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A47788 The alliance of divine offices, exhibiting all the liturgies of the Church of England since the Reformation as also the late Scotch service-book, with all their respective variations : and upon them all annotations, vindictating the Book of common-prayer from the main objections of its adversaries, explicating many parcels thereof hithereto not clearly understood, shewing the conformity it beareth with the primitive practice, and giving a faire prospect into the usages of the ancient church : to these is added at the end, The order of the communion set forth 2 Edward 6 / by Hamon L'Estrange ... L'Estrange, Hamon, 1605-1660. 1659 (1659) Wing L1183; ESTC R39012 366,345 360

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meant by Presbyteri consignant in the counterfeit Ambrose F Vnction or Chrism an ancient ceremony belonging to Confirmation why separated at length from it and indulged to Presbyters The Arausican Council diversity of readings Sirmundus his Edition defended Whence two Chrismations in the Church of Rome G Signing with the Cross a companion of unctson H Children when anciently confirmed I Communication of the Eucharist to succeed presently upon Confirmation p. 261. CHAP. X. A. The Matrimonial Office very necessary Marriage ought to be blessed by a Minister Our Saviour and the Primitive Fathers did it Set forms anciently used B. Times prohibited for Marriage upon what Law founded The Directory as guilty of Popery therein as our Church C. Marriage anciently celebrated ad ostium Ecclesiae D Mutual consent of both Parties necessary Espousals what E The giving of the Woman ancient F. The excellence of the English mode in receiving the Wife from the Priest G. The right hand a Symbole of fidelity H. A Ring why given by the man The ancient use of Rings I. Why the Ring is laid upon the Book K. Why the Ring is put upon the 4th singer the usual reason rejected L With my Body I thee worship what meant by it M. The blessing ought to be by imposition of hands N. Why the married couple to communicate O. The visitation of the sick a necessary Office P. A sound faith how necessary Q. Charity very necessary to a dying man R. So also Almes-giving S. Absolution how commendable and comfortable The several kinds of absolution T. Extreme unction why laid aside V. Communion of the sick vindicated Calvin fo● it W. Reservation of the consecrated Elements anciently very laudable X. The various customs of bearing the Corps to Church Copiatae what Why Hymns sung all along as the corps was born Y. The Resurrection of our bodies ought to be the chief of our Meditations upon funeral occasions Z In sure and certain hopes c. What meant by it AA Prayer for the Dead in the Romish Church implyeth not Purgatory The mind of the Breviary opened Trentals what BB. Communion at Burials ancient why now laid aside The Original of Oblations Doles at Funerals and Mortuaries p. 291 CHAP. XI A The grounds of Thanksgiving after Child-birth why rather for this than other deliverances B Our Church doth not Judaize Difference betwixt our practice and Jewish Purification C What meant by the word Church into which the woman is to come D The woman not enjoined a veil F The 121 Psalm not abused E But deliver us from evil why returned by way of response F Commination how often used in the year G Why read in the Pulpit A discourse of reading-Desks none setled by Rule before the Canons 1603. upon what occasion devised H A Discourse of publick Pennance By whom it was imposed and how long to continue The several motions of it in the Greek Church What meant by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what and what 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Errours noted in the Editions of Zonaras and Balsamon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what Penitential customs in the Western Church Africa most severe and why The ancient mode of Excommunicating of notorious offenders out of Gratian Discourse upon it Adgeniculari charis Dei in Tertullian Penitents when reconciled in the Latine Church The Ancient Discipline commended and Vote for its restauration I What meant by the word Curate in our Liturgy K Homilies whether part of our Churches Service And whether the Doctrine of our Church L Calvins Epistle to the Protector mis-dated in all Editions p. 315 FINIS THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER AND Administration of the SACRAMENTS AND Other RITES and CEREMONIES OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND CHAP. I. An Act for the uniformity of Common-Prayer and service in the Church and administration of the Sacraments WHere at the death of our late soveraign Lord King Edward the sixt there remained one uniform order of common service and prayer and of the administration of Sacraments Rites and Ceremonies in the Church of England which was set forth in one book entituled the book of Common-prayer and administration of the sacraments and other rights and ceremonies in the Church of England authorized by act of Parliament holden in the lift and sixt years of our said late soveraign Lord king Edward the sixt entituled an Act for the uniformity of Common-prayer and administration of the Sacraments the which was repealed and taken away by act of Parliament in the first yeer of the raign of our late soveraign Lady Queen Marie to the great decay of the due honour of God and discomfort to the professours of the truth of Christs religion Be it therfore enacted by the authority of this present Parliament that the said statute of repeal and every thing therein contained onely concerning the said book and the service administration of Sacraments rites and ceremonies contained or appointed in or by the said book shall be void and of none effect from and after the feast of the Nativity of Saint John Baptist next coming And that the said book with the order of service and of the administration of Sacraments rites and ceremonies with the alteration and additions therein added and appointed by this statute shall stand and be from and after the said feast of the Nativity of Saint John Baptist in full force and effect according to the tenour and effect of this statute any thing in the aforesaid statute of repeal to the contrary notwithstanding And further be it enacted by the Queens highnesse with the assent of the Lords and Commons of this present Parliament assembled and by the authority of the same that all and singular ministers in any Cathedral or parish Church or other place within this realm of England Wal●s and the marches of the same or other the Queens dominions shall from and after the feast of the Nativity of saint John Baptist next coming be bounden to say and use the Mattins Even-song celebration of the Lords Supper and administration of each of the sacraments and all other common and open prayer in such order and form as is mentioned in the said book so authorized by Parliament in the said fift and sixt year of the raign of king Edward the sixt with one alteration or addition of certain Lessons to be used on every Sunday in the year and the form of the Letanie altered and corrected and two sentences onely added in the delivery of the Sacrament to the Communicants and none other or otherwise And that if any manner of Parson Uicar or other whatsoever minister that ought or should sing or say common prayer mentioned in the said book or minister the sacraments from and after the feast of the ●ativity of saint John Baptist next coming refuse to use the said common prayers or to minister the sacraments in such Cathedral or parish Church or other places as he should use to minister the same in such order and form as
for through default of their concurrent Ratification many of their Canons became insignificant ciphers and where custome and Canon chanced to justle and enterfere the people if their either inclination or interest might be gainers by it alwayes fled to prescription And prescription was sure to carry the cause where no Act of Parliament interposed to the contrary Now at our first entry into the Realm c. The complaint implyed in this Proclamation is a Libel miscalled The humble petition of the Ministers of the Church of England desiring Reformation of certain Ceremones and abuses in the Church that they might the better fore-speak impunity for so strange boldnesse they exhibit their muster-roll thus formidable To the number of more then a thousand This Petition they presented in April 1603. Formed it was into four heads comprehending a summary of all their pitiful grievances concerning first the Church service Secondly Church ministers Thirdly Church livings Fourthly concerning Church discipline To encounter these schismaticks both the Vniversities presently endeavour what they can Oxford models out a very brief but solid answer to all their objections not suffering one to escape Cambridge passeth a grace in their publick Congregation June 9. in the same year That whosoever shall openly oppose the Doctrine or Discipline of the Church of England or any part thereof either in words or writing shall be forthwith suspended of all degrees already taken and made uncapable of taking any hereafter This notwithstanding they held private conventicles the usual forerunners of sedition so as the King was compelled in October next to restrain them by Proclamation but promising withal that he intended a conference should shortly be had for the sopiting and quieting of those disputes This was the great occasion of that Conference of Hampton Court. According to the form which the Laws of this Realm c. The Kings of this Realm are by the statute 26. H. c. 1. declared justly and rightfully to be the supream Governours of the Church of England to have full power and Authority from time to time to visit represse redresse reform order correct restrain and amend all such errours c. which by any manner spiritual Authority or jurisdiction ought or may lawfully be reformed repressed ordered redressed corrected restrained or amended Agreeable to this power Henry the 8. Edw. the 6. Queen Mary her self Queen Elizabeth severally in their respective reignes did act But the laws referred to by this Proclamation is first that Act of Parliament 1. Eliz. wherein it is ordained that the Kings and Queens of this Realm shall have have full power and authority by letters Patents under the great Seal of England to assigne name and Authorize when and as often as their Heires and Successors shall think meet and convenient such person or persons as they shall think meet c. to visit reform redresse c. Secondly the latter end of the Act for uniformity where the Queen and consequently her Successors are authorized by the Advice of their Commissioners or the metropolitan to ordain and publish further Rites and Ceremonies And this helps us with an answer to an objection of Smecttymnuus who from the several Alterations made in our Liturgy both by Queen Elizabeth and King James from that of the second establishment by Edw. 6. infer that the Liturgie now in use is not the Liturgie that was established by Act of Parliament and therefore that Act bindeth not to the use of this Liturgie To this we reply that those Alterations can excuse from that act onely in part and for what is altered as to what remaineth the same it bindeth undoubtedly still in tanto though not in ●oto And for the Alterations themselves the first being made by Act of Parliament expresse that of 1 Elis. and the second by Act of Parliament reductive and implied those afore-mentioned what gain Smecttymnuus by their illation that those alterations are not established by the first Act And whereas it may be supposed that that Proclamation may lose its vigor by that Kings death and consequently the Service book may be conceived to be thereby in statu quo prius yet considering his late Majesty did not null it by any expresse edict that several Parliaments sitting after did not disallow it that all subscriptions have been unanimous in reference to those changes that the Emendations were made to satisfie the Litigant party I conceive the Proclamation valid notwithstanding the death of that King The first original and ground whereof c. Here our Church is explicite expresse enough to confute the vulgar errour of her seduced children who fill the world with more noise then truth that our service hath its original from the Masse-Book her resort is to the Antient Fathers to their godly and decent orders she conforms her self leaving the Romanists to the yesterday devised innovations of their Church The Pye Pica or in English the Pye I observe used by three several sorts of men First by the quondam Popish Clergy here in England before the Reformation who called their ordinal or Directory ad usum Sarum devised for the more speedy finding out the order of Reading their several services appointed for several occasions at several times the Pye Secondly by Printers which call the letters wherewith they Print books and treatises in party colours the Pica letters Thirdly by Officers of civil Courts who call their Kalendars or Alphabetical Catalogues directing to the names and things contained in the Rolls and Records of their Courts the Pyes Whence it gained this denomination is difficult to determine whether from the Bird Pica variegated with divers colours or whether from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contracted into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which denoteth a Table the Pye in the Directory being nothing else but a Table of rules directing to the proper service for every day I cannot say from one of these probably derived it was and no great matter which Wherein the reading of the Scriptures is so set forth c. The Lessons appointed in the Kalendar are onely ordered for the week dayes or such festivals as happen upon them not for the Sundayes for which resort must be had to a future order Nothing but the pure word of God or that which is evidently grounded upon the same Here the Church declareth that over and besides the Canonical Scripture what is evidently grounded upon the same vi● Some part of the Apocrypha she approveth and appointeth to be read in Churches to which end some Lessons in the Kalendar are selected thence but neither considered by her in a party of honour with the Canon nor so strictly enjoyned but that she in some cases tolerateth yea commendeth a swerving from her prescriptions For where it may so chance some one or other Chapter of the Old Testament to fall in order to be read upon the Sundayes or holy-dayes which were better to be changed with some other of the New