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A68376 A testimonie of antiquitie shewing the auncient fayth in the Church of England touching the sacrament of the body and bloude of the Lord here publikely preached, and also receaued in the Saxons tyme, aboue 600. yeares agoe.; Sermo de sacrificio in die Pascae. English and Anglo-Saxon Aelfric, Abbot of Eynsham.; Joscelyn, John, 1529-1603.; Parker, Matthew, 1504-1575. 1566 (1566) STC 159.5; ESTC S122220 34,758 172

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micelre stemne to all the men which with eallū ðam mannū ðe mid Moyses were in the Moyse ƿaeron on ðam wildernesse then ƿaestene ða THe lorde was Dryhten ƿaes speaking these sprecende ðas wordes to Moyses and thus ƿord to Moyse and ðus sayth I am the Lord thy cƿaeþ Ic eom ðryhten ðin God I thee out ledde of God Ic ðe ut gelaedde of Aegypt lande and of their egipta londe and of hiora bondage Ne loue y u other ðeoƿdome Ne lufa ðu oþre straūge Gods besides me Ne fremde Godas ofer me Ne my name name thou in minne noman ne cig ðu on vayne for that thou ne idelnesse forþon ðe ðu ne arte giltlesse with me if bist unscyldig ƿiþ me gif thou in vayne namest my ðu on idelnesse cigst minne name Remēber that thou noman Gemyne ꝧ ðu hallowe thy rest day gehalgige ðone raeste daeg VVorke ye vj. dayes on ƿyrceaþ eoƿ vi dagas on the seuenth rest ye bycause þā siofoþan restaþ eoƿ forðam in vj. dayes Christ on vi dagū Crist geƿorhte made heauen and earth heofonas eorþan y e sea all creatures that saes and ealle gesceafta ðe in them be And he rested on him sint hine gereste on the seuenth day therfore on þone siofoþan daeg forþon the Lord it hallowed dryhten hine gehalgod Honour thy father thy Ara ðynū faeder þinrae mother that the Lorde medder ða ðe dryhten gaue thee y t thou be longe sealde ðe ꝧ ðu sie ðylenge lyuing in y e earth Ne kill libbende on eorþan Ne sleah thou Ne lig ne y u priuelye ðu Ne lige þu dearnenga Ne steale thou Ne say thou Ne stala ðu Ne saege ðu false witnesse Ne desire lease geƿitnesse Ne ƿilna thou of thy neyghbours ðu ðynes nehstan heritage with vnryght ierfes mid unryhte These cōmaundementes we haue taken from the lawes of Alfrede the king before which they are alwaies placed but here the maner of speaking in the scripture is somewhat chaunged and that more is here is lefte out these wordes Non facies sculptile neque omnem similitudinem quae est in coelo desuper quae est in terra deorsum nec eorum quae sunt in aquis sub terra non adorabis neque coles c. 2. Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen Image nor the likenes of any thing that is in heauen aboue or in the earth beneath or in the water vnder the earth Thou shalt not bowe downe to them nor worship them For I thy Lord. c. Which thyng is done in all copyes of Alfredes lawes written in the Saxon tounge and not onely in them but in many other bookes as hath been seene eyther Saxon or Lattyne intreatyng of the commaundementes which were written before the Conquest and since the second Nicene councell wherin was decreed the worshipping of Images See what followed of taking away frō the worde of God contrarye to the expresse cōmaundement of the same vpon the vngodly decree of that coūcell Whē this thing was espied by them that translated these lawes into the Lattyne tounge sone after the conquest these wordes were restored agayne by the trāslatours to their due place as by the Lattyne bookes of the lawes it is to be seene But bicause we haue made mention of that second Nicene councell whiche decreed both of the hauing and worshipping of Images we shall here brieflye shewe what our stories report was thought of the same coūcell by the learned of England and chieflye by that great learned Englyshe man and of most fame in that age Alcuine scholemaister to Charles the great Anno ab incarnatione Domini 792. Carolus rex Francorum misit Synodalem librum ad Britanniā sibi a Cōstantinopoli directū in quo libro heu proh dolor multa inconuenientia verae fidei contraria reperta sunt maxime quod pene omniū orientalium doctorum nō minus quam trecentorū vel eo amplius episcoporum vnanima assertione confirmatū imagines adorari debere quod omnino ecclesia dei execratur Cōtra quod scripsit Alcuinus epistolam ex autoritate diuinarū scripturarum mirabiliter affirmatā illamque cū codem libro persona episcoporū principum nostrorum regi Francorum attulit That is In the yere frō the incarnatiō of our Lord. 792. Charles kinge of Fraunce sent to Brytaine a Synode booke which was directed vnto hym from Constantinople in the which booke alas many thinges vnconuenient and contrarye to the true fayth were found in especiall that it was establyshed with a whole consent almost of all the learned of the East no lesse then of three hundreth byshoppes or more that men oughte to worship Images the whiche the Churche of God doth vtterlye abharre Agaynst the whiche Alcuine wrote an epistle wonderouslye proued by the authoritie of holy Scripture and brought that epistle with the same booke and names of our byshoppes and princes to the king of Frauuce This story hath Simeon of Durham Roger Houeden Flores Historiarum and the historie of Rochester ⁂ ¶ The Saxon Caracters or letters that be moste straunge be here knowen by other common Caracters set ouer them ¶ d. d. ð. th þ. th f. f. g. g. i. i. r. r. s. s t. t. ƿ. w. y. y. z. z. and. ꝧ that ¶ ¶ Æ AE Æ AE Ð. Th. Þ. Th. E. E. H. H. M. M. S. S. Ƿ. W. And. ¶ One pricke signifieth an vnperfect point this figure which is lyke the Greeke interrogatiue a full painte which in some other olde Sai●●● bookes is expressed wyth three prickes set in triangle wyse thus Imprinted at Londō by Iohn Day dwelling ouer Aldersgate beneath S. Martyns ⸫ ¶ Cum priuilegio Regiae Maiestatis * Who dyd put out secular priestes out of the church of Canterbury as the story of that house sheweth These charters are to be sene * No suche demaunde of thys profession in any Englyshe pontificall before thys tyme. Exod. 14. Exod. 17. Math. 27. Marc. 15. Luke 24. * No such signe commaunded by God in that place of scripture but it was the bloud that God dyd loke vpon Exod 12. * Vnderstand thys as that of S. Paule Ephe. 2. Christ reconciled both to God in one body through hys crosse Iohn 6. Math. 26. Luke 22. Marke 14 1. Cor. 11. * This was now in question and so before Beringarius tyme. * A necessarye distinction * The water in baptisme and bread and wine in the Lords supper compared * No transubstantiation * Differēces betwixt Christes naturall body and the Sacramēt therof * 1. Difference * Not the body that suffred is in the housell * 2. Difference * 3. Difference * 4. Difference Math. 15. * 5. Difference These tales seme to be infarsed placed here vpon no occasion 1. Cor. 10. * Note this exposition which is now a dayes thought new Iohn 4. 1. Cor. 10. Exod. 17. Math. 26. Luke 22. Marke 14 * Now we eate that bodye which was eaten before he was borne by the faythfull * See a transubstantiatiō * Manna Iohn 6. Iohn 6. * What body do the faithfull now eate * A signification before Christ * A sacrifice in Christes tyme. * A remembraunce after Christ Math. 26. Ebreu 10. * This doctrine with praying to images to the dead bodies of men at their tombes tooke his beginning of the auarice of mōkes vnto whom it was gain full * The housell is also the body of al faithfull men * No scripture enforceth the mixture of water with the wyne * The wine signifieth christes bloude * How we shoulde come to the holy cōmunion The words inclosed betwene the ij halfe circles some had rased out of Worceter booke but they are restored agayne out of a booke of Exeter church William of Malmes 1. lib. de pontificibus * That is commit no adultery * That is commit no adultery
A TESTIMOnie of ANTIQVITIE shewing the auncient fayth in the Church of England touching the sacrament of the body and bloude of the Lord here publikely preached and also receaued in the Saxons tyme aboue 600. yeares agoe Ieremie 6. Goe into the streetes and inquyre for the olde way and if it be the good and ryght way then goe therin that ye maye finde rest for your soules But they say we will not vvalke therein Jmprinted at London by Iohn Day dwelling ouer Aldersgate beneath S. Martyns ¶ Cum priuilegio Regiae Maiestatis The Preface to the Christian Reader GReat contention hath nowe been of longe tyme about the moste comfortable sacrament of the body bloud of Christ our Sauiour in the inquisition and determinatiō wherof many be charged and condemned of heresye and reproued as bringers vp of new doctryne not knowen of olde in the church before Berengarius tyme who taught in Fraunce in the daies whē William the Norman was by conqueste kyng of England and Hildebrande otherwyse called Gregorius the seuenth was pope of Rome But that thou mayest knowe good christian reader how this is aduouched more boldly then truely in especiall of some certayne men which be more ready to maintaine their old iudgement thē of humilitie to submitte them selues vnto a truth here is set forth vnto thee a testimonye of verye auncient tyme wherin is plainly shewed what was the iudgement of the learned men in thys matter in the dayes of the Saxons before the conquest Fyrst thou hast here a Sermon or homelye for the holy day of Easter written in the olde Englishe or Saxon speech which doth of set purpose and at large intreate of thys doctryne and is found among many other Sermons in the same olde speech made for other festiuall dayes and sondayes of the yeare and vsed to be spoken orderly accordyng to those daies vnto the people as by the bokes thē selues it doth well appeare And of such Sermons be yet manye bookes to be seene partlye remayning in priuate mens handes and taken out from monasteryes at their dissolution partlye yet reserued in the libraryes of Cathedrall churches as of Worceter Hereford and Exeter From which places diuerse of these bookes haue bene deliuered into the handes of the moste reuerend father Matthewe Archbyshop of Canterburye by whose diligent search for such writings of historye and other monumentes of antiquitie as might reueale vnto vs what hath ben the state of our church in England from tyme to tyme these thynges that bee here made knowen vnto thee do come to lyght Howe be it the Sermons were not first written in the olde Saxon tounge but were translated into it as it shoulde appeare from the Lattyne For about the end of a Saxon boke of lx Sermons which hath aboute the middest of it this Sermō agaynst the bodely presēce be added these wordes of the translatour Fela faegere godspell ƿe forlaetaþ on þisū dihte ða maeg aƿendan se ðe ƿile Ne durre ƿe ðas boc na micle sƿiþor gelaengan ðyles ðe heo ungemetegod sy mannum aeþraet ðurh hire micelny'sse astirige We let passe many good gospells which he that lyste may translate For we dare not enlarge thys boke much further lest it be ouer great so cause to men lothsomnes through hys bygnes And in an other booke contaynyng some of these Saxon Sermons it is also thus written in Lattyne In hoc codicillo continentur duodecim sermones anglice quos accepimus de libris quos Aelfricus abbas Anglice transtulit In thys booke be comprysed xij Sermons whche we haue taken out of the bookes that Aelfricke abbot translated into Englishe In which wordes truelye here is also declared who was the translatour to witte one Aelfricke And so hee doth confesse of hym self in the preface of his Saxon grāmer where he doth moreouer geue vs to vnderstand the number of the Sermons that he translated thus Ic AElfric ƿolde ðas litlan boc apendan to engliscum gereorde of ðam staef craefte ðe is gehaten gsammatica syþþan ic tƿa bec aƿende on hund eahtatigū spellum I Aelfricke was desirous to turne into our Englishe tounge from the arte of letters called grammer thys little booke after that I had translated the two bookes in fourescore Sermons But how soeuer it be nowe manifest enoughe by thys aboue declared how that these Sermons were translated I thinke notwithstanding that there will hardlye be found of them any Lattyne bookes being I feare me vtterlye peryshed made out of the waye since the conquest by some which coulde not well broke thys doctrine And that such hath bene the dealing of some partiall readers may partlye hereof appeare There is yet a very aunciēt boke of Cannons of Worceter librarye and is for the most parte all in Latyne but yet intermyngled in certayne places euē thre or foure leaues together with the olde Saxon tounge and one place of this booke handleth thys matter of the sacrament but a fewe lynes wherin dyd consiste the chiefe poynte of the cōtrouersie be rased out by some reader yet consider how the corruption of hym whosoeuer he was is bewrayed This part of the Lattyne booke was taken out of ij epistles of Aelfrike before named were written of hym aswell in the Saxon tounge as the Lattyne The Saxon epistles be yet wholie to be had in the librarye of the same church in a boke written all in Saxon and is intituled a boke of Cānons shrift boke But in the Church of Exeter these epistles be seene both in the Saxon tounge and also in the Lattyne By the which it shall be easie for any to restore agayne not onely the sense of the place rased in Worceter booke but also the very same Lattyn wordes And the words of these two epistles so much as concerne the sacramentall bread wyne we here set immediatlye after the Sermon fyrst in Saxon then the words of the second epistle we set also in Lattyne deliuering them most faythfully as they are to be seene in the bookes from whence they are taken And as touching the Saxon writings they be set out in such forme of letters and darke speech as was vsed whē they were written translated also for our better vnderstanding into our common and vsuall Englishe speech But nowe it remayneth we do make knowen who thys Aelfricke was whom we here speake of in what age he liued and in what estimation He was truely brought vp in the scholes of Aethelwolde byshop of Winchester Aethelwolde I meane the elder and greate saincte of Winchester church So canonised because in the dayes of Edgar kyng of England he conspyred with Dunstane Archbyshop of Canterburie Oswalde bishop of Worceter to expell out of the Cathedrall churches through out all England the maryed priestes which then were in those churches the olde dwellers as wryteth Ranulphus Cestrencis in hys pollicronicon and to set vp of newe the religion or rather
ought we to betake the rest vnto the might of y e holy ghost w t true humilitie not to searche rashlye of that deepe secretnes aboue y e measure of our vnderstāding They did eat y e lambes flesh w t their loynes gyrt In the loines is the lust of the body And he whyche wyll receyue y t housell shall restrayne that concupiscēce and take with chastitie that holy receypt They were also shod VVhat be shoes but of the hydes of dead beastes VVe be truely shod if we folow in our steps deades the lyfe of those pilgrimes which please god w t keping of his commaūdemēts They had staues in their handes when they ate This stafe signifieth a carefulnes and a diligēt ouerseing And al they y t best know and cā should take care of other men and staye them vppe with their helpe It was inioyned to the eaters y t they shoulde eate the lambe in haste For god abhorreth slouthfulnes in his seruantes And those he loueth that seeke the ioye of euerlasting life with quicknes hast of minde It is written Prolong not to turne vnto god lest the time passe awaye through thy slowe tarrying The eaters mought not break the lābes bones Nomore mought the souldyers y t did hang Christ breake his holy legges as they did of the two theefes that hanged on either syde of him And y e Lord rose frō death sound without al corruption at the last iudgemēt they shal see him whom they did most cruelly hange on y e crosse This time is called in y e Ebrue tonge Pasca and in latine Transitus in English a Passouer bicause y t on this daye the people of Israell passed from the land of Aegipt ouer the read sea from bondage to the lande of promyse So also dyd our Lord at thys tyme departe as sayeth Iohn the Euangelyste from thys world to his heauēly father Euen so we ought to folowe our head and to go from the deuill to christ from this vnstable world to his stable kingdōe Howbeit we should first in this presēt life depart frō vice to holy vertue from euill manners to good manners if we will after thys lente lyfe go to that eternal life after our resurrection to Christ He bring vs to his euerliuing father who gaue him to death for our sinnes To him be honour praise of wel doing world wythout ende Amen ¶ This sermon is found in diuerse bookes of sermōs written in the olde English or Saxon toung whereof two bookes bee nowe in the handes of the most reuerend father the Archbishop of Caunterburye Here followeth the wordes of Aelfrike abbot of S. Albones also of Malmesberye taken out of his epistle written to Wulfsine byshop of Scyrburne It is founde in a booke of the olde Saxon tounge wherin be xliij chapters of Canons and ecclesiasticall constitutions and also Liber poenitentialis that is a poenitentiall booke or shryfte booke deuided into iiij other bokes the epistle is set for the 30. chapter of the fourth boke intituled be preost sinoþe that is a Synode concerning priestes and this epistle is also in a canonn boke of the churche of Exeter SVme preostas healdaþ þaet husel ðe biþ on easter daeg gehalgod ofer gear to sceocum mannum ac hi misdoþ sƿyþe deope ꝧ ðaet halige husel sceole fynegian nellaþ understandan hu mycele daedbote seo poenitentialis taecþ be ðam gif ðaet husel biþ fynig oþþe haeƿen oþþe gif hit forloren biþ oþþe gif mus oþþe nytenu ðurh gymeleaste hit etaþ Man sceal healden þaet halige husel mid mycelre gymene ne forhealdan hit ac halgian oþer edniƿe to sceocum mannum a embe vii niht oð ðe embe xiiii niht ꝧ hit huru fynig ne sy forþon ðe eal sƿa halig biþ ꝧ husel þe nu to daeg ƿaes gehalgod sƿa ꝧ ðe on easter daeg ƿaes gehalgod Ðaet husel is Crister lichama na lichamh ce ac gastlice Na se lichama ðe he on ðroƿode ac se lichama ðe he embe spraec ða ða he bletsode hlaf and ƿin to husle anre nihte aer his ðroƿunge and cƿaeþ be ðā gebletsode hlafe ðis is min lichama and eft be ðam halgan ƿine ðis is min bloode þe biþ for manegū agoten on synna forgyfennesse Vnderstandaþ nu ꝧ se drihten ðe mihte aƿendon ðone hlaf aer his ðroƿunge to his lichaman and ꝧ ƿin to his blode gastlice ðaet se ylca daeghƿamlice bletsaþ ðurh sacerda handa hlaf ƿin to his gastlican lichaman and to his gastlican blode Here thou seest good reader how Aelfrike vpon fynding fault wyth an abuse of his tyme whiche was that priestes on Easter day filled their housell boxe and so kept the bread a whole yere for sickmen toke an occasion to speake agaynst the bodely presence of Christ in the sacramēt So also in an other epistle sent to Wulfstane Archbyshop of York he reprehending agayne thys ouerlong reseruing of the housell addeth also wordes more at large against the same bodely presence His wordes be these SVme preostas gefyllaþ heora husel box on eaftron and healdaþ ofer tƿelf monaþ to untrumum mannum sƿylce ðaet husel sy haligre ðonne oþer Ac hi doþ unƿislice for þam ðe hit ƿannaþ oþþe mid ealle forrotaþ on sƿa langum fyrste and he biþ ðonne scyldig sƿa sƿa us saegþ seo boc Se ðe husel forhylt oþþe hit forlyst oþþe mys eton oþþe oþre nytenu sceaƿa ða poenitentialem hƿaet he saegþ be þisum Eall sƿa halig is ðaet husel ðe biþ gehalgod to daeg sƿa ðaet ðe biþ gehalgod on ðam halgan easter daege Healdaþ forþig ic bidde ðone halgan Crister lichaman mid maran ƿisdome to scocū mannum fram sunnan daege to sunnan daege on sƿiþe claenum boxe oþþe be þam maestan feoƿertyne niht and ðicgaþ hit ðonne lecgaþ ðaer oþer ƿe habbaþ bysene be þam on Moyses bocum sƿa sƿa God sylf bebead on Moyses ae ðaet se sacerd sceolde on aelcū saeternes daege settan tƿelf hlafas on þam tabernaculo ealle niƿe bacene ða ƿaeron gehatene panes propositionis and hig sceoldon ðaer standan on ðam Godes getaelde oþ oþerne saeternes daeg ▪ etan hi ðonne ða sacerdas sylfe settan ðaer oþre Sume preostar nellaþ ðicgan þaet husel þe hi halgiaþ Nu ƿille ƿe eoƿ secgan hu seo boc segþ be ðam Presbyten missam celebrans et non audens sumere sacrificium accusante conscientia sua anathema eft Se maesse preost ðe maessaþ and ne dear ðaet husel ðicgan ƿat hine scyldigne se is amansumod Laesse pleoh is to ðicgenne ðaet husel ðonne to halgienne Se ðe tuƿa halgaþ ane ofletan to husle se biþ þam gedƿolan gelice ðe an cild fullaþ tuƿa Crist syif gehalgode husel aer his ðroƿunge he bletsode þone hlaf tobraec ðus cƿeþende to his halgum apostolum etaþ
of VVinchester VVilliam Bishop of Chichester Iohn Byshop of Hereford Richard byshop of Elye Edwine Byshop of VVorceter Nicholas Byshop of Lincolne Richard Byshop of S. Dauys Thomas Bishop of Couentry and Lichfield Iohn Bishop of Norwiche Iohn Bishop of Carlyll Nicholas Bishop of Bangor With diuers other personages of honour and credite subscribyng their names the recorde wherof remaines in the handes of the moste reuerend father Matthewe Archbishop of Canterbury THE Lordes prayer the Creede and the x. Commaundements in the Saxon and Englishe tounge THat it is no new thyng to teache the people of God the Lordes prayer and the articles of their beliefe in the Englishe tounge wherby they mought the better serue their God and holde faste their profession of Christianitie may well be proued by many godly decrees of byshops and lawes of kinges made frō tyme to tyme in the raigne of the Saxons before the Conquest In a councell holden by Cuthbert Archbyshop of Canterburye in the yeare of our Lorde 747. and in the 33. yeare of Aethelbalde king of Mercia who was present at this same Councell with his princes dukes it was decreed vt ipsi presbyteri dominicam orationem et simbolum anglice discant et doceant That the priestes doe both learne them selues and also teach to others the Lordes prayer and the Creede in Englishe In olde Cannon bookes of churches in the epistles of Aelfricke we read it thus inioyned to priestes Se maesse preost sceal secgan on sunnan dagū and maesse dagum ðaes godspelles andgyt on englisc ðam folce and be ðam Pater noster be ðam Credan eac sƿa he oftost maege þā mannū to onbryrdnysse ꝧ hi cunnon geleafan heora cristendome gehalden The priest shall say vnto the people on sondayes and holydayes the sense of the Gospell in English and so also touching the Lordes prayer and the Creede so ofte as he may to mens contritiō that they may know their beliefe and kepe suere their Christianitie Cnut a king of England worthy of memorye amongest many other good lawes he made in the time of his princely gouernmēt hath also thys law And ealle cristene men ƿe laeraþ sƿiþe georne þaet hig inƿeardne heortan aefre God lufian and rihtne cristendon geornlic healdan and god cundan lareoƿan geornlice hyran Godes lara laga smeagan oft gelome him sylfum to þearke And ƿe laeraþ ꝧ aelc cristen man geleornige ꝧ he huru cunne rihtne geleafan and ariht understandan and Pater noster Credan geleornian for ðam mid oþrum sceal aelc cristen mann hine to Gode gebiddan mid þam oþrum gesƿutelan rihtne geleafan We admonish diligentlye all Christian men that they doe alwayes loue God with an inwarde harte and be diligently obedient to deuine teachers and doe subtillye search Gods learning and lawes often and dayly to the profite of them selues And we warne that all Christian men do learne to know at the least wyse the right beliefe and aright to vnderstand and learne the Pater noster and the Creede For that with the one euery Christian man shall pray vnto God and with the other shewe forth right beliefe Thus is it reserued in memorie put in writing as touching the diligent care that the former age of the church of God bad to haue the people of God wel instructed in that prayer wherof Christ him self is the author and in the articles of their beliefe Which prayer of the Lord and Creede with the tenne lawlyke wordes that God hym selfe taught Moyses and wrote with hys finger in two tables of stone on the Mount Sinai for all mens chastisement as well for that olde people that was in tymes paste as also for vs that bee nowe be here set out as they are yet sene in old bokes of the Saxon tonge But for the better vnderstanding of any worde that may seeme harde vnto the reader we haue thought good to place ouer the Saxon the familiar wordes of our own speech ⸪ Math. 6. Verely when ye pray Soþlice ðonne ge gebiddan nyll ye speke much nellon ge spraecan faela as y e hethē They thinke sƿa sƿa haeþene Hig ƿenaþ that they be harde in ðaet hig syn gehyrede on their manyfolde speaking heorna maenigfealdan spraece Nill ye therefore them Nellon ge eornoslice him do like vnto Verely your geefenlaecan Soþlice eoaer father wote what your nede faeden ƿat hƿaet eoƿ ðearf is before y t ye to hym pray ▪ is ▪ aer þam ðe ge hine biddaþ VVherfore praye ye Eornostlice gebiddaþ eoƿ thus ðus The Lordes praier in Englishe Pater noster on englisc THou our father Ðu ure faeder which art in heauen ðe eart on heofenū be thy name hallowed si þin nama gehalgod Come thy kingdome Be thy Cume þin rice Si ðin will in earth as in ƿilla on eorþan sƿa sƿa on heauen Geue vs to day heofonum Syle us to daeg our daylye bread And urne daeghƿālican hlaf And forgeue vs our trespasses forgif us ure gyltas as we forgeue them that sƿa sƿa ƿe forgifaþ ðam ðe against vs trespasse And ne ƿiþ us agyltaþ And ne led y u not vs into temptatiō laed ðu na us on costnunge But deliuer vs from euill Ac alys us fram yfele Be it so Si hit sƿa The beliefe in English Credo in deū on Englisc I Beleue in God Ic gelyfe on God y e father almightye maker faeder aelmihtigne scyppend of heauē earth And heofenan eorþan I beleue in y e sauiour Christ ic gelyfe on haelend Crist hys onely begottē sonne our his ancennedan sunu urne Lorde who was cōceaued of drihten se ƿaes geeacnod of the holy ghost borne ðam halgan gaste acenned of Marye the virgyne suffred of Marian ðā maedene geþroƿod vnder Pontius under þā Pontiscan Pilate on y e crosse hāged he Pilate on rode ahangen he was dead buryed he ƿaes dead bebyrged he down descēded to hel And he ny ƿer astah to helle he arose frō death on the thyrd aras of deaþe on þā þriddan daye And he went vp to daege And he astah up to heauen and sitteth now at heofonū and sitt nu aet y e righthād of God almighttie sƿiðran Godes aelmihtiges the father Frō thence he faeder Ðanon he will come to iudge ƿile cuman to demenne both the quicke the aegþer ge ðā cucum ge þam deade And I beleue on the deadū ic gelyfe on þone holy ghost And the holy halgan gast And ða halgan cōgregatiō And of y e saintes y e gelaþunge halgena societie And sinnes forgeuenesse gemaennysse synna forgifenysse And of y e flesh y e rising flaesces aerist And y t euerlasting life ꝧ ece life The ten cōmaundementes þa tyn beboda which also God himselfe ðe eac God sylf proclaimed frō the mounte geclypode of þam munte with loude voyce to mid