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A61017 A rationale upon the Book of common prayer of the Church of England by Anth. Sparrow ... ; with the form of consecration of a church or chappel, and of the place of Christian burial ; by Lancelot Andrews ... Sparrow, Anthony, 1612-1685.; Andrewes, Lancelot, 1555-1626. Form of consecration of a church or chappel. 1672 (1672) Wing S4832; Wing A3127_CANCELLED; ESTC R5663 174,420 446

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Forasmuch as the Ancient Fathers of the Church led by example of the apostles who set men apart to the ministery of the Gospel by imposition of hands with prayer and fasting appointed prayers and fasts at the solemn ordering of Ministers and to that purpose allotted certain times in which only sacred orders might be given or conferred we following their holy and religious example do constitute and decree that Deacons and Ministers be Ordained or made but only upon the Sundays immediately following jejunia quatuor temporum commonly called Ember weeks appointed in ancient time for Prayer and Fasting purposely for this cause at their first institution and so continued at this day in the Church of England 2. Sunday The Epistle perswades to temperance and abstinence from all uncleanness The Gospel tells us how we may subdue that Devil namely by stedfast faith and servent and importunate prayer 3. Sunday The Epistle as the time calls for strictness of life The Gospel commends perseverance shewing the danger of relapsing For the end of that man is worse than the beginning 4. Sunday This is called Dominica Refectionis For the Gospel tells us of Christs miraculous feeding and satisfying the hungry souls that hunger after him and his doctrine and the Epistle tells us of a Ierusalem which is above which is free and a joyous place to which we as children are heirs Thus holy Church mixes joy and comfort without sorrow and afflictions 5. Sunday This is called PASSION-SUNDAY For now begins the commemoration of the Passion of our Lord and after a long funeral pomp and train the corps follows upon Good Friday The Epistle treats of the Passion The Gospel of our Lords being slandred by the bold malice of the Jews who call him Samaritan and tell him he hath a Devil which must needs be a thorn in his side and a part of his Passion 6. Sunday This is PALM-SUNDAY on which CHRIST came from Bethany to Ierusalem and was received with joy some strewing their garments others cutting down branches and strewing them in the way whose religion it is fit that we should imitate Bernard We should meet Christ by keeping innocency bear Olive by doing works of mercy carry Palms by conquering the Devil and our vices green leaves and flowers we carry if we be adorned with vertues and we strew our garments in the way when by mortification we put off the old man This week was called of old the GREAT-WEEK because it hath a larger Service than any other Week every day having a Second-service appointed It was called also the Holy-week because men gave over all worldly employments and betook themselves wholly to devotion this week The Courts were shut up and civil affairs laid aside and prisoners that were put in for small faults were freed Chrys. Hom. 30. in 10. cap Gen. Code l. 1. tit 4. 3. It was also called the week of Fasts Because fasting was then heightned and intended with watching and prayers for these six dayes were spent in lying upon the ground and afflicting the body in prayers watchings and fastings longer than ordinary And when they did eat their refreshing was only bread salt and water Epiphan adv Aerium It will not be amiss to set down Epiphanius somewhat more at large Aerius and his disciples had flouted at the Catholick Christians severities at this time Why say they do you keep Easter why do you keep such a strict fast before it it is Ienish thus to keep daies of fasting by a law it is an enslaving your selves to a yoke of bondage if I would determine to fast at all I would fast what day I pleased at mine own liberty Upon this principle it is saith that Father that Aerius and his followers affect to fast on Sunday and feast on Friday and to spend this week of Religion and Devotion in jollity and sport rising early to fill themselves with flesh and wine with which being full stuft they sport and scoff at the Catholick Christians folly in afflicting themselves with such severities But who says he are the more fools Aerius a silly fellow of yesterday still living with us or we who observe this severe discipline which our Fathers delivered us which they received from their Fathers and they from theirs and so from the Apostles The Epistles and Gospels of this week are concerning Christs Passion to the contemplation of which this week is dedicated Thursday THis day CHRIST washt his Disciples feet and gave them a commandment to do likewise Hence it is called Dies mandati Mandate or Maundy Thursday This day the penitents that were put out of the Church upon Ash-wednesday were received again into the Church partly because there was this day an holy Communion in memory of our Lords institution of the same this day and the Epistle is fitted to that purpose sit therefore it was that penitents should be reconciled this day upon which this Sacrament was instituted for the remission of sins to receive the holy Communion Partly because this day our Lord was apprehended and bound whose binding wrought our deliverance● and freedome The form of reconciling penitents was in short this The Bishop goes out to the doors of the Church where the penitentsly prostrate upon the earth and thrice in the Name of CHRIST he calls them Come Come Come ye children hearken to me I will teach you the fear of the Lord then after he hath prayed for them and admonished them he reconciles them and brings them into Church The peniterts thus received trim their heads and beards and laying off their penitential weeds they reclothe themselves in handsome apparel The Church doors were wont to be set all open this day to signifie that penitent sinners coming from North or South or any quarter of the World shall be received to mercy and the Churches favour GOOD-FRIDAY THis day holy Church keeps a most strict Fast It is called GOOD-FRIDAY For a good day it was for us even the cause of all our good and ground of all our joy And so in respect of the effect of it Christs Passion may be a Gospel for a Feast and so it is upon Palm-Sunday But if we consider that our sins were the cause of his Sufferings and that it was we that crown'd his head with thorns nail'd his hands and feet and gored his side with a Spear so his Passion considered in the cause of it is matter of the greatest sorrow and in this respect we keep it a Fast. The Gospel is taken out of S. Iohn rather than out of any other Evangelist because he was present at the Passion and stood by the Cross when others fled and therefore the Passion being represented as it were before our eyes this day his Testimony is read who saw it himself and from whose example we may learn not to be ashamed nor afraid of the Cross of Christ. This day holy Church prayes expresly for all Jews Turks and Infidels Enemies of the Cross
turning of our bodies towards a more honourable place may mind us of the great honour and majesty of the person we speak to And this reason S. Augustine gives of the Churches ancient custom of turning to the East in their publick prayers because the East is the most honourable part of the World being the Region of Light whence the glorious Sun arises Aug. l. 2. de Ser. Dom. in Monte c. 5. That this was the constant practice of the Church to turn toward the East in her publick prayers may sufficiently appear by S. Augustin in the place last cited where he sayes Cum ad orationes stamus ad Orientem Convertimur When we stand at our prayers we turn towards the East And by Epiphan l. 1. haer 19. c. 19. who there detests the madness of the Impostor Elzaeus because that amongst other things he forbad praying toward the East And the Church of England who professes to conform to the ancient practices as far as conveniently she can as may be seen in many passages of her Canons and other places did observe the same custom in her prayers as appears by the placing of the Desk for the Prayer-book above mentioned looking that way and as may be collected from this Rubrick which directs the Priest in the reading of the Lessons to turn to the people which supposes him at prayer and the Psalms to look quite another way namely as in reason may be concluded that way which the Catholick Church uses to do for divers reasons and amongst other for that which S. Augustine hath given because That was the most worthy part of the World and therefore most fit to be lookt to when we come to worship God in the Beauty of Holiness Again another reason may be given of turning from the people towards the upper end of the Chancel in our Prayers because it is fit in our prayers to look towards that part of the Church or Chancel which is the highest and chief and where God affords his most gracious and mysterious presence and that is the holy Table and Altar which anciently was placed towards the upper or East end of the Cha●cel This is the highest part of the Chancel set apart to the highest of Religious Services the consecration and distribution of the holy Eucharist here is exhibited the most gracious and mysterious presence of God that in this life we are capable of the presence of his most holy Body and Blood And therefore the Altar was usually call'd the Tabernacle of Gods Glory His Chair of State the Throne of God the Type of Heaven Heaven it self As therefore the Jews in their Prayers lookt towards the principal part of the Temple the Mercy-Seat Psal. 28. 2. So the Christians in their prayers turned towards the principal part of the Church the Altar of which the Mercy-Seat is but a type And as our Lord hath taught us in his Prayer to look up towards Heaven when we pray saying Our Father which art in Heaven not as if God were there confin'd for he is every where in Earth as well as in Heaven but because Heaven is his Throne whereas Earth is but his Foot-stool so holy Church by her practice teaches us in our publick and solemn prayers to turn and look not towards the inferior and lower parts of the Footstool but towards that part of the Church which most nearly resembles Heaven the holy Table or Altar Correspondent to this practice was the manner of the Jews of old for at the reading of the Law and other Scriptures he that did Minister turned his face to the people but he who read the prayers turned his back to the people and his face to the Ark. Mr. THORNDYKE of Relig. Assem pag. 231. For the choice of these Lessons and their Order holy Church observes a several course For the Ordinary Morning and Evening prayers she observes only this to begin at the beginning of the year with Genesis for the first Lesson and S. Matthew for the Second in the Morning and Genesis again for the First and S. Paul to the Romans for the Second Lesson at Even and so continues on till the Books be read over but yet leaving out some Chapters either such as have been read already upon which account she omits the Chronicles being for the most part the same with the book of Kings which hath been read already and some particular Chapters in some other Books having been the same for the most part read either in the same book or some other or else such as are full of Genealogies or some other matter which holy Church counts less profitable for ordinary hearers Only in this she alters the order of the books not reading the prophet Esay till all the rest of the books be done Because the Prophet Esay being the most Evangelical Prophet most plainly prophesying of Christ is reserved to be read a little before ADVENT For Sundayes somewhat another course is observed for then Genesis is begun to be read upon Septuagesima Sunday because then begins the holy time of penance and mortification to which Genesis is thought to suit best because that treats of our misery by the fall of Adam and of Gods severe judgment upon the world for sin Then we read forward the books as they lye in order yet not all the books but only some choice Lessons out of them And if any Sunday be as they call it a priviledged day that is if it hath the history of it expressed in Scripture such as Easter Whit sunday c. then there are peculiar and proper Lessons appointed for it For Saints dayes we observe another order for upon them except such of them as are especially recorded in Scripture and have proper Lessons the Church appoints Chapters out of the moral books such as Proverbs Ecclesiastes Ecclesiasticus and Wisdom for first Lessons being excellent instructions of life and conversation and so fit to be read upon the daies of holy Saints whose exemplary lives and deaths are the cause of the Churches Solemn Commemoration of them and Commendation of them to us And though some of these books be not in the strictest sense Canonical yet I see no reason but that they may be read publickly in the Church with profit and more safety than Sermons can be ordinarily preacht there For certainly Sermons are but humane Compositions and many of them not so wholsome matter as these which have been viewed and allowed by the judgment of the Church for many ages past to be Ecclesiastical and good nearest to divine of any writings If it be thought dangerous to read them after the same manner and order that Canonical Scripture is read lest perhaps by this means they should grow into the same credit with Canonical It is answered that many Churches have thought it no great hurt if they should but our Church hath sufficiently secured us against that danger whatsoever it be by setting different marks upon them
for all times and so not unseasonable for this 3. Sunday Adv. The Epistle mentions the second coming of Christ the Gospel the first The Collect prayes for the benefit of this light This week is one of the four Ember weeks concerning which see after the first Sunday in Lent 4. Sunday Adv. The Epistle and Gospel set Christ as it were before us not prophesied of but being even at hand yea standing among us pointing him out as S. Iohn Baptist did to the people Behold the Lamb of God that takes away the sins of the world The Collect Prayes most earnestly and passionately to him to succour us miserable sinners Feast of CHRISTMAS-day THe Epistle Gospel and Collect are plainly suitable to the day all mentioning the birth of Christ. Besides this Feast hath proper Psalms in which some Verses are peculiar to the day as will appear if they be well considered The First Psalm for the Morning Service is the 19. The heavens declare the glory of God very suitable to the Feast for at His Birth a a new Star appeared which declared his Glory and Deity so plainly that it fetcht the Sages of the East to come and worship him S. Matt. 2. Where is he that is born King of the Iews for we have seen his Star in the East and are come to worship him The Second Psalm for the Morning is 45. Which at the beginning of it is a Genethliack or Birth-song of Christ The fairest of the children of men v. 3 And of his mighty success in subduing the Devil a●d the world by the word of truth of meekness and righteous●ess vers 5. c. The third is Psal. 85. which is principally set for the Birth of Christ. For it is a thanksgiving to God for sending a Saviour which should save his people from their sins the greatest captivity that is and therefore cannot properly be meant of any but Christ who was therefore call'd Iesus because be should save his people from their sins S. Matt. 1. 21. And so the Primitive Church understood it and therefore selected it out as a part of their Office for this day as being proper and pertinent to the matter of the Feast For the meeting here specified ver 10. 11. of Mercy and Truth Righteousness and Peace was at Christs birth who said of himself that he was the Truth who as he had a birth from Heaven to wit his Divine nature so had he another as Man from Earth from the Virgin which birth drew Righteousness to look from Heaven upon poor sinners with a favourable look and made righteousness and peace kiss for the delivering of sinners from their captivity True it is the Prophet in the first Verses speaks of this delivery as of a thing past Lord thou hast turn'd away the captivity of Iacob Yet for all this it may be a prophesie of our salvation by the coming of Christ hereafter for as S. Peter sayes Acts. 2 30. David being a Prophet and seeing this before spake of Christs Nativity as if it were already past The Evening Psalms are 89 110 132. The first and last of which are thankful commemorations of Gods merciful promise of sending our Lord Christ into the world that seed of David which be had sworn to establish and set up his Throne for ever For which O Lord the very heavens shall praise thy wondrous works and thy truth in the congregation of the Saints v. 5. Psal. 89. The Church was in aff●iction now as is plain in both these Psalms but such was the joy that they were affected with at the promise of Christs birth and coming into the world that they could not contain but even in the midst of their misery break forth into Thanksgiving for it and how can the Church excite us better to Thanksgiving to God for the birth of Christ upon the day then by shewing us how much the promise of it afar off wrought upon the Saints of old The 110. Psalm expresly mentions the birth of Christ ver 3. The dew of thy birth is of the womb of the Morning as the morning dew brings forth innumerable fruit so shall the birth of Christ bring forth innumerable faithful people and therefore the Prophet here does as we should this day adore and praise the goodness of God for the birth of Christ the cause of so much good It is admirable to behold the frame of the Churches holy Office and Service this day In the First Lessons she reads us the prophesie of Christs coming in the flesh in the Second Lessons Epistle and Gospel she gives us the History of it In the Collect the teaches us to pray that we may be partakers of the benefit of his birth In the proper Preface for the day as also in the proper Psalms she sets us to our duty of Adoring and Glorifying God for his mercy In the Lessons and Gospels appointed holy Church does the Angels part brings us glad tydings of our Saviours Birth Behold I bring you glad tydings of great joy for unto you is born this day a Saviour which is Christ the Lord S. Luke 2. 10. In pointing the special Hymns and Psalms the calls upon us to do the Shepherds part to glorifie and Praise God for all the things that this day we hear and see ver 20. And to sing with the Angels Glory to God in the highest for this good will to Men. For the Antiquity of this day many testimonies might be brought out of the Ancients but because I intend brevity I shall be content with two beyond exception S. Augustine Ep. 119. witnesses that it was the custome of holy Church to keep this day And upon the five and twentieth of December in Psalm 132. S. Chrysostom makes a Sermon to prove that the keeping of Christmas-day was ancient even from the first times and that the Church kept the true day In the same same sermon he sayes It is a godly thing to keep this day Nay further that the keeping of this day was one of the greatest signs of our love to Christ. Amongst other Arguments which he uses there to perswade his hearers to keep this day he brings this that the custome of keeping this day was religious and of God or else it could never have been so early spread over the whole World in spight of so much opposition Orat. in Natal Dom. Tom. 5. Edit Savil. S. Stephen S. Iohn Innocents IMmediately after Christmas ●ollow as attendants upon this high Festival S. Stephen S. Iohn and Innocents not because this was the very time of their suffering but because none are thought fitter attendants on Christs Nativity than the blessed Martyrs who have laid down their lives for him from whose birth they received spiritual life And there being three kinds of Martyrdom I. In will and deed which is the highest 2. In will but not in deed 3. In deed but not in will in this order they attend S. Stephen first who suffered both
memory of our Saviours joyful Resurrection Now if you take out of the six weeks of Lent Six Sundays there will remain but thirty six Fasting-days to which these four of this week being added make the just number of forty This was anciently call'd Caput● jejunii the Head of Lent and was a day of extraordinary humiliation Upon this day were Ashes sprinkled upon their heads to mind them of their mortality and also to mind them what they had deserved to be namely burnt to Ashes Hence was it call'd Dies cinerum ASH-WEDNESDAY and upon this day they were wont to cloath themselves in Sackcloth These rites are mentioned Esay 58. 5. as the usual rites of penitents This was common to all penitents But notorious sinners were this day put to open penance Which godly discipline saies our Church in her office of Commination it is much to be wished that it might be restored again Now that we may know what it is the Church wishes there it will not be amiss to set down in part the solemnity used upon those sinners at this time which was ordered thus Let all notorious sinners who have been already or are now to be enjoyned publick penance this day present themselves before the Church doors to the Bishop of the place cloathed in sackcloth barefooted with eyes cast down upon the ground professing thus by their habit and countenance their guilt There must be present the Deans or Arch-Presbyters and the publick penitentiaries whose office is to examine the lives of these penitents and according to the degree of their sin to apportion their penance according to the usual degrees of penance After this let them bring the penitents into the Church and with all the Clergy present let the Bishop sing the seven penitential Psalms prostrate upon the ground with tears for their Absolution Then the Bishop arising from prayer according to the Canons let him lay his hand upon them that is to ratifie their penance not to absolve them let him sprinkle ashes upon their head and cover them with sackcloth and with frequent sighs and sobs let him denounce to them that as Adam was cast out of Paradise so are they cast out of the Church for their sins After this let the Bishop command the Officers to drive them out of the Church-doors the Clergy following them with this Respond In the sweat of thy brows shalt thou eat thy bread that these poor sinners seeing holy Church afflicted thus and disquieted for their sins may be sensible of their penance Gratian dist 50. c. 64. I. Sunday in Lent The Epistle exhorts to patience in afflictions The Gospel reads to us Christs victory over temptations to keep us from despair of conquest that we should be of good cheer and heart since he our Captain hath overcome the world S. Iohn 16. v. last The Collect for the day is another of those Collects where in the Church directs her Petitions to Christ thereby manifesting her belief that he is the true Son of God for she prayes to none but God in praying to him therefore she professes to believe him to be God as it is in the close of the Collect and this in opposition to the Tempter Satan and all his Adherents who are still tempting Christ in his Members to misbelief in that Article Of EMBER-WEEK THe Week after Ash-wednesday is Imber or Ember-week of which Fast we will here treat in general There be Four Ember-weeks called in Latin Iejunia quatuor Temporum the Fasts of the four Seasons because they were kept in the four parts of the year Spring Summer Autumn Winter The first of these begins upon Wednesday next after Ash-wednesday The second upon Wednesday next after Whitsunday the third upon Wednesday next after Holy Cross. Sept. 14. The last upon Wednesday next after S. Lucie Dec. 13. The days of fasting and prayers in these weeks are Wednesday Friday Saturday Wednesday because then our Lord Christ was betrayed by Iudas Friday because then he was crucified Saturday because then we represent the Apostles sorrow for the loss of their Lord lying in the grave The causes of such religious fastings and prayers upon these weeks were formerly many as namely that Christians in these religious duties might let the World know that they were as devout as the Jews formerly had been whose custome it was to observe four solemn Fasts Zach. 8. 19. That they might dedicate to God as the first-fruits the beginnings of the several seasons of the year set apart to his religious worship and by this means obtain Gods-blessing upon them the remainders of those times But the principal cause was for preparation to the solemn Ordination of Ministers holy Church imitating the Apostles practice who when they were to set a-part men to the Ministery prayed and fasted before they laid on their hands Acts 13.3 And in after-times at these solemnities these Ember-Fasts special regard was had to the Ordination of Priests and Deacons In what manner and with how much care and Christianity these Fasts have been heretofore observed may be gathered from S. Leo in his Sermons upon them and from others And the second Councel of Millain decreed herein to good purpose Tit. 1. Dec. 22. That upon the Sundays before these Fasts the Priests should not only in their Parishes bid the solemn Fast but every one in his several Parish should piously and religiously say the Prayers and Litanies c. That Gods assistence being implored both the Bishop may be guided by the Holy Spirit in the choice of those whom he shall Ordain and also that they that are ordained may grow in Learning and holiness of life These four Fasts have been anciently observed both in the Church of England and in other Churches In the Laws of K. Canute Chap. 16. thus it is said Let every man observe the Fasts that are commanded with all earnest care whether it be the Ember-Fast or the Lent-Fast or any other Fast. And the like Decrees are found in other Councels of our Nation before his time See Sir Henry Spelmans Concil Britan. p. 256. 518. 546. Now for the reason of the name we find in Tho. Becon as he delivers it out of others that wrote before him By opinion of much people these daies have been called Ember-daies because that our Fathers would on these daies eat no bread but Cakes made under Embers so that by eating of that they reduced into their minds that they were but ashes and so should turn again and wist not how soon These Fasts are still appointed by the Church of England For though she hath not reckoned them amongst the Holy daies because there is no peculiar Office appointed for them as there is to all those that are reckoned in the Catalogue of Holy days yet by custome they have been always kept with Litanies Prayers and Fasting and are commanded to be kept still as formerly they were by that excellent Can. 31. Anno Dom. 1603.
things as be rightful to please him both in will and deed that he would encrease nourish keep us in true Religion and all goodness give unto us the encrease of Faith Hope and Charity that we may live according to his will with pure and free hearts follow him accomplish those things he would have done may be cleansed assoyled delivered from all our offences have pardon peace protection and defence may plentifully bring forth the fruits of good works and by him be plenteously rewarded and obtain his promises which exceed all we can desire Such requests as these besides some other That God would hear the prayers of the people of which see pag. 68 and 85. are by the Priest presented to God fit for the Churches meditations at this time after Pentecost and not unfitly following the Lessons the Decalogue and the following Supplications of the people as the proper place of Collects Being all of them though in several branches and expressions in effect thus much That by the merciful Grace Inspiration Defence and Protection of God Almighty we may be cleansed from our sins may obey his Commandments may live as Christians ought not after the flesh but after the Spirit and so to be fitter to meet our blessed Lord at his second Advent to judge the world And this meditation of the second Advent of Christ is thought so seasonable in the last place that some Churches instead of those Readings which we have for the last Sunday of this Time make use of some other which concern the day of judgement But our Church as she hath good reason for her method as we have seen p. 187 188. So is she not at all defective in her thoughts of Christs second coming In time of Advent and often afterwards she takes occasion to remember it but most especially at this season The last Gospel except that which implyes a prophesie of Christs advent sets before us his raising up of one from the dead a great ground of our faith and hope of a Resurrection The Epistle that goes with it and all the rest in a manner aim most evidently at this the Quickning us to a life spiritual by the hopes of an eternal The last Collect with some other is for the enjoyment of it ac cording to Gods promises So that we see the Church in her Meditations for the conclusion of the year takes in that for her subject which is the close of our Creed end of our Faith and Crown of our Devotions The Rosurrection of the body and the life everlasting S. ANDREW THis Saints day is the first that is kept solemn because he first came to Christ and followed him before any of the other Apostles S. Iohn 1. 38. He brought his brother Simon to Christ 42. He it was that said We have found the Messiah and therefore his day is right set at the beginning of Advent for ever to bring news De Adventu Domini of the Advent or coming of our Lord. Conversion of S. PAVL WHereas other Saints martyrdoms or at least the dayes of their death are celebrated by holy Church S. Pauls Conversion is made the Holy-day For these reasons 1. For the Example of it that no sinner how great soever might hereafter despair of pardon seeing Saul a grievous persecutor made S. Paul For this cause I obtained mercy that in me first Iesus Christ might shew forth all long-suffering for a pattern to them which should hereafter believe 1 Tim. 1. 36. 2. For the joy which the Church had at his Conversion 3. For the miracle wrought at his Conversion Purification of S. MARY or Feast of Candlemas SOme Churches keep four Holy-daies in memory of the blessed Virgin namely The Annunciation the Assumption the Nativity and Purification Our Church keeps only the Purification and Annunciation which are common to her and our Blessed Lord. The Purification is a double Feast partly in memory of the Virgins purification this being the fourtieth day after the birth which she observed according to the Law Leviticus 12. 4. though she needed it not but chiefly in memory of our Lords presentation in the Temple which the Gospel commemorates Our Saviour thus presented in the Temple offered himself alive Oblation for us that so the whole obedience of his life might be ours This day had one solemnity of old peculiar to it namely Procession the order and manner of which I shall set down briefly out of S. Bernard We go in Procession two by two carrying Candles in our hands which are light 〈◊〉 at a common fire but a fire first blest in the Church by a Bishop They that go out first return last and in the way we sing Great is the glory of the Lord. We go two by two in commendation of Charity and a social life for so our Saviour sent out his Disciples We carry lights in our hands First to signifie that our light should shine before men Secondly this we do this day especially in memory of the wise virgins of whom this blessed Virgin is the chief that went to meet their Lord with their Lamps light and burning And from this usage and the many lights set up in the Church this day it is called Candelaria or Candlemas Because our works should be all done in the holy fire of Charity therefore the Candles are light with holy fire They that go out first return last to teach humility in humility preferring one another Phil. 2. 3. Because God loves a cheerful giver therefore we sing in the way The Procession it self is to teach us that we should not stand idle in the way of life but proceed from vertue to vertue not looking back to that which is behind but reaching forward to that which is before For the Antiquity of this day see Cyril Alex. Gregory Nys in diem And for the Feast of the Annunciation Athanas. Ser. de Dei para S. Philip and S. Iames. WHereas in the Primitive Church the Apostles had not several days of solemnity it was appointed that one day should be allowed for them all namely in the Latin Church the Calends or first of May in the Greek the Feast of S. Peter and S. Paul Afterwards when the other Apostles had peculiar days appointed this first of May was left to S. Philip and S. Iacob because it was thought that they suffered upon that day Thus Durandus and some other deliver it but upon further enquiry it seems to be a mistake for it as hath been proved in the discourse upon S. Stephens day Martyrs and other Saints had their several days observed in the first times it is not probable that the Apostles those Founders of Churches those Princes over all Lands as they are called Ps. 44. 10. should be hudled up all into one day and have a less respect given them by the Church than other Saints and Martyrs had I conceive therefore that they had several days allowed them as well as other Saints and this