can not be knowne but by a true interpretour which euery priuate man as we see is not for although there be a great disparity in the abilitys of men excelling one another yet noe man of himselfe is free from errour and can but by his owne reason probably affirme that which another may probably deny and therfor all priuate opinions must be referred vnto some certaine authority which must decide all controuersys in the sense of the scriptures Besides the scriptures in themselues are soe hard to be vnderstoode and full of difficultys that it were against reason to leaue euery man to his owne sense and construction of them They haue beside the litteral sense many kindes of allegorys in which if we should follow the letter it would kill vs. The deuill alleadged the letter and word of holy scriptures but in a false sense to tempt Christ and Christ refuted him by the words of scripture in their true sense but if we had not at all times the like authority of Christ in the Church the deuill would easily peruert the scriptures to vs and we should be subiect to continuall errors S. Peter saith that in the Epistles of S. Paul there are certaine thinges hard to be vnderstoode which the vnlearned and vnstable depraue as also the rest of the scriptures to their owne perdition and S. Augustine Pet. 2.3 Epis 119. who was one of the learnedest sort of men confesseth that there were more places of the scriptures which he vnderstoode not then that he vnde stoode The sense of the scriptures is soe depraued by haeretiks that Luther called the scriptures the booke of haeretiks euery haeretike alle●dging scriptures and all of them deprauing them to their owne perdition and in this they are knowne to depraue them that they follow their owne interpretations and priuate conceipts against the whole Church Simon Magus would giue soe much honour to the Angels that he would haue them our mediators aboue Christ and he alleadged scriptures and reason for this doctrine Protestants honour them soe litle that they will not grant them any mediation at all neither v●der Christ and they also alleadge scriptures and reasons for their doctrine The Manichees forbadde some meates as in themselues vnlawfull to be eaten and alleadged scriptures and reason for this doctrine Protestants allow of all meates to be eaten at all times although it be against the praecep● of the Church and alleadge also scriptures and reason for their doctrine The Marcionists Encratites and other haeretiks forbadde marriage as vnlawfull and alleadged scriptures and reasons for this doctrine Protestants esteeme soe highly of marriage that they make it lawfull for virgins and religious persons that haue dedicated and vowed their chastity to God and alleadge also scriptures and reasons for it Pelagius attributeth our good works to our owne natural forces and to freewill more then to grace and hath more shew of scriptures then most haeretiks haue for their doctrines Protestants on the contrary grant noe freewill at all and will not want scriptures nor reasons for themselues Thus you haue two contrary doctrines both of them alleadging scriptures and both of them in a false sense the truth being betwixt them both saith a learned authour as Christ was betwixt two theeues Mald in Io. 6. But how doe we know that neither of them hath the true sense of the scriptures We know it by the authority of the whole Church which at first declared against those doctrines and therefor whosoeuer shall obstinatly mainteine them are haeretiks because they deny the ninth article of the Creede not beleeuing the Catholike Church but standing obstinate against all authority that was then in the world Which if at any time it were lawfull to doe then were there none to interprete the scriptures and to destinguish betwixt sense and sense and reason and reason and we might as well haue noe scriptures at all as haue noe meanes to know the true sense of them Lastly if there were not at all times some authority amongst men infallibly assisted of God to gouerne and direct in his worship and to determine the verity of all propositions that were to be beleeued with diuine faith then might euery man beleeue and say what he liked and all order and gouernment were taken away and vtmost disorder would reigne amongst vs euen to the denying of God For although natural reason doth declare the diuine existence and a demonstration may be made by a good Philosopher to prooue it yet liberty would induce to that which is against reason and would draw into atheisme as it doth to other vices which by the reason and nature of all men are abhorred Besides not one man among a thousand can make that demonstration and what then should become of those that can not if they were to forsake the authority of the Church and follow onely their owne reasons should he onely be saued that can make it noe nor he neither by that which were but a natural knowledge and humane faith in him Out of all which it followeth that the Catholike Church hath diuine authority to determine all veritys and to decide all controuersys of faith and to direct vs infallibly in that which we are to beleeue and to doe in relation to the honour of God or els the Creede had bene in vaine as also the scriptures all proofe of reason had bene vncertaine all vnion and orderly gouernment and the very foundation of all religion were vtterly destroyed and therfor one may as well say I will haue noe Creede nor religion at all as to say I will haue or beleeue noe Church and those onely remaine sure and
to the mysterys of it which thou must haue learned to vnderstande At communion time rise vp from thy place and come before the altare with profounde reuerence stirring vp in thy selfe many feruerous acts of the loue of God and detestation of sinne Say then from thy hart the words which S. Peter who with great faith and ardent affection receiued the words of Christ and professed them to be the words of life when some of his disciples went away for the hardnesse of this mystery Christ preaching to the people that he would giue them a more pretious bread then the Manna of their forefathers and that this bread was to be his owne flesh the Iewes beganne to murmure saying Io. 6. how can this man giue vs his flesh to eate he then confirmed his words againe in plane termes Saying Amen Amen I Say to you vnles you eate the flesh of the sonne of man and drinke his blood you shall not haue life in you ●he that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath life euerlasting and I will raise him vp in the last day Formy flesh is meate indeede and my blood is drinke indeede They seeing him thus to confirme what he had said before that he would giue them his owne flesh to eate and not vnderstanding how it could be many euen of his disciples said that it was a hard speech and went backe and walked not with him But Christ turning to the twelue and asking them what will you also depart Then S. Peter with a constant and ready faith answered for himselfe and for them Lord to whom shall we goe Thou hast the words of eternal life And we beleeue and haue knowne that thou art Christ the sonne of God This was an answere worthy of S. Peter and Christ had soe disposed of his speech as though of purpose he had intended to draw this answere from him It was for our instruction in this point that we might say as S. Peter said especially then when we are going to receiue Lord wither shall I goe but vnto thee I beleeue thy words for that they are thine thou hast the words of eternal life and looking towards the B. Sacrament I beleeue and know that thou art Christ the sonne of God L. 6. de Saccrd And thinke with what respect the Angells attende on thy communion S. Chrysostome saith that there is not doubt but the priest is guarded by Angels whilst he is in hand with the blessed Sacrament and that a venerable and graue person had informed him that himselfe had seene the Angels enuironing it bending their heads in homage as souldiers saith he doe to their captaine and courtiers to their king See then that thou remember the Angels reuerence And when the priest presenteth the sacred host to then and saith Domine non sum dignus c. Say thou with him Lord I am not worthy that thou shouldst enter vnder my roofe but onely say the word and my soule shall be saued And repeate them thrice ouer with him The humble Centurion thought it too great an honour for him to haue Christ to come into his house to cure his seruant but he entreth into thy body to cure thy soule Thou hadst neede to be more humble and better disposed then he was although worthy to be commended of Christ When the priest de liuereth the blessed Sacrament to thee lift vp thy head that he may see what he doth and hold the towel vnder thy chinn to kepp any particle that might chance to fall open thy mouth decently and putting thy tongue to thy lips receiue that sacred host as a pledge of thy redeemers loue who as he came into this world and refused neither shame nor paine to make thee his freind soe whould he still humble himselfe in remaining with thee to keepe thee in his freindship As soone as thou hast receiued and washed thy mouth if neede be with some drinke gather together all the powers of thy soule to giue thanks vnto God doe homage to him with them and offer them to him to be imployed in his seruice all thy life time loue him with all thy hart and detest all that which is displeasing to him and neuer faile as often as thou receiuest to make a vehement detestation of that sinne which thou art most inclined vnto purposing and thinking how to amende it Vntill thou hast the benediction of the priest sitt still on thy knees burning with loue and reuerence to thy soueraigne Thenn rize vp and returning to thy place againe take thy booke and say the prayers of thanksgiuing and departing out of the Church or oratory haue a care for that day to keepe thy senses more retired and as it were at home with thy guest If some great personage or prince were come to thy house thou wouldst not stirre abrode as long as he stayed but wouldest with good reason stay at home and attende vpon his pleasure The king of kings infinitly more worthy then all the princes of the world put together commeth to thee in the Eucharist haue therefor a care to please him and let noe occasions draw thee away from him Frequent Communion Concerning the frequenting of the blessed Sacrament these are the words of S. Augustine Serm. 21. de verbis Domini To receiue the communion of the Eucharist euery day I neither commende nor discommende it but to communicate euery Sunday I would wish and exhort euery one soe to doe if his soule be without affection to sinne And he exhorteth all soe to order their liues Part. 1. ●h 20. that they may be worthy to receiue often B. Bishop Sales in his Introduction to a deuout life aduiseth euery one to receiue at least once a month That which may be gathered out of them both is in breife that some may receiue eueryday many may receiue euery weeke all may receiue euery month Those that receiue euery day had neede to be of great sanctity and aboue others in their good example and conuersation Those that receiue once a weeke must be free from affection euen to venial sinnes not that they neuer committe any but that they be not affected to any To receiue once a month requireth onely a cleare conscience that they prooue and purge themselues first by a Good confession of their mortal sinnes which if they doe they shall finde great benefit in often receiuing S. Ambrose when thy aduersary shall see thy lodging taken vp with the brightness of the heauently presence perceiuing all place for his temptations to be preuented by Christ he will depart and runne away S. Bonauenture of reuerence to the B. Sacrament abstained for some dayes from saying of masse L. 2. deprofec relig c. 27. and being present at the masse of another priest at communion time he felt a particle of the sacred host to come from the altare into his mouth By which he vnderstoode as himselfe saith relating this passage that it was
ought very much to flourish and excell in this vertue louing their neighbour and bearing with one anothers falts Christ called his disciples brethren because he would haue them to be as brethren in loue and vnion of hart And it was the first name which christians had to be called the brethren euen before they were called christians for then as the Euangelist declareth the multitude of beleeuers had one hart and one soule Act. 4. And soe great was the loue of christians in the primitiue Church that their very enemys admiring at it Apol. 36. according to Tertullian vsed to say see how they loue and are ready euen to dy for one another The peaceable and mild of hart are the temple of the Holy Ghost who dwelleth in the house of peace the peeuish and malicious of hart are of the deuils spirit and the more their anger and malice increaseth the liker they grow to him The best is to foresee the occasions and to preuent them We haue many examples of the punishments of anger and to commende patience to vs. Col. 7. c. 27. Cassian recordeth how that the abbot Moyses was possessed by the deuill for one small impatience by which he sinned Serm. 15. Quadrag But it was a terrible sight that which S. Bernardin as an eye witnes reporteth of a woman in a great presse of people who by chance throwne downe by a yong man became soe madde with anger that the man falling downe on his knees to aske forgiuenes of her and she denying it in the sight of all was carried away by the deuill The example of the Priest Paphnutius was admirable in this euen in his youth Cas coll 18. c. 15. who liuing in the wildernes in great sanctity of life one of the brethren out of enuy to him to blemish his good name tooke occasion on the Sunday when all was at the Church to goe into his cell and to leaue there a booke hidden and comming presently to the Church as soone as seruice was done he complained publikely that some had stolne his booke from him At which all being strucken with admiration as a strange and vnvsuall thinge amongst them he that had hidd it desired that before any stirred out of the Church some faithfull persons might be sent to search in the cells of euery one for it Some of the auncienter Monks being sent founde it in the cell of Paphnutius hidden amongst the baskets and frailes which he made At which the holy yong man stoode a long time astonished neither daring to confesse nor to deny it But in the end he desired them to impose what punishment they pleased vpon him and going forth he afflicted himselfe with many teares and with two weeks fast absteining also from holy Communion and then prostrating himselfe at the threshold of the Church he asked pardon But it pleased God to to declare the innocency of his seruant for his enemy was forced to bewray himselfe the deuill possessing and pittifully vexing him And when none could helpe him he was dispossessed by Paphnutius his prayers Remedys against anger Authors haue praescribed many meanes for patience and remedys against anger but they may all be reduced vnto this that we procure in our harts a great loue of God and apprehension of his goodnesse Io. 1.4 for then we shall loue our neighbour for his sake If any man saith S. Iohn shall say I loue God and hateth his neighbour he is a lyer When therefor we are at any time prouoked vnto anger let vs presently make an act of the diuine loue and thinke that we see the liuing image of God in the face of him that prouoketh vs and although he abuse that image in himselfe by then prouoking vs yet God whose image he is is still the same as louely and beautifull as before Gen. 9. and therefor I will not abuse his image nor be angry at it Whosoeuer shall shed mans blood his blood shall be shed for to the image of God man was made Secondly we may consider our selues as the souldiers of Christ then called out to fight and that the armes of his souldiers are patience without which we can by noe meanes gett victory the enemys of Christ being armed with impatience If we saw two companys the one of them following of Christ for their captaine the others vrged and driuen on by the deuill which side would we take the one armed with patience and meekenes towards the other the other with rage and malice against them Behold in the one their pale faces staring eyes foming mouths and their whole bodys swelling with the deuils poyson who clappeth his hands and vrgeth them to more and more anger Behold on the otherside the graue and mild countenances of the souldiers of Christ shining like the sunne all this while on their enemys and laboring to pacify them Christ as their captaine exhorting them still to perseuer in patience Prou. 16. Which of these would we rather preferre a patient man is better saith the holy Prouerbe then a strong one and he that ouer ruleth his minde then the ouerthrower of cittys Thirdly we may consider the rewarde and blessing which the patient man gett's God then presently blesseth him and opening and enlarging his hart to receiue more and more fauours of him in the end he goeth away with the crowne of victory Fourthly we may consider the good which we may doe to others by the example of our patience our very enemy will be edifyed at it and although for the present he perceiue not the grace of thy good example yet with in a while he will see it and be sorry for his falt and thou shalt be better satisfyed with this then if thou hadst spitte in his face or taken whatsoeuer reuenge of him Fiftly we may consider the many hurts which are endangered when men are blinded with passion and want reason to guide themselues A man that were to runne a race in a craggy place full of pitts and praecipices with his eyes blindfolded were he not in manifest danger to fall and kill himselfe soe are men in their passion they goe not leasurely but runne headlong and being blinded in their vnderstandings Io. 1.2 what can be expected but ruine to them He that hateth his brother is in darknesse saith S. Iohn because darknesse hath blinded his eyes Many great euils haue ensued of passionate and crosse answeres which might haue bene preuented with a mild word spoken in time Lastly we may consider how that all afflictions are sent of God and come not by chance but for our tryall and good Tob. 12. soe the Angell comforted Toby saying it was necessary that temptation should prooue thee and therefor holy Iob said that God had taken his goods and had strucken him and he blessed God for it We will then be contented with them and make them wellcome as the messengers of God THE SIXT COMMANDEMENT
are acknowledged for holy men and Saints euen by Protestant authors These great seruants of God were most singularly deuoted to his blessed Mother many wayes Some of them instituted particular deuotions to her and inuiting all to those deuotions haue spared noe labour to increase her honour and the number of her seruants But this needes not for that I haue shewed it to haue bene the deuotion of the Catholike Church in those times in which her enemys confesse and must needes confesse the true faith of Christ to haue flourished if euer it flourished That which the Catholike Church still laboureth for is to preserue in her people the same deuotion which was then giuen to her And therefor she consecrateth Churches erecteth altares instituteth holy dayes and omitteth nothing to setforth her worthy prayses and the power of her intercession which afterwards I shall shew The English Protestant Church is not yet soe auncient but that I haue knowne diuerse who haue remembred the like deuotion to haue bene in this kingdome to her when the Catholike religion flourished in it English men were then blessedly and singularly aboue other nations deuoted to her reioycing in her patronage and ioyfull solemnitys But now that ioy is turned into hatred and contempt and her cheife solemnitys are blotted out and prophaned by them and yet absurdly and without consequence they will seeme to honour the Saints commāding their holydayes to be kept Is it not an absurde and malicious proceeding in them to her to commande the holydayes of the Saints and Angels as lawfull and fitting and to take away the cheife holy dayes of our B. Lady yet this the English protestant Church hath done as may be seene in their commune prayer booke where the Feasts of the Apostles and of other Saints and of the Angels are commanded by their Church and not the Natiuity and Assumption of our B. Lady which were allwais held her cheife solemnitys As for her Annunciation and Purification they may obserue them in honour of the Conception and Presentation of Christ and cunningly seeme as though they would honour her but this cunning is worth nothing to those that vnderstande her Natiuity and Assumption to be her cheife and most propper feasts and soe auncient that S. Hierome and S. Augustine haue left sermons which they made of them and which they taking away keepe noe day at all as propper to her It is the nature of malice to hate all that which is worthy of loue and of enuious persons to hate that which their enemys loue though neuer soe good This is the very true cause why the beginners of this English religion would take away her two cheife holydayes They see the Catholike Church to aduance her honour and to be 〈◊〉 ●ularly deuoted to her and therefor of malice and enuy to the Church they labour what they can to pull downe her honour and to disgrace her What iniury had the most blessed of women and their particular patronesse done to them in what had she deserued this at their hands but that they would oppose the Catholike Church S. Hierome speaking of the feast of the Assumption saith If we be commanded to honour God in his Saints how much more in this solemnity Ep. ad Paul Eustoch to 9. I would all Englishmen had knowne these words and remembred them when the beginners of their new religion tooke away that festiuall day they would not perhaps haue permitted this disgrace to haue bene put vpon their patronesse in whom their nation had soe long bene honored as to let them take away her Assumption which according to S. Hierome and to reason is much more to be honored then the Assumptions of other Saints which they keepe But let vs goe on in honoring of her We will now gather together out of the sentences of the holy fathers alleadged a posy as it were of our B. Ladys prayses taking onely the summe of them in breife First for her sanctity they affirme her to haue excelled all creatures there being nothing in heauen and earth to compare with her all but God inferiour to her As for sinne it is certaine that she neuer committed the least Venial sinne in soe much that S. Augustine will haue noe mention of sinne to be made in her Aug. l. de nat gra c. 8. Sess 6. c. 23. and the Councell of Trent doth sufficiently declare it She had the grace of all vertues faith hope charit 〈◊〉 humility patience chastity meeknes fortitude c. in an eminent degree aboue all She was a perpetual Virgin Con. Ephes Chalced. Syn. 6. c. 2. Mariae Virginitas ante partum in partu post partum intemerabilis Marys Virginity before her child bearing in her child bearing and after her child bearing vnuiolated She did not onely obserue perpetual Virginity but she obserued it by vow According to S. Augustin l. 4. de Sancta Virginitate and S. Gregory Naz. orat in Sanctam Natiuitatem and it is inferred out of her answere to the Angell when she said how shall this be done because I know not man Luc. 2. That is to say I can not lawfully know man as the hebrew children said to Nabuchodonosor we worship not thy Gods that is we must not and cannot lawfully worship them Dan. 3. But the B. Virgin might lawfully haue knowne man if she had not made a vow to the contrary Neither is there otherwise any congruity in her answere Dr Kellison is of opinion that she was the first that euer vowed perpetual Virginity In 3. part for saith he although Chastity were held in great esteeme both amongst the Iewes and Gentils before the comming of Christ yet they vowed it not for euer but onely for a certaine time S. Ambrose confirmeth it when he calleth her the standart bearer of virginity Amb. to 2. de inst Virg. c. 5. Bed in Luc. 1. as going before all in the perpetuall vow of it But S. Bede saith more planely that she was the first that emancipated herselfe to that vertue which must be vnderstoode by perpetual vow for there were diuerse before her that vowed it for a time Soe that we may number this amongst our B. Ladys prayses that she was the first foundres of the perpetual vow of Virginity and soe she is the particular patronesse of Priests and religious persons that follow her in that vow She had more ouer a gift of God to make those to be Virgins that conuersed with her and soe saith S. Hierome that she made S. Ioseph to be a Virgin and S. Ambros that she made S. Iohn Baptist to be a virgin by her virginal conuersation that as it is written of the Cedar tree and of the flowers of vines Amb. de Instit virg c. 7. that they driue away all venemous beasts from about them so the blessed Virgin had the vertue to expell all vnchast desires and carnall inclinations from those that came about
Temple to receiue him in his armes and full of toy to blesse him Anne a Prophetesse was then also sent vnto the Temple to speake of him to all that expected the redemption of Israel and the Priest to represent this great ioy spreadeth his armes prayseth blesseth adoreth glorifyeth and giueth thanks to God for it Then he turneth about to the people Dominus vobiscum and he turneth to the right hand both for more decency and also because it is more mysterious the right hand in the Scriptures signifying power glory and dignity and the left hand on the contrary signifying imperfection weakenesse and ignobility Psal 117. The right hand of our Lord hath wrought strength saith the Psalmist the right hand of God hath exalied mee and the Apostle saith On the right hand and on the left by honour and dishonour At Orate fratres he turneth round about on the left hand to the Altare in token of his sinnes and imperfections for which he desireth the people to pray Then he saith Dominus vobiscum our Lord be with you Which is both a prayer that God will eleuate their spirits to him and a salutation inciting them to eleuate their spirits to God by a seruerous attention tothose misterys So the Angell saluted Gedeon Iud 6. Ru●h Our Lord be ●ith thee ô most valiant of men So Booz saluted his haruest men praying for them and inciting them to worke as we doe when we say God be with you or God speede your worke and therefor the Priest turneth often to the people with those words They answere cum spiritu tuo praying also for him that God may be with his Spirit Then he turneth to the Altare againe The Collect. and going to the booke he sayeth Oremus Let vs pray because he prayeth in the name of all and gathereth together the prayers of all all praying with him and therefore the prayer is called a Collect as the prayer of many to wit of the whole Church he lifteth vp his hands at prayer to signify the eleuation of the hart Exod. 16. It is likely that our Sauiour prayed so on Mount Oliuet for it was the custome of holy men so to pray Moyses prayed so lifting vp his hands whilest the Israelits fought and as long as he lifted vp his hands they preuailed Reg. 3.8 but his hands failing their enemys preuailed against them So also Salomon prayed lifting vp his hands and blessing the people with much deuotion And these two were the especiall figures of our Sauiour Moyses as the Redeemer of the Israelits and Salomon by his infused wisedome I will sayth the Apostle that men pray in ewery place lifting vp pure hands Tim. 1.2 he prayeth with his hands open as requiring of benefits At the end of the prayer he ioyneth them to shew the vnity of nature in the blessed Trinity to whom we pray as to one diuine power and also to signify the vnion of our harts and of the Catholik Church All prayers are concluded through our Lord Iesus-Christ because all benefits are granted through him Io. 16. who said If you aske the Father any thing in my name he will giue it you The people answere Amen Amen to ioyne prayer with the Priest as when Gabelus at the sight of yong Toby wept for ioy kissed him and prayed hartily for him all that were present answered Amen After the Collects the Epistle is read The Epistle which is taken out of the Apostles Epistles or of some of the Prophets and signifyeth the preaching and writings of the Prophets and of S. Iohn Baptist before the Ghospell of Christ and that by the Apostles labors we receiue the light of the Ghospel After the Epistle followeth the Gradual or Responsory Graduall which is a deuout Canticle corresponding to the Epistle as the last preparation or stepp to the Ghospell and therefore it is called the Gradual and signifyeth the preaching of Saint Iohn Baptist as the last stepp or degree of preparation to the Ghospell of Christ And because Saint Iohn preached pennance to the people saying Doe pennance for the kingdome of Heauen is at hand Therefore the Gradual which intimateth lamentation and mourning of pennance is not said in the dayes of Pentecost which is a time of ioy We are admonished by it that as by the Prophete from time to time succeeding one another and lastly by Saint Iohn Baptist the world was prepared for the comming of Christ so we may ascende from vertue to vettue and attaine to the perfection of good Christians Alleluya Alleluyn is added to signify that after the mourning of pennance commeth ioy and glory for Alleluya The tract is a word of reioycing as much as to say Praise our Lord. The Tract which is a graue and dolesull mourning is said in times of sorrow and austerity Ghospell Then the Ghospell is read the booke being turned to the left hand to signify the receiuing of the Ghospell by the Gentils who are denoted by the left side of the Altare as being in insidelity vntill the light of Christs Ghospell shined to them Act. 13. To you said S. Paul and S. Barnaby speaking ●o the Iewes it behoued vs first to speake the word of God but because you repell it and iudge yourselues vnworthy of eternall lise ●●hold we turne to the Gentils and therefore the booke of the Ghospell is turned from the right hand which signifyeth the Iewes to the left which signifyeth the Gentils The people stande at the Ghospell as also at the Creede to signify the hearing of the Faith of Christ then preached When Verbum caro factum est or Homo factus est is said wee kneele downe in reuerence to the mystery of the Incarnation The signe of the Crosse is made vpon the Ghospel because the doctrine of our Redemption is conteined in it And the Priest signeth his forhead mouth and heart with that fig●● of our Redemption that his thoughts words and deeds may allwayes redounde to the honour of Christ crucifyed He kisseth the booke in the end as the booke of life and of all happinesse to vs. Then the people answere The Creede laus tibi Christe giuing prayse to Christ The Creede is said alowd to shew that we must not be affraid but boldly and cheerfully make profession of our Faith when neede requireth for if we be ashamed of Christ now he will be ashamed of vs afterwards and with shame we shall be damned The Creede being said the first part of Masse is ended then Ite missa est vsed to be sung to dismisse the Catechumeni who not being yet Christians by Baptisme where not to be present at the Christian Sacrifice but were to depart now that the cheife parts of Masse beganne and therefore this part of Masse vntill the Offertory was commonly called Missa Catcchumenorum The Masse of the Cathecumens At the Offertory beginneth the second part in
mortall sinne is as opposite to the diuine grace as poyson wounds and sicknesse are to health and as darknes is to light which can not be both together and therefor he that knoweth himselfe to be in mortall sinne and cleereth not his conscience before he receiueth any Sacrament doth as a sicke man that should desire health and yet willfully keepe poyson at his hart or as one that should shutte vp the windows to let in light and doth not onely hinder the effect and fruit of the Sacrament which he receiueth but committeth also a new mortall sinne in soe receiuing and there for we are bounde to cleere ourselues by a good confession from mortall sinne before we receiue either the Eucharist Extreme-Vnction Holy Orders or any other Sacrament baptisme onely excepted because by it we must be made christians before we can receiue any of the christian Sacraments if we did but consider the benefits which we gette by the Sacrament of Pennance we should not neede to be commanded to it First we ●ette the forgiuenesse of our sinnes by which we are as it were in a moment freed from the most painfull and lothsome sicknes that can be We gette the diuine grace the least degree of which is better then all this visible world we gett pardon from a horrible and euerlasting ●ame for the future we gett ourselues admitted into the Communion of Saints and to the fellowship of the blessed soe as to haue then a condignity through the merits of Christ to their euerlasting reward Lastly we exhilarate and make glad the whole court of heauen and we contristate and make sad the spirits of hell with our conuersion to God We are commanded to confesse to our ordinary Pastour and that with good reason that our Pastors who haue the particular charge of vs may haue a more destinct and particular knowledge of the state of our consciences And this is intimated in the words of Christ when he said that the good Pastour calleth his sheepe by name and leadeth them forth that is knoweth them all in particular and hath a care of euery one of them Besides Pastors and people are thu● ●ngaged to each other to be good Pastors and good people But because Pastors in their parishes haue many imployments and can not allwais attende to hearing of confessions therefor the Church licenceth other Priests and religious men who are not ordinary Pastors to heare confessions and to such we may lawfully confesse because our Pastors licence is supposed to confesse to them THE FOVRTH PRAECEPT TO receiue the Eucharist at Easter time I haue sh●wed in its propper place how oftne of deuotion we may receiue this the most blessed of all Sacraments But that none may be depriued of the benefits and graces of it the Catholike Church hath commanded that all should receiue once euery yeare and that about Easter time because it was then instituted and bequeathed as a legacy to the Apostles to be deliuered by them to the christian world and to remaine as an euerlasting testimony of the loue of Christ towards vs and as a memoriall of the worke of our redemption And therefor it is sitting that euery christian should commemorate the mystery of it about that time by humbly and thankefully receiuing it We are bounde also to receiue it against our deaths because it is the most comfortable Vyande and strengthening bread which God hath prouided against that last and irreuocable voyage Of which we haue a figure in the third booke of Kings When Iesabel persecuted the Church and killed soe many Prophets that Elias in Israel was as it were left alone and he also was threatened by a messenger that the next day his soule should follow them he fledd into the desert committing himselfe to the diuine prouidence in that barren and solitary place And God who neuer faileth to prouide for his freinds prouided for him sending him bread by an Angell who badde him eate for that he had a great way to goe Reg. 3.19 And eating of the Angels bread he walked in the strength of that meate forty dayes and forty nights vnto the mount of God Horeb. The Angels bread was the blessed Sacrament in mystery the Angell that brought it signifyeth the Priest tho great way which Elias had to goe is the iourney of death which all haue to goe Horeb the mount of God representeth heauen and thither we artaine by vertue and strength of this comfortable bread We are bound then to receiue the Eucharist at Easter time and at our deaths THE FIFT PRAECEPT TO pay tithes This Praecept obligeth partly by Law of nature and partly by the authority of the Church By the Law of nature we are bound to allow a maintenance for our spirituall Pastors and the Church hath determined that this allowance should be the tithes In the holy Law of Moyses God chose to himselfe the tribe of Leui to attende vpon his s●ruice and to labour for the spirituall good of the people and being soe imployed in that charge that they could not attende to tilling of Land nor to worke for their owne maintenance he ordained that the people whom they susteined spiritually should susteine them corporally and should pay to them the rithes of the fruits of the earth as a competent allowance for them By the same ●ty of God and of nature we are bounde as they were to mainteine our spirituall Pastors and Christ not hauing specifyed any allowance in particular but hauing left it to the determination of the Church what could the Church of Christ more reasonably determine then that which God had determined before in the same case to wit the tithes a● a competent maintenance for Pastours Saint Paul indeede would receiue nothing of the Corinthians but would worke with his hands on the night time to maintaine his labour on the day rather then he would be burder some to them But although he would doe this with the Corinthians yet with others he did not soe but receiued a liuelyhood of those to whom he preached and of the Corinthians also he challenged it as due although for some reasons he would take nothing of them Luc. 10. Our Sauiour instructed his Apostles to take their maintenance of the people and declared it as due to them as wages are to workemen For the workman saith he is worthy of his hyre Tim. 1.5 And Saint Paul alleadging this sentence to that purpose hath assured vs of the sense of it and of the authority of Christ in that sense The same Apostle speaking of it saith Whoeuer playeth the souldier at his owne charges in the law of Moyses those that serued the Altare participated of the Altare And so also our Lord ordained in the Law of grace for them that preach the Ghospell to liue of the Ghospell Thus doth S. Paul discourse vpon th● By all which it doth appeare that the tithes being appointed by the Church for the labors of the Clergy
freely cooperate with it For as God would make vse of Moyses his rodde to the working of miracles saying Exod. 4. What is it that thou holdest in thy hand and then beganne to worke miracles by it and as Elizeus asked the widdow what hast that in thy house Reg. 4.4 and vsed her oile to the enriching of her Io. 1. and as Christ would vse water to the procuring of wine soe God vseth vs as instruments to the effecting of good works and therefor in the Scriptures they are attributed sometimes to God and sometimes to ourselues To God as to the principall and cheife cause to vs as to an inferiour and instrumentall cause Exod. 31. As I am the Lord that sanctify you To wit cheefly and principally and man also is said to sanctify himselfe as in S. Io. 1. Iohn euery one that hath this hope sanctifyeth himselfe That is instrumentally and after an inferiour manner by cooperating with Gods grace Ezech 36 Ezech 8 Cor. 1.5 Soe also Ezech. I will giue you a new hart And in another place make to your selues a new hart And therefor S. Paul saith we are Gods Coadiutors but if we had not freewill the goodnes of the worke were by noe meanes to be attributed to vs and we could not be said to sanctify ourselues nor to make to ourselues new harts Furthermore we see that we can deliberate and consult of our actiōs but we can deliberate and cōsult of nothing but that which we haue freedome to doe or not to doe therefor our actions are free in vs. When an enemy pursueth vs we deliberate not whether we shall fly in the ayre or noe because it is not in our freedome Lawes are commanded vs rewards and punishments are proposed to vs we exhort to good works and praise and honour those that doe well which we would not doe if they did soe of necessity and had not freedome to the contrary Clem. Alex. l. 1. strom Neither praise nor dispraise nor honours nor punishments were iust if man had not freewill And this which is soe manifest to reason is as planely declared in the Scriptures Eccli 15. God from the beginning made man and left him in the hands of his owne counsaile Holy Iosue at his death exhorting the Israelites and drawing neere to the end of his speech to engage them the more to the seruice of God he biddeth them to choose what they would doe Ios 24. Now therefor feare our Lord and serue him with a perfect and very true hart But if it like you not to serue our Lord choice is giuen you Choose this day that which pleaseth you Soe that it is in our choice to doe well or ill But I end this and all controuersys of religion in this booke with the authority of the Church This was the doctrine of the Catholike Church aboue a thousand and foure hundred yeares since when Manes beganne to oppose it and he was then and hath euer since bene esteemed an haeretike for opposing it there being then noe Church of Christians in all the world that denyed it therefor this is the true Catholike doctrine This was the doctrine of the Church a few yeares since when Luther beganne to oppose it Ses 7. c. 16. can 14. and the Councell of Trent of aboue two hundred and fifty prelates with the authority of the supreme pastour that then was of the Church declared for this doctrine therefor this is the true Catholike doctrine Let now the enemys of the Catholike Church obiect what they can either out of Scriptures or reason against it all is in vaine the Church is to iudge of the sense of Scriptures and of reason and not euery priuate man to vnderstande them as he will and to get followers to himselfe against the Church Whatsoeuer is obiected contrary to the authority of the vniuersall Church allthough it seeme neuer soe plane is wrong and falsly applyed and we must take them for haeretikes that will stande obstinate in any such doctrine S. Augustine must that which is cleere be denyed Aug. l. de nat grat c. 38 because that which is done can not be vnderstoode and what is soe cleere as that which is once declared by all the Doctors of the Catholike Church We may dispute about the sense of Scriptures or any point of doctrine vntill the Church haue declared concerning it as Lawyers dispute about applying the sense of the Law to particular cases vntill the iudge giue sentence in it but when that is done then all argument must cease because then it is cleere and soe cleere that it can be noe cleerer then to be declared viua voce with the liuely voice of the iudge who hath lawfull authority Soe that which the Church hath once declared is soe cleere that it can be noe cleerer because it is declared by the liuely voice of all the Pastors of the Church all who must either haue lawfull authority to decide all controuersys concerning Scriptures and all other points of faith or els there is noe lawfull authority in the world to decide them but euery man might hold and teach what he listed which were to destroy the world Therefore we neede noe more for the proofe of freewill but the authority of the Church and all arguments that can be obiected against it are but delusions Yet the true sense of those places which they obiect may be vnderstoode by that which hath bene said I know Lord that mans way is not his owne Ier. 10. neither is it in a man to walke and to direct his stepps It is not in man by himselfe without the grace of God But with it it is Io. 6. Noe man can come to mee vnles the father that sent mee draw him God draweth not by force necessitating whether we will or noe but as the spouse said draw mee Can. 1. we will runne after thee in the odour of thine ointments that is sweetly and by faire meanes mouing and exciting our wills Nay although he had said vnles my father compell them we might haue vnderstoode it of a sweet kind of violence by which God inuiteth vs to him as the master in the ghospell seeing the slownes of those that were inuited in comming to him sent to bid others saying Compell them to enter which was noe more Luc. 14. but earnestly to intreat and inuite them Such is the loue of God to vs and his desire of our saluation and soe powerfull is the grace by which he inuiteth and exciteth vs to vertue that he may very well be said to draw vs as a very louing father doth his children vnto goodnes Will you see this planely Apoc. 3. Behold I stande at the doore and knock If any man shall heare my voice and open the gate I will en●er into him and suppe with him and he with mee See here O Christian the loue of God towards thee what he doth for
pleasure which we tooke in it The first euill of the losse of God is repaired by our conuersion to him in confession by which we are restored to his fauour againe But the punishment of our senses is not allwais quite taken away but as our auersion from God and conuersion to the creature for sensible pleasure was more earnest and intense then our conuersion is to God againe soe it is fitting that some sensible paine should remaine to be susteined These are the grounds of the Catholike doctrine of Satisfaction and of Purgatory of both which we wil say somethinge here as in their propper place If I said noe more in proofe of this doctrine but onely that the Bishop of Rome and Pastors of his communion deliuered it I had in reason said enough For he being the head of the Church as the true and lawfull successour in S. Peters primacy as I haue shewed him to be he and the Pastors of his communion haue the lawfull authority of the whole Church and are the whole Catholike Church in authority and being that we must alwais say I beleeue the Catholike Church we must allwais beleeue and obey the succession of that authority But I will say somethinge in particular of them That which the Catholike Church teacheth of Satisfaction is that although the conuersion of a sinner to God may be soe intense and perfect sometimes that he may obtaine a full remission of all punishment and be as it were new borne to God in baptisme yet this doth not allwais happen Our conuersion to God is not allwais soe intense and perfect but that there may and commonly doth remaine some punishment to be suffered after it This we shew first by holy Scriptures When the children of Israel sinned by murmuring against God and their Pastors Moyset praying obtained the remission of their sinne But yet saith God all the men that haue seene my Maicsty Nu. 14. c. And haue tempted mee c. they shall not see the land for the which I sware to their fathers Here their sinne was forgiuen them yet it was punished afterwards those that had sinned neuer entring into the land of promise Nu. 20. Moyses and Aaron sinned at the waters of contradiction and when their sinne was forgiuen there remained a penalty to be endured by them and they endured it not bringing the people into the holy land Dauid had sinned by murder and adultery and Nathan being sent to reprooue him and bring him to repentance Reg. 2.12 he repented and deserued to heare from the Prophet our Lord hath taken away thy sinne thou shalt not dy But his sinne being taken away it was not withstanding punished with the death of his sonne the Prophet declaring the sonne which is borne to thee dying shall dy And for all king Dauids earnest praying fasting and lying on the ground he could not obtaine the life of the child By all which we see that punishment of sinne may remaine to be suffered when the sinne is forgiuen It Was therfor the custome of the Catholike Church aunciently as now it is to impose penaltys vpon sinners at their repentance as by auncient Canons doth appeare Ep 3. 14. can 38. S. Basil ep 3. 14. can 38. He that hath committed adultery shall not communicate in the Sacraments for fifteene yeares S. Augustine Let vs seeke confession with a pure hart and performe the pennance which is giuen by priests It is against reason that he that commeth to confession with many mortal sinnes should thinke to haue noe more puishment then he that hath but one onely if they be disposed with equal deuotion Yet they were both alike if they had noe more punihment but onely to confesse and that then all sinne and punishment were taken away Sinne therfor and punishment are onely soe farre correlatiues that punishment allwais supposeth sinne to haue bene but doth not require that there be then actually sinne Neither is it worth any thinge that which haeretiks obiect against this That Christ satysfyed for vs therefor we neede not to satisfy for our selues noe more then it is to say Christ did good works for vs therefor wee neede nor to doe good works for our selues Our good works derogate not from the good works of Christ nor our Satisfaction from his Satisfactions our good works haue their value from his and soe hath our satisfaction but neither of them is hindered by him Thus much for Satisfaction and for the enioyning of pennance after the remiffion of sinnes As for Purgatory it followeth hence that those who dy with their sinnes forgiuen them but haue not that intense sorrow and perfect repentance which is necessary for the remission of all punishment due to their sinnes must haue their punishment in some place in the next world where they must be purged from that guilt of punishment as also of their lesser sinnes before that they can enter into heauen Aërius was one of the first that denyed Purgatory and that which he gott for it was to be recorded as an haeretike euer from the times of the primitiue Church and to haue his doctrine in thelist of those whom S. Epiphanius haer 75. And S. Augustine haer 83. haue branded with the marke of haeresy Luther at first although he denyed indulgences yet was soe resolute in the mainteining of Purgatory that in his disputation with Eckius he would needs make publike profession of it saying I firmely beleeue and dare boldly say I know there is a Purgatory whatsoeuer haeretiks raile against it Disp lips But hauing once fallen from the Catholike Church he was constant to nothing but vnconstancy and came in the end to deny Purgatory also But the Catholike Church hath allwais acknowledged that there is a place for the soules of those to be purged in who dy in venial sinne or haue not made full satisfaction for their mortal which place therfor may aptly be called Purgatory That there is such a place it appeareth in all those sentences of Scriptures where prayer for the dead is commended Teh 4. For those who are in heauen or in hell are not to be prayed for Set thy bread and thy wine saith holy Toby vpon the burial of a iust man Not as the Gentils vainely did to delight the dead with corporal viands but to be giuen to the poore to pray for them Hence saith S. Chrysostome who liued aboue twelue hundred yeares since came the custome of calling together the poore to receiue almes to pray for the dead Thus did Iudas Machabaeus make a gathering and sent a great summe of syluar to be bestowed in sacrifice for the dead Where vpon the Scriptures make this inference Mach. 2.12 It is therfor a holy and healthfull cogitation to pray for the dead that they may be loosed from sinnes And if any deny these Scriptures to be canonical because the Iewes deny them S. L. 18. de ciu Det. Augustine will