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A17586 The re-examination of two of the articles abridged: to wit, of the communicants gesture in the act of receaving, eating, and drinking: and The observation of festivall dayes Calderwood, David, 1575-1650.; Cowper, William, 1568-1619. Passage of Master William Cowper pretended bishop of Gallway, his sermon delivered before the estates, anno 1606. at which time hee was minister at Perth. 1636 (1636) STC 4363.5; ESTC S118315 29,491 64

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communicated in the evening after they had refreshed themselves with commoun meats upon other dayes also it is likely then they also sate Alexander de Hales in the second part of his tractat concerning the masse sayeth the Pope communicateth sitting in rememberance that the Apostles at the Lords supper communicated sitting The Waldenses who are justly called the pure seed of the ancient kirk and have continued since the dayes of Pope Sylvester or as some thought from the dayes of the Apostles sayeth Rainerius the inquisitour their enemie celebrated the communion sitting See Master Fox first volumn pag. 209 edict 1610. and their apologie against one Doctour Augustine which is extant in Lydii Waldensia Luther exponing the epistle upon Saint Stevins day sayeth Christ so instituted the Sacrament that in it we should sit at the Sacrament but all things are changed and idle ordinances of men are come in place of divine ordinances Zuinglius in expositione sidei Christianae setting down the form of celebration used at Berne Zurick Basile and other neighbour townes reporteth that they communicated sitting The kirks of strangers at London in Alascoes time communicated sitting so do other kirks in the Low-countries even to this day In Pol such as adhered to the confession of Helvetia communicated sitting as we may see in consensus Poloniae By the gesture of standing is pretended more reverence and thereby the gesture of sitting is indirectly taxed and that lively representation of our familiar societie with Christ taken away seeing it is not the usuall and ordinarie gesture at civill feasts As for kneeling in the act of receaving First wee have not a warrant from the example of Christ and his Apostles or the practises of the Apostolick kirks after and therefore they who receave adoration they are secure they have the example of the Apostles whom wee read not to have adored prostrate but as they were sitting they receaved and did eat They have the practise of the Apostolicall kirks where it is declared that the faithfull did communicate not in adoration but in breaking of bread sayeth Calvin Institut lib. 4. cap. 37. sect 33. Beza in his dispute against Iodocus Harchius So like as when the Lord truely to bee adored as God and man at table did institute this holy supper that the Disciples arose to the end that falling upon their knees they might receave that bread and wine out of his hand And so like as the Apostles were ignorant how to deliver to the kirks the manner how to celebrate these holy mysteries it is known well enough that the love-feasts could hardly or scarce at all admit geniculation The Waldenses in the apologie above-mentioned say that Christ gave the Sacrament to his Disciples and his successours for a long time made no reverence meaning adoration This holy action is denominate the LORDS table and the Lords Supper The use of a table is not only to set meat on it but also for the guests or persons invited to sit at and about it and to partake of the meat set upon the table Wee require not of necessitie an artificiall table of tymber a Bul-hyde or a plot of ground may serve in time of necessitie and answereth analogically to a standing table as the plot of ground did whereabout the multitude sate in rowes by fifties and fifties Mark 6. Neither do wee stand upon the fashion whether it bee long or round but wee require that the Communicants alwayes sit table-wayes so that they may observe the form of a feast or banquet For in that this holy action is called a supper it is imported that it was celebrate in the forme of a feast or banquet as Piscator observeth in his observations upon Matth. 26. Wee do not require all the formes used at commoun feasts but these which Christ the institutour and Master of the feast thought sufficient Kneeling is not a gesture sutable with the forme of a banquet or use of a supper table The termes supper and table of the Lord very familiar with the Apostle Paul seeme to require sitting rather then standing kneeling or passing by sayeth Alasco Kneling is not a gesture which hath beene used at feasts or banquets but rather a gesture of supplicants Plessie in his fourth book of Eucharist sayeth that of old this holy Supper was celebrated in the forme of a banquet whereat they did sit a footestep whereof remaineth among the Benedictines If these termes the Table of the LORD the Supper of the LORD and breaking of bread had beene retained and other new names not invented as Sacrament Eucharist then might easilie have been perceaved how harsh it were to use these phrases They brake bread together kneeling they compassed the table of the LORD kneeling they celebrate the Supper of the LORD kneeling which seemeth not so harsh when wee say they receaved the Sacrament or Eucharist kneeling Therefore the ancient Doctours sayeth Mowline on the LORDS Supper part 1. pag. 8. had done better if they had hold themselves to the tearmes expressed in Gods word c. The distribution of the elements by the communicants amongst themselves admitteth not kneeling in the act of receaving Can the communicant bee both adoring GOD upon his knees and at the verie instant bee reaching the elements to his brother likewise kneeling and adoringe Yee have heard out of Calvin before that the faithfull in the Apostolical times did not communicate with adoration but breaking of bread as if adoration and breaking of bread could not consist together But so it is that the Communicants ought to distribute and reach the elements to other Christ reaching the cup to his Disciples commandeth them to divide it among themselves Luke 22.17 This cup which hee commanded them to divide was the Evangelicall cup or which is all one the last paschall cup changed into the Evangelicall Luke applieth Christs protestation that he will drink no more of the fruit of the wine c. to the cup which hee commanded them to divide amongst themselves but that protestation is applied to the com●●●on cup by Matth. and Mark who make mention only of this cup in the verses immediatly preceeding the protestation If Christ was to drink incontinent after this protestation of the com●●●n cup how could hee protest that hee would drink no more of the fruit of the wine● When the Schoolemen would prove that wine was one of the elements at the Evangelicall supper they can not finde a proof in all the Evangelists but in this protestation Christ in this protestation alludeth to the canon or custome of the Iewes forbidding to taste any thing after the last cup which was called the cup of praise Now the last cup was the Evangelicall or communion cup or the last paschall cup changed it into the Evangelicall Further Christ gave thanks when he took the cup in his hand which he cōmanded them to divide and therefore Luke maketh no mention of this thanksgiving when hee maketh mention of
that the first institution was given for a patern whereunto wee ought to conform Now the washing of the disciples feet the putting off and on of Christs upper garment were ended before they sate down to the second course of the paschall supper and consequently a good space before the institution of the last supper Time and place are commoun circumstances to all actions The particular time and place when Christ instituted this Sacrament were occasionall They might not eat the paschall supper but at evening and therefore the Evangelical supper which was to succeed to it behoved to bee celebrate that night seeing Christs suffering was so neer at hand They behoved to eat the paschall lamb in a chamber in Ierusalem and consequently the supper behooved to bee instituted in a chamber after the paschall supper The number of such as did eat the paschall lamb behooved to consist of few betwixt ten and twentie and therefore they behooved to bee so few that night at the institution of the supper Their manner and kinde of sitting was a form observed among the Iewes at their commoun feasts and at the paschall supper Put the case that they stood at the first Passeover in Egypt as it can not bee prooved it were then extraordinarie and for that night only to signifie their hastie departure out of Egypt Sitting was the ordinarie gesture used at all religious feasts The Heathnicks sate at their feasts made of the remainder of the sacrifices offered to their idoles Amos 2.1 Cor. 8.10 to professe their communi●● and societie with their idoll or fellowship with devils as the Apostle calleth it 1 Cor. 10.20 Our Lord instituting his supper to bee the only religious feast to bee used in the Christian kirk observed the same gesture which was used at the paschall supper and other religious feasts Christ might easily have changed sitting into kneeling and very commodiouslie seeing they fate upon beds yet would he retain the same gesture which they used at the paschall supper Time and place are meere circumstances and the particular time and place were then only occasionall But the gesture is more then a meere circumstance as Master Paybodie pag. 34. confesseth This supper was institute in form of a banquet to represent not only our spirituall nuriture but also our societie and familiaritie with Christ who is to sup feast with us The Polonian Baroun Ioannes Alasco maintaineth further that our sitting eating and drinking at the communiō table is a figure and representation of our sitting at the heavenly table So doth Musculus upon Matthow 26 and Aquinas part 3. quest 60. make the Lords supper a type and fore-shewing sign of our glory to come Christ himself expresseth our peaceable fruition of the joyes of heaven by sitting with Abraham Isaac and Iaakob in the kingdome of Heaven Matth. 8.11 and by Lazarus resting in Abrahams bosome Luke 16. that is sitting at the heavenly table and leaning upon Abrahams bosome after the same manner that Iohn lay on Christs bosome when hee fate at this table Iohn 16. and Christ himself at the institution promised to his Apostles that they should eat and drink at his table in his kingdome and sit upon twelve thrones Luke 22.30 Yea this Polonian Baroun affirmeth that they have slender affection to the glory of Christ or our eternall felicitie that would abolish out of the kirk that image of our eternall felicitie in the celestiall glory to come which is so much recommended to us by Christ himselfe by the symbole of sitting at a banquet to the unspeakable comfort of all the faithfull We see that at civill banquets the time the place the number of persons and other things are variable but no other gesture hath beene used but sitting after one form or other according to the custome of the nation Even when men are invited by a king to a feast they are honoured with sitting in token of his familiar intertainment It appeareth by the practise of the Apostolicall kirks observing still this gesture albeit other circumstances of time and place and other things which fell foorth occasionally at the first supper were not regarded that the gesture of sitting is still to be retained Christ himself Luke 24 30. sitting at table in Emaus tooke bread blessed it and brake it This place is interpreted by sundrie ancients and modern writers of the ministration of the Sacrament And Master Paybodie himself pag. 86. is of that same judgement The apostle 1 Cor. 11. maketh not mention of sitting because he presupposed a lawfull Minister a table and sitting at the table and rehearseth only Christs actions and his words uttered to communicants sitting at the table Nor yet all his actions and his words as giving of the bread blessing of the cup either severally or conjunctly with the bread and the precept to drink all of it His chief purpose was to correct the abuse of the Corinthiās for not staying upon other for the Lord that night hee was betrayed said to all his disciples conveened together Take yee eat yee c. The love-feasts and the Lords supper went together the love-feasts in these times preceeding and the Lords supper immedialy following Doctor Bilson in his book of obedience pag. 653. sayeth that whether they went before or after they could not divide themselves each from other but they must offer the same abuse and disdain of the poor at the Lords supper which was ministred to them as they sate at their tables immediatly before or after their usuall or corporall refreshings Master Paybodie pag 86 and 94. thinketh that together with the institution itself after supper were grounded the love-feasts by continued occasion whereof his disciples might possibly for a time use sitting in the very act of receaving Doctor Downam in his second sermon pag. 61. confesseth sitting to receave the Sacrament to have been used in the kirk in the apostles times Sitting in the act of receaving was continued at sometimes in the Christian kirk evē to our times Mornaeus in his first book of the masse 1 cap. and 5 reporteth that the Monks of St. Bennets order communicate sitting for three dayes before Easter Bullinger in his book de origine errorum pag. 46 reporteth that not only in their monastries but also in cathedrall kirks they communicate sitting upon that day Now it was the custome of old not only for the Monks but also other Christians to communicat upon this day and no doubt after the same form The two thousand souldiours who were reconcealed to the Emperour Mauritius about the year 1590. by the travell of Gregorius bishop of Antioch receaved the Sacrament sitting upon the ground as Euagrius reporteth lib. 6. cap 13. Doctor Lindesay in his defence pag. 53 54. alleadgeth the like done by the Scottish armie at Bonnokburn in the dayes of King Robert Bruce Socrates in his historie lib. 5. cap. 23. reporteth of the Egyptians who dwelt near to Alexandria and the inhabitants of Thebais