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A31329 The catechism for the curats, compos'd by the decree of the Council of Trent, and publish'd by command of Pope Pius the Fifth / faithfully translated into English.; Catechismus Romanus. English Catholic Church. 1687 (1687) Wing C1472; ESTC R16648 482,149 617

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contra duas Epist Pelag c. 13. lib 3. c. 5 in Ench. c. 64. lib. 1. de nupt concupisc c. 25. Item Greg. lib. 9. Epist 39. Conc. Vien Florent in Mater de Sacram. It most be confess'd indeed XLIII Concupiscence remaining in those th●t are baptiz'd is not sin Aug●st as in the same place by authority of That Holy Synod has bin decreed that even in those that are baptiz'd there does remain Concupiscence or a kind of scum But that has not truly the Reason or Nature of sin For according to S. Austin In little Children baptiz'd the guilt of Concupiscence is absolv'd tho the Concupiscence it self remain till Death And elswhere he testifies The Guilt of Concupiscence in Baptism is loos'd but the Infirmity remains For Concupiscence which proceeds of sin is nothing else but an Appetite of the mind by its own nature repugnant to Reason Which motion notwithstanding if it have not the Consent of the Will or Negligence joyn'd with it is far from the true nature of sin But when S. Paul says I had not known Concupiscence to be sin Rom. 7.7 if the Law had not said Thou shalt not covet By these words he means not the very Concupiscence it self but the Corruption of the Will The same Doctrine S. Gregory taught writing thus Lib 9 Regist Epist 39. If there be any who say that in Baptism sin is forgiven only superficially or as to the outward commission of it what can be spoken more like an Infidel than this since by the Sacrament of Faith the Soul is absolv'd from sin even to the very Roots thereof And to prove this he uses the testimony of our Savior when in S. John he says Joh. 13.10 He that is wash'd needs not but to wash his Feet but is clean throughout Now if any one would see an express Figure and resemblance of this matter XLIV A Figure of Bapti m. 4 Reg. 9.14 let him contemplate the History of Naaman the Syrian's Leprosie who when he had wash'd himself seven times in the Water of Jordan he was so cleans'd from his Leprosie as the Scripture witnesses That his Flesh became like the Flesh of a little Child Wherefore the proper Effect of Baptism is the Forgiveness of all sins whether contracted by Original Corruption or by our own Fault For which cause it was instituted by our Lord and Savior as to omit other Testimonies the Prince of Apostles shew'd in most clear words Act. 2.38 when he said Repent and let every one of you be baptiz'd in the name of Jesus Christ for the r●mission of sins Of concupiscence remaining in those that are baptiz'd See Aug. lib. 1. de peccat merit remiss c. 39. Item lib. 1. cont duas Epist Pelag. c. 13. l. 3. c. 3. in medio lib. 1. de nupt concupisc c. 23. 25. Item lib. 6. cont Julian q. 5. de verb. Apost Serm 6. But now in Baptism not only sins are remitted XLV The Second effect of Baptism The remission of the Punishment due to sin Rom. 9.3 but also all the Punishments of sins and wickedness are graciously pardon'd of God For tho it be common to all the Sacraments that by them is communicated the vertue of Christ our Lords Passion yet of Baptism only is it said by the Apostle that through it we dye and are bury'd together with Christ Whence Holy Church always understood that without exceeding great wrong to this Sacrament it could not be that those Offices of Piety or Devotion which by a usu●● name the Fathers call'd works of Satisfaction could be enjoyn'd to him that was to be cleans'd by this Sacrament That the Punishments due to sin are remitted in Baptism See Ambros in cap. 11. ad Rom. Aug. lib. 1. de nupt concupisc c. 33. in Ench. cap. 4. D. Thom. 3. Art p. q. 69. art 2. unde nec nulla est imponenda penitentia Greg. lib. 7 regist Epist 24. habetur de consecrat dist 4. cap. Ne quod absit D. Thom. p. q. 68. ar 5. Nor are the things which we here teach contrary to the practice or custom of the Ancient Church XLVI Works of Penance before Baptism to what purpose which antiently requir'd the Jews when they were to be baptiz d to fast forty days together For that was not ordain'd for satisfaction For those that receiv'd Baptism were by that means admonish'd that for the more reverencing of the Dignity of that Sacrament they should for some time without intermission give themselves to Fasting and Prayer But tho we ought to be assur'd that in Baptism the Punishment of Sin is pardon'd XLVII What Punishments are not remitted in Baptism yet no one is freed from that kind of punishment which is deserv'd of the Civil Judgement for any grievous Crime So as that he that deserves to dye should be freed by baptism from the punishment appointed by the Laws Note Notwithstanding the Religion and Piety of those Princes is highly to be commended who that the Glory of God in his Sacraments might be made the more illustrious do at the Fonts remit and pardon that punishment also Besides Baptism procures us after the stage of this life a freedom and discharge from all those punishments which follow Original Sin for by merit of our Lord's Death it is that we obtain these things But as was said before Rom. 5.6 by Baptism we dye with him For if as the Apostle says we are planted together with him in the likeness of his Death we shall be also in the likeness of his Resurrection But if any one ask XLVIII Why after Baptism we are not freed from all Misery of Life why immediately after Baptism and even in this mortal life we are not freed from these inconveniences and are not carry'd by vertue of this Sacred Washing into that perfect state of life in which Adam the first Father of Mankind was plac'd before he sinn'd we must answer that this is thus done for Two reasons especially The First of which is The First Reason That we who by Baptism are knit to the Body of Christ and are made his Members might not receive greater dignity than our Head Since therefore Christ our Lord tho from his first birth he had the Fulness of Grace and Truth yet he laid not down the Frailty of Humane Nature which he took before he had endur'd the torments of his Passion and Death it self and then he rose to the Glory of Life Everlasting who can wonder when he sees the Faithful who have already by Baptism got the grace of the righteousness of Heaven to be notwithstanding yet cloath'd with weak decaying Bodies that afterwards having gone through many labors for Christ's sake and last of all even through Death it self they may be called again to life and be found worthy to enjoy an everlasting Age with Christ Another cause why after Baptism
to be given because with the benefit thereof our Soul is consecrated and joyn'd to God Wherefore to shew more fully what a Sacrament is X. A more full explication of a Sacrament it should be taught that it is a thing subject to Sense which by Gods appointment has vertue both to signifie and to work holiness and righteousness Whence it follows that any one may easily understand that the Images of the Saints Crosses and such like things tho they are Signs of Holy Things yet they are not to be call'd Sacraments Now the truth of this Doctrin it will be easie to prove by the example of all the Sacraments as before we observ'd of Baptism when we said that That solemn washing of the Body is a Sign and has the efficacy of a Holy Thing which is inwardly wrought by the power of the Holy Ghost any one may do the same thing in the other Sacraments But then this also specially belongs to these mystical Signs XI Every Sacrament signifies at least three things Present Grace the Passion of Christ and Life Everlasting which are instituted of God that by Gods appointment they signifie not any one thing only but more things together Which thing may be seen in all the Sacraments which shew not only our Holiness and Righteousness but declare two other things besides very nearly joyn'd with that Holiness to wit Christ our Redeemer's Passion which is the cause of our Holiness and Life Everlasting and the Bliss of Heaven to which our Holiness ought to be referr'd as to the End And this may be observ'd in all the Sacraments Rightly have the Holy Doctors taught that every Sacrament has in it a threefold vertue of signifying both because it brings to remembrance something already past and because it points at and shews another thing present and also because it foreshews something yet to come Nor is it to be suppos'd that these things have been thus taught of them as that it cannot be prov'd by testimony of Holy Scripture For when the Apostle says Rom 6.3 As many of us as have bin baptiz'd in Christ Jesus have bin baptiz'd in his death he plainly shews that Baptism is therefore to be call'd a Sign because it puts us in mind of the Death and Passion of our Lord. And then when he says We are bury'd together with him by Baptism into Death that as Christ rose again from the dead by the glory of the Father so also should we walk in newness of life From these words it is plain that Baptism is a Sign whereby the Divine Grace is shew'd to be pour'd into us by verture whereof is given to us that leading a new life we can easily and cheerfully perform all Offices of true Piety Lastly Rom. 6.5 when he adds For if we are planted together in the likeness of his Death we shall be also of his Resurrection it appears that Baptism has no dark signification of the Life Everlasting also which through it we shall obtain But besides these XII A Sacrament ●ometimes signifies not one thing only present divers kinds and ways of signifying which we have mention'd it oft happens that a Sacrament shews and notes not One thing only as present but more This is easie to be observ'd by any that consider the most Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist Wherein is signifi'd the presence of the true Body and Blood of the Lord which those who receive those Holy Mysteries not impurely do perceive From what has been said therefore the Pastors cannot want Arguments whereby to shew How great a Divine Power how many hidden Miracles are in the Sacraments of the New Law to prevail with all to revernce them and receive them with the greatest Devotio● But to teach the true use of the Sacraments XIII for what reason the Sacraments were instituted there can nothing seem more proper than diligently to explain the Reasons Why it was needful the Sacraments should be instituted Of these there are many Whereof the First is The First The weakness of Human Vnderstanding which by nature we see to be so fram'd that no One can aspire to the knowledg of those things which are comprehended by the mind and understanding unless by those things which are perceiv'd by some sense That therefore we might the more easily understand those things which are wrought by the hidden power of God the same supream Maker of all things has most wisely order'd that of his Good-will towards us he declares that very Power by some Signs which fall under some Sense For as S. Chrysostom excellently says Chrysost hom 83. in Matt. hom 60. ad pop Antioch If Man were but free from the conjunction of the Body those goon things would be offer'd him naked and not wrapp'd up in coverings But because the Soul is joyn'd with the Body it was altogether needful to use the help of sensible things to understand them Another Reason is The Second Aug l. 4. de Baptis con tra c. 24. Because our Minds are not easily wrought upon to believe those things which are promis'd us And therefore from the very beginning of the World God has bin us'd very frequently to shew by Words what he intended to do and sometimes also when he intended any work the Greatness whereof might shake the Belief of the Promise he add'd to the words some Signs alsso which had a kind of miracle in them sometimes For when God sent Moses to deliver the people of Israel Exod. 3.10 Exod. 3.42 but he not being assur'd of Gods assistance who sent him fear'd lest too heavy a burden should be laid upon him which he could not be able to hear or lest the people would not give credit to the Divine Oracles and Sayings The Lord confirm'd his promise by a great variety of Signs As therefore in the Old Testament God so ordered it that the Constancy or Truth of some great Promise might be testified by Signs so also ●n the New Law our Savior Christ when he promis'd us Forgiveness of Sins Heavenly Grace the Communion of the Holy Ghost instituted some certain Signs subject to our Eys and Senses by which as by pledges we might esteem him as it were oblig'd and so for the future might never doubt of the Faithfulness of the Promise A Third Reason was The Third ● m● .. ● de Sa●● ● 4. as S. Ambrose writes That the Soul might have ready at hand the remedies and medicines as it were of the Evangelical Samaritan for the recovery and preservation of her Health For the vertue which flows from Christ's Passion i. e. the Grace which he merited for us upon the Altar of the Cross must be deriv'd upon our selves by the Sacraments as it were by certain Pipes otherwise no one can have any hope of Salvation Wherefore our most merciful Lord would leave in his Church Sacraments firmly establish'd by his Word and Promise by which
not profit that Grace is given in the Eucharist the Pastors ought to admonish that it is not so to be understood as tho' it were not necessary that he who will indeed profitably receiv'd this Sacrament should not before obtain Grace For it is manifest that as natural Food does nothing at all profit a dead Body so also the sacred Mysteries profit not that Soul which lives not in Spirit And therefore they have the species or shew of Bread and Wine to signifie Note that they were instituted indeed not to call a dead Soul to Life again but to preserve Life But this is therefore spoken LII By the Eucharist is given the first Grace and why because even the First Grace which All ought to have before they presume to receive the sacred Eucharist in their mouth lest they eat and drink judgment to themselves is not given to any except in Wish and Desire they receive this very Sacrament For This is the End of all the Sacraments and the Symbol of Ecclesiastical Vnity and Conjunction neither can any one out of the Church obtain Grace And then Note because the Body is not only serv'd by Natural Food but also increas'd and the Taste daily receives new pleasure and sweetness from it so also the Meat of the sacred Eucharist does not only keep the Soul alive but it also adds strength to it and causes that the Spirit be more and more mov'd with the Delight of divine things Sap. 16.20 for this cause it is that Grace is rightly and most truly said to be given in this Sacrament for it may well be compar'd to Manna wherein every sweetness of Taste was perceiv'd Now that in the Eucharist are remitted and pardon'd the lesser sins LIII Lesser sins remitted thro the Eucharist which are commonly call'd Venial there 's no one ought to doubt for whatsoever the Soul has lost by the heat of desire while she committed some small offence in some light matter all That the Eucharist restores wiping away all those lesser faults even as for there seems no reason why we may not make use of the common similitude that which is daily lost and decays by the force of the innate Heat we feel to be refresh'd and renew'd by little and little by natural Sustenance Wherefore rightly was it said by St. Ambrose concerning this heavenly Sacrament Lib. 4. de sac c. 6. lib. 5. c. 4. This daily Bread is taken for a Remedy of our daily Infirmity Innocent 111. lib. 4. de Myst Miss c. 44. Cyril lib. 4. in Joan. c. 17. lib. 3. c. 36. Inter opera D. Bernardi habetur cujusdam Sermo Domini qui incipit Panem Angelorum singularis est de Euch. videatur D. Thom. 3. p. q. 79. Mark well But this is to be understood of those sins with the Sense and Pleasure whereof the Soul is not much mov'd There is moreover such Vertue in the sacred Mysteries LIV. The Eucharist strengthens against harms that it keeps us pure and clean from sin and safe from the violence of Temptations and prepares our Soul as it were with a heavenly Medicine or Antidote that it be not easily infected Aug. Tract 26. in Joan. l. 1. op 2. ad Cornel. or hurt with the Poyson of any deadly Contagion or Disease And for this Cause also as S. Cyprian testifies when in old times the Faithful were hal'd away by the Rabble to slaughter and Torments for the Confession of the name of Christ lest haply they being overcome with the bitterness of their Pains should faint in the Sacred Combat it was an old custom in the Catholic Church for the Bishops to give them the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of the Lord. And it also restrains and suppresses the Lust of the Flesh LV. The Eucharist restrains Lust For while it more and more inflames our Souls with the Fire of Charity it must needs quench the Heat of Concupiscence Lastly LVI The Eucharist clears the way to eternal Glory Joh. 6.53 That we may comprehend all the Advantages and Benefits of this Sacrament in one word The Sacred Eucharist has a mighty force to gain eternal Glory for it is written He that eats my Flesh and drinks my Blood has eternal Life and I will raise him up at the last day Vide Chrys de Sacerdotio dialogo 6. D. Thom. 3. p. q. 79. art 2. By the Grace of this Sacrament also the Faithful while they live here in this World enjoy the highest Peace and Tranquility of Conscience And then by the vertue hereof being strengthen'd even as Elias was 3 Reg. 19.8 who in the strength of his Cakes bak'd on the Ashes walk'd as far as to Horeb the Mount of God when the time shall come for them to pass out of this Life they shall ascend to eternal Glory and Bliss All these things will be very largely explain'd by the Pastors if they will but handle the sixth Chapter of S. John wherein are laid open the manifold Effects of this Sacrament or running through the admirable works of Christ our Lord shall shew since we rightly and deservedly account them bless'd who receiv'd him into their Houses while he liv'd in this mortal life or who by the very Touch only of his Garment or of his Sleve recover'd Health that we are much more happy and bless'd into whose Souls he disdains not to enter cloath'd now with immortal Glory to heal all their Wounds to adorn them with the most excellent endowments and to unite them to himself But it must be taught by Whom these mighty Fruits of the Eucharist LVII A threefold way of receiving the Eucharist De Consecr dist 2. c. 46. Sess 13. c. 8. now mention'd may be perceiv'd Nor is there One only way of Communicating that the Faithful may learn to emulate the better Gifts Rightly therefore and wisely have our Ancestors as we read in the Council of Trent distinguish'd three ways of taking this Sacrament For some receive the Sacrament only Sacramentally as those sinners who are not affraid to take the sacred Mysteries with an impure Mouth and Heart 1 Cor. 11.19 who as the Apostle says Do eat and drink the Lords Body unworthily Aug. in Joan. tract 16. contra Dom. l. 5. c. 8. Of these S. Austin writes thus He that abides not in Christ and in whom Christ abides not without all doubt he eats not Christ's Flesh altho carnally and visibly he press with his Teeth the Sacrament of his Flesh and Blood Those therefore that being thus affected receive the Sacred Mysteries not only hereby receive no fruit 1 Cor. 11.19 but as the Apostle himself testifies they eat and drink judgment to themselves But others are said to receive the Eucharist Spiritually only Spiritually Gal. 5.6 and they are those who being kindl'd with a lively Faith which works by Love eat that heavenly Bread in desire and
was instituted of Christ our Lord for Two causes The One is that it might be the heavenly Food of our Souls wherewith we might preserve and sustain our spiritual Life The Other that the Church might have a perpetual Sacrifice whereby our sins might be expiated and our heavenly Father who has often times bin grievously offended by our wickedness might be turn'd from his Anger to his Mercy and from the severity of his just Revenge to Pity We may observe the Figure and Resemblance of this thing in the Paschal Lamb which was us'd to be offer'd as a Sacrifice and eaten as a Sacrament by the Children of Israel Vide Trid. de Sacrif Missae c. 1.3 Dionys l. 17. de Eccl. c. 3. Ignat. Epist ad Smyrn Tert. lib. de Orat. Iren. l. 4. c. 32. Aug. lib. 10. de Civit. Dei c. 10. Et lib. 17. c. 20. lib. 18. c. 35. lib. 19. c. 23. lib. 22. c. 8. alibi passim Nor indeed when our Savior was about to offer himself to God the Father upon the Altar of the Cross LXXVII How great the Benefit of the Eucharist is could he give any more illustrious signification of his immense Love towards us than when he left us a visible Sacrifice whereby might be restor'd that which was a little after to be sacrific'd once in Blood on the Cross and the memory thereof might every Day be honor'd by the Church spread abroad over all the World to her exceeding advantage even to the end of the World Now these Two ways are very different in themselves LXXVIII The Difference between a Sacrifice and a Sacrament for a Sacrament is perform'd or perfected in the Consecration but the force or vertue of a Sacrifice consists in this that it be Offer'd Wherefore the Sacred Eucharist while it is kept in the Pyx or carry'd to the Sick has not the Nature of a Sacrifice but of a Sacrament and besides as it is a Sacrament it gives them that receive the Divine Hoste or Sacrifice cause of Merit and all those other advantages which were before remembred but as it is a Sacrifice it has not only the Efficacy of Meriting but of Performing also For as Christ our Lord in his Passion merited and satisfi'd for us so they that offer this Sacrifice wherein they communicate with us do satisfie and merit the fruits of our Lord's Passion Now concerntng the Institution of this Sacrifice LXXIX By Whom and when the Sacrifice of Mass was instituted the Holy Synod of Trent has left no more room to doubt for she has declar'd that it was instituted by Christ our Lord at his last Supper and has condemn'd those with an Anathema that assert that a true and proper Sacrifice is not offer'd to God or that to Offer is nothing else than that Christ is given to be eaten Sess 22. de Sacrificio Missae c. 1. can 1. 2. Nor did she omit LXXX Sacrifice to be offer'd to God only and not to the Saints but diligently explain'd that Sacrifice is done to God only for altho' sometimes the Church uses to celebrate Masses in Memory and Honor of the Saints yet she never taught to offer Sacrifice to them but to One God only who has crown'd them with immortal Glory Wherefore neither is the Priest wont at any time to say I offer Sacrifice to Thee Peter or Paul but while the sacrifices to God only she gives thanks to him for the signal Victory of the blessed Martyrs and so implores their Patronage that they would vouchsafe to intercede for us in Heaven whose Memory we celebrate on Earth Now these things which have bin deliver'd by the Catholic Church concerning the Truth of this Sacrifice she receiv'd from our Lords own Words when in that last night commending to his Apostles these Sacred Mysteries 1 Cor. 10.24 Do this says he in Commemoration of me He then Note as has bin defin'd by the Holy Synod made them Priests and appointed that both they and those who were to succeed them in the Priests Office should Sacrifice and Offer his Body And this the Words of the Apostle written to the Corinthians evidently shew when he says 1. Cor. 10● Ye cannot drink the Chalice of the Lord and the Chalice of Devils ye cannot be partakers of the Table of the Lord and of the Table of Devils For as by the Table of Devils is to be understood the Altar whereon Sacrifice was done to them so also that what the Apostle proposes may by probable Argument be concluded the Table of the Lord can signifie nothing else but the Altar on which Sacrifice was done to the Lord. Now if from the Old Testament we would have some Figures and Oracles of this Sacrifice LXXXI Figures and Prophecies of the Sacrifice of the Eucharist first then Malachias has most plainly prophecy'd of it in these words From the rising up of the sun to the going down thereof my name is great among the Gentiles and in every place a clean oblation is offered to my name because my name is great among the Gentiles says the Lord of Hosts Besides this Hoste or Sacrifice was foreshew'd as well before as after the Law was given in divers kinds of Sacrifices for this one Sacrifice as the Perfection and Fulfilling of all the rest contains in it all those good things which were but signifi'd by those other Sacrifices But yet we cannot see the Figure of This better express'd in any thing thah in Melchizedechs Sacrifice for our Savior himself declaring himself to be a Priest forever according to the Order of Melchizedech at his last Supper offer'd his own Body and Blood to God the Father under the species of Bread and Wine We therefore acknowledge it to be LXXXII The Sacrifice of the Mass and of the Cross is one and the same Sacrifice and it ought to be accounted but One and the same Sacrifice which is done in the Mass and which was offer'd on the Cross even as it is One and the same Hoste to wit Christ our Lord who once only offer'd himself in his Blood upon the Cross For the Bloody and Vnbloody Hoste is not Two Hosts but one Hoste only Luc. 22.19 1 Cor. 11.24 the Sacrifice whereof is renew'd daily in the Church after that our Lord had commanded thus Do this in Commemoration of me And there is One and the same Priest Christ the Lord LXXXIII Christ and the Priests are but One Priest For the Ministers that make this Sacrifice undergo not their own but the Person of Christ when they consecrate his Body and Blood as is evident from the words of the very Consecration for the Priest says not This is Christ's Body but This is my Body to wit bearing the Person of Christ our Lord he changes the substance of the Bread and Wine into the true Substance of his Body and Blood Chrys hom 2. in 2. ad Tim.
the other Powers of the Soul It is also call'd by the Holy Fathers Compunction of Heart Chrysost de Compunct co●dis Isidor de summo bono l. 2.12 who were pleas'd to entitle the Books they wrote of Contrition to be of Compunction of the Heart rather For as swelling Ulcers are cut with a Knife that the poisonous Corruption may be let forth So our Hearts are cut as it were with the Pen-knife of Contrition that the deadly Poyson of Sin might run out And therefore it is call'd by the Prophet Joel Joel 2.21 A cutting of the Heart Be ye converted to me says he with all your Heart in Fasting and in Weeping and in Mourning and cut your Hearts But that the greatest and deepest Grief is to be taken for sin committed XXXV Contrition ought to be the greatest Grief so that no greater can be imagin'd will be easie to evidence by these Reasons For whereas perfect Contrition is an Act of Love The First Reason 1 Joh. 3. which proceeds from a filial Fear it is plain that there ought to be the same measure both of Love and Contrition hence it comes That Contrition has joyn'd with it the most vehement Grief of Mind for as God is to be lov'd above all things so those things which estrange us from God are to be hated above all things Wherein this is also observable Note that after the same manner of speaking is signifi'd in Sacred Scripture the Greatness of Love and of Contrition Of Charity it is said Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart And again as to Contrition the Lord cries out by the Prophet Be ye converted with your whole Heart Besides The Second Reason if as God is the supreme Good among all the things that are to be lov'd and so Sin the greatest evil among all the things that Men ought to hate This follows that for what cause we confess that God is above all things to be lov'd for the same cause again we must needs hate Sin above all things But that the Love of God is to be put before all other things so that we may not sin tho it were to save out very Lives those words of our Lord plainly teach us Matt. 10.27 Mar. 16.25 Mar. 8.35 He that loves Father or Mother more than me is not worthy of me And He that will save his Life shall lose it But This also must be observ'd The Third Reason that as there is no End or Measure prescrib'd to Charity as S. Bernard testifies Lib. de di●●gendo Deo circa inod For says he The measure of loving God is to love him without Measure so there is no measure defin'd to the Detestation of Sin Besides XXXVI Contrition ought to be most vehement Deut. 4.27 Hierem. 2● 13 it ought to be not only the Greatest but also the most Vehement and therefore Perfect and excludes all slothfulness and laziness For in Deuteronomy it is written When thou shalt seek the Lord thy God thou shalt find him if notwithstanding thou shalt seek him with thy whole Heart and in the tribulation of thy Soul And in Jeremy Ye shall seek me and shall find me when ye shall seek me with your whole Heart and I wil be found of you says the Lord. Now altho we cannot get to make it perfect XXXVII Contrition tho imperfect yet it may be true yet our contrition may be true and efficacious for it often comes to pass that those things which are subject to sense more affect us than spiritual things Wherefore sometimes some Men are more sorrowful for the Death of their Children than for the Filthiness of their sins The same judgment is to be made XXXVIII Tears tho to be desir'd yet not necessary Serm. 41. de Sanctis if Tears follow not the Bitterness of Grief which yet in Penance are much to be wish'd and commended For S. Austins sentence in this case is very excellent The Bowels of Christian Charity says he are not in thee if thou lamentest the Body from which the Soul is departed but dost not lament the Soul from which God is departed And hither tend those words of our Savior before recited Mat. 11.21 Wo to thee Chorazin wo to thee Bethsaida for if the mighty works which have bin done in you had bin done in Tyre and Sydon they had done Penance long ago in Sack-cloth and Ashes Yet for the proof of this those most famous examples of the Ninivits of David of the Harlot of the Prince of Apostles will be sufficient All which sought pardon of their sins imploring the Mercy of God with very many Tears But the Faithful are specially to be exhorted and admonish'd XXXIX All Mortal sins to be detested with Contrition that they study to apply the proper Grief of Contrition to their several Mortal Sins For so Ezechias describes Contrition when he says I will recount to thee all my years in the bitterness of my soul For to recount all his years is severally to examine his sins to be sorry in mind for them And we read in Ezekiel Ezek. 28.21 If the wicked man do Penance for all his sins he shall live And agreeable hereto S Austin says Let the sinner consider the Quality of his sin at that Time in what Place against what Light and against whom Lib. de vera falsa Religione cap. 14. Let not the Faithful notwithstanding in this Case despair of the infinite Goodness and Mercy of God Note For since he is most desirous of our Salvation he will not delay to pardon us but will embrace the sinner with a Fatherly Love as soon as ever he shall have recollected himself and detested all his sins which thencesorth at any time according to his ability he can bring to remembrance and resolves in his mind to hate and converts himself to the Lord Ezek. 33.12 for so by the Prophet he commands us to ho e when he says The wickedness of the wicked shall not hurt him at what day soever he will be converted from his wickedness From hence therefore may be gather'd what ' things are most necessary to true Contrition XL. How many things necessary to True Contrition concerning which the Faithful must be accurately taught that every one may know by what means he may get it and may have a certain Rule whereby he may judge how far he is from the Perfection of this Vertue For first The first it is necessary to hate and to gri ve for all the sins we have done Lest if we blot out some only the Penance we do may seem dissembl'd and counterfeit and not saving For as S. James says He that shall have kept the whole Law but Offends in One thing he is guilty of all The second is The second that This Contrition has a Will to Confess and to Satisfie for Sin join'd with it of which shall
aright VII A good Order of Prayer when they pray against Calamities Inconveniences and freedom from Evil refer it to God's Glory So David to that Prayer Lord rebuke me not in thine anger added the Reason whereby he shew'd himself very desirous of God's Glory Psal 6. for he says Because in Death there is no one that remembers thee and in Hell who shall confess to thee And when he pray'd God to have mercy upon him Psal 50.2 subjoyns this I will teach the Vnrighteous thy Ways and the Wicked shall be converted to thee To this excellent way of Praying VIII The evil Prayers of Infidels and to follow the Example of the Prophet the Faithful are to be incited and to be taught how much difference there is between the Prayers of Infidels and those of Christians They also pray God heartily to recover of their Diseases and Wounds to be deliver'd from their pressing and imminent Dangers but yet they put their special Hope of that Deliverance in the Remedies prepar'd either by Nature or the Industry of Men yea without any Religion they use any Medicin given them by any one tho made by Inchantment Witchcraft or the help of the Devil so that they have but any hope of Recovery thereby But the way of Christians is far otherwise IX The Prayers of Christians who when they are in any Sickness or Adversity have God for their Highest Refuge and Protection of Health they have Him only for the Author of all their Good and own and worship Him for their Deliverer and certainly reckon that all the Vertue of Healing that is in Medicins is given them of God and that they are profitable to the Sick only so far as God pleases For Medicin is given of God to Mankind to heal their Sicknesses Eccl. 38. hence is that Saying of Ecclesiasticus The most High created Medicins out of the Earth and he that is prudent will not abhor them They therefore that have given their Name to Christ Note put not their highest Hope of the Recovery of Health in those Remedies but trust most in God the Author of those Medicins Wherefore in Sacred Scripture they are reprov'd X. We must not use unlawful Remedies 2 Chron. 16. who thro confidence of the Medicins seek no help of God yea they that lead their Life according to God's Laws abstain from all Remedies whatsoever which it is manifest are not appointed of God and if by the use of those Medicins they might have certain Hope of Recovery yet they would abhor them as the Enchantments and Artifices of the Devil But the Faithful must be exhorted to put their Confidence in God XI In Sickness we must trust in God only for for that Reason our most bountiful Father has commanded us to beg of him Deliverance from Evils that because he has commanded it therefore we should have hope of obtaining In Sacred Scripture there are many Examples of this Matter that they who are not led by Reason may be compell'd to have Hope and Confidence by a multitude of Examples Among whom Abraham Jacob Loth Joseph David are sufficient Witnesses of God's Goodness The Sacred Scriptures of the New Testament reckon up so many that have been deliver'd out of the greatest Difficulties by the prevalency of devout Prayer that the thing wants not the Proof of Examples We will therefore content our selves with that one Sentence of the Prophet Note which may confirm any even the most weak Psal 38.18 For says he the Just cry and the Lord hears them and delivers them out of all their Tribulations Now follows the Force and Vertue of the Petition XII The Force of t●is Petition that the Faithful may understand that in this place we do not pray to be deliver'd wholly from all Evil For there are some things which are commonly thought Evil 2 Cor. 2. which yet are profitable to those that suffer them as that Prick which the Apostle had 2 Cor. 12. that by the Assistance of Gods Grace his Power might be perfected in our weakness These things if their Vertue were known Note do wonderfully please the pious that they are far from praying to have them remov'd Wherefore we pray against those Evils only which do not at all profit the Soul XIII From what evils we here pray to be d●livered but not against the rest if we get but any Advantage by them The meaning hereof therefore is that being freed from Sin and the danger of Temptation we may be delivered from Evil both inward and outward that we may be safe from Water and Fire and Lightning that the Hail hurt not the Fruits of the Earth that we may not suffer scarcity of Provisions Sedition or War We beg of God to drive away Diseases Pestilence Desolation to keep us from Imprisonment Bonds Banishment Treasons Snares and all other Inconveniences wherewith the Life of Man is used to be greatly terrified and oppressed and lastly that he would turn away all the Causes of Sin and Wickedness Nor do we pray against those things only which even by the Consent of all are evil but also against those things which almost all Men account good as Riches Honors Health Strength yea and this Life it self rather than that should turn to our hurt and to the Destruction of our Souls We also pray God not to be oppressed by suddain Death that we provoke not Gods Anger against us that we may never suffer the Punishments which attend the Wicked that we may not be tormented with the Fire of Purgatory from which that others also may be delivered we make holy and devout Prayers This Petition both in the Mass and Litanies Note the Church thus expounds to wit that we pray against Evil past present and to come Now the Goodness of God delivers us out Evil XIV God delivers us from evil many ways not after one manner only for he hinders those Evils that hang over our Heads as we read that that great man Jacob was delivered from his Enemies whom the Slaughter of the Sichemites had provoked against him Gen. 35.3 For it is said The terror of the Lord came upon all the Cities round about and they durst not follow them returning back And indeed blessed are all they who when they reign with Christ our Lord in Heaven are by Gods help delivered from all Evil. But us that remain in this Pilgrimage he will not have to be free from all Inconveniences but he delivers us from some But yet those Comforts which God sometimes gives to those that are press'd with Hardships XV. The Comforts he gives Psal 93.8 is as good as a Freedom from all Evils In these the Prophet comforted himself when he said According to the multitude of the Sorrows in my heart try comforts rejoyc'd my Soul Besides God delivers Men from Evil when he keeps them safe and sound when brought to the utmost Difficulties
he said I am he Joh. 18.5 and of his own accord freely he underwent all those punishments which unjustly and unmercifully they threw upon him Than which X. A strong motive to the love of Christ sure there is nothing in the World more powerful to move our compassion when we well consider in our minds all his sufferings and torments For if for our sakes any one should suffer all those sorrows not which he voluntarily underwent but which he cou'd not avoid this indeed we shou'd hardly account as a benefit of any great regard but if on our score only he freely endure death which he cou'd have refus'd verily this is such a kind of benefit that it bereaves even the most grateful person in the World not only of the power of paying due thankfulness but even of having it and hence the transcendant and superlative love of Christ Jesus and his divine and infinite deseits towards us may be perceiv'd But then when we confess that he was Bury'd XI Why we are to believ that Christ was bury'd this is not set down as a part of the Article which thing seems to have some new difficulty in it besides what has bin already spok'n of his death For if we believ that Christ was dead it is easie enough to perswade us That he was bury'd But this was added first that we may doubt the less of the Truth of his death it being the strongest proof that a person is dead if we can prove that his Body was bury'd And then that the Miracle of his Resurrection might be the more apparent and illustrious Nor do we believ this only Mat. 27.60 That Christs Body was bury'd but this especially is propos'd to our Belief in these Words That God was bury'd Mar. 15 46. as by the Rule of Catholic Faith we most truly say Luc. 23.53 That God was dead was born of a Virgin for since his Divinity was never divided from his Body no not even when it was laid in the Sepulchre rightly we confess That God was bury'd Joh. 19.38.42 And that will be sufficient for the Curat concerning the manner and place of Christ's burial which is spoken by the Holy Evangelists But first of all XII Two things to be noted Ps 15 10. Act. 2.31 two things are to be observ'd the one is That Christs Body was in no part corrupt'd in the Sepulchre concerning which the Prophet thus prophecies Thou shalt not suffer thy Holy One to see corruption The other which belongs to all the parts of this Article is That the Burial Passion and Death of Jesus Christ have reference to him as Man not as God for to suffer and to dye are incident to the human Nature only Tho all these things are also attribut'd to God because as it is manifest they may rightly he said of that person who at once was perfect God and perfect Man These things being known the Curat may explain those things concerning Christs Passion and Death whereby the Faithful may at least contemplate if not comprehend the immensity of so great a Mystery And First XIII What we are to meditate of the Passion of Christ First Joh. 1.1 Heb. 1.2 3. It should be consider'd Who it is that suffers all these things And here we are not able by Words to relate or even in our Hearts to conceiv his Dignity S. John says he is the Word which was with God The Apostle with stately Expressions describes him in this manner That this is He whom God has appoint'd to be the Heir of all things by whom also he made the Worlds who is the brightness of his Glory and the Figure of his Substance and the Image of his Person who supports all things by the Word of his Power He therefore having wash'd away our sins sits at the Right-hand of the Majesty on High And to say all in a Word He who suffers is Jesus Christ God and Man Rom. 11.36 The Creator suffers for those whom he created The Lord for his Servants be by whom the Angels Men Heav'ns and Elements were made He I say in whom by whom and of whom are all things It is no wonder therefore if when he was wounded with so many Torments and Sufferings the whole Fabric of the World trembl'd for as the Scripture says Ma●t 27.51 The Earth quak'd and the Rocks were rent Luc. 23 44. and there was Darkness over all the Earth 1 Pet. 2.5 and the Sun was dark'n'd Now if ev'n the dumb and insensible Creatures bewail'd the Sufferings of their Maker let the Faithful consider with how great and bitter Lamentation they as living Stones of this Building ought to evidence their Grief And now we come to shew the Causes of his Passion XIV What Secondly that thereby the Strength and Greatness of the Divine Love towards us may the better appear If therefore any one ask What shou'd be the Cause why the Son of God wou'd undergo such an extream bitter passion he will find it to be this chiefly besides the hereditary Contagion of our first Parents namely The Vices and Sins which Men have committed from the beginning of the World to this day and which they will hereafter commit to the end of the World For this was it That the Son of God our Savior intended in his Death and Passion to redeem and to blot out the sins of all Ages and richly and abundantly to make satisfaction to his Father for them Let this also be added to inhance the dignity of the thing XV. What Thirdly that Christ did not only suffer for sinners but also that those very sinners for whom he suffer'd were both the Authors and Inflicters of those Punishments he endur'd Of which the Apostle thus admonishes us writing to the Hebrews thus Heb. 12.13 Consider him who endur'd such contradiction of Sinners against himself lest ye be weary and faint in your Souls Of this Fault rightly may those be judg'd guilty Note who easily and often fall into sin For since our sins drove Christ our Lord to undergo the punishment of the Cross verily they who run into Sin and Wickedness do as much as in them lies crucisie to themselves the Son of God afresh Heb. 6.6 and put him to an open shame And this wickedness is by so much more insolent and heinous in us Note than it was in the Jews because they as the same Apostle bears them Witness 1 Cor. 2.8 if they had known they wou'd never have crucifi'd the Lord of Glory But we profess we have known him and yet in our Deeds denying him we seem in a manner to lay violent Hands upon him Now the Holy Scripture teftifies XVI What Fourthly Isay 53.8 That Christ Our Lord was deliver'd to Death both by the Father and by himself For in Isaiahs Prophecy he says For the ' wickedness of my people have I smitten him And the same
Apostle us'd Eph. 5.2 when he said Christ lov'd us and gave himself a Sacrifice and oblation for us to God for a sweet-smelling Savor Furthermore this is the Oblation whereof we read in the Prince of Apostles 1 Pet. 1.18.19 Ye were not redeem'd with corruptible things as Silver and Gold from your vain conversation of the Tradition of your Fathers but with the precious Blood of Crist as of a Lamb without spot or blemish And the Apostle teaches us Gal. 3.13 That Christ was made a Curse for us that he might redeem us from the curse of the Law But besides these immense Benefits XXVI In Christs Passion are examples of all Vertues we have this very great one over and above that in this only Passion we have the most Glorious Patterns of all Vertues For he shew'd forth his Patience Humility the most profound Love Charity Meekness and Obedience and most unshaken Constancy and Resolution of Mind not only in suffering Injuries for Righteousness or Justice sake but also even in Death it self and that in such a manner as we can truly say That our Savior in the very height of his Sufferings did most lively express in himself all those Rules and Precepts of Life which throw all the time of his Preaching he taught by Words And this shall suffice to have bin spoken briefly of the most saving Death and Passion of Christ our Lord. And wou'd God these Mysteries were seriously impress'd upon our Souls and Hearts and that we wou'd learn to suffer to dye and to be bury'd together with our Lord that then every spot of Sin being wip'd away and rising with him to newness of Life by his Mercy we may be found worthy to be made partakers of his Kingdom of Heav'n and Glory ARTICLE V. HE descended into Hell the third Day He rose again from the Dead It is of very great use to know the glory of the Burial of our Lord Jesus Christ I. 〈◊〉 very useful o unde●●t●●● this Article of which we have spoken last But it more concerns the Faithful to know the glorious Triumphs he bore away by conquering the Devil and spoiling the Powers of Hell Of which and also of the Resurection we are now to speak Which Point altho it may well be handl'd distinctly and by it self yet we following the Authority of the Holy Fathers have thought fit to joyn it with that of his descent into Hell In the first part therefore this is propos'd to our Belief II. What is propes'd in the first Part. That Christ being now dead his Soul went down to Hell and there continu'd so long as his Body was in the Sepulchre But in these words we also confess That the very same person of Christ at the same time was both with the Spirits below and also lay in the Sepulchre Which when we say no one ought to wonder because as we have often said before That though his Soul departed from his Body yet his Divinity was never separated either from his Soul or his Body But because it may bring much light to the Explication of this Article III. The various signification of Hell if the Curat teach what in this place is to be understood by the Word Hell It is necessary to admonish That in this place by Hell is not meant the Sepulchre as some no less impiously than unskilfully have thought for by the former Article we are taught That Christ our Lord was bury'd neither was there any Reason why in the Creed the same thing shou'd by the Holy Apostles be repeated in another and a more obscure form of Speech But the Word Hell signifies those hidd'n Receptacles wherein the Souls are kept IV. The First The Receptacle of the damn'd Phil. 2.10 which have not attain'd to the Blessedness of Heav'n For so the Holy Scriptures use this Word in many places For thus we read in the Apostle At the name of Jesus every Knee shall bow of those in Heav'n of those in Earth and those under the Earth And in the Acts of the Apostles S. Peter testifies Act 2.24 That Christ the Lord was risen again having loos'd the Pains of Hell Nor are all those Receptacles of one and the same kind For there is that worst and most dismal place of all where the Souls of the damn'd together with the unclean Spirits shall be tormented for ever and that with unquenchable Fire which is call'd the Bottomles-Pit and by its own proper signification Hell There is besides V. The Fire of Purgatory The Fire of Purgatory wherein the Souls of the Pious for a certain determin'd time are cleans'd by Sufferings that so the entrance to the Heav'nly Country may be laid open into which no polluted thing can be admitted And of the truth of this Doctrin Apoc. 21 27. Con. Trent Sess 25. which the Holy Councils declare to be confirm'd both by Testimonies of Scripture and by Apostolic Tradition the Curat shall discourse and argue by so much the more industriously and frequently because we are fall'n upon those times wherein Men will not endure Sound Doctrin Lastly VI. Limbus where the Souls of the Father were The third kind of Receptacle is that wherein the Souls of the Saints were receiv'd before the coming of Christ our Lord and there being refresh'd with the bless'd hope of Redemption and free from all sense of Pain enjoy'd a peaceable Habitation The Souls therefore of these Pious Persons who in the bosome of Abraham expected the Savior Christ our Lord descending to Hell deliver'd Nor are we to think that he so descended to Hell VII Christ's Soul truly went down to Hell as that only his Influence and Vertue and not also his Soul went thither But we are verily to believ That his very Soul indeed and in presence descended to Hell Ps 15.10 of which there is this most certain Testimony of David Thou shall not leave my Soul is Hell But tho Christ went down to Hell yet this was no damage to his Supreme Power nor was the Splendor of his Holiness stain'd in the least seeing that by thus doing it rather was most evidently prov'd that all those things are most true which are celebrated concerning his Holiness and that he is the very Son of God as he had before made appear by so many prodigious Miracles And this we may easily perceiv VIII Two differences betwixt Christ's and the damned's going to Hell if we but consider the Causes why Christ and other Men came into those places For all others went thither as Captives but he as free among the Dead and Conquerer to Master the Devils by whom they were there kept shut up and imprison'd by reason of sin Furthermore All others who descended thither partly were tormented with most bitter pains and partly tho they wanted all other sense of sorrow yet being depriv'd of the sight of God and with-held in the Hope only of
And because the Latins have borrow'd the Name Ecclesia Church III. What is properly to be understood by the name Church from the Greeks after the publishing of the Gospel they transferr'd it to Sacred Matters But what the Meaning of this word is is to be shew'd The word Ecclesia Church signifies a Calling forth Act. 19.39 But Writers afterwards us'd it for a Council and Assembly Nor is it much to the matter whether that people worshipp'd the true God or a false Religion For in the Acts it is written of the Ephesians That when that Scribe had appeas'd the Rabble he said If ye enquire of any other matter it may be resolv'd in a lawful Church or Assembly He calls the Ephesians who were worshippers of Diana a lawful Church Nor are the Gentiles only which knew not God but the Councils also of Evil and Wicked Men sometimes call'd a Church I have hated says the Prophet Ps 25.5 the Church of the Wicked and I will not sit with the Vngodly But then by the common custom of the Scriptures This word is taken to signifie the Christian Common-wealth and the Congregations of the Faithful To wit those who are call'd to the light of Truth and the knowledg of God that casting away the darkness of ignorance and error they may worship the living and true God with Piety and Holiness and to say all in a Word The Church as S. Austin says S. Aug. in Ps 49. is the Faithful People dispers'd throw the whole World Nor are they trivial Mysteries which are contain'd in this Word IV. What Mysteries are contain'd in the word Church For in Calling forth which Ecclesia or Church signifies at first sight shines forth the Benignity and Splendor of Gods Grace and we understand That the Church differs very much from Other Common-wealths For They are establish'd by Human Reason and Prudence But This by the Wisdom and Counsel of God For he has Inwardly call'd us by Inspiration of the Holy Ghost but Outwardly by the Ministery and Labor of the Pastors and Teachers Besides from this Calling V. How the Church differs from a Synagogue what ought to be our end to wit the knowledg and passession of things Eternal he will best perceive who shall have consider'd why in old times the Faithful People under the Law were call'd a Synagogue i. e. a Congregation or flocking together For as S. Austin teaches They had this name given them because after the manner of Cattel to which it is more suitable to flock together they look'd only at earthly and transitory things And therefore rightly is the Christian People call'd not a Synagogue but a Church because despising earthly and mortal things it follows after those things only which are heavenly and eternal There are besides many other Names which are full of Mysteries VI. Other Names of the Church 1 Tim. 3.13 deliver'd to signifie the Christian Common-wealth For it is call'd by the Apostle the House and Building of God but if I tarry long says he to Timothy that thou mayst know how to behave thy self in the House of God which is the Church of God the Pillar and Ground of Truth And the Church is therefore call'd a House First because it is as it were one Family which one Father or Master governs and in which is a communion of all spiritual good things It is also call'd Christ's Flock of Sheep Second whereof he is the Door and Shepherd It is call'd the Spouse of Christ Third 2 Cor. 11.2 I have betrothed you as a chast Virgin to one Husband which is Christ says the Apostle to the Corinthians And the same Apostle to the Ephesians Men love your wives even as Christ loved the Church Eph. 2.5 And of Matrimony This is a great Mystery says he but I speak in Christ and in the Cburch Lastly Fourth Eph. 1.23 Col. 1.24 The Church is call'd the Body of Christ as may be seen in the Epistle to the Ephesians and that to the Colossians And all these severally avail very much to stir up the Faithful to behave themselves worthy of the immense goodness and mercy of God who has chosen them to be his people These things being explain'd VII The Church Militant and Triumphant Aug. Ench. c. it will be necessary to reckon up the several Parts of the Church and to teach the differences of them whereby the people may the better understand the Nature Properties Gifts and Graces of the Church so much belov'd of God and for that cause never intermit to praise the most holy Name of God Now of the Church there are especially Two Parts whereof the One is call'd Triumphant the Other Militant The Triumphant is that most glorious land happy company of the blessed Spirits VIII Which is Triumphant and those who have triumph'd over the World the Flesh and the Devil and being deliver'd and safe from the Troubles of this life enjoy eternal Bliss But the Church Militant is the company of all the Faithful IX Which Militant Aug. lib. 12. de Civ Dei c. 9. which yet live in the earth Which therefore is call'd Militant because she has continual War with those most implacable Enemies the World the Flesh and the Devil Nor is it yet to be thought that there are Two Churches but that of the same Church as was said before there are Two Parts whereof the One is gone before and has already obtain'd the Heavenly Country The Other daily follows till at last being joyn'd with our Saviour she shall rest in everlasting Happiness Now in the Church Militant there are two sorts of Men Good and Bad X. In the Church Militant are both Good and Bad Men. 2 Tim. 2.19 Concil Trid. sess 6. c. 12. Mark this the Wicked being indeed partakers of the same Sacraments profess the same Faith as the Good do but in their Life and Manners are far unlike Now these in the Church are call'd Good who are conjoin'd and knit together not only in profession of Faith and communion of Sacraments but also in the Spirit of Grace and Bond of Charity of whom it is said The Lord has known who are his and Men also may think and conjecture who they are that belong to this number of Pious Men but no one can certainly know And therefore it is not to be thought that Christ our Saviour spake of This Part of his Church when he remitted us to his Church and commanded us to obey Her For since She is out of our knowledge who can be assur'd to whose Judgment we are to fly and whose Authority we must obey The Church therefore includes both the Good and Bad as both the Holy Scripture and the Writings of Holy Men Testifie according to which Sentence is written that of the Apostle Ephes 4.4 There is One Body and One Spirit Now this Church is known XI By what Figures and Similitudes
thing only lest in any thing we may offend the Majesty of God we wholly forsake the custom of sinning By these Steps or Degrees therefore we come to this most excellent Vertue of Penance XII Heaven promis'd to Penance which may well be accounted a divine and heavenly Vertue Because to it the Holy Scripture promises the Kingdom of Heaven For in S. Matthew it is written Do Penance for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand Matt. 4 17. And in Ezekiel Ezek. 18.21 If a wicked Man do Penance for all the sins which he has done and shall keep all my commandments and do justice and judgment he shall live And also in another place Ezek. 33.11 I will not the Death of a sinner but that the wicked Man be converted from his evil way and live Which that it is to be understood of that bless'd and eternal Life is plainly evident But of External Penance it is to be taught XIII External Penance which is the Sacrament that it is That wherein the Reason or Nature of the Sacrament consists and that it has some external things subject to the senses whereby those things are declar'd which are done inwardly in the Soul And First XIV Why Christ instituted this Sacrament The First Cause it seems necessary to be explain'd to the Faithful Why it was that Christ our Lord would have Penance in the Number of the Sacraments And hereof this was certainly the cause That we might doubt the less concerning the Remission of sins which God had promis'd us when he said Ezek. 18.12 If the wicked man do Penance c. For it must needs be that we be very dubious in our minds of our inward Penance seeing every one deservedly ought to fear concerning his own judgment of those things he does himself Now therefore that the Lord might relieve our sollicitude he instituted the Sacrament of Penance wherein through the Absolution of the Priest we may consider that our sins are forgiven us and our Consciences by the Faith which justly ought to be given to the vertue of the Sacraments are more quieted For neither are the words of the Priest legitimately pardoning our sins to be receiv'd otherwise than of Christ himself Mat. 6.22 who said to the Lame-man Son be of good chear thy sins are forgiven thee Vide Concil Trid. Sess 14. c. 1. Innoc. 1. Epist 91. inter Epist Aug. And then The Second Cause seeing that no one can obtain Salvation but through Christ and the benefit of his Passion it was fit and very profitable to us that such a kind of Sacrament as this should be instituted by the Vertue and Efficacy whereof Christs Blood flowing to us might do away our sins committed after Baptism and that we might acknowledg with due thankfulness that we owe the Benefit of our Reconciliation to Christ our only Savior But that Penance is a Sacrament XV. Penance prov'd to be a Sacrament the Pastors may easily shew thus For as Baptism is a Sacrament because it blots out all our sins and especially that which was contracted by our Birth For the same reason Penance must truly and properly be call'd a Sacrament because it takes away all sins done after Baptism in the Will or in the Act. And then which is the chief seeing those things which are done outwardly both by the Penitent and by the Priest do declare those things which are inwardly wrought in the Soul who is there can deny that Penance is endued with the true and proper reason or nature of a Sacrament For a Sacrament is a sign of a Sacred thing But a sinner that does Penance by the Notes of Words and Things plainly expresses That he has withdrawn his mind from the Filthiness of sin And also from those things which are done and said by the Priest we easily understand the Mercy of God forgiving those sins Altho those words of our Savior plainly shew this thing Mar 16.19 I will give thee the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven and whatsoever thou shall loose in Earth shall be loos'd also in Heaven For the Absolution of the Priest pronounc'd by words signs that Remission of sins which it works in the Soul Nor are the Faithful to be taught only that Penance is to be reckon'd in the number of the Sacraments XVI The Sacrament of Penance may be iterated but also that it is One of Those that may be iterated For to Peter asking Whether Forgiveness of sin might be given seven times Our Lord answer'd Matt. 18.22 I say not to thee till seven times but till seventy times seven Wherefore if we have to do with such men as seem to distrust the supreme Goodness and Mercy of God the Souls of such are to be confirm'd and to be supported with the Hope of Divine Grace Which they will easily do by the handling of this Point and of very many others which they meet with in the Holy Scriptures and also with those Reasons and Arguments which they may find in S. Chrysostoms book de Lapsis and S. Ambrose's books of Penance Chrysostom 5. lib. de Laps repar habetur de Poen dist 3. c. talis Ambr. de poen lib. 1. c. 1 2. vide Aug. lib. de vera falsa poen c. 5. citatur de poen dist 3. c. adhuc instant Now since the Faithful ought to know nothing more than the Matter of this Sacrament XVII The Matter of Penance what it must be taught that herein chiefly this Sacrament differs from the rest that the Matter of the other Sacraments is some natural thing or made by Art But that which is as the Matter of this Sacrament of Penance are the Actions of the Penitent to wit Contrition Confession and Satisfaction as has bin declar'd by the Council of Trent S ss 24 de poenit c. 3. can 4. because so far as by Gods institution they are requir'd in the Penitent to the Integrity of the Sacrament and to the full and perfect Remission of sins for this reason they are call'd Parts of Penance Nor are these Acts said by that Holy Synod to be as the Matter Note because they have not the true Reason of Matter But because they are not Matter of that kind which is us'd extrinsecally as Water in Baptism and Chrism in Confirmation But then XVIII In What sense sin is the Matter of Penance As to what is said of Others that the sins themselves are the Matter of this Sacrament there will seem to be no difference therein if we consider well For as we say that Wood is the Matter of Fire which by the force of the Fire is consum'd So sins which are blotted out by Penance may rightly be call'd the Matter of this Sacrament Now the explication of the Form also is not to be omitted by the Pastors XIX The Form of the Sacrament of Penance because the knowledg thereof will
it came so to pass also that Pardon of Sins should be deny'd but to a very few Wherefore it was needful that the most merciful Lord should ●rder the common Salvation of Mankind after an easier way which by his admirable Counsel he has done when he deliver'd to his Church the Keys of the Kindgom of Heaven For by the Doctrin of Catholic Faith XLVII Confession perfects Contrition All must believe and constantly affirm If any one be so affected in mind as to bewail his sins and also to sin no more for the future altho he be not affected with such a kind of sorrow as may be sufficient to get him Pardon Yet when he has rightly confess'd his sins to a Priest by Vertue of the Keys all his wickednesses and sins are remitted and forgiven him That worthily by the most Holy Men our Fathers was it celebrated That an Entrance into Heaven is open'd by the Keys of the Church Whereof it is not fit for any one to doubt since we read it decreed by the Council of Florence That the Effect of Penance is Absolution from Sins Amb. Serm. 1. de Quadrag citatur de Poenit. dist 1. c. ecce nunc August lib. 2. de adult conjug 59. Chrysost de sacerd lib. 3. in Decreto Eugenii IV. And we may further learn from hence XLVIII Confession a most sure way of amending manners how much advantage Confession brings because we find by experience that there is nothing so profitable for the amendment of manners to those whose custom of Life has bin corrupt as if they lay open to some Prudent and Faithful Friend who can help him with his pains and counsel all the secret Thoughts of his Heart his Actions and Words Wherefore according to the same Reason it must be thought very wholsom for those who are conscious of the guilt of Sin to open the Sicknesses and Wounds of their Souls to a Priest as to the Vicar of Christ our Lord who is under the most severe Law of perpetual silence For they presently find Remedies prepar'd for them D. Poenit. dist 6. c. Sacerdot which have such a heavenly Vertue of curing not only the present Sickness but also of disposing the Soul in such a manner that thenceforth it will not be easie for the future to fall into the like kind of Disease and Vice Nor is this advange of Confession to be pretermitted XLIX Confession exercises the Bad. which is very pertinent to the society and conjunction of Life For it is evident that if you take away Sacramental Confession from Christian Discipline all things will be full of hidden and horrid wickedness Which afterwards and many others also much more heinous Men deprav'd by the custom of Sin will not fear to commit openly For the modesty and shame of Confessing calls a Bridle as it were upon the desire and liberty of offending and restrains Dishonesty And now the advantages of Confession being laid open L. The Description of Sacramental Confession the Pastors must teach what the Nature and Vertue thereof is They therefore define it to be an Accusation of sins which belongs to a kind of Sacrament done to this End that by vertue of the Keys we may get Pardon And it is rightly call'd an Accusation LI. With what mind sins are to be declar'd in Confession because sins are not so to be commemorated as tho we boasted of our wickedness as they do who are glad when they have done mischief nor are they altogether to be told as if for divertisement or sport to some idle Hearers we were telling some matter that had bin done but they are so declar'd by a mind accusing it self as that we desire also to revenge them in our selves But we confess our sins to the End that we may get pardon LII We must confess to get Pardon Chrys 20. in Genes because this Judgment is far unlike those Courts which make inquisitions of Capital Causes where the Pain and Punishment of Confession is not made to be a Discharge of the Fault or a Pardon of the Offence In the same sense in a manner altho in other words the most holy Fathers seem'd to have defin'd Confession as when S. Austin says Aug. Serm. 4. de Verbis Domini Greg hom 40. in Evang Confession is that by which the Disease which lay hid is laid open by the Hope of Pardon And S. Gregory Confession is the Detestation of sins either of which because it is contain'd in the definition above mentioned may easily be referr'd to it And now LIII Confession instituted of Christ which is above all the Curats shall teach and without any doubtfulness deliver to Faithful that this Sacrament was instituted by Christ our Lord who did all things well and for the sake of our Salvation For after his Resurrection the Apostles being gather'd together into one place he breath'd upon them saying Joh. 20.22 Receive ye the Holy Ghost whose sins ye remit they are remitted to them and whose sins ye retain they are retained Vide Trid. Sess 14. de poenit c. 5. can 6. Aug. lib. hom 64. citatur de poenit dist 1. c. agite Orig. hom 1. in Ps 37. Chrysost de Sacerd. lib. 3. When therefore the Lord gave power to the Priests of Retaining and Remitting sins LIV. Confession to be made to the Priest it is plain that they were made Judges of the Matter And the Lord seem'd to signifie the same thing when he gave his Apostles that imployment to loose Lazarus Joh. 11. when he was rais'd from the Dead from those Bands wherewith he was bound For S. Austin explains that place thus Aug. de vera falsa poenit ●tia c 16. Serm. 8. de verb. Domini They says he the Priests can now profit more they can spare more those that confess to whom they forgive sin to wit the Lord by the Apostles deliver'd Lazarus whom he had rais'd from the Dead to his Disciples to be loos'd shewing that the Power of Loosing was now granted to his Church Whither also belongs that which he commanded those who on their journey were cleans'd of their Leprosie that they should shew themselves to the Priests and undergo their judgment Since therefore the Lord has given to the Priests a Power of Remitting and Retaining sins it is evident that they are appointed Judges of that Matter and because as the Holy Synod of Trent has wisely admonish'd Sess 14. c. 5. can 7. de Poenit. that a true judgment cannot be made concerning any thing and in appointing punishments of sins there can be no Measure of Justice held unless the Cause be truly known and searched into from hence it follows that by the Confession of Penitents all sins are severally to be laid open to the Priests That the Priests are Judges of sins S. Austin teaches lib. 20. de civit Dei c. 9. Hieron Epist 1.
defin'd by the Holy Synod of Trent and has always bin deliver'd by the Catholic Church even as the Testimonies of the Holy Fathers declare For in S. Ambrose it is declar'd after this manner Sess 14. de Poenit. c. 5. can 7. No one can be justifi'd from his sin unless he confess his sin And S. Hierom upon Ecclesiastes says Lib. de Parad c. 4. If the Serpent the Devil have secretly bit any one and no one know of it he had infected him with the Poison of sin C. 1. Super illud si mord●at s●rpens circa finem If he hold his Peace and do not do Penance and is not willing to confess is wound to his Brother or Master his Master who has a Tongue to cure him cannot profit him Furthermore S. Cyprian in his Sermon de Lapsis most plainly teaches this in these words Altho they are fetter'd by no such heinous crime as Sacrificing to Idols or Libelling yet because they had thoughts of doing so they ought with grief to confess it to the Priests of God Lastly This is the common voice and sentence of all the Doctors of the Church That all Mortal sins ought severally to be confess'd do teach Aug. lib. de vera falsa Poenit. cap. 10. Greg. hom 10. super Ezekiel Ambr. lib. de parad cap. 14. Hieron in Ecclesiast cap. 10. Cypr. de Lapsis circa finem Vide de Poenit. dist 3. cap. sunt plures c. pluit ibid. dist 1. cap. quem poen ibid pass But in Confession that very great Care and Diligence is to be used LXII How by Confession sins are pluck'd up by the Roots which we are wont to use in the weightiest Matters and all our study ought so to be imploy'd herein that we may cure the Wounds of our Souls and destroy the very Roots of Sin Nor ought we only by a Declaration of them to explain our grievous sins but also all the several Circumstances of every sin which either greatly increase or lessen the sins For some Circumstances are so weighty LXIII The Circumstances which increase the sin must be confess'd that the Nature of the Deadliness of the sin consists only in them wherefore all these things must always be confess'd For if any one shall have kill'd a Man it must be explain'd whether he were a Clerk or a Lay man As also it is necessary that he declare if he lay with a Woman whether she were free from the Law of Marriage or were another Man's Wife or of his Kindred or Consecrated to God by the Betroathing of any Vow For these things make the kinds of sins different So that the first by the Doctors of Holy things is call'd simple Fornication The Second Adultery The Third Incest The Fourth Sacriledge Also Theft is to be reckon'd among sins But if any one shall steal a piece of Gold he certainly sins less than he that steals away a hundred or two hundred pieces or a great quantity of Gold and of especially who stole the Sacred Mony And this Reason belongs also to Place and Time Examples whereof are more known in the Books of many than that we should make mention of them in this place These things Note as we have said are to be numbr'd but those things which do not much increase the wickedness of the thing may without sin be omitted But to Confession it is so necessary LXIV To conceal sin in Confession a great Crime the Confession to be iterated as we said before that it be intire and absolute that if any one in Confession pass over some of those things which ought to have bin explain'd and confess'd only some of them he not only by that Confession reaps no advantage but also fetters himself in a new wickedness Nor is such a kind of reckoning up of sin to be call'd by the name of Confession in which is the Vertue of a Sacrament but rather it is necessary for the Penitent to repeat again his Confession and to acknowledge himself guilty of that sin that he violated the Holiness of that Sacrament by a counterfeit Confession But if for any other cause there may seem to be any defect in the Confession LXV Confession not to be iterated by reason of sin forgot either because the Penitent has forgot some sins or because he has not so narrowly search'd into the secret corners of his Conscience yet because he had it in his mind intirely to confess all his sins he has no need to iterate his Confession But it will be sufficient if when he remembers the sins before forgot he confess them to a Priest at another time Wherein care must be taken LXVI Negligence in examining must be avoided that we do not haply search our Consciences too dissolutely and remissly and so negligently study to bring our sins to remembrance that we may deservedly seem to be willing indeed not to remember them For if we do so we must by all means iterate our Confession Moreover we must take heed LXVII Confession must be naked simple and plain that our Confession be Naked Simple and Plain not artificially compos'd as is done by some who seem rather to lay down the Rule of their Life than to confess their sins For such ought to be our Confession as it may shew us to the Priest to be such Persons as we know our selves to be and may shew things certain for certain and doubtful for doubtful But if sins are not disclos'd or recited Note or the words we make use of be far from the matter we have in hand it is evident that this Confession wants this Vertue They also are much to be commended who use Prudence and Modesty in explaining things LXVIII Prudent and Modest for neither ought there too many words to he us'd but those things which belong to the Nature and Reason of every sin are to be open'd in a short Speech which is joyn'd with Modesty But this must be endeavour'd both by the Confessing Person LXIX Secret and by the Priest that their speech in Confession be secret For which cause it is not lawful for any by any means Note either by Messenger or by Letter to confess their sins because according to reason nothing by that means can be done secretly But nothing so much requires the Care of the Faithful LXX Frequent as to study to cleanse their Soul by a frequent Confession of their Sins For when any one is tempted with any deadly sin there can be to him nothing more wholesome or saving by reason of the many dangers which hang over our life than presently to confess his sins For it is a foul thing for any one to promise himself a long time to live when we are so diligent in cleansing the spots of our Body or of our Cloaths and not to use at least the same diligence that the splendor of our Soul grow not
all LXXIX What is to be done with one who excuses or lessens his sins the Pride of some is to be reprov'd who endeavor either to defend their wickednesses by some excuse or to lessen them For for example when any one confesses that he was somewhat overmuch mov'd with Anger he presently charges another with the cause of that Disturbance who as he complains first did him the Wrong He is therefore to be admonish'd That this is the sign of an exalted or proud mind and of a Man that either despises or else is ignorant of the greatness of his sin And also that such kind of Excuse does rather increase than lessen the sin For he that strives thus to approve his Fact seems to profess that he then will use Patience when no body hurts nor wrongs him than which nothing can be more unbecoming a Christian For whereas he ought very much to bewail the condition of him who did the Injury yet is not mov'd with the naughtiness of the sin but is angry at his Brother And when a fair occasion was offer'd him to honor God with his Patience and amend his Brother with his Meekness he turns the matter of his Salvation to his Hurt But more pernicious is the Fault of those to be thought LXXX What to be done with those who are asham'd to confess who being hinder'd by a foolish kind of Bashfulness dare not confess their sins They must by Exhortation be encourag'd therefore and admonish'd That there is no cause why they should be afraid to reveal their Vices and that no one ought to wonder if he knows that Men sin which is indeed the common Disease of all and is properly incident to Human Weakness There are others LXXXI What with the slothful and those that neglect Conscience who either because they are us'd very seldom to confess their sins or because they take no care and thought to find out their sins and know not well how to begin that Office and having begun Confession know not how to dispatch it There is need certainly that such as these be more sharply chid and to teach first of all that before any one go to a Priest there must be great care and diligence us'd that he be mov'd with contrition of his sins but This can by no means be done unless he study to recollect and remember them severally Wherefore if the Priest find such Men as these LXXXII See what is to be done wholly unprepar'd he shall with kind expressions send them away and exhort them that they take some longer time the better to think upon their sins and then they may return again But if haply they affirm that they have us'd all their Diligence and endeavor therein already because that they have endeavor'd as they affirm it is very much to be fear'd lest being once sent away they return no more they are to be heard and especially if they shew an endeavor of amendment of Life and can be wrought upon to accuse their own negligence for which they promise another time to make amends by diligent and exact Meditation But in this Case there is great caution to be us'd For if Note when he has heard his Confession he shall judge that neither diligence in reckoning up his sins nor Grief in detesting them have bin altogether wanting in the Penitent he may be absolv'd But if he shall observe both of them to be wanting in him he shall exhort and perswade him as was said before to use greater care in examining his Conscience and shall send him away handl'd with all the respect and kindness he can But because it sometimes happens that Women LXXXIII The remedy to be us'd for the Bashfulness of some having forgot some sin in their former Confession dare not return again to the Priest because they are afraid lest they may be suspected by the people of some very great dishonesty or else may be thought to look for the praise of bein singularly religious it must often both publickly and privately be taught that no one is of so excellent a memory as to be able to remember all his Actions Words and Thoughts Wherefore the Faithful are in no case to be frighted so as not to return to the Priest if they afterwards remember any sin which before they pretermitted These therefore and many other things of this kind shall in Confession be observ'd by the Priests LXXXIV Of Satisfaction And now we come to the Third Part of Penance which is call'd Satisfaction First therefore the Name and Vertue of Satisfaction is to be expounded For from hence the Enemies of the Catholic Church have taken a large occasion of Difference and Discord to the exceeding great Damage of Christians Now Satisfaction is a full Payment of a thing that is due LXXXV What satisfaction is for nothing seems to be wanting to that which is satisfactory or enough Wherefore when we speak of Reconciliation to Grace To satisfie signifies the same thing as to give another so much as may be suffictent to an angry mind to recompense the injury And so Satisfaction is nothing else than a Recompence for an Injury done to another But as to this place the Doctors of Divinity have us'd the word Satisfaction to signifie that Recompence when a Man pays something to God for the sins he has committed In which kind LXXXVI The various degrees of Satisfaction because there may be many Degrees hence it is that Satisfaction is taken differently And the First and most excellent is that whereby The First is Christ's Satisfaction according to the nature of our sins is paid abundantly to God whatsoever is owing to him from us altho he would deal with us according to the utmost Justice Now this is said to be of that kind which renders God appeas'd and propitious to us And This we have receiv'd from Christ our Lord only who upon the Cross having paid the price for our sins most fully satisfi'd God Nor could there be any created thing of so great worth as to free us from so grievous a debt and as S. John testifies 1 Joh. 2.2 He is the Propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but also for the sins of the whole World This Satisfaction therefore is full and compleat equally answering to the Nature of all the sins which are committed in the World by the vertue whereof the Actions of Men prevail very much with God and without him they would be accounted worthy of no regard And hither the Words of David seem to have respect who considering with himself after that he had said thus Ps 11.52 What shall I give to the Lord for all the things which he has given me He could find nothing but this Satisfaction which he express'd by the name of a Chalice worthy so many and so great Benefits Wherefore he subjoyns I will take the Chalice of Salvation and will call
upon the Name of the Lord. Another kind of Satisfaction is call'd Canonical LXXXVII The Second is Canonical satisfaction which being defin'd is perfected in a certain space of Time Wherefore it has bin receiv'd by the most antient usage of the Church That when Penitents are absolv'd from sins some Punishment is requir'd of them the undergoing of which Punishment is us'd to be call'd Satisfaction By the same Name also is any kind of Punishment signifi'd LXXXVIII The Third is any Punishment freely undertaken which for sins we endure not as appointed by any Priest but of our own free accord undertaken and laid upon our selves by our selves for sins Note But this belongs not to Penance as a Sacrament But that only is to be thought a part of the Sacrament which as we said is to be paid to God for sins by the command of the Priest This being added That we stedfastly purpose and resolve in our Hearts with our utmost labor and care to avoid sin for the Future For so some define it LXXXIX What it is to satisfie To satisfie is to pay due Honor to God But it is sufficiently evident that no one can give due Honor to God but he that resolves to avoid sin by all means And to satisfie is to cut oft the Causes of sins and not to indulge any entrance to their Suggestions According to which Sentence Mark this Definition some have thought that Satisfaction is a Cleansing whereby whatsoever Uncomeliness by reason of Stain remains in the Soul is wash'd away and we are absolv'd from the Temporal Punishments wherewith we were held Which things seeing they are so XC How Satisfaction is prov'd necessary it will be easie to perswade the Faithful how necessary it is for Penitents to exercise themselves in this study of Satisfaction For they are to be taught that there are two things which follow sin to wit Stain and Punishment And altho together with the Fault committed the Punishment of Eternal Death with the Damn'd be forgiven Yet it does not always happen as has bin declar'd by the Council of Trent Sess 14. c. 8. Can. 12. 15. Gen. 3.17 Num. 12.21 2 Reg 12.23 That the Lord remits the Relics of sin and the temporal Punishments which are due to sin Of which thing there are plain Testimonies in Sacred Scripture Genesis ch 3. Numbers 12 and 22. and in many other places But we will see that most clear and illustrious place of David To whom altho Nathan said The Lord also has took away thy sin Thou shalt not dye Nevertheless he freely underwent very grievous punishments Night and Day imploring the Mercy of God in these Words Psal 50.4 Wash me further from my iniquity and cleanse me from my sin because I acknowledg my Iniquity and my sin is ever against me In which words is begg'd of God that he would pardon not only the Crime but also the Punishment due to the Crime and that he would restore him being purg'd from the Relics of sin into his former state of Excellency and Integrity And this he begg'd with most earnest Prayers Yet the Lord afflicted him Both with the Death of the Child gotten in Adultery and with the Rebellion and Death of Absalom whom he dearly lov'd and with other Punishments and Calamities which he had before threatned him with In Exodus also Exo. 32.8.9 Altho the Lord were intreated by the Prayers of Moses to spare the people for their Idolatry yet he threatens That he will recompence them with grievous Punishments for so great a Wickedness And Moses himself testifies That so it will be that the Lord would most severely revenge it even to the Third and Fourth Generation Now that these things have bin always deliver'd by the Holy Fathers in the Catholic Church i● most evidently prov'd by their authority Vide Aug. lib. 2. de peccat merit remiss cap. 34. contra Faust lib. 22. cap. 66. praesertim in Joan. tract 124. paulò ante med Greg. lib. 9. Moral cap. 24. Chrysost hom 8. ad Popul Antioch Iterum Aug. Ench. cap. 30. Amb. de Poenit. lib. 2. c. 5. Vide item Canones Poenitentiales apud Anton. August vel in Actis Eccl. Mediolan But for what cause it is XCI In Penance as in Baptism the Punishment of sin is not remitted that all Punishment is not equally forgiven in the Sacrament of Penance as in the Sacrament of Baptism is excellently explain'd by the Holy Synod of Trent in these words The Nature or Reason of the Divine Justice seem'd to require that they should by him be receiv'd into Grace after one sort who before Baptism sinn'd through Ignorance and those after another sort who being once freed from the slavery of Sin and the Devil and after having receiv'd the Gift of the Holy Ghost do violate the Temple of God and are not afraid to grieve the Holy Ghost And it becomes the Divine Mercy that our sins should not be forgiven us without any Satisfaction That taking that occasion thinking our sins to be more light than they are as those that are injurious and contumelious to the Holy Spirit we fall into greater sins treasuring up to our selves Wrath against the day of Wrath. For without all doubt XCII Canonical Satisfaction profitable these Satisfactory Punishments do greatly restrain Penitents from sin and hold them back as with a Bridle and make more cautious and watchful for the future And besides First Secondly Ezek. 6. they are as it were certain Testifications of the Grief we take for having committed sin By which means we satisfie the Church who by our wickedness is grievosly offended For as S. Austin affirms God despises not a Contrite and humble Heart but because for the most part the Grief of one Man's Heart is hid from another Man nor does it come forth into the knowledg of other Men by Words or any other Sign rightly are the Times of Penance appointed by those who preside in the Church That so the Church might be satisfi'd in which sins are remitted Besides Thirdly The Examples of our Penance teach others how they ought to order their life and to follow Piety For seeing other Men behold the Punishments laid upon us for our sins they will perceive that they are to use the greatest caution through all their Life and that their former Manners are to be corrected and amended Wherefore it is most wisely observ'd by the Church XCIII Public Penance wisely instituted That when a Heynous Wickedness has bin publicly committed by any one he must undergo public Penance also That others being affrighted with Fear might thenceforth more warily avoid sin Which thing also has bin us'd sometimes to be done even in hidden sins which have bin great Vide Aug. lib. 5. de Civit. Dei cap. 26. Epist 54. l. 50. hom hom 49. de vera falsa Poenit. passim Ambr. lib. 2.
proper to the Children of God to be so inflamed with Love and Devotion towards him that being spent with most bitter labors they either feel almost no inconvenience or else they bear all things with a most chearful Spirit But the Pastors shall teach CIV The works of Satisfaction are Prayer Fasting Alms. that every kind of satisfaction is to be referr'd to these three especially Prayer Fasting Alms which indeed answer to those three sorts of Goods of the Soul of the Body and those which are call'd outward Goods all which we have receiv'd of God But there can be nothing more fit and convenient to pluck up the very Roots of sin CV Three Remedies for the Three Sicknesses of the Soul For whereas every thing that is in the world is either the Lust of the Flesh the Lust of the Eyes or the Pride of Life there is no one who sees not that to these three Causes of Sickness are very rightly oppos'd so many Medicins to wit Fasting to the First Alms to the Second and Prayer to the Third Moreover CVI. By Prayers we satisfie to God by Fasting to our selves by Alms to our neighbor if we consider those who are offended by our sins we shall easily understand why to these Three especially all satisfaction is referr'd Now these are God our Neighbor and our Selves wherefore we appease God by Prayer we satisfie our Neighbor by Alms and we chastise our selves by Fasting But because many and divers Afflictions and Calamities press us while we are in this Life CVII A good use of the Afflictions of this Life the Faithful are chiefly to be taught that they who with a patient mind endure whatsoever Labor and Inconvenience God sends upon them have gotten full Matter of Satisfaction and Merit But those who against their Will and resisting as much as they can are forc'd to bear this kind of punishment deprive themselves of all the Fruit of Satisfaction and bear only the Revenge and Punishment of God revenging their sins by his just judgment But herein the immense Goodness and Mercy of God is to be celebrated with the highest Praises and Thanksgivings CVIII One can satisfie for another who has granted this to Human Frailty that One can satisfie for another And this indeed is very proper to this Part of Penance But then as to Contrition and Confession CIX None can be Contrite or Confess for another as there is no one can Grieve or Confess sor another so those that are indu'd with divine Grace can pay in another mans name what is owing to God Wherefore it comes to pass that after a certain sort one may seem to bear anothers Burthen Nor is there any place left for any of the Faithful to doubt of This CX How it comes that one can satisfie for ●nother seeing that in the Apostles Creed we confess the Communion of Saints For since we all are born again to Christ being cleans'd by the same Baptism and are partakers of the same Sacraments but above all since we are strengthen'd with the Meat and Drink of the same Body and Blood of Christ our Lord This most evidently shews that we all are Members of the same Body As therefore neither the Foot performs its Office for its own Profit A similitude but for the profit of the Eyes also and again that the Eyes see is not to be limited to their own advantage only but for the common advantage of all the Members So among us the Offices of Satisfaction ought to be esteem'd common Nor yet is this true without an Exception CXI Medicinal Satisfaction cannot be fulfilled by another if we consider All the Advantages which are receiv'd hereby For the Works of Satisfaction are a kind of Medicin and Cure which is prescrib'd the Penitent for curing the corrupt Affections of his Mind Which kind of Fruit of Advantage it is evident that they altogether want who satisfie not for themselves These things therefore shall be largely and clearly explain'd concerning the Three Parts of Penance Contrition Confession and Satisfaction But this ought specially to be observ'd by the Priests CXII When Absolution is to be deny'd that having heard Confession before they absolve the Penitent from his sins they are to take diligent Care that if haply he has taken away any thing either of the Goods or of the Credit of his Neighbor let him make full recompence for the sin whereof he seems deservedly to be condemn'd For no one is to be absolv'd unless he first promises to restore every one his own But because there are many Note who tho they largely promise that they will sufficiently do their duty yet it is certain that they never perform their promise Such are by all means to be compell'd to make restitution And that of the Apostle is often to be inculcated That he who stole now steal no more Ephes 4.10 but rather let him labor working with his hands that which is Good that he may have wherewith to give to him that suffers need But in appointing the punishment of Satisfaction CXIII How great Satisfaction is to be impos'd the Priests will consider that nothing is to be appointed by them for their own pleasure but that all things are to be directed by Justice Prudence and Piety And that sins may seem to be measur'd CXIV The Old Canons of Penance to be propos'd and Penitents may the better know the weight of their sins it will be worth the while sometimes to signifie to them what punishments have bin appointed for certain Faults Note by the Prescription of antient Canons Note The Nature of the Fault therefore shall temper the measure of all Satisfaction But of all kinds of Satisfaction CXV What kind● of satisfaction especially is to be impos'd it will be most suitable to appoint Penitents to give themselves to Prayer upon certain determin'd days and that they make Prayers to God for all men and especially for them who are gon out of this Life to the Lord. And they must also be exhorted CXVI The Vertue of Voluntary Penance to be added to the vertue of Sacramental that they often take upon themselves freely of their own accord to repeat those services of Satisfaction which were appointed by the Priest And that they so order their manners that when all those things which belong to the Sacrament of Confession are diligently perform'd yet that they never intermit the studies of the Vertue of Penance But if sometimes also Public Penance is to be prescrib'd for Public Offence CXVII Public Satisfaction to be impos'd upon public Offenders altho' the Penitent may refuse and pray to be excus'd yet he is not easily to he heard But he must he perswaded that those things which are wholsom or saving both to himself and others he accept with a free and chearful mind These things concerning the Sacrament of Penance and the several
thee with the sign of the Cross or is pronounc'd as it were by commanding as when in administring the Sacrament of Orders it is said Receive thou Power But this One Form of Extream Unction is perform'd in a kind of Prayer but this is very properly and rightly done for seeing this Sacrament is therefore us'd that besides the spiritual Grace that it gives it also restores Health to the Sick yet because it does not always follow that the Sick are made whole of their Disease for this cause the Form is made in a Prayer that we may beg that of Gods Bounty which the Power or Vertue of the Sacrament is not us'd to effect in a constant and perpetual course Now there are proper Rites us'd in the administration of this Sacrament also But the greatest part of them contains Prayers XV. Why so many Prayers us'd in administring this Sacrament which the Priest uses to obtain Health for the sick Person For there is no Sacrament which is made with more Prayers and indeed rightly because at that time especially the Faithful are to be assisted with Pious Devotions Wherefore also all the rest who then happen to be present and specially the Curat ought from their heart to beseech God for the sick Person and with all their study and affection to commit his Life and Health to Gods Mercy Now seeing it has bin shew'd that Extream Unction is truly and properly to be reckon'd in the number of the Sacraments XVI The Sacrament of Extream Unction instituted by Christ This also follows that the Institution thereof came from Christ our Lord which afterwards was propos'd and publish'd to the Faithful by the Apostle S. James Altho the same our Savior seem'd to have given the First Draught of this Unction when he sent his Disciples by two and two before his Face for it is thus written of them by the Evangelist Mar. 6.13 They went and preach'd that Men should do Penance and they cast out many Devils and Anointed many that were sick with Oyl and heal'd them Which Unction must indeed be believ'd to have bin not invented by the Apostles Note but commanded of the Lord Not endu'd with any Natural Vertue but was instituted to be Mystic rather to heal their Soul than to cure their Body Which things S. Dennys S. Ambrose S. Chrysostom and S. Gregory the Great assert that it is by no means to be doubted but that with great Religion we ought to receive This as One of the Seven Sacraments of the Catholic Church So the Faithful are to be taught XVII To Whom this Scarament is to be administer'd altho this Sacrament belongs to all yet there are some sorts of Men to be excepted to whom it is not to be administer'd And first they are excepted who are of a sound and healthy Body For that Extream Unction is not to be given to them the Apostle teaches when he says Ja. 5.14 Is any one Sick among you And Reason shews For for this cause was it instituted not only to be a Remedy to the Soul but to the Body also Seeing therefore that they only who are Sick want cure therefore ought this Sacrament to be given to them who seem to be so dangerously Sick that it may be fear'd that the last day of their life is at hand In which case notwithstanding they grievously sin XVIII The Sick are to be anointed before they lose their Senses who use to observe that time for the anointing of the Sick when all Hope of Health is gone and the Person begins to grow dead and senseless for it is manifest that to the more profitable receiving of the Sacrament it is very available that the sick be anointed with the Sacred Oyl when his Mind is yet whole in him and his Reason strong and when he can make use of his Faith and a Religious Will or Disposition of Soul Wherefore the Curats are to observe that at such time chiefly they apply that Heavenly Medicin which by its own vertue is always very wholsome but they will understand that it will be more profitable when joyn'd with the pious Devotion of them that are to be heal'd The Sacrament of Unction therefore may not be given to any one that is not grievously sick XIX To whom this Sacrament is not to be administer'd altho he go about any thing that may be dangerous to his Life either because he is a going some dangerous Sea-Voyage or because he is entring into Battle where certain Death hangs over him or even being condemn'd to Death he is carry'd away to suffer it Furthermore all those that want the use of Reason are not fit to take this Sacrament And Children that do not sin the Relics whereof there is no need to heal by the Remedy of this Sacrament Also Mad-men and Phrenetic unless they sometimes have the Use of Reason and at that time especially give some signification of a pious Soul and desire to be anointed with the Sacred Oyl For he who from his Birth never had the Use of Reason and Right-Mind is not to be anointed but not so if the sick person when being in his Right-mind he would be made Partaker of this Sacrament afterwards fell into Madness and Raving Now all the Parts of the Body are not to be anointed XX. What parts of the Body to be anointed but those only which Nature gave to Man to be as it were the Instruments of Sense The Eyes for Sight The Ears for Hearing The Nostrils for Smell The Mouth for Taste or Speech The Hand for Feeling which tho it be equally spread abroad through the whole Body yet it is most vigorous or lively in that Part Now this Rite of Anointing XXI Why these Parts are to be anointed the Universal Church retains and it very well agrees also to the Nature of this Sacrament for it is as a Medicin And because in the Diseases of the Body altho the whole Body be ill affected yet the Cure is apply'd to that Part only from whence as from the Fountain and Original the Disease flows Therefore not the whole Body but those Members are anointed in which chiefly the strength of Sense is most eminent as also the Reins being the seat as it were of Pleasure and Lust and the Feet which move and carry us from place to place And here it must be observ'd XXII This Sacrament may be iterated and when That in one and the same Sickness when the sick Man is in the same danger of Life he is to be anointed once only But if after this Unction receiv'd the Sick Person recover so often as he shall afterwards fall into the same danger of Life so often may the help of this Sacrament be giv'n him Whence it plainly appears That this Sacrament belongs to the number of those that may be iterated But because all diligence ought to be us'd XXIII With what Preparation
remain unmarry'd or that she be reconcil'd to her Husband Note For neither does Holy Church allow a Husband and a Wife to depart each from other without very weighty cause And that the Law of Matrimony may not seem rigorous XXIX How it comes that Indissolubility is more tollerable because it can never for any reason be dissolv'd it must be taught what the Advantages join'd with it are For first First Men should know that in joining Matrimony Vertue and Likeness of Manners are to be regarded rather than Riches and Beauty In which thing no one can doubt that the common Society is very much concern'd Besides Secondly if Matrimony could be dissolv'd by Divorce Men would scarce ever want causes of strife to be daily laid in their way by the old Enemy of Peace and Modesty But now when the Faithful consider with themselves Thirdly tho they want the bed and board of VVedlock yet that they are held bound with the Bond of Matrimony and that all hope of marrying another Wife is cut off for this cause it is that they are slower to anger and discord But if sometimes they proceed to make Divorce Fourthly and yet cannot long endure the want of a Mate they are easily reconcil'd by Friends and return to each other But here the wholsome Admonition of S. Austin is not to be pass'd over by the Pastors Fifthly Lib. de Adulter Conjug c. 6. 9. For he to shew the Faithful that they should not look upon it as a burdensome thing to receive again into favor their Wives which they had put away for the cause of Adultery if they repented of their sin Why says he should not the Faithful Husband receive his Wife again whom the Church receives Or why should not the Wife pardon her adulterous Husband whom even Christ has pardon'd Prov. 18.12 For that the Scripture calls him a Fool who keeps an Adultress it means of her which when she has offended repents not and refuses to leave off the filthiness she has begun From these things therefore it is plain that the Marriages of the Faithful far excel the Marriages both of the Gentiles and of the Jews in perfection and Nobility The Faithful are further to be taught XXX Three Benefits of Matrimony that there are three Benefits of Matrimony Children Faith Sacrament By recompense of which those inconveniencies are lessen'd which the Apostle shews in these words 1 Cor. 7.28 They that are married shall have Tribulation of the Flesh And thereby it comes to pass that the Conjunction of Bodies which without Matrimony are worthily condemn'd is render'd honest Vide Aug. lib. 5. cont Julian c. 5. The First Good therefore is Children The First which are begotten of a just and lawful Wife for this the Apostle reckons so much of 1 Tim. 2.25 that he said The Woman shall be sav'd by the begetting of Children Nor is this to be understood only of the Begetting of Children but also of the Education and discipline of them whereby Children are instructed in Piety So the Apostle presently adds If they remain in Faith The Scripture also admonishes Eccle. 7.25 Hast thou Children teach them and bend them from their Childhood The same thing the Apostle teaches And of this kind of Teaching Tobias Job and other Holy Fathers in Sacred Scripture afford us very fair Examples But what the Duties of Parents and Children are Note will be explain'd more at large in the Fourth Command Now follows Faith The Second which is another Benefit of Matrimony not that Habit of Vertue wherewith we are tinctur'd when we receive Baptism but a kind of Fidelity wherewith the Husband binds himself to his Wife and the Wife mutually binds her self to her Husband and that in such a manner that each of them deliver the power of their Bodies to each other and promises never to violate the Holy Covenant of Marriage This is easily gather'd from those words utter'd by our first Father Gen. 2.24 when he receiv'd Eve his Wife and which Christ our Lord afterwards approv'd in the Gospel Wherefore a Man shall leave his Father and Mother and cleave to his Wife and they Two shall be One Flesh Also from that place of the Apostle 1 Cor. 9.4 The Woman has not power of her own Body but the Man and in like manner the Man has not power of his own Body but the Woman Wherefore those more grievous Punishments were most justly appointed by the Lord in the Old Law against Adulterers Levit. 20. ●0 because they broke this Material Faith The Faith of Matrimony requires further Note that the Husband and Wife be joyn'd together in a kind of singular holy and pure love nor may they love as Adulterers do among themselves but as Christ lov'd the Church For this Rule the Apostle prescrib'd Ephes 3.25 when he said Men love your Wives as Christ also lov'd the Church which certainly he embrac'd with that immense Charity not for his own profits sake but proposing to himself the advantage only of his Bride The Third Good of Matrimony is call'd the Sacrament The Third to wit the Bond of Marriage from which they can never be dissolv'd 1 Cor. 7.19 For as the Apostle has it The Lord has commanded that the Wife depart not from her own Husband But if she depart that she remain unmarri'd or be reconcil'd to her Husband and that the Husband put not away his Wife For if Matrimony as it is a Sacrament signifie the Conjunction of Christ with his Church it must needs be that as Christ never separates himself from his Church so a Wife as to the Bond of Matrimony can never be separated from her Husband But that this holy Society may be the better preserv'd without Quarrel the Duties of the Husband and of the Wife as they are describ'd by S. Paul and S. Peter the Prince of Apostles are to be taught Vide Aug. lib. 1. de Adulterin conjug c. 21. 22. de bono Conjug c. 7. de Nupt. concupisc lib. 1. c. 10. It is the Part of the Husband therefore liberally and honorably to treat his Wife XXXI The Duty of the Husband towards the Wife First for which purpose it ought to be remembred that Eve was call'd the Companion of Adam when he said The Woman thou gavest me for a Companion For which cause it was as some of the Fathers have taught that she was not formed out of the Feet but out of the Side of the Man Ev'n as also she was not made of the Head that she might understand that she is not the Mistress of her Husband but rather subject to him Besides Secondly it is the Office of the Husband to be always imploy'd in the Study of some honest thing both to provide those things which are necessary for the Sustenance of his Family and also that he grow
Matth. 25.19 Out of the Heart proceed Adulteries and Fornications which pollute a Man And S. Paul the Apostle detests this Vice with many and weighty Expressions 1 Thes 4.19 This says he is the will of God even your Sanctification 1 Cor. 5.9 that ye abstain from Fornication And Avoid Fornication And 1 Cor. 6.18 Be not Companions of Fornicators But Fornication Eph. 5.3 says he and all Vncleanness and Covetousness 1 Cor. 6.9 let it not be nam'd among you And Neither Fornicators nor Adulterers nor Effeminate nor Abusers of themselves with Mankind shall possess the Kingdom of Heaven But Especially for this cause is Adultery so plainly forbidd'n because besides the Foulness of it VII Why Adultery especially forbidd'n which is common to that with other kinds of Intemperance it has joyn'd with it the Sin of Injustice also not only against our Neighbor but also against civil Society But this is certain that he that abstains not from the Intemperance of other Lusts will easily fall into that Incontinence of Adultery Wherefore VIII Even the inward Lust of the Mind is here forbidd'n by this forbidding of Adultery we may easily perceive That every kind of uncleanness and immodesty whereby our Body is polluted is forbidd'n Yea and that even every inward Lust of the Mind is forbidd'n by this Commandment both the very Force of the Law it self shews which as it is manifest is Spiritual and also Christ our Lord has taught in these Words Matth. 18. Ye have heard that it has been said by them of old Time Thou shalt not commit Adultery But I say to you that every one that sees a Woman to lust after her has already committed Adultery with her in his Heart These are the things which we have thought fit should be taught publickly IX Things to be observ'd by the Curats but if these things be added which have bin decreed by the holy Synod of Trent against Adulterers and those that keep Bawds and Harlots and passing over many and divers kinds of Immodesty and Lust Ses 24. c. 24. de reform whereof every one shall be admonish'd by the Curat privately as the State of the Time and Persons shall require It now follows to explain those things X. Chastity to be kept by every one in his condition which have the Force of Commanding The Faithful therefore are to be taught and earnestly exhorted to keep Modesty and Continence with all their Study and to cleans themselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit perfecting Holiness in the fear of God And First they are to be admonish'd That tho the Vertue of Chastity shines more bright in that sort of Men that holily and religiously hold that most commendable and truly divine purpose of Virginity yet it is suitable to them also that lead a Married Life or being married keep themselves clear from forbidd'n Lust But because by the Holy Fathers many things have bin deliver'd XI Remedies to be propos'd against ● Lust whereby we are taught to conquer our Lusts and bridle our Pleasures The Curat shall study to expound them accuratly to the People and let him be very industrious on this Account Vide. D. Thom. 2.2 q. 151. Trid. 24. de matrim c. 3. ses 25 de regular And they are such as consist partly in Thought XII Remedies against unclean Thoughts The First and partly in Action The Remedy which concerns Thought consists in this That we understand How great the Foulness and Hurtfulness of this Sin is Which being known the way of detesting it will be much more easie But that it is a hurtful Wickedness may be understood from hence because by reason of this Sin Men are taken and thrust out of the Kingdom of God and this is the worst of all Evils And that Calamity is indeed common to all Sins The Second But this thing is proper to this Sin That they that commit Fornication are said to sin against their own Bodies according to S. Paul who writes thus 1 Cor. 5.18 Avoid Fornication for every Sin that a Man do's is without his Body but he that commits Fornication sins against his own Body Which is therefore said because he wrongs his Body when he violates the Sanctity of it 1 Thess 4.5 of which matter he writes thus to the Thessalonians This says he is the Will of God even your Sanctification that ye abstain from Fornication that every one of you may know how to possess his Vessel in Sanctification and Honor not in the Passion of Concupiscence as the Gentiles do which know not God And then The Third which is yet more wicked a Christian by the foul Act of giving himself to a Whore ● Cor. 6.17 makes Christ's Members the Members of an Harlot for so St. Paul says Know ye not that your Bodies are the Members of Christ Shall I therefore take the Members of Christ and make them the Members of an Harlot God forbid Know ye not that he that is join'd to an Harlot is made one Body Besides The Fo●rth 1 Cor. 6.17 as S. Paul testifies A Christian is the Temple of the Holy Ghost to violate which is nothing else but to cast the Holy Ghost out of it But in the Sin of Adultery there is great Injustice XIII The great Injustice of A ul●ery ● Cor. 7. For if as the Apostle has it they that are join'd in Matrimony are under the power of each other so that neither of them has the power or dispose of their own Body but are so bound with a kind of mutual Bond of Service as it were each to other that the Husband ought to comply to the Will of his Wife and again the Wife ought to accommodate her self to the Will and Dispose of her Husband certainly if either of them separate their Body which is the others Right from that Person to whom it is bound he or she is very unjust and wicked And because the fear of Disgrace vehemently stirs Men up to those things that are just XIV The notable Filthiness of Adultery and deters Men greatly from things forbidden the Curat shall teach That Adultery brands Men with a notable Mark of Baseness For in Sacred Scripture it is thus written Prov. 6.32 33. He that is an Adulterer thro lack of Vnderstanding will lose his Soul he gathers to himself Disgrace and Ignominy and his Reproach shall not be blotted out Now the greatness of this Sin may be easily perceiv'd from the Severity of its Punishment XV. The punishment of Adultery For Adulterers by God's Law in the Old Testament were ston'd to death yea and even for one Man's Lust not only he that committed the Sin but sometimes a whole City has been overthrown Levit. 20.10 Joh. 8.5 Gen. 34.25 There are in Sacred Scripture many Examples of God's Vengeance XVI Examples of the Punishment of Adultery which
of are referr'd as to their proper Heads The Curat therefore shall use all Care and Diligence to bring the Faithful to the Hatred of them and to deter them from so horrid a Wickedness But to go on with these Parts Therefore they also are Thieves Who are Thieves First that buy stolen Goods or keep things that were found lent or taken away For S. Austin says If thou hast found a thing and restorest it not thou hast robb'd Lib. 50. Hom. hom 9. de verbis Apost Serm. 19. But if the true Owner can by no means be found Note those Goods that are found are to be given to the use of the Poor But if the Finder cannot be brought to restore them Note he thereby plainly shews that he would take away all things from every Body if he could They entangle themselves in the same guilt Secondly who in Buying and Selling use Deceit and vanity of Words the Lord will revenge their Cheats But they are more wicked and unjust in this kind of Theft Note that sell deceitful and corrupt Wares instead of true and good Commodities or that deceive the Buyer in Weight Measure Tale or Order Deut. 25.17 For in Deuteronomy it is written Thou shalt not have divers weights in the Bag. And in Leviticus Levit. 19.35 Do nothing unjust in judgment in mete-yard in weight or in measure let the Balances be just let the Weights be just let the Bushel and the Quart be just Prov. 20.32 for divers Weights are an abomination to the Lord and a deceitful Balance is not good It is plain Theft also in those Laborers and Artificers Thirdly who require a full and whole reward of them for whom they have not done their just and due labor Neither are unfaithful Servants and Stewards of their Lords or Masters other than Thieves Fourthly but rather by so much worse than the other kind of Thieves who are not trusted with the Keys because from such a thievish Servant nothing in the House can well be lock'd or shut up Moreover Fifthly they seem to steal who with feigned and hypocritical words or by deceitful lies extort Mony from others whose sin is by so much the greater because they add Theft to a Lye They also are to be reckoned in the number of Thieves Sixthly who being put into some private or publick Office using none or but little care therein neglect their Duty and enjoy the Reward and Wages only It would be very tedious and difficult Seventhly as we said before to go thro the other multitude of Thefts found out by restless Covetousness which has known all the ways of getting Mony and therefore it seems fit we should speak of Rapine or Extortion which is the other head of these Wickednesses If the Curat shall first have admonish'd the People to remember that Sentence of the Apostle Note They that will become rich 1 Tim. 6.9 fall into temptation and the snare of the Devil Nor does this Precept suffer any one in any case to exceed it Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you Matt. 7.22 do ye also to them And let them always think on that Tob. 4.16 Luc. 6.31 What you would not should be done to you see that you do it not to another Extortion therefore is very large XVIII The First kind of Extortion or Robbery For they who pay not Laborers their due Reward are Extortioners or Robbers And these men S. James calls to Penance in these words Goe to now ye rich men lament houling in your miseries which will come upon you Of which Penance he subjoyns a Reason For behold the hire of the ●●borers that reap'd your fields which you have defrauded them of cryes and the cry thereof has entred into the ears of the Lord of Sabbaoth And this kind of Robbery is higly condemn'd in Leviticus Deuteronomy Malachi and Tobit Levit. 19.13 Deut. 24.14 Malach. 3.9 Tob. 4.4 15. In this crime of Robbery are included The Second those that do not pay or do turn to other uses or take to themseves the Customs Tributes Tithes and other things of like kind which are due to the Governors of the Church and to the Magistrates Hitherto do belong Usurers The Third the most rigid and cruel Extortioners who pill poor People and rack them with Usury Now XIX What Usury is That is Usury whatsoever is receiv'd above the Principal which was lent whether Mony or any thing else that may be bought or valued with Mony Ezec. 18.8 For thus it is written in Ezec. Vsury and increase thou shalt not receive And our Lord in S. Luke says Luc. 6.31 Lend ye hoping for nothing from thence Now this was always accounted a most grievous wickedness XX. Usury a hateful Crime and even very hateful among the Gentiles Hence came that Saying What is Usury what is it does it say to kill a Man For they that take Usury sell the same thing twice or sell that which is not De Vsura vide 14. q. 3 q. 4. passim Vide item titulum de Vsuris Decretalibus D. Thom. 2.2 q. 78. item Amb. lib. de Sab. c. 14. Also Judges that receive Bribes are Robbers The Fourth kind of Robbery who Sell Judgment and being greas'd in the Hand with Bribes and Rewards overthrow the rignteous Causes of the Poor and Needy Also Cheaters and Defrauders of their Creditors The Fifth and those who take up Goods on their own or other Mens Credit and do not discharge their Trust are guilty of the same Crime of Robbery whose sin is the greater because by occasion of their Unfaithfulness and Deceit to the great Damage of the Countrey are fain to sell all things the dearer to whom that Sentence of David seems properly to belong Tho wicked Man borrows and will not pay again And what shall we say of those Rich Men Psal 36.12 who of them that are not able to pay them The Sixth require that they trusted them with with rigidness and also contrary to God's Command take those things of them for Pawns which are necessary to cover their Bodies Exod. 22.26 27. For God says If thou receive of thy Neighbor a Garment for a Pledg thou shalt restore it him before the Sun set for it is the only thing wherewith his Skin is cover'd and he has no other to sleep in If he shall cry to me I will hear him for I am merciful We will appeal against the Cruelty of the Exaction and consequently the Robberies of these Men. Titulum habes de pignoribus in Decretal lib. 3. tit 21. Vide Amb. lib. 5. de Offic. c. 6. Of the number of those that are by the Holy Fathers call'd Robbers The Seventh are those who in time of Dearth or Scarcity keep their Corn from the Market and by their Fault cause Provisions to be dearer
might easily happen that she that was cast off by one Husband might be married to another For this Reason the Lord did forbid that either Men should be sollicited to leave their Wives XXIX Why this Law was made or that the Wives should behave themselves so sowr and churlish to their Husbands that for that cause there should be any necessity as it were laid on their Husbands to cast them off But now it is a greater Sin XXX A gri●vous Sin to covet another Mans Wife since it is not lawful for another to marry a Woman tho she be divorc'd from her Husband unless her Husband be dead He therefore that covets another Man's Wife easily slides out of one Covetousness into another For either he will wish her Husband dead Note or to commit adultery with her And the same thing may be said of those Women that are betrothed to another XXXI Or a Woman betroth'd to another for neither is it lawful to covet them since they that endeavour to break these Contracts violate the most holy Band of Faith And as it is utterly unlawful to covet her that is married to another XXXII Or a Virgin consecrated to God so it is by no means lawful to desire her for his Wife that is consecrated to Gods Worship and Religion But if any one desires to marry a VVoman Note this Case that is already married supposing her not to be married and would not desire to marry her if he knew that she were married to another which we read happen'd to Pharaoh and Abimimelech Gen. 12. 20. who wish'd to have Sarah to be their VVife supposing her not to be married but to be Abraham's Sister and not his VVife he verily that is thus minded seems not to break this Commandment But that the Curat may lay open the Remedies XXXIII Remedies against hurtful Desires that are fit to take away this Vice of Covetousness he ought to explain the other part of the Commandment which consists herein That if Riches increase we set not our Hearts upon them and that we be ready to apply them to the Study of Piety and of Divine Matters and that we freely bestow our Mony in relieving the Miseries of the Poor And if we are in want that we bear our want with an even and a chearful Spirit and indeed if in diposing of our Goods we use Liberality we shall quench our Covetousness of other Mens Goods Now concerning the Praises of Poverty and despising of Riches in Sacred Scriptures and in the Holy Fathers it will be easie for the Curat to gather a great many things and to teach them to the Faithful Vide Hier. Epist 1. ad Heliod 8. ad Demetriadem 150. and Haedipiam q. 1. 16. ad Pammach Item Basil in regul fusius disputatis Interrog 9. Chrys in Epist. ad Rom. ad haec verba Salutate Priscam Cassian lib. de institut Monach. c. 13 33. collat 24. c. 26. Greg. hom 18. Ezech. Ambr. in c. 6. Lucae Leonem Magn. in Serm. de omnibus sanctis Aug. lib. 17. de Civit. Dei Epist 98. ad Hilar. Epist 109. By this Law it is also commanded XXXIV The other part commanding That very earnestly and with our utmost desire we wish that thing chiefly to be done not which we our selves will but what God wills as is taught in our Lords Prayer Now it is the Will of God chiefly XXXV What the Will of God towards us is that we be made holy after a singular Manner and that we keep our Soul sincere and upright and clean from every Spot and that we exercise our selves in those Duties of Mind and Spirit which are contrary to our bodily Senses and that our sensual Desires being brought into subjection being guided by Reason and the Spirit we lead the course of our Life aright and further that we utterly beat down the Force of those Senses which afford matter to our Lusts and Desires But to the quenching this heat of our Desires XXXVI The Antidotes of evil Desires The First this also will be very prevalent to put before our Eyes the Inconveniences we suffer thereby The First Inconvenience is That by Obedience to our Lusts Sin gets the utmost force and power in our Soul Wherefore the Apostle admonishes Let not Sin reign in your mortal Body Rom. 6.12 that ye should obey the Lusts thereof For even as if we resist our Lusts the Power of Sin decays so if we yield to them we throw our Lord out of his Kingdom and place Sin in his room Besides The Second another Inconveniency is That from this force of Concupiscence as from a kind of Fountain all Sins flow as S. James teaches and S. John says Jac. 1. 2 John 2.16 All that is in the World is the Lust of the Flesh and the Lust of the Eyes and the Pride of Life The Third Inconvenience is The Third That the true Judgment of the Mind is darkned For Men being blinded with the darkness of their Lusts think all those things good and excellent whatsoever they desire Besides The Fourth by force of Concupiscence the Word of God is oppress'd which is sown in our Souls by God that great Husbandman For thus it is written in S. Mark Some was sown among Thorns These are they which hear the Word and the cares of the World and the deceitfulness of Riches and so other things entring in by Concupiscence choak the Word and so make it unfruitful But now those that above others labor under this Vice of Concupiscence XXXVII These are guilty of this Vice of Covetousness First and whom the Curat ought therefore more earnestly to exhort to observe this Commandment Are those that are delighted with dishonest Sports and that immoderately abuse Games As also Merchants Secondly who wish for scarcity of things and dearness of Provisions and take it ill that others besides themselves do sell Commodities and sell cheaper than they In which case they also Sin Thirdly that wish others to want that either by selling or buying they may make a Gain of them And those Soldiers also Fourthly that wish for War that they may get Plunder Fifthly And those Physitians that pray for Diseases Sixthly And those Lawyers that desire a Throng and Multitude of Contentions and Law Suits Seventhly And those Trades-men who being greedy of Gain wish for Scarcity of such things as are for Food and other Necessaries thereby to get Profit to themselves Eighthly And in this kind they also grievously sin that are greedy and covetous of other Mens Glory and Praise not without some slandering of other Mens Credit and specially if they that thus covet it are idle Persons and of no worth For Fame and the Glory of Vertue and Industry is not the Reward of Sloth and Idleness THE CATECHISM FOR THE CURATES BY THE DECREE
this blind Pilgrimage we are absent from the Lord XXII Our Instability in the Kingdom of Grace we often slip and fall casting off the Admonitions of the Kingdom of Grace wherewith we were secur'd but when the Light of the Kingdom of Glory which is perfect shall have enlightned us we shall always stand firm and stable for every Fault and Inconveniency shall be taken away every Infirmity being confirmed shall be strengthen'd Lastly God himself will reign in our Soul and Body But this thing has bin more fully handled in the Creed when we discours'd of the Resurrection of the Flesh These things therefore XXIII What things are here pray'd for First which shew the common Sense of the Kingdom of God being explain'd we must shew what this Petition properly prays for Now we beg of God that Christs Kingdom which is the Church may be propagated that all Infidels and Jews Schismatics and Heretics may turn themselves to the Faith of Christ our Lord and receive the Knowledg of the true God and return to Soundness of Mind and to the Communion of the Church of God from whence they are fallen that it may be fulfil'd and brought to that Issue which the Lord spake by the Mouth of Isaiah Isa 54.2 Enlarge the place of thy Tents and stretch out the Borders of thy Tabernacles make thy Lines long renew thy Rule for thou shalt penetrate to the right and left Hand because he that made thee shall reign over thee And again The Gentils shall walk in thy Light Isa 60.5 and Kings in the brightness of thy rising lift up thy Eyes round about and see all these are gather'd together they came to thee thy Sons shall come from far and thy Daughter shall rise from beside thee But because in the Church there are some that in their Words confess God Secondly but in their Deeds deny him and yet boast of their deform'd Faith in whom by Reason of Sin the Devil dwells and rules as in his own Houses we pray also that the Kingdom of God may come upon them whereby the Darkness of their Sins being dispell'd and being illustrated with the Rays of the Divine Light they may be restor'd into their former Dignity of being the Children of God that all Heretics and Schismatics being taken away and all Offences and all causes of Sin cast forth out of his Kingdom our Heavenly Father may purge the Floor of his Church that in worshipping God devoutly and holily she may enjoy a quiet Peace and Tranquillity Lastly Thirdly we pray that God alone may live in us and he alone may reign in us that hereafter there be no place for Death but that it may wholly be swallowed up in the Victory of Christ our Lord who having scattered and dispersed all the Principality of the Enemies by his own Power and Might he may subject all things under his Government And it shall be the Curats Care XXIV The Curats Duty in this case to teach the Faithful what the Reason of this Petition requires with which Thoughts and Meditations being furnish'd they may make these Prayers devoutly to God And First they shall exhort them to consider the Force and Meaning of that Parable us'd by our Saviour The Kingdom of Heaven is like to a Treasure hidden in a Field which he that found it in the Ground hid and for joy thereof goes and sells all that he has and buys that Field For he that knows the Riches of Christ our Lord XXV All things seems vile when we know Gods Kingdom will despise all things in comparison of them all Excellencies Riches and Power will seem mean to him for nothing can be compar'd to that most precious Jewel or be able to stand before it Wherefore those that know it Phil. 8. will cry out with the Apostle I account all things but loss and esteem them but as Dung that I may gain Christ This is that famous Jewel of the Gospel Matth. 13.45 for which he that sells all his Goods and gives the Mony thereof shall enjoy everlasting Happiness O happy we XXVI How precious this Jewel of didivine Grace is Rom. 8.15 if Jesus Christ would give us so much Light as to see this Jewel of Divine Grace whereby he reigns in those that are his for we would sell all that we have yea and our very selves to buy and secure this for then at last we might assuredly say Who shall separate us from the love of Christ But if we would know what is the exceeding Excellency of the Kingdom of Glory let us hear the Words and Sentences of the Prophet and Apostle agreeing in the same Isa 64.2 1 Cor. 2.9 Eye has not seen neither has Ear heard nor has it enter'd into the Heart of Man what things God has prepar'd for them that love him Now XXVII That we may be heard we must pray with Humility for the obtaining what we desire it will be very profitable to consider with our selves what we are i. e. the Offspring of Adam justly cast out of Paradice and Exiles whose unworthiness and Perverseness might rather deserve God's utmost Hatred and eternal Punishments XXVIII The Advantage of self-despising The First Wherefore it then behoves us to be of an humble and lowly Spirit Our Prayer also will be full of Christian Humility And wholly distrusting our selves The Second we will betake our selves as that Publican did to God's Mercy And ascribing all to his Bounty Third Rom. 8.15 we will give him immortal Thanks who has given us his Holy Spirit incourag'd by whom we may be embolden'd to cry Abba Father And we shall take Care and Consideration what we are to do The Fourth and on the contray what to avoid that we may come to the Kingdom of Heaven For we are not call'd of God to Idleness and Sloth Note for says he Matth. 11.12 the Kingdom of Heaven suffers Violence and the violent take it by force And if thou wilt enter into Life Matth. 19.17 keep the Commandments It is not enough therefore to seek the Kingdom of God XXIX We must labor together with Grace unless Men labor and toil for it for they ought to help and serve that Grace of God in holding that Course which leads to Heaven God never forsakes us Note for he has promis'd to be with us always How ought this one thing therefore to be regarded of us that we forsake not God and our selves And in this Kingdom of God XXX The defence of our Salvation and how great which is his Church are all things wherewith he defends the Life of Man and perfects their eternal Salvation Multitudes of Angels which are invisible and the Benefit of visible Sacraments full of Celestial Treasures in these things there is so much Security appointed us by God that we may be safe not only from the Government of our worst Enemies but
everlasting Fountain to wash away the Pollutions of Sin whereby we wish to he cleans'd and expiated God being our Guide and Benefactor when we pray thus of him Forgive us our Debts Now this Petition contains the Sum II. What this Petition contains Isa 27.9 as it were of those Goods which are heap'd upon Mankind thro Jesus Christ For so Esaias taught Iniquity shall be forgiven to the House of Jacob and all this Fruit is to take away Sin Which thing David also shews declaring them that could receive that saving Fruit to be blessed in these words Psal 34.11 Blessed are they whose so Iniquities are forgiven Wherefore the Pastors must observe and expound the meaning of this Petition accurately and deligently III. This Petition to be explain'd which we perceive to be so available to the attaining of the Life of Heaven Now we enter upon a new way of Praying IV. This ●●●ten d ●ers from the rest for hitherto we have begg'd of God not only Eternal and Spiritual Good things but Transitory Conveniencies and such as belong to this Life But now we pray to be deliv●r'd from the Evils both of Soul and Body both of this and the other Life Now because to the obtaining what we pray for V. What need we have to pray aright there is requir'd a proper way of Petitioning it seems fit to shew how they ought to be affected that will make Prayers to God The Curats therefore shall admonish the Faithful First first That it is necessary that he that will come to beg this first acknowledge his Sin And then Secondly that he be mov'd with the Sense of and Grief for it And then Thirdly that he throly perswade himself that God is willing to pardon those that have sinn'd if they are so affected and dispos'd as we have said lest haply after the bitter remembrance and acknowledgment of Sin there follow the despair of Pardon which long ago took hold upon the Souls of Cain and Judas Gen. 4 13. Mat. 27.4 who look'd upon God only as a Revenger and not also as Gracious and Merciful In this Petition therefore we ought so to be affected VI. With what Mind this Petition to be made that with grief acknowledging our Sins we fly to God as to a Father and not as to a Judge whom we pray to deal with us not in Justice but in Mercy Now we are easily brought to acknowledge our Sins VII How Men are to be brought to acknowledg their Sin Psal 13.52 if we but hearken to God himself admonishing us in such places of sacred Scripture as these For thus we read in David They are all gone out of the Way they are all together become unprofitable there is none that does good no not one To the same sense speaks Solomon There is no Man just upon the Earth that do s good and sins not Pertinent to which is this also Who can say My Heart is clean I am pure from Sin Prov. 20.9 Which very thing also for the deterring Men From Pride is written by S. John 1 Joh. 1.8 If we say that we have no Sin we deceive our selves and the Truth is not in us And by Jeremy Hier. 2.35 Thou saidst I am without Sin and innocent and therefore let by Anger be turn'd from me Behold I will contend with thee in Judgment because thou saidst I have not sinn'd All whose Sentences VIII In what sense this Petition is to be understood agreeing in the same tho coming out of their several Mouths Christ our Lord confirm'd in the appointment of this Petition For the Authority of the Council of Milevis forbad that it should be otherwise interpreted after this manner c. 7 8 9. VVe decree That whosoever will have those VVords of the Lord's Prayer where we say Forgive us our Debts so to be said of the Saints as that it be said for humility but not truly Let him be Anathema For who can endure one to pray Note and at the same time to lie that not to Men but to the Lord himself who with his Lips tells him that he desires to be forgiven but in his Heart he says he has no Sins to be forgiven him Vide Trid. Sess 6. de Justificatione c. 11. Item Aug. in Ench. c. 17. But in the necessary acknowledgment of our Sins IX Sin is to be remember'd with grief it is not enough lightly to make mention of them For that the remembrance of them might be bitter to us there is need that we be prick'd at the Heart wounded at the Soul and grieve inwardly VVherefore the Curats shall diligently handle this Point Note that his faithful Hearers may not only bring to remembrance their Sins and VVickedness but that they may remember them with grief and sorrow that when they are griev'd at the Heart they may betake themselves to God their Father whom they humbly pray to pluck away the Stings of their Sins that stick within them Nor shall they labor to lay before the Eyes of the Faithful the Filthiness only of their Sin X. How the Peoples Sins are to be put before their Eyes but also Mens Indignity and Blemishes who being nothing else but stinking Flesh and the utmost Deformity dare after an incredible manner provoke the incomprehensible Majesty and inexpressible Excellency of God and especially since by him we have been created redeem'd and enrich'd with innumerable and exceeding great Benefits And why Note and Amplifie that being estrang'd from God the Father who is the Supream Good we dedicate our selves to the Devil for the basest Reward of Sin and to the most miserable Slavery For neither can it be express'd how cruelly he tyrannises in the Souls of them who having cast away the sweet Yoak of God and broken the most lovely Knot of Charity whereby our Soul is ty'd to God our Father they have fallen off to their most bitter Enemy Joh. 14.30 who for that Reason is call'd in Sacred Scripture the Prince and Ruler of the VVorld Ephes 6.12 Job 41.25 Isa 26.13 and the Prince of Darkness and King over all the Children of Pride And to them that are oppress'd with the Devils Tyranny does that VVord of Esay properly agree O Lord our God other lords besides thee have ruled over us If these broken Covenants of Love move us not XI How many and great Mischiefs Sin causes at least let the Calamities and Miseries into which we have plung'd our selves by Sin move us For the Sanctity of the Soul which we know is espous'd to Christ is violated and this same Temple of the Lord is prophan'd which those that pollute 1 Cor. 3. the Apostle threatens thus Now if any one violate the Temple of God him will God destroy Innumerable are the Evils which Sin brings upon Men. Which Plague being almost infinit Psal 37.4 David expresses in these Words There is
who by Law are excluded Pag. 315 Wherein the Vertue and Nature of Matrimony consists ibid. Consent makes Matrimony 316 That Consent express'd in Words signifying the present Time ibid. The Consent of one Party is not enough to Matrimony ibid. Words are needful to declare Mutual Consent ibid. Matrimony not contracted by Words signifying Time to come ibid. If after Matrimony the Parties repent they cannot alter their Deed. 316 317 In stead of Words a Nod or other Sign is sufficient in Matrimony 317 Besides Consent there is no need of the Eed to make it true Matrimony ibid. The double respect of Matrimony as it is an Office of Nature and as it is a Sacrament ibid. Matrimony as it is an Office of Nature appointed by God 318 Matrimony indissoluble ibid. Those Words Increase and multiply lay not a Necessity of Matrimony upon all Men. ibid. Mankind being increas'd Virginity is very highly commended 318 319 For what Causes Matrimony was instituted Pag. 319 The Nature of Matrimony as it is a Sacrament 320 That Matrimony is a Sacrament and one of the Seven Sacraments of the Gospel 321 The Sacrament of Matrimony instituted by Christ ibid. Matrimony signifies and gives Grace 322 How far the Sacrament of Matrimony excels that Matrimony before the Law ibid. The Matrimony of the Jews ibid. Why the ancient Fathers had many Wives 323 Why a Bill of Divorce allow'd by the Law of Moyses ibid. Poligamy strange to the Law of Nature ibid. Matrimony consists in the Conjunction of two only and no more ibid. An Infidel being converted ought to keep to his first Wife ibid. The Bond of Matrimony dissolv'd by no Divorce 324 Very profitable that Matrimony cannot be dissolv'd ibid. Three Advantages of Matrimony 325 The Mutual Offices of Husband and Wife 327 Clandestin Marriages neither true nor ratified 329 The Impediments of Matrimony ibid. How they ought to be dispos'd that contract Matrimony Pag. 329 What use there ought to be of Matrimony 330 We are sometimes to abstain from the Office of Matrimony for the sake of Prayer ibid. The Law against Murder pleasant to be heard 394 Murder forbidden to all 397 All Men by vertue of this Law protected from being murder'd ibid. Unlawful for one to murder himself ibid. What Man-slaughter is not forbidden 395 The Law against Murder restrains not only the Hands but the Heart 397 398 Medicin given of God to Men. 545 546 What hope we are to put in Medicinal Remedies 546 Our Merits depend upon Christ's Passion 277 Being assisted by Grace we may merit 278 The proper Minister of Baptism see Baptism The Order of the Ministers of Baptism to be observ'd ibid. The proper Minister of the Sacrament of Confirmation see Confirmation The Minister of Confession must be Learn'd and Prudent See Penance The Minister of the Sacrament of Order See Order The Misery of Man See the Third Petition 499 Modesty and Continency diligently to be kept 407 N NAmes given to those that are baptiz'd See Baptism 180 Giving Heathenish Names in Baptism reprov'd ibid. What real Honor to be given to God's Name 357 358 How God's Name to be sanctified in all 486 God's holy and terrible Name wants not our Sanctification 485 486 How God's Name is sanctified in all 486 God's Name to be sanctified in Deed and not in Word only 488 Who is our Neighbor 427 A sure Note of knowing which Prayer is good which bad 469 470 471 O ALl bound to obey God's Will 506 What Order is 298 There are Seven Orders 299 The Greater and Lesser Orders ibid. Why Holy Order reckon'd among the Sacraments of the Church 298 Holy Order imprints a Character ibid. The first Shaving 299 The Order of Door-keeper and his Office Pag. 301 The Order and Office of Reader 302 The Order and Office of Exorcists ibid. The Order and Office of Collats ibid. The Order and Office of Subdeacon 303 Perpetual Continence impos'd on the Sacred Orders ibid. The Order and Office of Deacon 304 The Office of a Deacon to explain the Fospel but not in the Pulpit 305 The Order of Priesthood 306 To what kind of Persons Orders are to be given 294 310 Sacred Orders conferr'd on certain appointed Days wherein Fasting is enjoyn'd 310 Those that are to be Ordain'd ought first to their Conscience by the Sacrament of Penance 311 The Sacrament of Order not to be conferr'd on Children or Mad Persons 312 What Age is requir'd for the several Orders ibid. The Sacrament of Order confers Grace ibid. The Sacrament of Order imprints a Character 313 P PArents their Duty towards their Children 392 When Parents are not to be obey'd Pag. 385 Honor due to Parents ibid. Parents to avoid too much Indulgence and Severity 392 393 The Mystery of Christ's Passion clearly shews the Power and Love of God 55 Christ's Passion often to be propos'd to the People 45 Why the Time of Christ's Passion is observ'd 46 Christ's Suffering inwardly in his Soul ibid. The Cause of Christ's Passion 51 Christ suffer'd the heaviest Punishments 53 Christ's Passion much more bitter than that of the Saints 54 What Benefits Christ's Passion brings to us 55 Christ's Passion procures us Pardon of Sin 519 From Christ's Passion flows all the Vertue of our Satisfaction ibid. The Pastors of the Church are to be heard even as Christ himself See the Preface We must obey the Pastors tho Wicked 389 The Necessity of Penance 238 The want of the Use of Penance very hurtful to us ibid. Of Penance as a Vertue and what belongs to it 240 241 The Sacrament of Penance necessary 238 Penance ought to be iterated Pag. 244 The divers Notions and Significations of Penance 249 God by translation is said to repent 240 Wherein the various Significations of Penance differ ibid. Faith goes before Penance 241 Why inward Penance is a Vertue ibid. What a Penitent ought to propose to himself 242 By what Degrees we arrive at Penance ibid. The S. Scripture promises the Kingdom of Heaven to Penance 243 External Penance is a Sacrament ibid. Why God instituted the Sacrament of Penance ibid. The Form and Matter of the Sacrament of Penance 245 The Ceremonies and Rites of Penance 246 247 The Fruits of the Sacrament of Penance 247 Penance restores us into favor with God ibid. The intire Parts of Penance 249 Why Penance consists of Parts ibid. Why Public Penance injoyn'd for Public Offences 276 In Penance two things to be observ'd 277 The Punishment of Penance freely undertaken turns away God's Punishments from us 278 Restitution is necessary to a Penitent Pag. 419 What Perjury is See the second Commandment 356 c. M Men are perjur'd many ways Ibid. The great propensity of men to Perjury Ibid. For Perjury men are many ways afflicted Ibid. The Perils we are in daily ought always to be before our eyes 533 Permission in God how to be understood 539 Pride very offensive to God 466 The Properties of the Divine Persons 21 Why
Sess 21. de co●● sub u●raque specie can 1 2 3. For as has bin explain'd by the Council of Trent altho Christ at his last Supper instituted and deliver'd to the Apostles this most profound Sacrament in the Species of Bread and Wine Yet it does not follow from hence That this was made by our Lord and Savior to be a Law that the Sacred Mysteries should be administer'd to all the Faithful under both kinds For the same our Lord when he spake of this Sacrament frequently made mention but of One Species only Joh. 6.51 as when he says If any one shall eat of this Bread he shall live forever and the Bread which I will give is my Flesh for the Life of the World And He that eats this Bread shall live forever That the use of One species only is sufficient to a perfect Communion may be gather'd ex Tertul. lib. 2. ad Vxor Cypr. de Lapsis Orig. Hom. 13. in Exod. Basil Epist ad Caesar patr Aug. Epist. 86. Hier. in Apol. ad Pammach Chrysost hom 41. operis impers in Matth. It is evident that the Church was led by very many LXXI Why the use of both species is not permitted to the Lay people and indeed by very weighty Reasons not only to approve but also to establish by the Authority of a Decree this Custom of communicating chiefly under one species For first The first Reason great heed was to be taken lest the Blood of our Lord should be spilt on the Ground which thing seem'd not easie to be avoided if it should be administer'd in a great multitude of people Besides The second when the Sacred Eucharist ought to be in a Readiness for the Sick it was much to be fear'd lest if the species of Wine were to be kept somewhat longer it might grow sower Besides there are very many who can by no means indure the Tast The third nor so much indeed as the very smell of Wine Wherefore lest that which was given for spiritual Healths sake The fourth might hurt the Health of the Body it was very wisely establish'd by the Church that the Faithful should receive only the species of Bread And this may be added to the other Reasons The fifth that in very many Countries they have a very great scarceness of Wine nor can they procure it from elsewhere but with very great charges and very tedious and difficult travel And then The sixth which is most of all to the purpose the Heresie of them was to be rooted up who deny'd that whole Christ is in each species but asserted that the Body only without the Blood is contain'd in the species of Bread and that the Blood was contain'd under that of the Wine Now therefore that the Truth of Catholic Faith might the more evidently be put before our eyes the Communion of One Species i. e. of Bread was wisely brought in There are other Reasons also collected by them who treat of this Argument which if it shall seem needful the Curats may make use of And that nothing might be pass'd by LXXII The Minister of this Sacrament is only a Priest that seems to belong to the Doctrin of this Sacrament we are now to speak of the Minister altho' there can be no body in a manner ignorant hereof it must be taught therefore that the Power to make and to distribute this Sacrament to the Faithful is given only to the Priests Now that this Manner has always bin kept in the Church that the Faithful People receive the Sacraments from the Priests and that the Priests who consecrate communicate themselves the Holy Synod of Trent has explain'd and shew'd Sess 13. c. 10. that This custom has bin always religiously observ'd as being sprung from Apostolic Tradition Mat. 26.26 especially seeing that Christ our Lord has left us a clear Example hereof who both consecrated his own most Holy Body Mar. 14.22 and did reach it forth to his Disciples with his own Hands But that by all means the Dignity of so great a Sacrament might be consulted LXXIII Lay people prohibited to touch the Sacred Vessels and Linnen not only the Power of Administring it is given only to Priests the Church by Law has also forbid every one that is not consecrated to presume so much as to handle or to touch the Sacred Vessels Linnen and other Instruments that are necessary to the consecration thereof unless there be some very great necessity Whence both the Priests themselves and the rest of the Faithful may understand with how great Religion and Holiness they ought to be qualified that come to the Eucharist either to consecrate to administer or to take it Altho' as was before said of the other Sacraments they are no less truly administred by Evil men LXXIV The wickedness of the Minister diminishes not the Holiness of the Eucharist provided that those things which belong to the perfect reason or nature of them be duly observ'd the same thing avails in the Sacrament of the Eucharist for neither are we to believe that all these things are done by the merit of the Ministers but by the Vertue and Power of Christ the Lord These are the things which are to be explain'd concerning the Eucharist as it is a Sacrament Now what remains to be spoken must explain it as it is a Sacrifice LXXV Of the Eucharist as it is a Sacrifice that the Curats may understand what chiefly they are to teach the Faithful people upon Sundays and Holy-days concerning this Mystery according as Holy Synod has decreed For this Sacrament is not only a Treasure of heavenly riches Sess 22. princip which if we use well we may reconcile the Grace and Love of God towards us but there is in it also a kind of special Mean whereby we return him some thanks for his immense benefits bestow'd on us But this Victim or Sacrifice if it be rightly and legitimately offerd how grateful and acceptable it is to God is gather'd from hence If the Sacrifices of the Old Law whereof it is written Psal 39.7 Sacrifices and Oblations thou would'st not Psal 50.8 And again If thou would'st have Sacrifice I would give it thee accordingly but thou delightest not in burnt Offerings so pleas'd the Lord that God as the Scripture testifies Gen. 2. smelt a sweet savor i. e. were grateful and acceptable to him what may we hope for from this Sacrifice wherein he himself is sacrific'd and offer'd of whom that voice from Heaven was twice heard Mat. 3 17● This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased Let the Curats therefore diligently explain this Mystery that when the Faithful come together to Divine Service they may learn attentively and religiously to meditate on those things at which they are present And first let them teach LXXVI The Eucharist instituted for Two causes that the Eucharist
servile work to be put off to the Lords Day in this Commandment the Lord requires that In Six Days we do our Work Lest any of those things which ought to be done on the other Days of the VVeek should be put off to the Holy Day and so the Mind be call'd off from the care and study of Divine matters In the next place XXX What the third part of the Commandment forbids the third Part of the Commandment is to be explain'd which in a manner shews how we ought to keep Holy the Sabbath Day But especially it explain's what we are forbidden to do on that Day wherefore says the Lord Thou shalt not do any Work therein thou and thy Son and thy Daughter thy Servant and thy Maid thy Cattel and the Stranger that is within thy Gates By which VVords we are taught XXXI Whatever withdraws our mind from the divine Worship is forbidd'n first wholly to avoid whatsoever may hinder the VVorship of God For it may easily be perceived that every kind of servile VVork is forbidden not because it is naturally either base or evil but because it withdraws our mind from the VVorship of God which is the End of this Commandment VVhere Note and I teach this the Faithful are the rather to avoid those Sins which not only call off our Minds from the Study of Divine matters but wholly separate us from the Love of God Vid. Aug. tract 3. in Joan. in Psal 31. Serm. lib. de decem chordis c. 3. Yet those Actions and those VVorks which belong to Divine VVorship XXXII What works are not forbid'n on Holy Days The first sort altho they be servile as to cover or deck the Altar to adorn the Churches for some Festival Days and our like are not forbidd'n and therefore the Lord says The Priests in the Temple violate the Sabbath and yet are without Sin Nor is it to be thought The second sort that the doing of those things which otherwise will be lost if not done on the Holy Day are forbidden by this Commandment even as also it is permitted by the Sacred Canons There are many other things which our Lord in the Gospel has declar'd The third sort may be done on Holy Days which the Curat may easily observe in S. Matthew and S. John But that nothing may be omitted XXXIII Cattel not to be part to labor on Holy Days by the doing whereof the Sanctification of the Sabbath may be hindred here is mention made of Cattel by which sort of living Creatures Men are hindred from keeping the Sabbath For if on the Sabbath Day the use of Cattel be design'd to the doing of any VVork the Labor of Man is also necessary to make them work The Beast therefore can do no work of it self but helps the Man who manages him But on that Day it is not lawful for any to do work therefore not for the Cattel whose Labor Men make use of for their work This Commandment requires also XXXIV Cruel y to Cattel forbidd'n that if God would have Men to spare the Labor of their Cattel they ought surely to be so much the more wary that they be not cruel to them whose Labor and Industry they use Nor ought the Curat to omit XXXV What to be done on Holy Days To be present at Ma s. but diligently to teach in what VVorks and Actions Christians ought to exercise themselves on Holy Days Of which kind are these To come to Gods Church and to be there present at the Holy Sacrifice of Mass with a sincere and devout Attention of Mind Conc. Agath c. 47. Aurel. c. 8. Tribur c. 35. vide de consec dist 1. capite Missas cum ad celebrandas omnes Fideles Often to make use of the Sacraments of the Church To frequent the Sacraments which were instituted for our Salvation and to cure the VVounds of our Souls Aug. de Eccle. dogm c. 53. citatur de cons dist 2. c. quotidie Nor is there any thing which can be either more seasonable or better for Christians To confess Sins than often to confess their Sins to the Priests For doing of which the Curat may exhort the People taking for clearing of this matter a Pattern and Example from those things which have already in their proper place bin deliver'd and taught in the Sacrament of Penance Nor shall he only stir up the People to that Sacrament To receive the Eucharist but he shall diligently again and again exhort them to it that they may frequently receive the Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist Moreover To hear Sermons the Sacred Sermons are diligently and attentively to be heard by the Faithful For there is nothing les● to be indur'd nor indeed is there any thing so unworthy as to despise or negligently to hear Christs Word Justin Apol. 2. ex Actis Apost c. 20.7 Aug. lib. 50. Hom. hom 26. citatur 1. q. l. cap. interroga Also the Exercise and Study of the Faithful in Prayers To pray to and praise God and Praises of God ought to be frequent And hereof a chief care should be To be present at Catechising diligently to learn those things which belong to the Institution of a Christian Life And let him exercise himself in those Duties which contain Christian Piety To do works of Mercy by giving Alms to the Poor and Needy by visiting the Sick and piously comforting those that are in Heaviness and Affliction Jac. 1. For as S. James says Pure Religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this To visit the fatherless and Widows in their tribulation So the ancient Christians did as do testifie Justin apol 2. Tertul. in apol in lib. ad Martyres in lib. 2. ad Vxorem prope finem From what has bin said XXXVI The fourth part of this Commandment it is easy to gather what things are committed contrary to the Rule of this Commandment And let the Curat reckon it as his Duty to gather Reasons and Arguments strongly to perswade the People with their utmost Study XXXVII How just it is to observe the Festivals Care and Diligence to keep the Law of this Commandment And to this end it will be very useful for the People to understand and perceive plainly how just and agreeable to Reason it is that we should have some certain Days which we may bestow wholly upon Divine Worship and wherein we may acknowledge worship and venerate our Lord from whom we have receiv'd most excellent and innumerable Benefits For if he had commanded us every Day to render him the Worship of Religion Note ought we not to do our utmost endeavour with a ready and cheerful mind for all Benefits towards us which are very great and infinite to hearken to his VVord But now there being but a few Days set apart to his VVorship there is no cause why
we should be negligent and uneasy in the Discharge of this Duty which without very grievous Sin we cannot omit Vide de Consecr dist 1. in Decret Titul de Feriis Conc. Matisc 2. c. 1. 37. Tribur c. 35. Ignat. in Epist ad Philip. Leon. serm 3. de Quadrag August Serm. 251. de tempore And then the Curat may shew XXXVIII How good and profitable it is to observe this Commandment how great the Vertue of this Commandment is since those who truly observe it seem to be in the Presence of God and to speak freely with him For in making Prayers we both contemplate the Majesty of God and freely talk with him And in hearing the Preachers we receive the Voice of God which throw their Labor who preach of Divine Matters holily and devoutly reaches even to our Ears And then we adore Christ our Lord present in the Sacrifice of tile Altar and these are the good things which they enjoy especially who diligently obey this Commandment But those who altogether neglect this Law XXXIX How great a Sin to break this Commandment seeing that they obey not God and his Church and hear not his Commandments are Enemies both of God and of his Holy Laws which may be observ'd from hence because this Precept is of such a kind as may be observ'd without any pains For since God imposes no labor upon us which yet were it the hardest in the VVorld we ought to undergo for his sake but only commands us to be free and quiet on the Holy Days from wordly cares it is a sign of great rashness to refuse Obedience to this Commandment Hereof the Punishments which God has inflicted upon those that violated it Numb 1.15 ought to be for an Example to us as we may see from the Book of Numbers That therefore we may not run into Gods Displeasure Note it will be worth our while often to think upon this word Remember and to lay before our Eyes those mighty Profits and Advantages which as has been shew'd before may be had by the ●bservance of Holy Days And many other things belonging to the same purpose which a good and diligent Pastor can largely and fully discuss as Occasion shall require The Fourth COMMANDMENT of the DECALOGVE Honor thy Father and thy Mother that thou mayst live long upon the Land which the Lord thy God shall give thee SInce the highest Vertue and Dignity is in the former Commandments I. How this Commandment agrees with the former those which we now proceed upon because they are very necessary rightly claim the next place For those directly have Regard to God as their End but these teach us Charity towards our Neighbor altho at the long Run they lead to God himself that is to that ultimate End for the sake whereof we love our Neighbor Matt. 22.39 Mar. 12.31 wherefore Christ our Lord said that those two Commandments of loving God and our Neighbor are like one to the other Vide Aug. in Psal 32. Serm. 1. item lib. 3. de Doctr. Christ cap. 10. lib. 50. Hom. hom 38. D. Thom. 2.2 quaest 17. art 8. Now it can hardly be express'd how great Advantages this Point has II. The Love of God shines forth in the Love of our Parents 1 Joh. 6.20 since it both bears its own fruits and those large and excellent and is as it were a Sign whereby the Obedience and Duty of the First Commandment is apparent He that loves not his Brother says S. John whom he sees how can he love God whom he sees not After the same manner if we do not Reverence and Honor our Parents whom we ought to love 〈◊〉 to God seeing they are almost always in our Sight what Honor what Worship will we give to God the Supream and Best Parent who is above our Sight Whence it is plain that both Commandments agree among themselves Now the use of this Commandment is very large III How large this Commandment is For besides those that have begotten us there are many other besides whom we ought to Honor as Parents by reason either of their Power or Dignity or Profitableness or some other excellent Function or Office Besides it eases the Labor of Parents and Superiors For seeing their chief Care is that those whom they have in their Power live well and agreeably to the Divine Law this Care will be very easy if all Men understood that even by Gods Authority and Admonition the greatest Honor is to be given to Parents Which that we may do it is needful to know a kind of Difference between the Commandments of the First and those of the Second Table These things therefore are first to be explain'd by the Curat and first of all let him Teach That the Divine Laws of the Decalogue were cut in Two Tables In one of which as we are taught by the Holy Fathers those Three were contain'd which have already been explain'd but the rest were included in the other Table Vide Clem. Alexand. lib. 6. Strom. satis ante finem August in Exod. q. 71. Epist 119. cap. 11. D. Thom. 1.2 q. 100. art 4. And this Description was very fit for us IV. Mark this Reason that the very Order of the Commandments might distinguish the Reason of them For whatsoever in Sacred Scripture is commanded by the Divine Law it arises from one of these Two Kinds For in every Duty our Love either towards God or towards Man is seen Now the Three first Commandments teach our Love towards God But that which belongs to the Conjunction and Society of Men is contain'd in the other Seven Commandments Wherefore it was not without Reason that such a Distinction was made that 〈◊〉 Commandments 〈…〉 to the First and others to the Last Table For in the Three first Commandments V. The first Difference betwixt the Commandments of the first and second Table whereof has bin spoken God who is the Supreme Good is as it where the subject Matter which they handle but in the rest the good of our Neighbor In the First is propos'd our greatest Love in the rest our next Love the First respect their End the rest those things that are referr'd to the End Vide Aug. in Psal 32. Ser. 1. D. Thom. 22. q. 122. art 1 2. in opusc 7. c. p. de primo praecept Besides The second difference the Love of God depends thereupon For God is of himself and not for the sake of any other thing to be lov'd above all things but the Love of our Neighbor has its beginning from our Love of God and is to be directed to it as to a certain Rule For if we account our Parents Dear if we obey our Masters if we reverence our Betters we must do it specially for this Cause because God is their Procreator and would have them above others by whose Labor he rules and defends the rest Who
the Curat may gather to terrifie Men from their evil Lust as the Destructiom of Sodom and the other neighboring Cities the Punishment of the Israelites who committed Fornication with the Daughters of Moab in the Wilderness and the Destruction of the Benjamites Gen. 29.24 Num. 25.4 Jud. 20. But those that escape Death yet they escape not intollerable Pains and Tortures of Punishment XVII Adulterers blinded and become foolish in all things which frequently lays hold on them for their Mind is blinded which is the greatest Punishment of all so that they have no regard of God nor of their Fame nor of their Honor nor of their Children nor even of their own Life and by this means they grow to be so wicked and unprofitable that nothing of moment ought to be trusted with them and they are hardly fit for the discharge of any Office Hereof we may find Examples in David and Solomon Examples whereof the one after his Adultery became very unlike himself of Merciful he became Cruel 3 Reg. 11. so that he deliver'd Vriah to Death who had deserv'd very well of him The other when he had given himself wholly over to the Lust of Women so turn'd himself from God's true Religion that he follow'd other Gods This Sin therefore Hos 11. as Hoseas says takes away the Heart of Man and oftentimes blinds him And now let us come to the Remedies XVIII Antidotes against Lust The First which consist in Action Whereof the first is this Strongly to resist Ideness in which when the Men of Sodom blunted themselves as it is in Ezekiel they fell headlong into the most foul Sin of wicked Lust Next The Second Hier. 5.7 Gluttony is to be avoided I fed them says the Prophet and they committed Adultery because a full and satisfied Belly begets Lust This very thing our Lord signified in these words Luc. 21.34 Take heed to your selves lest haply your Hearts be overcharged with Gluttony and Drunkenness Eph. 5.18 And so says the Apostle Be not drunk with Wine wherein is Excess But especially by the Eye is the Mind us'd to be inflam'd with Lust The Third whither belongs that Sentence of Christ our Lord Mat. 5.32 If thy Eye offend thee pluck it out and cast it from thee There are besides many Sayings of the Prophets to this purpose Job 31.1 as that of Job I have made a Covenant with my Eyes that I would not so much as think of a Virgin Lastly There are many and almost innumerable Examples of the Evils which had their beginning from the Sight of the Eyes So David and so the King of Sichem sinn'd and by this means those Old Men the false Accusers of Susanna sinn'd 2 Reg. 11. Gen. 34.2 Dan. 13.8 Also more curious Apparel or Ornaments The Fourth wherewith the Sense of the Eyes is much taken oftentimes affords no small Occasion to Lust Ecclus 9.8 And therefore Ecclesiasticus admonishes Turn away thy Face from a Woman curiously attir'd Whereas therefore Women are overmuch employ'd in adorning themselves Let the Curat observe thi● it will not be far from the Matter if the Curat use some Diligence herein sometimes to admonish and sometimes to chide them in those words which S. Peter us'd the most weighty in this kind 1 Pet. 3.3 Let not the adorning of Women be outward as the glittering of Gold or the exquisit Ornament of Apparel 1 Tim. 2.1 And S. Paul Not in curl'd Hair says he or Gold or Precious Stones or costly Clothes for many Women adorn'd with Gold and Precious Stones have lost their Ornaments both of Mind and Body But after this Provocation of Lust The Fifth which consists in the exquisit Ornament of Clothes there follows another which is filthy and obscene Talk for by obscene Words as by a kind of Fire-brand the Minds of Young Persons are inflam'd For as the Apostle says 1 Cor. 15.53 Evil Communication corrpts good Manners And since the more delicate and effeminate Singing and Dancing works the same thing they must diligently take heed of them also Of which kind are to be accounted obscene and amorous Books The Sixth Seventh which are to be shunn'd as Images which carry in them a Representation of Filthiness seeing they have in them a mighty force to inflame the Minds of young Persons to corrupt Abuses But let the Curat chiefly take care that those things be very religiously observ'd which have been piously and religiously decreed by the Holy Council of Trent concerning those things Sess 25. Decret de Invocat Venerat Sacris Imagin Now The Eighth Ninth Tenth Eleventh and Twelfth if all those things before-mention'd be avoided with great care and labor then all the Matter or Fuel of Lust in a manner will be taken away But the frequent use of Confession and of the Eucharist will be very prevalent to destroy the power of it as also daily and devout Prayers to God join'd with Alms and Fasting For Chastity is the Gift of God XIX God gives Chastity to them that ● ask it which he denies not to them that ask it aright nor suffers us to be tempted above what we are able Vide Tertul de Monag in fine Nazianz. Orat. 3. Basil de Virg. ultra medium Chrysost Hieron in cap. 16. Matth. August lib. 6. Confess c. 11. But the Body is to be exercis'd XX. Other Antidotes and the Desires of the Senses to be repress'd not only with Fastings and with those things especially which Holy Church has appointed but with VVatchings and devout Pilgrimages and other sorts of Afflictions For in those and such like things is very much observ'd the Vertue of Temperance according to which sense S. Paul writes thus to the Corinthians 1 Cor. 9.15 He that contends in a Combat keeps himself from all things and These that they may receive a corruptible Crown but We an incorruptible one And a little after I chasten my Body says he and bring it it into servitude lest haply when I have preached to others I my self be made a Reprobate And in another Place Rom. 13.14 Fulfil not the Desire of the Flesh in the Lusts thereof The Seventh COMMANDMENT of the DECALOGVE Thou shalt not steal THat this was the ancient manner of the Church to inculcate the Force and Vertue of this Commandment upon the Hearers I. The ancient of the Church's inculcating this Commandment Rom. 2.21 the Apostles Reproof of those who would scare others from those Vices whereof they themselves were found guilty plainly shews For says he thou that teachest another teachest not thou thy self Thou that preachest A Man should not steal dost thou steal By which excellent way of teaching II. The profitableness of this manner they not only corrected the common Sin of those Times but also appeas'd Disturbances and Quarrels and the other Causes which were us'd to
move the Ancients to Theft Now since this our Age also is miserably prone to the like Sins III. The Curat 's Duty in this Case and the Inconveniences and Calamities of them after the Example of the Holy Fathers the Masters of Christian Discipline the Curats shall urge this Point and shall carefully and diligently explain the Force and Meaning of this Commandment And first IV. Herein Gods Love towards us is manifested they shall exercise their Office and Diligence to shew the infinite Love of God towards Mankind who not only in those two former Commandments Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not commit Adultery as it were by Fences defends our Life our Body and our Fame and Esteem but also in this Commandment Thou shalt not steal secures and defends our outward Goods and Estates by a kind of Protection For what can be the meaning of these VVords but that which we have already said when we spake of the other Commandments To wit That God do's forbid these our Goods which are under his Protection to be hurt or taken away by any one Vide D. Thom. 1.2 q. 100. a. 3. 2.2 q. 122. art 6. Now by how much the greater this Benefit of the Law of God is by so much the more thankful ought we to be to God V. How willingly we are to obey this Commandment the Author of that Benefit And because the best way both of being thankful and paying our Thanks is not only willingly to hearken to his Commandments but also to manifest them in Deed the Faithful are to be excited and inflam'd to the performance of the Duty of this Commandment Now this Commandment VI. This Commandment divided into two Parts as the former is divided into two Parts whereof the former which forbids Theft is plainly declared but the force and meaning of the other wherein we are commanded to be kind and liberal to our Neighbor lies hid and wrapp'd up in the former We will first speak of the First Thou shalt not steal VVhere it is to be observ'd VII What is here understood by Theft That by the Name of Theft is to be understood not only the taking away of any thing from the right Owner privily and without his knowledge but also when a Man possesses that which is another Man's against the VVill and Knowledge of the true Owner thereof unless we would think that he that forbids Theft do's not disallow that violent taking away of other Mens Goods by Force and VVrong 1 Cor. 6.10 since the Apostle has declar'd that Extortioners shall not possess the kingdom of God All the practice and ways whereof are to be avoided as the same Apostle teaches Vide Aug. q. 7.1 in Exod. citatur 32. q. 4. c. M●retrices But tho forcible taking away of any thing from another VIII Robbery or Rapine worse than Theft be a greater Sin than Theft because besides the thing taken away from any one they moreover use force and give greater affront Vide D. Thom. 2.2 q. 66. art 4 9. item 14. q. 4. c. Poenale Yet it is not to be wondred at IX Why that name of Theft is here used that the Precept of this Divine Law uses the lighter Term of Theft and not of Robbery for it is so done on a very weighty Account because Theft is of a larger signification and extends to more things than Robbery which they only can commit who have Power and Strength Altho there is no one that sees not that the greater Enormities are also forbidd'n Note when the lesser Sins of the same kind are prohibited For the unjust Possession and use of anothers things is known by divers names X. The various kinds of Theft according to the diversity of those things that are taken away without the Will an Knowledge of the Owners For if any private thing be taken from a private Person Theft it is call'd Theft If from a public Person Pecculatus it is call'd in Latin Pecculatus If a Free-man or anothers Servant be carried into Slavery Man-stealing it is call'd Man-stealing But if a Sacred thing be taken away Sacriledg it is call'd Sacriledg which Wickedness the most horrid and lewd of all is so common that the Goods which were piously and wisely given to the necessary use of Divine Worship and to the Ministers of the Church and to the Benefit of the Poor are converted to private Covetousness and pernicious Lusts But besides the Theft it self XI The will of Stealing forbidd'n that is the outward Act the very Will and Desire of Theft is forbidd'n by Gods Law For the Law is Spiritual which regards the Soul the Fountain of our Thoughts and Designs for out of the Heart as our Lord says in S. Matth Matth. 15.19 proceed evil Thoughts Murders Adulteries Fornications Thefts False Witness Now how grievous a Sin Theft is XII Theft a grievous Sin even the very natural Light and Reason sufficiently shew For it is contrary to Justice which renders to every one his own For the Distributions and Assignments of Goods even from the very first beginning have bin determin'd by the Law of Nations and confirmed by Divine and Human Laws and ought to be ratifi'd That every one unless we will take away all human Society may enjoy those things which he has rightly gott'n for as the Apostle says 1 Cor. 6.10 Neither Thieves nor Covetous Persons nor Drunkards nor Revilers nor Extortioners shall possess the kingdom of God Now there are very many evils XIII The mischiefs following Theft which follow Theft which shew the Savageness and Enormity of this Sin For hereby many rash and unadvis'd Judgments are made of many Persons Hatred breaks forth Differences are begun Sometimes innocent Men are most cruelly condemned And what shall we say concerning that necessity XIV The necessity of Restitution which by God himself is laid on all of satisfying him that is wrong'd For as S. Austin says The Sin is not forgiven unless Restitution be made Epist 54. Of making which Restitution XV. How difficult Restitution is when a Man has accustomed himself to enrich himself with other Mens Goods how great must the Difficulty needs be besides that which every one may judge both from the Discourse of others and from his own Sense we may understand it from the Testimony of the Prophet Abacuc Abac. 26. for he says Wo to him that increases that which is not his how long and to him that gathers together against himself a thick clay He calls the Possesion of other mens Goods a thick Clay Note from whence it is very hard for Men to rid and get themselves out But there are so many kinds of Theft XVI Many kinds of Theft that it is very hard to number them wherefore it is suffcient to have spoken of these Two Theft and Robbery to which all the rest we shall speak