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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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a thing might be more remarkable to all when the very certain Time was set down when the thing was done as we find it done by the Apostle 1. Tim. 6.13 and also because in those words it is declar'd that the prophecies concerning our Saviour might be verifi'd by the event Mat. 20 19. for they says he will deliver him to the Gentiles to be mock'd to be scourg'd and to be crucifi'd But especially that he suffer'd death on the Tree of the Cross IV. Why Christ dy'd on the Cross this also is to be ascrib'd to the council of God to wit that whence death had its beginning thence life shou'd have its resurrection For the Serpent by the Tree seduc'd and overcame our first Parents himself was vanquish'd by Christ throw the Tree of his Cross Many other reasons may be produc'd for this matter which the Holy Fathers have largely treated of to shew that i● was convenient that our Redeemer shou'd undergo that death of the Cross rather than any other But the Curat may admonish that it is enough if the faithful believ that that kind of death was chosen by our Savior which seem'd indeed more proper and suitable to the redemption of mankind for certainly there could be none more odious and unbecoming For the punishment of the Cross was always not only among the Gentiles held accurs'd and full of shame and disgrace Deut. 21 23. Gal. 3.13 but also in the Law of Moses he is call'd accurs'd that hangs on a tree Nor may the Curat omit the history of This Article V. Why the explication of this Article ought to be often repeated which the Evangelist took such diligent care to expound but that the faithful may learn and know the chief heads at least of this Mystery which seem to be most necessary for the confirmation of the truth of our Faith For on this Article as upon a certain foundation our Christian Religion and Faith is establish'd and this being well grounded all the rest will hold well together For if any thing prove difficult to the mind and understanding of man certainly the mystery of the Cross may deservedly be accounted the hardest of all and we can very hardly imagine that our Salvation can depend upon the Cross and on him who was crucifi'd thereon but in this as the Apostle teaches we may admire the profound Providence of God 1 Cor. 8. for because in the wisdom of God the world by wisdom knew not God it pleas'd God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believ Wherefore we are not to wonder if the Prophets before the coming of Christ and the Apostles after his death and resurrection so strenuously labour'd to perswade men that this is the Redeemer of men and to bring them into the Dominion and Obedience of him who was crucifi'd for them Wherefore seeing there is nothing so strange to humane reason as the Mystery of the Cross VI. Figures and Prophecies of the mystery of the Cross immediately after the commission of sin the Lord was not wanting both by Figures and the Oracles of the Prophets to signifie the death his Son was to undergo To touch a little upon the Figures Abel first who was kill'd by the malice of his Brother Gen. 4.8 Gen. 22.6 7 8. then the sacrificing of Isaac next the Lamb which the Jews kill'd at their going forth out of Egypt Exod. 12.5 6 7. then the Braz'n Serpent which Moses lifted up in the Wilderness Num. 21.8 9. all these as Figures foreshew'd the Death and Passion of Christ our Lord. But then as to the Prophets Job 3.4 how many were there that propheci'd of it is better known than to need to be told in this place But above all others to omit David who in his Psalms Ps 2. 12 66 109. has handl'd all the chief mysteries of our Redemption the Oracls of Isaiah are so plain and clear Is 53. that it may well be said Hier. Epist ad Paulin. ante f●nem that he rather told the story of a thing already done than foretold the Prophecy of a thing yet to be done Dead and Buried In explaining these words the Curat shall teach that we are to believ VII Christ truly dy'd that Jesus Christ after he was crucifi'd was truly dead and buried And indeed it is not without cause that this is severally propos'd to the faithful to be believ'd seeing there have bin some who have deny'd that he dy'd on the Cross The ●nostics the Apostls therefore deservedly thought it fit that this point of Faith shou'd be oppos'd to that error of the truth of which Article there is no room left to doubt Mat. 27.50 Mar. 15.37 Luc. 23.46 Joh. 19.30 For all the Evangelists agree together in this that Jesus gave up the Ghost Besides whenas Christ was true and perfect Man he also cou'd truly dye Now man dies when his Soul is separated from his Body Wherefore when we say that Jesus was dead VIII God was united to the Soul and Body of Christ tho separated when he was dead we mean that his Soul was divided from his Body and yet we do not grant that his Divinity was disjoyn'd from his body but rather we constantly believ and confess that when his Soul was divided from his Body his Divinity was always joyn'd both to his Body when it was in the Sepulchre and to his Soul when it was in Hell But it became the Son of God to dye Heb. 2.10 14 15. that by death he might destroy him who had the power of death i. e the Devil and rescue them who by the fear of death all their whole life were subject to bondage But this was singular in Christ our Lord IX Christ's death was voluntary not forc'd that he then did dye when himself had purpos'd to dye and he died a death rather voluntary than by constraint nor did he only appoint and determine his own death but likewise the Place and the Time when and where he wou'd dye for so says Isaiah He is offer'd a sacrifice because it was his will And the same our Lord Isai 53.9 before his Passion said of himself I lay down my life to take it up again Joh. 10 17. no man takes it from me but I lay it down of my self and I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it up again But then as to the Time and Place when Herod sought his life and to insnare him he said Luk. 13.32 33. Tell that Fox behold I cast out Devils and do cures to day and to morrow and the third day I am perfected nevertheless I must walk to day and to morrow and the day following for it cannot be that a Prophet shou'd perish out of Jerusalem He therefore did nothing unwillingly or by force but willingly he offer'd himself and going to meet his enemies
words are to be understood of the compleat Resurrection because then we are rais'd to everlasting life all necessity of dying being wholly tak'n away And in this kind Christ our Lord obtains the First place For if we speak of such a Resurrection or of such a Return to life as after which there remains a necessity of dying again 3 Reg. 17.22 there were many others so rais'd from the dead 4 Reg. 4.34 Christ all which notwithstanding reviv'd on this condition that they were to dye again But Christ our Lord so arose again from Death which he had subdu'd and conquer'd that he cou'd dye no more And this is confirm'd by that most plain Testimony Rom. 6 9. Christ being now ris'n from the Dead dyes no more Death shall no more domineer over him And now follows what is added to the Article The third Day The Curat must instruct the Faithful not to believ that our Lord was all those three days in the Sepulchre XVII Christ rose again the third day For because he lay in the Sepulchre a Whole Natural Day and Part of the Day before it and Part of the Day after it for this Reason it is truly said That he lay in the Sepulchre Three days and that the Third Day he arose again from the Dead Now that he might manifest his Divinity XVIII Why the third day he wou'd not put off his Resurrection till the end of the World and again that we might believ him to be truly Man and to be truly dead he did not immediately after his death revive but on the Third Day after his Death Which space of time seem'd to be sufficient to prove he was truly dead The Fathers of the first Council of Constantinople have added to this place XIX Why according to the Scriptures is added in the Creed 1 Cor. 15.14 ACCORDING TO THE SCRIPTURES Which being receiv'd from the Apostle they therefore plac'd in the Creed And that the Mystery of the Resurrection is very necessary the same Apostle has taught us in these words If Christ have not ris'n again then is our preaching vain and your Faith is vain And if Christ have not ris'n again your Faith is vain and you are yet in your sins Wherefore S. Austin admiring the Faith of this Article wrote thus De August in Ps 120. v. 4. It is no great matter to believ that Christ dyed for this do the Heathens Jews and all the wicked believ This all believ that he dy'd But the Resurrection of Christ is the Faith of Christians only This we account a great matter to believ that he rose again Hence it was that our Lord most commonly spake of his Resurrection Note and scarce ever did he talk with his Disciples about his Passion but he spake of his Resurrection When therefore he said Mat. 16.21 The Son of Man shall be deliver'd to the Gentiles and be mock'd and beat'n and spit upon and after that they have beat'n they will kill him Luc. 18.32 At last he added And the third day he shall rise again and when the Jews requir'd him to prove his Doctrin by some Sign or Miracle Luc. 11.29 he answer'd There shall no other sign be giv'n them than the sign of the Prophet Jonas for as Jonas was three Days and three Nights in the Whales Belly so he affirm'd Mat. 12.39 That the Son of Man shou'd be three Days and three Nights in the Heart of the Earth Now the better to perceiv the Force and meaning of this Article XX. Three things to be explain'd here we must know and observ three things First Why it was needful that Christ shou'd rise again Then What the Scope and End of his Resurrection was And also what Profits and Advantages redound to us thereby As to the first XXI First The necessity of Christs Resurrection Phil. 2.8 9. It was necessary for him to rise again that the Justice of God might be manifest by whom it was very meet that he shou'd be rais'd up who in obedience to him was cast down and loaded with all kinds of Disgrace This Reason the Apostle brings when he says to the Philippians He humbl'd himself and became obedient to Death ev'n the death of the Cross wherefore God has also exalted him Besides for confirmation of our Faith without which Man can attain to no Righteousness For this ought to be a main Argument That Christ was the true Son of God because by his own Power he rais'd himself from the dead and then to cherish and support our Hope For since Christ rose again we have a sure Hope that we also shall rise again for it is necessary that the Members enjoy the same state and condition with the Head For so the Apostle seems to argue when he writes both to the Corinthians and Thessalonians and Peter the Prince of the Apostles says 1 Cor. 15.12 1 Thes 4.14 1 Pet. 2.8 Bless'd be God and the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who of his great mercy has begott'n us again to a lively Hope throw the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the Dead to an Inheritance incorruptible Lastly XXII The Second The End of the Resurrection For this reason also it must be taught That the Resurrection of our Lord was necessary That the Mystery of our Salvation and Redemption might be compleated For Christ by his Death has freed us from Sin but by Rising again he has restor'd us to all those good things which we lost by our sins Wherefore the Apostle says Rom. 4.15 Christ was deliver'd to Death for our Sins and Rose again for our Justification That nothing therefore might be wanting to the Salvation and Happiness of Mankind as it behov'd him to Dy so also it did to Rise again Now from what has bin said XXIII The Third The Advantages The first we may perceiv How great advantage the Resurrection of Christ our Lord brings to the Faithful For by his very Resurrection We acknowledg him to be God Immortal and full of Glory and conqueror of the Devil which without all doubt we are to believ and confess concerning Christ Jesus Besides The Second The Resurrection of Christ has produc'd the Resurrection of our Bodies also Because it was the efficient cause of this Mystery And also because after the example of our Lord we all ought to rise again For as to the Resurrection of the Body the Apostle thus testifies 1 Cor. 15. By Man came Death by Man came also the Resurrection of the Dead For there is use of Christ's Humanity as of the efficient instrument to all those things whatsoever they are which God did in the Mystery of our Redemption Wherefore his Resurrection was a kind of Instrument to bring to pass our Resurrection And it may be call'd a Pattern because the Resurrection of Christ was of all the most perfect And as the Body of Christ rising to immortal
Glory was chang'd so our Bodies also which before were weak and mortal shall be restor'd and adorn'd with Glory and Immortality For as the Apostle teaches Phil. 3.20 21. We wait for the Savior our Lord Jesus Christ who shall change our vile Body that it shall be like to his glorious Body And this may be said concerning the Soul The Third dead in Sins to which on what score the Resurrection of Christ is offer'd as an Example or Pattern to us the same Apostle shews in these Words Rom. 6.4 As Christ rose again from the Dead by the Glory of the Father so shou'd we also walk in Newness of Life For if we have bin planted together with him in the likeness of his Death we shall be also in the likeness of his Resurrection And a little after he says knowing that Christ being ris'n from the Dead now dyes no more Death shall no more domineer over him For in that he dy'd to Sin be dy'd once but in that he lives he lives to God So reck'n ye your selves to be dead indeed to sin but alive to God in Jesus Christ Two Examples therefore we ought to seek from Christ's Resurrection The one is XXIV Two Examples from Christ's Resurrection That after we have wip'd away the stains of sin we lead a new kind of Life in which way clearly shine forth Uprightness Innocence Holiness Modesty Justice Beneficence and Humility The other is That we so persevere in that kind of life that by Gods help we fall not off from the way of Righteousness whereinto we have once enter'd Nor do the Apostles Words shew only XXV The Fourth Advantage of Christs Resurrection Rom. 6.6 That the Resurrection of Christ is propos'd to us as an Example of our Resurrection but they declare That it gives us Power to rise again and bestows Strength and Courage whereby we may continue in Holiness and Righteousness For as by his Death we not only take Example of dying to sin but draw Vertue also whereby we may dye to sin So his Resurrection brings us Strength to obtain Righteousness that thenceforth worshipping God piously and holily we may walk in Newness of 〈◊〉 to which we are ris'n For this especially did our Lord bring to pas's by his Resurrection that we who before were dead with him to sin and to the world might also with him rise again to a new way and course of life The Signs of this Resurrection XXVI The signs of Resurrection from sin Coloss 3.1 which are chiefly to be observ'd the Apostle teaches us For when he says If ye be ris'n with Christ seek those things which are above where Christ sits at the right hand of God he plainly shews That those who desire to have Life Honours Rest and Riches there Phil. 4.8 where Christ specially is are truly ris'n with Christ But when he adds Relish those things which are above not those which are on the Earth he has giv'n this as a kind of Note whereby we may perceive whether we be ris'n with Christ For as the Taste or Relish is wont to discover the Temperature and Health of the Body so if Whatsoever things are true whatsoever things are comly whatsoever things are just whatsoever things are holy do relish with a person and if he can perceive with the inward sense of his Soul the sweetness of heav'nly things this is a good Argument That he that is thus affected is ris'n with Jesus Christ to a new and spiritual Life ARTICLE VI. HE ascended into Heav'n sitteth at the right-Hand of God the Father Almighty When the Prophet David full of Gods Spirit contemplated the bless'd and glorious Ascension of our Lord I. What kind of Solemnity and Faith of Christ's Ascension there ought to be Ps 46.1.6 he exhorts all to celebrate that Triumph with the greatest joy and gladness in these Words saying Clap Hands for joy O all ye Nations sing to God with the Voice of Rejoycing God is gone up with a merry noise Whence the Curat may understand That this Mystery is to be explain'd with the greatest study and that he ought to take diligent care That the Faithful embrace it not only with Faith and with the Mind but as far as may be and with Gods help they endeavor in their Life and Actions also to express the same As to the Explication of this Sixth Article therefore II. The former part of this Article wherein chiefly is treated concerning this Divine Mystery we must begin at the former part thereof and shew what is the effect and meaning thereof For concerning Christ Jesus III. What we are here to believe the Faithful must believe this also without any wavering That the Mystery of our Redemption being now perfected he as Man with his Soul and Body went up into Heaven For as he was God he never was absent thence because he fills all things with his Divinity And let the Curat teach that he went up by his own Power First Secondly 4 Reg. 2.11.35 n 14. Thirdly Act. 8.39 and not by the Power of another as Elias did who was carry'd into Heaven in a fiery Chariot or Abaccuc the Prophet or Philip the Deacon who by the Divine Power being carry'd through the Air past through the remote parts of the Earth Nor did he ascend to Heaven only by the mighty Power of his Divinity but also as he is Man For tho this could not be by any Natural Power Fourthly yet that Power wherewith the bless'd Soul of Christ was endu'd could move his Body as he li●●ed And his Body which was now glorify'd Fifthly did readily obey the Government of his Soul moving it And in this manner Sixthly We believe that Christ as he was God and as he was Man went up into Heaven by his own Power Now follows the other part of the Article He sitteth at the right-Hand of the Father In which place we may observe a Trope IV. The use and necessi y of Trope that is the change of a Word frequent in Holy Scripture when we attribute to God Human Affections and Members suitable to our Understanding sor he being a Spirit we cannot think any thing corporeal in him But because in Human Affairs we esteem a great honour done to him who is plac'd at the Right-hand transferring the same thing to heavenly matters to the explaining of the Glory of Christ which as he is Man he has merited above all others we confess him to be at the Right-hand of the Father But to sit V. What is here meant by S●●ing in this place does not signifie the Gesture and Figure of Body but it shews the firm and sure Possession of supream Power and Glory which he has receiv'd of the Father Of which the Apostle says Arian Ser. 1 cont Arian Basil lib de Spirit s●n●t c. 6. Heb. 1.13 Raising him up from the Dead and placing him at
our Wickedness by the Blood of his only begotten Son so that he freely endur'd the Punishment which for our sins we had deserv'd and the Just was condemn'd for the Unjust the Innocent was put to a most bitter death for the Guilty Wherefore when we seriously consider with our selves 1 Pet. 1.18 19. That we were not redeem'd with corruptible things as Silver and Gold but with the precious Blood of Christ as of a Lamb without spot or blemish we shall easily conclude that nothing could possibly come to us more advantagious than this power of forgiving sins which shews the unutterable of Providence of God and his exceeding Love towards us And from this consideration it must needs be X. Mortal Sin how great an Evil. that a mighty advantage redound to us For he that offends God by any mortal Sin whatsoever Merits he before had by the Death of Christ and his Cross he straightway loses all and the Gate of Paradice which before being shut our Savior by his Passion has open'd to all he has shut again against himself Which when we remember we cannot chuse but that the consideration of Mans Misery will extreamly grieve us But if we bend our mind to this admirable Power which God has given to his Church and being confirm'd in the Faith of this Article believe that this Power is offer'd to every one so that being assisted by Gods help he may be restor'd to his former state of dignity then are we forc'd with the highest joy and gladness to exult and give immortal Thanks to God And truly if those Medicines are us'd to seem welcome and pleasant which the skilful and careful Physitian prepares for us when we are sick how much more pleasant ought those remedies to be which the Wisdom of God has appointed for the cure of our Souls and consequently for the recovery of Life and especially when they carry with them not a weak doubtful Hope of Health as those Medicines do which are apply'd to the Body but when they bring most certain Health to those who desire to be heal'd The Faithful therefore are to be admonish'd XI The Benefit of Remission of Sin diligently to be us'd after they have known the dignity of so ample and so excellent a Gift that they study religiously to convert it to their own advantage For it can hardly be that he who makes no use of a thing that is profitable and necessary can be suppos'd not to despise it and specially seeing the Lord has deliver'd to his Church this Power of forgiving sins to this end that all might use this wholsome remedy For as no one without Baptism can be expiated or cleans'd so whosoever is minded to recover the Grace of Baptism which he lost by mortal sin must necessarily betake himself to that other kind of expiation to wit the Sacrament of Penance But here the Faithful are to be warn'd XII The Easiness of obtaining Pardon not to be abus'd Aug. in Joan. Tract 33. lib. 50. Hom. 41. Amb. lib. 2. de poenit c. 1.2 11. that hearing of so large a Power of Pardon and that it is not to be limited to any term of Time not to take encouragement either to sin the more readily or to repent the more slowly For since by the one they are manifestly discover'd to be injurious to and to affront this Divine Power they are unworthy that God should bestow any Mercy upon them and by the other it is much to be fear'd lest being overtaken by Death in vain they confess the Forgiveness of Sins which by their sloth and putting off they have deservedly lost ARTICLE XI THe Resurrection of the Body That this Article has a great influence to establish the truth of our Faith I. How necessary the Belief of this Article This does abundantly evidence that it is propos'd to the Belief of the Faithful not only by the Holy Scriptures but is confirm'd by many reasons also Which since we see it not done in the other Articles of the Creed we may perceive that the Hope of our Salvation is grounded herein as on a most foundation as the Apostle argues 1 Cor. 15.14 If there be no Resurrection of the dead then is not Christ risen again but if Chrst be not risen again then is Our Preaching vain and your Faith is vain In explaining hereof therfore the Curat shall take no less pains and care than the wickedness of many has labour'd to overthrow it For that great and excellent advantages redound to the use of the Faithful by the knowledge hereof will by and by be shew'd But first of all this is to be noted II. Why the Resurrection of Men call'd the Resurrection of the Flesh That in this Article the Resurrection of Men is call'd the Resurrection of the Flesh. And this is not done without good reason For the Apostles would teach what is necessarily to be suppos'd That the Soul is immortal Wherefore lest any one might think that the Soul dy's together with the Body and that Both were to be restor'd to life again seeing that by many places of Holy Scripture it is plainly manifest that the Soul is immortal for this reason in this Article there is mention made of the Resurrection of the Flesh only And tho frequently in Holy Scripture the word Flesh signifies the whole man as in Esaias Isay 40.8 All Flesh is grass and in S. John The word was made Flesh Yet in this place the word Flesh signifies the Body that we may understand that of the Two Parts Soul and Body of which Man is made the One only to wit the Body is corrupted and returns into the Dust of the Earth out of which it was made that the Sout remains uncorrupt But then whereas none can be restor'd to Life III. The Soul not said to rise again 2 Tim. 2.14 unless he had been first dead the Soul is not properly said to rise again And there is mention made of the Flesh to confute that Heresie which during the Apostles life was Hymenaeus and Philetus's who taught that when in Holy Scripture mention was made of the Resurrection it was not to be understood of a Resurrection of the Body but of the soul whereby we rise from the death of sin to an innocent life From these words therefore it is plain that this error is taken away and the true Resurrection of the Body is confirm'd But it is the Curates Part to illustrate and clear this Truth by Examples taken out of the Old and New Testaments IV. How the Resurrection of the Flesh is to be prov'd and out of all other Church Histories For some were restor'd to life by Elilijah and Elisha in the Old Testament others besides those which Christ our Lord rais'd from death by the Holy Apostles and many others 3 Reg. 17.19 4 Reg. 4.34 which Resurrection of many confirms the Doctrine of this Article
very rapture Death shall seize us and as it were by a deep Sleep so soon as the Soul goes out it shall return in a moment for when they shall be carry'd up they shall dye that coming to the Lord at the Lords presence they may receive their Souls because with the Lord they cannot be dead And the same Opinion is approv'd by the Authority of S. Austin lib. 20. c. 20. in his Books concerning the City of God Seeing therefore it much concerns us to be throughly perswaded that this very and therefore the same Body which is each of our own tho it be corrupted and reduc'd to Ashes yet that it shall be rais'd to Life the Curate shall diligently undertake to teach this point This is the Apostles meaning when he says This corruptible must put on incorruption 1 Cor. 13.25 plainly shewing by the word This every ones own proper Body Job also has most clearly propheci'd hereof Job ●9 26 And in my flesh says he shall I see God whom I my self shall see and my Eyes shall behold and not another This very thing is gather'd from the Definition of the Resurrection Damas●n l. 4. de Fide O●●h ● 28. For the Resurrection as Damascen defines it is a Recalling back to the state from which you fell Lastly if we consider for what reason there will be a Resurrection as a little before has been shew'd 1 Cor. 5.10 we shall have no ground to doubt of this matter For therefore as we have taught will the Body be rais'd again that every one might give an account of his own works done in the Body whether Good or Evil. Man therefore must rise again with that very Body with the help whereof he has serv'd God or the Devil that with the same Body he might either receive his reward and Crown of Victory or else endure the most miserable pains and punishments Nor will the Body only rise again IX In what state the Body shall rise again S. Aug. l 22. de Civit. Dei c. 19 20 21. ●●ch c. 86 87 88 89. Hier. Ep st 59. 6● but whatsoever does belong to the Truth of its Nature and to the comliness and ornament of Man shall be restor'd Very excellent is the Testimony of S. Austin in this matter There shall then be no deformity or fault in our Bodies if any have been loaded or grown unweildy with Fat he shall not assume that Load of his Body but whatsoever exceeds the true measure thereof will be accounted supertiuous And on the contrary whatsoever either Sickness or Old Age has done in the Body shall by Christ's Divine Power be repair'd as if any have been overpin'd and made thin by Leanness baecause Christ not only has repair'd our Body but whatsover elses has been taken from us through the Miseries of this life And in another place S. Aug. En●h c. 89. Man shall not have again that Hair which he had but that which would best become him according to that The hairs of your head are all number'd which according to the Divine Wisdom shall be repair'd And first X None m●●'d after the Resurrection All the Members because they belong to the Truth of Humane Nature shall be restor'd together for those who were Blind even from their very Birth or by any Disease had lost their Sight the Lame and the Creeples and those who were impotent in any of their Members shall rise again with intire and perfect Bodies for otherwise the Desire of the Soul which is prone to conjunction with the Body would be dissatisfi'd whose desire notwithstanding in the Resurrection we believe without doubt shall be fulfill'd Besides it is sufficiently apparent that the Resurrection no less than the Creation is to be reckon'd among the Special works of God As therefore in the beginning of the Creation all things were made perfect by God so also we must affirm that it will be in the Resurrection Nor ought this to be allow'd concerning the Martyrs only XI Scars of the Martyrs wounds will remain after the Resurrection to their Glory but of the Wicked to their Msery S. Aug. lib. 22 de Civit. Dei c. 20. of whom S. Austin thus testifies They will not be without their Members for Martyrs that Dismembring which they suffer'd can be no blemish to the Body otherwise they who are Beheaded should rise again without a Head but yet in the parts of those Members shall remain the Scars of the Sword shining far above the Gold and Pretious Stones even as do the Scars of Christ's Wounds And this also is truly said of the Wicked tho their Members were cut off by their own fault for by how much the more Members they shall have with so much the more bitter Torment of Grief shall they be loaded Wherefore this restitution of Members will redound not to their Happiness but to their Calamity and Misery when their Merits will not be ascrib'd to the particular Members but to the Person to whose Body they were joyn'd For to those who have done Penance they shall be restor'd to be Rewarded but to those who neglected it to be punish'd Now if these things be seriously consider'd by the Curats they will never want Sentences and matter enough to stir up and inflame the minds of the Faithful to the study of Piety that considering the Troubles and Afflictions of this Life they may earnestly long for that blessed Glory of the Resurrection which is propos'd to the Just and Pious Now it remains that the Faithful understand XII The Body will rise again immortal in the consideration of those things which constitute or make up the substance of the Body altho that very same Body shall be rais'd from the dead which before dy'd yet the Condition thereof shall be far different For to omit other things all the Bodies at the Resurrection shall differ from themselves very much in this thing that whereas before they were subject to Death after their Resurrection to Life they shall all be Immortal without any difference of Good and Bad. And this admirable Restitution of Nature Christs famous Victory has merited XIII Whence our Bodys made immortal Esa 25.8 O●c 13.14 1 Cor. 15.26 Apoc. 21.4 Apoc. 9.4 which he got over Death as the Holy Scripture testifies for it is written He shall throw down Death headlong for ever And elsewhere O Death I will be thy death Which the Apostle explaining says In the last place The enemy Death shall be destroy'd And we read in S. John Death shall be no more For it was very fit that by Christ's merit whereby the power of Death was overthrown the Sin of Adam at the long run should be overpower'd And it was agreeable to the same Divine Justice That the Good should for ever enjoy a bless'd Life And the Bad suffering eternal Torments should seek for Death but should not find it Should wish to dye but
custom For there is no body ignorant that Children were us'd to be circumcis'd on the eighth Day Now if the Circumcision made with Hands in taking away the Body of Flesh could profit them it is evident then that Baptism which is the circumcision of Christ not made with Hands must needs profit them Lastly Fifthly Rom. 5.17 as the Apostle teaches If by the sin of One Death reign'd through One much more they that receive an abundance of Grace and of the gift of Righteousness shall reign in life through One even Jesus Christ Since therefore by the sin of Adam Children by their very birth contract hurt much more by Christ our Lord may they obtain Grace and Righteousness to reign in life which verily without Baptism can by no means come to pass Conc. Trid. Sess 5. decret de peccat origin Sess 7. de Baptis c. 12 13 14. Dionys de Eccles Hier. c. 7. Cypria Ep. 59. Aug. Ep. 28. lib. 1. de peccat merit c. 23. Chrysost Hom. de Adam Eva. Concil Mil. vit c. 2. de consec dist 4. passim Wherefore the Pastors shall teach XXXII How Children baptiz'd are to be educated That by all means Infants are to be baptiz'd and then that by little and little their tender age is to be instructed to true Devotion by the Precepts of Christian Religion For as it is excellently said of the Wiseman Train up a Youth in the way he should go and when he grows old he will not depart from it Nor is it to be doubted XXXIII After what manner Infants baptiz'd receive Faith Epist. 23. ad Bon. but when they are baptiz'd they receive the Sacraments of Faith Not that they believe with the assent of their mind but because they are establish'd in the Faith of their Parents if their Parents were Faithful but if not to use S. Austin's words they are arm'd with the Faith of the whole company or the Saints For we rightly confess that they are offer'd in Baptism by all those Saints who were pleas'd to offer them and by whose charity they are joyn'd to the communion of the Holy Ghost And the Faithful are earnestly to be admonish'd to take care that their Children be brought to the Church so soon as may be without danger XXXIV Infants to be baptiz'd as soon as may be to be baptiz'd with the Solemn Ceremonies For since there is no other way left for Infants to attain Salvation unless they are baptiz'd We may easily perceive how great a guilt they bring upon themselves who suller them to want the Grace of that Sacrament longer than necessity requires especially since by reason of the weakness and tenderness of their age they are in continual danger of their life Aug. lib. 3. de Orig. animae c. 9. lib. 1. de peccat merit c. 2. Epist 28. But then the custom of the primitive Church declares that there is a different reason for those who are of ripe Years XXXV Adult persons to be invited and prepared for Baptism and have the perfect use of Reason to wit who are born of Infidel Parents for the Christian Faith is offer'd them and with all earnestness they are to be advis'd perswaded and invited to embrace it And if they are converted to our Lord God then they must be admonish'd that they defer not the Sacrament of Baptism beyond the time prescrib'd by the Church For seeing it is written First Delay not to be converted to the Lord and put not off froam day to day they are to be taught that perfect conversion is plac'd in the new Birth by Baptism Secondly And besides by how much the later they come to Baptism by so much the longer must they want the grace and use of the other Sacraments of Christian Religion because none can be admitted to them without Baptism And then Thirdly that they are also depriv'd of that excellent benefit we receive by Baptism for the Water of Baptism not only washes off and takes away every spot or blemish of all those sins which before were commiteed But it adorns us with Divine Grace by the aid and assistance whereof we can also avoid sin for the future and secure righteousnefss and innocence in which thing consists the sum of the Christian Life as all may easily perceive Tertul lib. de Poenit c. 6. de praescript c. 41. Cypr. Epist 13. de consecrat dist 4 c. 64. 65. Aug. lib de fide operib c. 9. But tho these things are so yet the Church has not bin us'd presently or hastily to bestow this Sacrament of Baptism upon this sort of Men XXXVI Why the Church is wont to defer the Baptism of those of ripe Age. The First Reason but has decreed that it should be deferr'd for a certan time For this delay has not joyn'd with it the same danger as was noted before to impend over Infants because the purpose and resolution that they who are endu'd with the use of Reason have of receiving Baptism and their Penance for their sore-past evil life will be available for Grace and Righteousness to them if any suddain accident should happen to hinder them from being Baptiz'd But on the contrary The Second The First Advantage this delay seems to be somewhat advantagious For first because the Church ought to be very provident that none come to this Sacrament through Hypocrisie and Dissimulation the Dispositions of those who desire Baptism will be more throughly try'd and discover'd For which cause we find it decreed by antient Councils that those Jews who come to the Catholic Faith before Baptism was administr'd to them were to be for some Months amongst the Catechumens The Second and then thereby they are more perfectly instructed in the Doctrin of that Faith which they ought to profess The Third and in the Rules of Christian Life Besides there is a greater and more religious veneration given to the Sacrament if with solemn Ceremony they receive Baptism only on the appointed days of Easter and Whitsuntide But notwithstanding the Time of Baptism XXXVII When Baptism of the Adult is to be deferr'd Act. 8.38.10.48 sometimes it is not to be deferr'd for some just and necessary cause as when there seems to be a present danger of Life and especially if the persons to be baptiz'd do fully understand the Mysteries of Faith which it is manifest that Philip and the Prince of Apostles did when the One baptiz'd Queen Candace's Eunuch and the other Cornelius and that without delay and as soon as ever they profefs'd that they embrac'd the Faith Furthermore XXXVIII They who are baptiz'd ought to desire Baptism it must be taught and explain'd to the people how they that are to be baptiz'd ought to be affected First of all therefore they must of necessity be willing and resolv'd to receive Baptism For since every one in Baptism dies to sin
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
rusty with the most filthy stains of sin And now we must speak concerning the Minister of this Sacrament And that he is a Priest LXXI An ordinary Priest the lawful Minister of Confession who has the Ordinary or Delegated Power of Absolving sufficiently appears from the Ecclesiastical Laws For he must have not only the Power of Order but of Jurisdiction also that discharges this Office A clear testimony of this Ministery we have from our Lords words in S. John Joh. 20.23 Whose sins ye remit they are remitted and whose sins ye retain they are retain'd And it is manifest that this was spoken not to all but to the Apostles only to whom the Priests succeeded in this Office And this is very consentaneous for whereas every kind of Grace which is given in this Sacrament is deriv'd to the Members from Christ the Head rightly ought they to administer this to Christ's mystic Body i. e. to the Faithful who only have power of consecrating his true Body especially seeing the Faithful by this Sacrament of Penance are made fit and well dispos'd for receiving the Sacred Eucharist But with how great Religion in old times Note in the Primitive Church the Right of the ordinary Priest was preserv'd is easily gather'd from the antient Decrees of the Fathers Whereby it is provided That no Bishop or Priest shall presume to act any thing in another's Diocess or Parish either by his authority who is over him or unless a great necessity seems to compel it And it was so decreed by the Apostle when he commanded Titus Tit. 1.5 That he should appoint Priests in every City to wit who might feed and educate the Faithful with the Heavenly Food of Doctrin and of the Sacraments Altho if there be imminent danger of Death LXXII At the Point of Death every Priest is the Minister of Confession and the proper Priest cannot be had that by this occasion none might perish the Council of Trent teaches That it has bin observ'd in the Church of God that it is lawful for any Priest not only to remit all kinds of sins to whose jurisdiction soever they belong but even to absolve them from the Bond of Excommunication also Sess 14. c. 6. de Peonit Now besides the Power of Order LXXIII The Qualities of the Minister of Confession and of Jurisdiction which are very necessary It is first Necessary that the Minister of this Sacrament be indu'd both with knowledg and Learning and Prudence For he bears the Person both of a Judg and of a Physician As to the First That he be Learn'd It is evident enough that it is not a common Knowledg which is necessary and which enables him to discover sins of the divers kinds of sins to judg which are weighty which are lighter according to the Rank and quality of the Person But as he is a Physician Prudent Ex Basilio in reg br●vib q. 229. he has need of the greatest prudence also For great care must be taken that those Remedies be apply'd to the sick person which seem to be proper to heal his Soul and to strengthen it for the future against the force of the Distemper Whence the Faithful may understand Of upright Life that every one ought to take extraordinary care to choose himself a Priest whose Integrity of Life Learning and prudent Judgment may commend him Who understands well of how grat weight and Moment the Office is wherein he is plac'd and what Punishment is suitable to every offence and who are to be absolv'd and who to be bound But because there is no one who does not earnestly desire LXXIV Most strictly forbid to reveal the sins of the Penitent that his Wickedness and Shame might be hid The Faithful are to be admonish'd that there is no reason to fear lest those things which they reveal in Confession shall ever be made known to any one by the Priest or lest he may at any time fall into danger thereby For the Sacred Laws will most severely revenge it upon those Priests who shall not have conceal'd with perpetual and religious silence all sins which any one shall have confess'd to them Wherefore in the great Council of Lateran we read thus Cap. 21. Let the Priest take special heed that neither by Word or Sign or by any other way he at any time betray the sinner And now the Order of the Matter requires LXXV The Negligence of sinners reprov'd since we have spoken of the Minister that some special Heads should be explain'd which are not a little suitable to the Use and Practice of Confession For a great part of the Faithful to whom commonly nothing seems more tedious than the passing away of those days which by Ecclesiastical Law are appointed for confession are so far from Christian Perfection that scarcely do they remember those sins which are to be reveal'd to the Priest nor yet do they diligently take care of those things which it is plain have a very great Power to reconcile the Divine Grace to them Wherefore since all endeavor must be us'd to further their Salvation The Priest shall carefully observe in the Penitent LXXVI It must be well observ'd whether the Penitent be contrite whether he have a true contrition for his sins and be stedfastly resolv'd for the time to come to leave them off And if they shall observe him to be so affected LXXVII When the Penitent is found contrite what he is to be exhorted to they shall earnestly admonish and exhort him that for so great and singular a benefit he give God his greatest thanks and never cease to seek of him the protection of his Heavenly Grace Wherewith being arm'd and secur'd he may easily resist and oppose his evil lusts He is also to be taught that he suffer no day to pass without meditating somewhat of the Mysteries of the Passion of our Lord and stir up and inflame himself to imitate him and to love him with the greatest Charity for by this Meditation he will obtain this that he will feel himself every day more and more safe from all the Temptations of the Devil For neither is there any other cause why we yield both our courage and our strength so soon and so easily to be overcome by the Enemy than that we labor not by the Meditation of heavenly things to conceive the Fire of divine Love whereby our Mind might be refresh'd and supported But if the Priest shall understand LXXVIII If he seem not to be contrite what is then to be done that he that is willing to confess does not so bewail his sins as that he may truly be said to be contrite he shall endeavor to affect him with an earnest desire of Contrition that thenceforth being inflam'd with the desire of this excellent Gift he may resolve with himself to beg and beseech it of the mercy of God But first of
the Eyes of them who cannot bring themselvs to forgive their Enemies not only that the Sin is grievous but also that by the continuance of the Sin● it grows greater For whereas he XXXIII The perverseness of Hatred whose Mind is thus affected thirsts after his Enemies Bloud being full of Hope of being reveng'd on him is Night and Day so imploy'd in the continual agitation of his wicked Mind that he seems never to be quiet from the contriving of Murder or some other heinous thing whence it comes to pass that either never or with very great Labor is he driven to it either wholly to pardon or at least in some measure to remit Injuries And therefore it is rightly compar'd to a Wound Note wherein the Arrow sticks fast There are moreover many Inconveniences and Sins XXXIV The attenddants of Hatred 1 Joan. 2.11 which are chain'd as it were to this one Sin of Hatred And therefore S. John according to this Sense spake thus He that hates his Brother is in darkness and walks in darkness and knows not whither he goes because Darkness has blinded his Eyes Therefore he must needs fall oftentimes for how can it be that a man can allow the Words and Actions of him whom he hates Hence proceed rash and unjust Judgments Anger Envy Reviling and such like wherein even they also are insnar'd who are related in Kinddred or Friendship And therefore it often happens that out of one Sin Note spring a great many Nor is this wrongfully call'd the Devils Sin XXXV Hatred the Devils Sin Joh. 8. Because he was a Murderer from the beginning Wherefore our Lord Jesus Christ the Son of God when the Pharisees sought to put him to Death said That they were begotten of their Father the Devil But besides these which have been mentioned XXXVI Remedies against Hatred there are other Remedies deliver'd in the Monuments of Holy Scripture and those indeed very fit whence Reasons may be had for detestation of this Wickedness And the first and greatest Remedie of all The First is the Example of our Saviour which we ought to imitate For he tho he could not in the least be suspected to be guilty of any Sin yet when he was beaten with Rods crown'd with Thorns and at last Crucifi'd he made this Prayer so full of Piety Luc. 23.4 Father forgive them for they know not what they do The sprinkling of whose Bloud Heb. 12.24 as the Apostle testifies Speaks better than that of Abel Another Remedy propos'd by Ecclesiasticus The Second Is to remember Death and the Day of Judgment Remember Ecclus 7.40 says he thy last things and thou wilt not sin for ever The meaning whereof is as if he had said Often times consider this again and again that shortly thou must die and because at that time thou wilt have very much to do and that it will he highly necessary to obtain the infinite Mercy of God it is necessary for thee to put it now and always before thy Eyes for so it will come to pass that that unruly desire of Revenge will leave thee since for the obtaining of Gods Mercy thou canst find no Remedy fitter or greater than Forgetfulness of Injuries and to love them who have wrong'd either thee or thine in Deed or Word The Sixth COMMANDMENT of the DECALOGVE Thou shalt not commit Adultery BEcause the Bond between the Husband and Wife is the strictest I. Why this Commandment plac'd in this O●der and nothing can happen more delightful to both of them than to know that they are belov'd with a mutual and singular kind of Love and on the contrary nothing more grievous than to perceive their lawful and due Love to be bestow'd elswhere rightly and in good order does this Law concerning Whoredom and Adultery follow that which defends the Life of Man from Murder So that no one by the Wickedness of Adultery dares violate or break off the Holy and Honorable Conjunction of Matrimony wherein there is us'd to be the great Power of Love But yet in explaining of this very thing II. This Commandment to be explain'd with caution let the Curat be very cautious and prudent and handle the Matter with modest Expressions a Matter which rather wants Restriction than copious Discourse for it is to be fear'd lest while he endeavours too largly and fully to explain by what Means Men depart from the Rule of this Law they haply fall upon the Discourse of those things from whence uses to arise Matter rather of provoking Lust than the way of restraining it But because in this Commandment many things are contain'd which are not to be pretermitted III. The Division of this Commandment The first Part forbidding those things shall be explain'd in their proper places The Force of it therefore is double The One wherein Adultery is plainly forbidd'n Vide 32. q. 4. c. Meretrices Item ibid. multa alia capita Item Amb. de Abraham c. 4. Hier. contra Jovin l. 1 l. 2. item in c. 5. Epist ad Galat. ad illa verba Manifesta autem item in c. 5. ad Eph. ad haec verba Viri diligite Aug. de bono conjug c. 16. lib. 22. cont Faust c. 47.48 item in quaest Deut. q. 37. ad c. 23. iterum Amb. in Serm. de S. Joan. qui sic incip Diximus superiore Dominica est 65. item Greg. in moral lib. 12. c. 21. D. Th. 1 2. q. 100. a. 5. 2.2 q. 122. a. 6. The Other The other part requiring which requires us to keep Chastity both of Mind and Body But to begin with that which is forbidd'n IV. What Adultery is Adultery is the wrong of a Lawful Bed whether it be a Man's'own or anothers for if a Man that is an Husband has to do with a single Woman he wrongs his own Bed But if a single Man have to do with another Mans Wife the other Man's Bed is polluted with the stain of Adultery Now by this Prohibition of Adultery V. All impure Lust forbidden here as S. Ambrose and S. Austin testifie all things whatsoever are dishonest and immodest are forbidd'n Amb. lib. 1. Officior c. 50. in fine Aug. q. 71. super Exod. That these words are so to be understood VI. The Scriptures confirm this Commandment Gen. 38.24 Deut. 23.16 may be gather'd from the Sacred Scriptures of the Old and New Testament For besides Adultery there are other kinds of Lust punishd in Moses's Writings In Genesis there is the Judgment of Judah against his Daughter in Law In Deuteronomy there is that excellent Law of Moses That none of the Daughters of Israel should be Whore There is the like Exhortation of Tobias to his Son Tob. 4.13 Look to thy self my Son Ecclus 41.25 beware of all Fornication And Ecclesiasticus Be ashamd ' says he in respect of a whorish Woman And in the Gospel Christ our Lord says
this Petition aright not to satisfie our Desires for this purpose of Mind has some difficulty that we seem in a sort to hate our selves while we pray thus which those Men account no better than Folly who are wholly bent upon the Flesh But let us willingly undergo the repute of Folly for Christ's sake Note for this is his Sentence If any one will follow me let him deny himself Mat. 16.24 Luc. 9.23 Especially since we know it to be much better to pray for that which is right and just XXIV Better to wish what is good than to obtain what is unjust than to obtain that which is against Reason and the Power and Laws of God And certainly he is in a worse condition whosoever he be that attains to whatsoever he rashly and thro the impulse of his Lust desir'd than he that obtains not that thing which he excellently pray'd for Altho we do not only pray God not to grant us what we desire of our selves since it is manifest that our Desires are corrupt but also not to give us what by the perswasion and impulse of the Devil we sometimes pray for as a Good That VVish of the Prince of the Apostles seem'd very excellent Note An Example and very full of Devotion when he would have perswaded our Lord from his Purpose of proceeding to Death and yet our Lord did sharply chide him because he was led by Human Sense and not by Divine Reason VVhat could seem to have been greater Love to our Lord Another Example than to pray as those Holy Men James and John who being angry at the Samaritans who would not entertain their Master besought him to command Fire to come down from Heaven to consume those hard-hearted and cruel Men But they were reprehended by Christ our Lord in these words Ye know not what Spirit ye are of for the Son of Man came not to destroy Mens Souls but to save them Luc. ● 54 Nor ought we to pray God that his VVill may be done What ninthly only when we desire what is evil or has the shew of evil but also when indeed it is not evil as when the VVill follows that first Inclination of Nature that it desires those things which preserve Nature and rejects those things that seem contrary to it VVherefore when we are come to that Point A singular Example as to pray for any thing of that kind then let us heartily say Thy Will be done Let us imitate himself from whom we receive both our Salvation and the Direction to Salvation who when he was mov'd with a natural Fear of Torments and the Bitterness of Death yet even in that utmost Horror of Grief he submitted his own VVill to his Fathers Not my Will says he but thine be done Luc. 22.42 But Mankind is wonderfully corrupt XXV Without Grace we cannot avoid Sin who when they have us'd Force upon their Desires and have subjected their own to the VVill of God yet without God's Help by which we are protected from Evil and directed to Good we cannot escape Sin VVe must therefore have recourse to this Petition What tenthly and beg of God to perfect those things he has begun in us What eleventhly That he would suppress the insolent Motions of our Desire What twelfthly That he would make our Appetites to be obedient to our Reason What thirteenthly That he would conform us wholly to his VVill. VVe also pray What fourteenthly That the whole VVorld may receive the Knowledge of his VVill and that the Mystery of God which was hidden from all Ages and Generations may be made known and evident to all VVe pray further for the Form and Prescription of this Obedience What f f●teenthly to wit that it be directed according to that which the Blessed Angels observe in Heaven and the other Quire of Celestial Souls do keep that as they do freely and with the utmost willingness obey God so we may most chearfully obey his VVill in the exact manner as he would have us And in the VVork and Service we do for God XXVI How God must be serv'd He requires of us our utmost Love and highest Charity that tho in hope of the Reward of Heaven we have wholly devoted our selves to him yet that we so hope for it as it has pleas'd his Divine Majesty that we should enter upon that Hope VVherefore let all our Hope be resolv'd into Love towards God who has offer'd to our Love eternal Bliss For there are some who chearfully serve another XXVII Imperfect Love but yet it is for the sake of the Reward whither they refer their Love Besides Perfect Love there are some who being mov'd only with Love and Devotion regard nothing in him whom they serve but his Goodness and Vertue in consideration and admiration whereof they esteeem themselves happy that they can do him any Service And this is the meaning of that Apposition As in Heaven so in Earth For we must endeavour with our utmost Labor to be obedient to God XXVIII The manner of our Obedience Ps 102. ●1 as we say that the Blessed Souls are whose Commendations for their exact performance of Obedience David sets forth in the Psalm Bless ye the Lord all ye Powers of his ye Servants of his that do his Will VVhich XXIX The Explication of S. Cyprian if any one following S. Cyprian thus interpret it as tho by In Heaven were meant among good and devout Persons and by In Earth were meant among the Wicked and Impious VVe also approve of that Sense that by Heaven may he understood the Soul and by the Earth may be understood the Flesh that all Men and all Things may in all things obey the VVill of God This Petition does also contain a Thanksgiving XXX In this Petition there is also Thanksgiving For we reverence his most holy VVill and being fill'd with the greatest Joys we celebrate all his VVorks with the highest Praises and Gratulations certainly knowing that he does all things well For seeing it is manifest that he is God Almighty it necessarily follows that we know that all things were made at his Command and when we affirm also That he is as he is indeed the Supream Good we confess that there is none of all his Works which is not good since he imparts his Goodness to all But if we reach not the Divine Reason in all things XXXI Our Understanding to be brought into Obedience to God yet in all things the Cause of all Doubtfulness not regarded and all Distrust being laid aside we confess with the Apostle That his ways are past finding out Rom. 11.33 But for this very Reason also we very much honor Gods Will that we are dignified with his Heavenly Light For having snatcht us out of the power of Darkness he has put us in the Kingdom of the Son of his love Colos
of his to stir up both in Abraham's Seed and in many other Men the expectation of a Saviour For when once the Jewish Commonwealth and Religion became Setled This began to grow more common and known to his people For there were many things which signifi'd and many Men which foretold What and how great good things that Saviour and our Redeemer Jesus Christ was to bring us And indeed the Prophets whose Minds were illuminated with Light from Heav'n foretold the people of the Birth of the Son of God Isa 7.15 8.3.9.6.11.1.53 throughout Jer. 23.5.30.9 Dan. 7 13.9.24 and the wonderful works which he shou'd perform when he shou'd be made Man his Doctrin Manners Kindred Practice Death Resurrection and other Mysteries of him and all this they taught so plainly as tho they had bin done before their Faces So that excepting the difference of time only we cou'd not discover any diversity between the Predictions of the Prophets and the preaching of the Apostles between the Faith of the old Patriarchs and our own But now we will speak of the several parts of the Article Iesus is his proper name VII What the name Jesus signifies and by whom it was given Luc. 1.31 who is God and Man and it signifies a Saviour and this name was given him not by chance nor by the judgment or will of Men but by the counsel and command of God For so the Angel told Mary his Mother Behold thou shalt cenceiv in thy Womb and bring forth a Son and shalt call his name Jesus and afterwards he not only commanded Joseph the Husband of the Virgin to call the Child by that name but also tells the reason why he was to be so call'd For he says Joseph thou Son of David Mat. 1.21 fear not to take to thee Mary thy Wife for that which is born in her is of the Holy Ghost And likewise her Son and thou shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his people from their Sins We read in Holy Scripture of many who were of this name As the son of Nun VIII The name Jesus suitable to Christ especially who succeeded Moses and led the people whom Moses deliver'd out of Egypt into the Land of Promise which was deny'd to Moses Josedech the son of a Priest was call'd by the same name But how much more truly ought we to believ That our Saviour ought to be call'd by this name who has brought light liberty and salvation not to one People or Nation only but to all Men of all ages oppress'd not with Famine or with Egyptian or Babylonian Bondage but sittng in the shadow of Death and miserably fetterd in Sin and the chains of the Devil and has purchas'd for them a Right and Inheritance in the Kindom of Heav'n and reconcil'd them to God the Father In them we see Christ our Lord shadow'd who heaps upon mankind those Blessings here mention'd Now all those names before spoken of which by divine appointment were to be given to the Son of God are all to be referr'd to this one name Jesus For whereas all the other in some measure had only touch'd the Salvation he was to give us this one conteins the whole weight and vertue of the compleat Salvation of Mankind And to the name of Iesus IX Why the name Christ added to the name Jesus this name of Christ is also added which signifies Anointed and is a name both of Honour and Office nor is it proper to one thing but common to more For our old Fathers were us'd to call Priests and Kings whom God had commanded to be anointed for the dignity of their Office Christs The Priests were they Reg 12 3.24.6 who in their daily Prayers recommended the people to God and offer'd Sacrifice to God for them Kings had the government of the people committed to them and to them chiefly belongs the power of the Laws to protect the Innocent and to correct the boldness of the Wicked Because therefore both of these Offices seem to relate to the Majesty of God in the Earth therefore those that were chosen to the Office of King or Priest were anointed with Oyl It was customary also to anoint the Prophets who as the Interpreters and Ambassadors of the immortal God open'd to us the Secrets of Heav'n and by wholesome Precepts and foretelling things to come warn'd Men to mend their manners But when Jesus Christ our Saviour came into the World X. Christ a Prophet King and Priest he undertook the Part and Office of all these three Persons Prophet Priest and King and for these causes he is call'd Christ and anointed for the discharge of those Offices not by the act of any mortal but by the influence and vertue of his Heav'nly Father not with earthly Oyntment but with spiritual Oyl when the fulness of the Holy Spirit and Grace and a more plentiful measure of all gifts was pour'd into his most Holy Soul than the Being or Nature of any other Creature was able to receiv and this the Prophet plainly shews when speaking to the Redeemer himself he said Ps 44.7 Thou hast lov'd Righteousness and hated Iniquity therefore God even thy God has anointed thee with the Oyl of Gladness above thy Fellows The same thing but much more plainly has the Prophet Isaiah shew'd in these Words Isay 61.1 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because the Lord has sent me to preach to the meek Jesus Christ therefore was that great Prophet and Teacher XI How Christ a Prophet Priest and King who taught us the Will of God and by whose teaching the whole World has receiv'd the knowledg of our Heav'nly Father and this name does much more truly and excellently belong to him because all whatsoever that were honour'd with this name of Prophet were but his Disciples and for this cause chiefly were they sent That they shou'd prophesie of this Prophets coming to save all Men. The same Christ was a Priest not of the same Order as the Priests of the tribe of Levi under the old Law were but of that of which the Prophet David sings Ps 189 4● Heb. 5.7 Thou art a Priest for ever after the Order of Melchisedech Which Argument the Apostle writing to the Hebrews handles excellently But we acknowledg Christ to be a King also not only as he is God but as he is Man and partakes of our Nature Luc. 1.33 Of whom the Angel testifies He shall reign for ever in Jacob and of his Kingdom there shall be no end Now this Kingdom of Christ is Spiritual and Eternal XII How and by whom Christs Kingdom is govern'd begun indeed on Earth but perfected in Heav'n And by his wonderful Providence performs the Office of King of his Church He governs it he defends it from the snares and violence of its enemies he gives it not only Holiness and Righteousness but also Power and Strength to
persevere And altho both good and bad Men are within the limits of this Kingdom and consequently all Men do belong to it yet those chiefly and above the rest experience the most excellent Goodness and Bounty of our King who lead their life innocently and uprightly according to his Laws Not that this Kingdom came to him by any humane Birth-right or Inheritance tho he came of the stock of the noblest Kings But he was a King in this respect Because God bestow'd upon that Man whatsoever Power Excellency and Dignity the nature of Man was capable of To him therefore God deliver'd the government of the World and to him he subjected all things He has already begun his reign but in the day of Judgment he shall enjoy it fully and perfectly His only Son In these Words are yet higher Mysteries propos'd to the Belief and Contemplation of the Faithful concerning Jesus XIII Christ the Son of God and true God to wit that he is the Son of God and true God as the Father himself is who begat him from all Eternity We moreover do confess him to be the Second person of the Trinity and in all respects equal to the other two For there ought nothing to be no nor so much as phanci'd in the mind to be any thing unequal or unlike in the divine Persons since we acknowledg that they have only one Being one Will one Power This is plain from many Oracles of Holy Scripture but especially that Testimony of S. John does exceeding plainly shew it 1 Joh. 1.1 In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God But when we hear that Jesus is the Son of God we ought not to imagine any earthly or mortal thing of his Birth XIV The eternal Generation of Christ ineffable But we ought constantly to believ and with the greatest devotion and affection of mind to honour that Birth whereby the Father from all Eternity begat the Son which to comprehend by Reason or perfectly to understand we can by no means do it But as amaz'd at the wonderfulness of the Mystery we ought with the Prophet to say Who can declare his Generation This therefore we ought to believ Isay 53.8 That the Son is of the same Nature of the same Power and Wisdom with the Father as we confess more largely in the Nicene Creed For it says And in Jesus Christ his only begott'n Son begott'n of the Father before all Worlds God of God Light of Light very God of very God begott'n not made being of one substance with the Father by whom all things were made But of all those things which are made use of as Similitudes to shew the manner and way of his Eternal Generation XV. A similitude that seems to come neerest the matter which is taken from the Thought of our mind wherefore S. John calls the Son his Word 1 Joh. 1. For as our mind after a sort understanding it self phancies its own Image which Divines call Word so God so far as humane things may be compar'd with divine understanding himself begets his eternal Word altho it is better to contemplate what Faith proposes and with a sincere Heart to believ and confess that Jesus Christ is true God and true Man begotten indeed as God of the Father before all Ages and Generations but as Man born in time of his Mother the Virgin Mary And tho we acknowledg his Twofold Nativity XVI Christ one person the only Son of his Father yet we believ him to be but One Son For it is One Person only in whom the Divine and Humane Nature meet together And as to his Divine Generation he has no Brethren or fellow Heirs he being the only Son of his Father but we Men the Potters-Clay and the work of his Hands But if we consider his Humane Generations he not only calls many by the name of Brethren Rom. 8.17 he uses them as Brethren That they together with him may obtain the glory of his Fathers Inheritance who by Faith have accepted Christ as their Lord and do in truth shew forth their Faith which they profess in his name by works of Charity Wherefore he is call'd by the Apostle The first begott'n among many Brethren Our Lord. Many are the things which in Holy Scripture are spok'n concerning our Savior XVII Why divers Epithets given to Christ whereof some as appears plainly agree to him as he is God Others as he is Man For he has different Properties according to his different Natures We therefore truly say That Christ is Almighty Eternal Infinite and this he has from his Divine Nature Agen we say of him That he suffer'd was dead and rose again and these things no one doubts but that they are agreeable to the Nature of Men. But besides these there are some things agreeable to both Natures as in this place where we say our Lord. If therefore this name be suitable to both Natures we may well surely call him our Lord. For as he is eternal God XVIII Why Christ is called our Lord. as the Father so also is he equally Lord and Father of all things And as he is not One and the Father Another God but One and the self same God so also is not he One Lord and the Father Another Lord but both One Lord. But rightly also for many reasons as he is Man is he call'd our Lord. And first because he is our Redeemer and has deliver'd us from our sins has he rightly got this power both to be and to be call'd our Lord. For so the Apostle teaches He humbl'd himself and became obedient to death Phil. 2.7 even the death of the Cross for which reason God has highly exalted him and giv'n him a name which is above every name that at the name of Jesus every Knee should bow V. 10. of things in Heav'n and things in Earth and things under the Earth and that every Tongue shou'd confess that Jesus Christ is in the glory of God the Father And after his Resurrection he says of himself Matt. 28.18 All Power is giv'n to me in Heav'n and in Earth For this other Reason also he is call'd Lord because in this one Person the two Natures Divine and Humane are joyn'd together For by this wonderful conjunction he merited to be made our Lord and Lord of all things that were created altho he had not dy'd for us but especially of the Faithful who obey and serve him with the utmost intention of Mind What remains therefore but that the Curate for this Reason perswade his faithful people to consider That it is most just that above all men in the World we who have our very name of him and are call'd Christians and cannot be ignorant what great Benefits he has bestow'd on us and this especially that by his Grace We know all these things by Faith It is most just
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
Bliss and Glory which they waited for they were in a kind of Torment But Christ our Lord descended not to suffer any more but to free the Saints and Righteous Men from the Misery and Trouble of that Imprisonment and to bestow upon them the Fruits of his Passion That therefore he went down to Hell was no lessening of his supream Dignity and Power These things being explain'd IX Why Christ went down to Hell it must be taught that Christ our Lord went down to Hell that after he had spoil'd the Devils he might lead those Holy Fathers and other pious persons being now freed from Prison with him to Heav'n which wonderfully and gloriously he has accomplish'd For immediatly the sight of him gave transcendant Light to the Captiv's and fill'd their souls with immense joy and gladness on whom he also bestow'd that most desir'd Bliss which consists in the Vision of God which done it is manifest what it was he promis'd the Thief in these words Luc. 23.43 This day thou shalt be with me in Paradice But of this deliverance of the Godly the Prophet Osee so long before propheci'd in this manner O death I will be thy death O Hell I will be thy destruction The Prophet Zachary signifi'd the same thing when he said Thou also by the blood of thy Testament hast sent them that are bound out of the lake wherein there is no water Lastly the same thing the Apostle expresses in these words Col. 2.15 in taking the spoils of principalities and powers he made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in himself But that we may understand the force of this mystery the better X. Who are sav'd by the benefit of Christs Passion we ought often to call to remembrance that devout men not only who were born after the coming of our Lord but those who after Adam were before him or who hereafter shall be to the end of the World have and shall attain Salvation by the benefit of his Passion Wherefore before he dy'd and rose again the Gates of Heav'n were never open to any but the Souls of the Godly when they departed this life were either carry'd into Abraham's Bosome or as now it fares with them who have somewhat to be purg'd or satisfi'd were cleans'd by the fire of Purgatory There is besides XI Another Reason of Christ's going down to Hell Phil. 2.10 another Reason why Christ our Lord went down to Hell namely that he might there shew his Might and Power as he had done in Heav'n and Earth and that as every knee both of things in Heav'n and things in Earth bow'd at the name of him so also of things below and under the Earth At consideration whereof who is there who admires not and even stands not amaz'd at the immense bounty of God towards mankind who was willing not only to undergo the most bitter Death for us but also to go down to the very lowest parts of the Earth that he might carry with him the Souls so very dear to him which he thence victoriously bore away to bliss and happiness Now follows the other part of the Article XII The other Part of the Article concerning the Resurrection 2 Tim. 2.8 in explaining whereof how painful the Curat ought to be appears by those words of the Apostle Remember that the Lord Jesus Christ arose again from the dead For what he commanded Timothy it is not to be doubted but that it is also commanded to all others that have the Cure of Souls And this is the meaning of the Article After that Christ our Lord had giv'n up the Ghost on the Cross upon Friday at the ninth hour of the day and the same day at Even he was bury'd by his Disciples who by leav of Pilate the President laid the body of our Lord when they had tak'n it down from the Cross into a new Tomb in a Garden near at hand the third day after his death which was the Lords day early in the morning his soul was again join'd to his body and so he who was dead those three days arose again and return'd to life out of which he departed by death but by the word Resurrection we are not to understand only that Christ was rais'd from the dead which was a thing common to many others but that he rose again by his own power and vertue which was a singular thing and proper to Him alone For it is contrary to Nature XIV No man can naturally rise again from the dead 2 Cor. 13.4 nor was it even granted to any man to be able by his own power to rais'e himself from death to life but this belongs to the supream power of God only as we learn from those words of the Apostle Altho he was crucifi'd throw weakness yet he liv's by the power of God which seeing it was never separated from Christ's Body in the Sepulchre nor from his Soul when it went down into Hell his Divine Power was both in his Body so that it cou'd be joyn'd again to his Soul and in his Soul so that it cou'd again be brought back to his Body so that by his own power he might revive and rise again from the dead And this thing XV. The Resurrection soretold Psa 97.2 David being full of the Spirit of God foretold in these words His right hand and his Holy arm hath gott'n himself the victory And the Lord himself by the divine testimony of his own mouth has confirm'd it I lay down my life and I will take it up again Joh. 10.17 and I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it up again And also to the Jews for confirmation of his doctrin he said Joh. 2.19 Dissolve this temple and in three days I will raise it up again Which tho they indeed understood of that Temple magnificently built of Stones yet he as is declar'd in the same place by the words of Scripture Act. 1.24 spake of the Temple of his Body Now although we sometimes read in Scripture that Christ our Lord was raised by the Father this is to be understood of Christ as Man ev'n as those things again relate to himself as God whereby is signifi'd that he rose again by his own Power And this also belongs specially to Christ XVI Christ first rose from the dead Apoc. 1.5 1 Cor. 15.20 that He was the First who enjoy'd this divine benefit of the Resurrection For in Scripture he is called the First begotten among the dead and the First begotten of the dead And as the Apostle has it Christ arose again from the dead being the First-fruits of them that sleep for verily by Man came death and by Man came the Resurrection of the dead and as in Adam all dye so in Christ shall all be made alive but every one in his own order Christ the First fruits and afterwards those that are Christ's Which
whom thou hast given me should be where I am And then This also Third as a very great benefit we have obtain'd that he has drawn up our love to Heav'n and inflam'd us with his Divine Spirit For most true is that saying Mat. 6.21 There our Heart is where our Treasure is And indeed if Christ our Lord were dwelling on the Earth all our thoughts wou'd be fix'd upon the face and acquaintance of the Man and we shou'd behold him only as Man who bestow'd so great benefits upon us and we shou'd affect him only with a kind of earthly Good Will But now being gone up into Heav'n he has render'd our Love Spiritual and makes us to love and reverence him as God whom we now consider as absent And this we understand partly by the Example of the Apostles Joh. 19.7 with whom while our Lord was present they seem'd to judge of him in a manner according to Human Sense And partly it is confirm'd by the testimony of our Lord himself when he says It is expedient for you that I go away For that imperfect Love wherewith they lov'd Jesus Christ when present with them was to be perfected by Divine Love and that by the coming of the Holy Ghost Wherefore he presently adds For if I go not away the Paraclet or Comforter will not come to you To this may be added Fourth that he has inlarg'd his House Eph. 4.22 i.e. his Church in the earth which was to be govern'd by the power and guidance of the Holy Spirit and he left Peter the Prince of Apostles the chief Pastor and Prelate of the whole Church among Men and then he gave some Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists some Pastors and Teachers and so sitting at the Right Hand of his Father he always bestows divers gifts upon divers persons for the Apostle testifies Eph. 5.7 That to every one of us is giv'n grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ But lastly Fifth The Faithful are to believe the same thing also concerning Christ's Ascension which we taught before concerning the mystery of his Death and Resurrection for tho we owe our Salvation and Redemption to the Passion of Christ who by his own Merit open'd to the Just an entrance to Heav'n yet his Ascension is not only propos'd to us as an example whereby we learn to look up on high and ascend up into Heav'n in Spirit but it has giv'n us Divine Power whereby we are enabl'd to do it ARTICLE VII FRom thence he shall come to judge the quick and the Dead There are three of excellent Offices and Functions which our Lord Jesus Christ has for the adorning and illustrating of his Church I. The Three Offices of Christ Of Redemption Patronage or Defence and Judgment But whereas from the former Articles it is manifest that he has redeem'd mankind by his Passion and Death and that he has undertak'n sorever to defend and patronize our cause by his Ascension into Heav'n it remains that in this Article we declare his Judgment The reason and force of which Article is this II. What we must believe conc●●●nig the last judgment That in the last day Christ our Lord will judge all mankind For the Holy Scriptures testifie that there are Two comings of Christ The One when for our salvation he took flesh and was made Man in the Womb of the Virgin The Other when he shall come to judge all men at the end of the World This Coming of his in Holy Scripture is call'd The Day of the Lord whereof the Apostle speaks 1 Thes 5.2 The day of the Lord so comes as a Thief in the night Ma● 24.20 and our Saviour himself Ma● 23.32 But of that Day and Hour no man knows 1 Cor. 5.10 Concerning which last judgment the authority of the Apostle is sufficient We must all appear before the judgment-seat of Christ that every one may give an account of what he has done in the body whether good or evil For the Holy Scripture is full of testimonies which the Curat may find scatter'd up and down not only for proof of this matter but to lay before the eyes of the Faithful that as from the begining of the World that Day of the Lord wherein he put on Human Flesh was always much longed for of all because in that Mystery they had the hope of their deliverance plac'd So from thence forth after the Death of the Son of God and his Ascension into Heav'n we might most earnestly desire that Other Day of the Lord waiting for that bless'd Hope and the coming of the Glory of the great God But for the explication of this matter the Curat shall observe and teach that there are Two times wherein every one must needs come in presnce before the Lord and give an account of all his particular Thoughts Actions and Words and must abide the present Sentence of the Judge The First is when every one of us goes out of this life for immediately he is placed before the Judgment-seat of God and there is a most just examination made of all things whatsoever he ever did spake or thought and this is call'd The Private Judgment But The Other is when in one day and in one place All men shall stand together before the Seat of Judgment that in the sight and hearing of all men of all ages every one may know what is judg'd and decree'd concerning himse lf The very Pronouncing of which Sentence to Ungodly and Wicked men will not be the least part of their punishments and torments And on the other side the Godly and the Just will from thence receive no small Reward and Profit when it shall truly appear what kind of persons every one of them was in this life And this is call'd the General Judgment Concerning which it must needs be shew'd what the Cause is V. Why a General Judgment to come why besides the Private Judgment concerning every one in particular there will also be held another Judgment concerning all men in general For since First Cause even when men are dead they sometimes leave behind them some surviving persons to imitate them as Children to imitate Parents Dependents and Scholars who are lovers and favourers of their Examples Discourses Actions whereby it must needs come to pass that the rewards and punishments of the dead shall be increas'd and whereas this either Advantage or Calamity which belongs to so very many cannot have an end before the coming of the last day of the World It was but meet that there should be a perfect examination of this General Account of good and evil Words and Actions And this could not be done except at one General Judgment of all men And besides The Second forasmuch as the Fame of the Godly is often times unjustly wounded and the wicked commended as innocent the justice of God requir'd that the
and clearly than S. Austins Definition which all the School Doctors after him have follow'd D. Aug. lib. 10. de Civit. Dei c. 5. Ep. 2. A Sacrament says he is a sign of a Holy Thing Yet in the same sence it is said A Sacrament is a Visible Sing of an Invisible Grace instituted or appointed for our Justification Which Definition that it may be the better understood VI. The Definition of a Sacrament explain'd the Pastors shall explain the several Parts of it And first they must teach that all sensible things are of two kinds some are therefore invented that they may be Signs others are made choice of not to signifie any other thing but meerly for their own sakes Of this number may be reckon'd almost all things which are in nature But of the first sort are to be accounted the Names of things Writings Ensigns Images Trumpets and many other things of the like kind for if you take away from Words the vertue of Signifying then the Cause also why those words were made use of seems to be taken away These therefore are Signs properly so call'd For as S. Austin testifies That is a Sign Aug l. 2 de Doct. Christi c. 1. which besides the thing it offers to the Senses it causes also that by it we come to the knowledge of something else as by a Footstep which we see made upon the ground whereby we easily know that somebody whose Foot-step appears has pass'd there Which being so VII A Sacrament prov'd to be a Sign Aug de doct Christi l. 7. c. 9. Et Epist 23. de Catec rud c. 26. Tertul. de Res●●rect carnis c 8. Greg. in ● Reg. l. 6. c. 8. post i. it it is plain that a Sacrament is of that kind of things which are us'd for signication's sake For by a kind of Resemblance and Likeness it declares to us that thing which God by his Power works in our Souls which Power cannot be perceiv'd by Sense For Baptism that what is taught may be better known by an example when we are outwardly wash'd with water with the Use of Certain and Solemn words signifies this to us That by the Power of the Holy Ghost all Pollution and Filthiness of Sin is wash'd away and our Souls enrich'd and adorn'd with that excellent Heavenly Gift of Righteousness And at the same time that very Washing of the Body as shall be said in its proper place works or causes that thing in the mind which it signifies But it is also clearly gather'd from Scripture that a Sacrament is to be reckon'd among Signs For the Apostle concerning Circumcision a Sacrament of the Old Law Gen. 17.10 which was given to Abraham Gen. 17.10 the Father of the Faithful in his Epistle to the Romans writes thus Rom. 4.11 And he took the Sign of Circumcision a Seal of the Righteousness of Faith And in another place when he affirms that we all who are baptiz'd in Jesus Christ Rom. 6.3 are baptiz'd in his Death We may know that Baptism has this signification to wit as the same Apostle says Rom. 6.4 That we are bury'd with him by Baptism into Death And this will be no small profit to the Faithful to understand that the Sacraments are Signs for by this means it will come to pass that they will more easily believe those things to be Sacred and Holy which are signifi'd and contain'd in and wrought by them And knowing the Holiness of them they will be the more mov'd to worship and reverence the Divine Bounty towards us It now follows VIII How many kinds of Signs there are l. 1. de doct Christ c. 1. Natural Aug. de doct Christ l. 2. c. 1. seq to explain these words Of a Holy Thing which is the other part of the Definition which to do well must be a little further repeated what S. Austin accurately and subtily has disputed concerning the truth of Signs For some Signs are call'd Natural which beget in our minds the knowledge of some other thing besides it self and this as was before shew'd is common to all Signs as Smoak whereby presently is understood that there is Fire And this Sign for this Cause is call'd Natural because Smoak does not in the Will signifie Fire but the Use of things causes that when any one sees Smoak only he presently in his mind and thought perceives that there is also the nature and vertue of Fire underneath which as yet lies hid Now there are some Signs Appointed by Men. Aug. ibid. c. 3. which are not by Nature made Signs but invented and appointed by men for that purpose as to talk with one another and to tell freely to each other the sense of their minds and to be able to undestand each others Opinions and Counsels But how various and manifold these are may be understood by this that some of them belong to the Sight others to the Hearing and the rest to the other Senses For when we Nod to any one and for example signifie any thing by removing a Flag it is plain that that signification belongs only to the Sight As the Sound of Trumpets Pipes and Viols which is made not only for Delight but sometimes also for a Sign belongs to the judgment of the Hearing by which Sense especially are words conceiv'd which have the greatest vertue to express the inward thoughts of our mind But besides these things which we have hitherto spoken of ●●ven of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de doct 〈…〉 3. c. 9. and which are appointed by the Will and Consent of Men to be Signs there are others given of God of which yet that there is more than one kind all do agree For there are some Signs which are of God commended to men for this reason only Signi●ying onl● Ex●d 12.15 to signifie or to admonish Of which kind were the Purificatoons of the Law the Show-bread and many other things which belong to the Ceremonies of the Mosaical Worship But God appointed others Both signifying and effecting Concil Trid. Sess de Sacr. which had not only the vertue of signifying but of working also and amongst this later kind of Signs it manifestly appears that the Sacraments of the New Law are to be reckon'd for they are Signs given of God not invented by Men which we verily believe to contain in them the efficacy of that Holy Thing which they signifie But as we have shew'd that there is a very great variety of Signs so also the Holy Thing is not to be thought to be of one manner only But as to the aforesaid Definition of a Sacrament IX What the Holy Thing is which a Sacrament signifies Divines shew that by the Name Holy Thing is signifi'd the Grace of God which makes us Holy and adorns us with the Habit of all Divine Vertues for to this Grace they have deservedly thought that the proper Name Holy Thing is
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
sufficient For each of them ceases not to be a Sacrament though it were laid up in the Pyx And then in the making of the other Sacraments there is no change of the Matter and Element into another nature For the Water of Baptism or the Oyl of Chrism when those Sacraments are administer'd lose not their former nature of Water and Oyl But in the Eucharist that which was Bread and Wine before Consecration the Consecration being made is truly the substance of the Body and Blood of the Lord. Now altho there be Two Elements X. The Eucharist ●ut one Sacrament tho double in Matter to wit Bread and Wine of which the whole Sacrament of the Eucharist is made yet being taught by the Authority of the Church we confess that there is not many Sacraments but one Sacrament only Otherwise the Number of Seven Sacraments which number has always bin held and was determin'd in the Councils of Lateran Florence and Trent cannot stand For seeing the Grace of this Sacrament makes us one mystic Body that the Sacrament it self might agree to the thing it makes it must needs be but One and One too not as tho it were individual but because it has the signification of One thing For as Meat and Drink which are two different things but serve only to One purpose to wit to refresh and strengthen the Body so it is fit that those two different Species of the Sacrament should answer to them since they signifie the spiritual Meat wherewith our Souls are sustain'd and refresh'd Wherefore it is said by our Lord and Savior Joh. 6. ● My Flesh is Meat indeed and my Blood is Drink indeed Ex Conciliis citatis Lateranense generale sub Innocent II. non numerat quidem distinctè septem Sacramenta sed ex variis Canonibus satis clarè colliguntur Florent in doct de Sacram. Trid. Sess 7. can 1. But it is diligently to be explain'd what the Sacrament of the Eucharist signifies The Eucharist signifies Three things that the Faithful beholding with their Eyes the Sacred Mysteries may also at the same time feed their Souls with the Contemplation of the Divine things Now there are Three things which are shew'd in this Sacrament The First is the Passion of Christ The Passion of Christ Luc. 22.19 1 Cor 11. which is now past for he taught Do this in Commemoration of me And the Apostle testifi'd As oft as ye shall eat this Bread and drink this Chalice ye will shew the Death of the Lord till he come The second is the Divine and Heavenly Grace Divine Grace which being present in this Sacrament is given to feed and preserve the Soul For as in Baptism we are begotten to a New life Tertul. de R●sur Carnis c. 8. and in Confirmation we are strengthen'd to resist Satan and openly to profess the name of Christ so in the Sacrament of the Eucharist we are nourish'd and sustained The Third Eternal Glory which foreshews somewhat to come is that Fruit of eternal Glory and Delight which we shall receive in Heaven by the promise of God These three therefore which are plainly distinguish'd by the variety of time past present and to come are so signifi'd in Holy Mysteries that the whole Sacrament altho it consists of divers Species may be apply'd to shew any of all these as it were to the signification of one thing But first of all XI The Double Matter of the Eucharist Bread and Wine the Pastors must know the Matter of this Sacrament both that they themselves may know how to consecrate it and also that the Faithful may be admonish'd of what thing it is a Symbol and also may be inflam'd with the love and desire of that thing which it signifies The Matter therefore of this Sacrament is double The one part is Bread made of Wheat of which we will speak first of the other will be spoken afterwards For as the Evangelists Matthew Mark and Luke do teach Mat. 26.20 Mar. 14.22 Luc. 22 19. Joh. 11. Christ our Lord took Bread into his Hands Bless'd and brake it saying This is my Body And in S. John the same our Savior call'd himself Bread when he said I am the living Bread which came down from Heaven Vide de Consecr dist 2. c. 1 2. 55. ubi habes de hac materia decret Alexand. Pap. in 1. Epist ad omnes Orthodoxos Cypr. lib. 2. Epist 3. Ambr. l. 4. de Sacram. l. 4. vide etiam Iren. l. 4. c. 34. l. 5. c. 2. Now since there are divers kinds of Bread XII Wheaten Bread the true Matter of the Eucharist D. Tho. 3. p. q. 74. a. 3. either because it is made of different matter as when some is made of Wheat some of Barley and some of Peas and other Fruits of the Earth or because it has different Qualities for some is leven'd and some is unleven'd As to the first our Saviors words shew that the Bread ought to be made of Wheat for by a common custom of speaking when Bread is absolutely nam'd it is plain enough that Wheaten-Bread is meant And this is declar'd by a Figure of the Old Testament Levit. 24.5 for the Lord commanded that the Loaves of Shew-Bread which signifi'd this Sacrament should be made of the like Matter Now as no Bread but Wheaten Bread can be thought fit to be Matter for this Sacrament XIII Unleven'd Bread the Matter of the Eucharist Ma. 26.17 Mar 14.12 Luc. 22.7 for so the Tradition of the Apostles teaches us and the authority of the Catholic Church has confirm'd so also it may easily be gather'd from what our Lord Christ did that it ought to be Vnleven'd For on the first day of Vnleven'd bread when it was unlawful for the Jews to have in their Houses any leven'd Bread he made and instituted this Sacrament Vide lib. 3. decretal tit de celebrat Missarum c. ul● ubi habes Auctoritatem Honorii Papae 3. But if any one hereto oppose the Authority of John the Evangelist XIV An Objection answer'd who says that all these things were done before the day of the Passover that reason may be easily solv'd For that day which the other Evangelists call the first day of unleven'd Bread because on the fifth day of the week at Evening the feast days of unleven'd Bread began at which time our Savior celebrated the Passover John 13.1 that same day S. John calls the day before the Passover as judging the space of a natural day which is begun at Sun-rising was chiefly to be observ'd Wherefore S. Chrysostom also In Mat. hom 38. interprets the first day of Vnleven'd Bread to be that day whereon at Evening Vnleven'd Bread was to be eaten But how suitable the Consecration of Vnleven'd Bread is to that Integrity and Cleanness of the Soul which the Faithful ought to bring to this Sacrament we are taught by
Christ our Lord the same has bin always us'd in the Catholic Church We might here forbear the Testimonies of the Holy Fathers By Fathers and Councils which to reckon up would be endless and the Decree of the Council of Florence which is open and ready for all to see especially since by those words of our Savior Do this in commemoration of me we plainly see the same thing In Decret de Sacram. Item Trid. Sess 13. cap. 1. For what the Lord commanded to be done Note ought to be referr'd not only to what he did but also to what he said And we must know that indeed it chiefly belongs to the Words which were utter'd no less for the sake of Effecting than for the sake of Signifying As to the Fathers see Amb. lib. 4. de Sacram. c. 4. 5. Chrys hom de Prodit Judae Aug lib. 3. de Trinit c. 4. Iren. lib. 4. cont Haer. c. 34. Orig. lib. 8. cont Celsum Hesich lib. 6. in Levit. c. 22. Cyril Alex. Epist. ad Calosorum Episcop Tertul. lib. 4. contr Marc. in Hier. Epist. 1. But this may easily be perswaded by Reason By Reason For the Form is that whereby is signifi'd that thing which is wrought in this Sacrament Now when these words signifie and declare that thing which is done i. e. the conversion of the Bread into the true Body of our Lord it follows that the Form is to be put in those very Words in which meaning we may take that which is written by the Evangelist He Blessed Mat. 26. For he seems to mean as if he had said Taking Bread he Blessed it saying This is my Body For tho the Evangelist plac'd these words Take and Eat before Note yet it is plain that thereby is signifi'd not the Consecration of the Matter but the Vse only Wherefore they ought indeed by all means to be pronounc'd by the Priest but to the making the Sacrament they are not necessary As also that Conjunction For is pronounc'd in the Consecration of the Body and Blood Note for otherwise it would come to pass that if this Sacrament were to be administer'd to no body it ought not or cannot be done Whereas there can be no doubt but the Priest pronouncing the words of our Lord after the manner and appointment of Holy Church doth truly consecrate the proper matter of Bread altho it may then chance that the Holy Eucharist be not administer'd to any body at all And now as to the Consecration of the Wine XXI The Form of the Eucharist as to the Win● defin'd and prov'd Decretal lib. 3. de celeb Miss c. 6. which is the other Matter of this Sacrament for the same reason before mention'd there is need that the Priest rightly know and understand the Form That therefore we must certainly believe is comprehended in these words This is the Chalice of my Blood of the New and Eternal Testament the Mystery of Faith which shall be shed for you and for many for the remission of sins ● Of which words there are many gather'd from Sacred Scripture By Scripture Luc. 22.20 1 Cor. 11.25 Mat. 26.28 But some have bin preserv'd in the Church by Apostolical Tradition For that which is said This is the Chalice is written by S. Luke and by the Apostle But that which follows Of my Blood or my Blood of the New Testament which shall be shed for you and for many for the Remission of sins was partly said by S. Luke and partly by S. Matthew But those words Of the Eternal and Mystery of Faith Holy Tradition By Tradition the interpreter and keeper of Catholic Unity has taught us But of this Form no one can doubt And Reason if he mind in this place also what was said before of the Form of Consecration which is us'd over the Element of Bread For it is manifest that by these words which signifie the substance of the Wine to be converted into the Blood of our Lord the Form of this Element is chang'd Wherefore since those words plainly declare this thing it is plain that there is no other Form to be made But they express besides XXII Three Effects of Christ's Blood certain admirable Fruits of Christ's blood shed in his Passion which specially belong to this Sacrament One is an Entrance to the Eternal Inheritance which comes to us by right of the New and Eternal Testament Another is an Entrance to Righteousness by the Mystery of Faith For God has offer'd Jesus through Faith in his Blood to be our Reconciler that he might be just and the justifier of him who is of the Faith of Jesus Christ The Third is the Forgiveness of Sins But because these very words of Consecration are full of Mysteries XXIII The words of the Consecration of the Wine explain'd Decretal lib. 3. de celeb Miss c. 6. and are very suitable to the matter we must consider them more carefully Now that it is said This is the Chalice of my Blood it must be thus understood This is my Blood which is contain'd in the Chalice Rightly therefore and very fitly here whilst the Blood as it is the Drink of the Faithful is consecrated there is mention to be made of the Chalice or Cup For neither would Blood seem to signifie sufficiently this kind of drink unless it were in some Vessels It then follows Of the New Testament which for this reason is added that we may understand that the Blood of Christ our Lord is not now given to Men in a Figure as it was done in the Old Testament for we read in the Epistle to the Hebrews Without Blood a Testament is not dedicated Heb. 9.16 but really and truly which properly belongs to the New Testament Wherefore the Apostle says Therefore Christ is the Mediator of the New Testament that by means of Death those who are call'd might receive the promise of eternal inheritance But the Word Eternal is to be referr'd to the eternal inheritance which of right comes to us by the death of Christ our Lord the eternal Testator That whit follows The Mystery of Faith excludes not the Truth of the thing but that which lies close hid and farthest off from the sight signifies that it is to be believ'd with a steady Faith But these words in this place have another meaning than they have when they are attributed to Baptism sor it is call'd the mystery of Faith because by Faith we perceive Christ's Blood hid under the Species of Wine But we properly call Baptism the Sacrament of Faith as the Greeks call it the Mystery of Faith because it contains the whole profession of Christian Faith Altho for another reason also we call the Blood of our Lord the Mysterie of Faith to wit because therein especially human reason finds much difficulty and labor when Faith offers to us to believe that the Son of God both God and Man suffer'd Death for us which
Death is indeed signifi'd in the Sacrament of the Blood Wherefore fitly in this place rather than in the Consecration of the Body is the Passion of the Lord commemorated in these words Which shall be shed for the remission of Sins For the Blood being separately consecrated by it self with relation to the Passion of the Lord has greater force and power to lay before the eyes of all Mat. 26.28 Luc. 22.20 both the Death and kind of suffering But those words which are added For you and for many are taken severally from S. Matthew and S. Luke which notwithstanding Holy Church taught by the Spirit of God has join'd together but they belong to the fruit of the Passion and shew the profitableness thereof For if we look at the vertue of it it must be confess'd that our Savior shed his Blood for the salvation of all men But if we look at the fruit which men gather from thence we may easily understand that it comes not to all to advantage but only to some When therefore he said For you he signifi'd either them that were then present or those whom he had chosen out of the Jewish people such as were his Disciples except Judas with whom he spake But when he added For many he would have the rest that were elected either Jews or Gentiles to be understood Rightly therefore was it done that it was not said for all seeing that in this place the design of the discourse extends only to the fruits of the Passion which brought the Fruit of Salvation only to the Elect. And hither do belong those words of the Apostle Christ was once offer'd to take away the sins of many Heb. 9. and that which our Lord himself said in S. John I pray for them I pray not for the World Joh. 17.8 but for those whom thou hast given me because they are thine There are many other Mysteries wrapp'd up in these words of the Consecration which the Pastors by the daily meditation and study of Divine Matters and God assisting them may easily discover But now to return to the explication of those things which the Faithful must by no means be ignorant of And because the Apostle admonishes XXIV We must judge of the Eucharist by Faith not by Sense 1 Cor. 11.29 that they are guilty of a most heinous sin who difference not the Lords Body let the Pastors chiefly teach that the Mind and Reason is here to be call'd off from sense For if the Faithful perswade themselves that those things only are contain'd in this Sacrament which are perceiv'd by the senses they must needs be led into the greatest impiety when with their Eyes their Feeling their Smell their Taste perceiving nothing at all but the Species of Bread and Wine they will judge that there is only Bread and Wine in the Sacrament There must be care tak'n therefore that as much as may be the minds of the Faithful may be abstracted or withdrawn from the judgment of sense and stirr'd up to contemplate the immense Power and Vertue of God Now there are three wonderful and stupendious things XXV Three things done in the Eucharist by Consecration which in this Sacrament Holy Church without all doubt believes and confesses to be wrought by the words of Consecration The First is The First That the true Body of Christ that very same which was born of the Virgin and now sits in Heaven at the Right-hand of the Father is contain'd in this Sacrament See Dionys de Eccl. Hierarch c. 3. Ignat. Epist ad Smyr Just Apol. 2. Iren. lib. 4. c. 34. l. 5. c. 2. Trid. Sess 13. c. 1. de Euch. The Second is that no substance of the Elements remains in it The Second Altho nothing seems more strange and distant to the senses Cyp. de coena Domini Euseb Emiss hom 5. de Pasch Cyr. Hier. Catech. 1 3 4. Ambr. l. 4. de Sacra c. 4. Chrysost hom 83. in Matt. 60. ad Pop. Antioch The Third The Third which is easily gather'd from both the former tho the words of Consecration fully express it is that what is beheld by the Eyes or perceiv'd by the other Senses is in a wonderful and unspeakable manner without any subject matter And one may see indeed all the Accidents of Bread and Wine which yet are inherent in no substance but they consist of themselves because the Substance of the Bread and Wine is so chang'd into the Body and Blood of the Lord that the substance of the Bread and Wine altogether ceases But that the first may be first handl'd XXVI The true Body of Christ prov'd to be in the Eucharist Mat. 26.26 Mar. 14.20 Luc. 22.19 Let the Pastors endeavor to shew how plain and clear the Words of our Savior are which shew the Truth of Christ's Body in the Sacrament for when he says This is my Body This is my Blood There is no one in his right mind can be ignorant what we are to understand Especially seeing the design of the discourse is concerning the human Nature which the Catholic Faith suffers none to doubt that Christ truly had As that very holy and learn'd Man Hilarius has written concerning the Truth of Christ's Flesh and Blood S. Hilar. l. 8. de Trinit super illa verba velut unum 1 Cor. 11.28 when according to the very profession of our Lord and our Faith his Flesh is truly our Food that there is no room left us to doubt thereof But there is another point to be open'd by the Pastors whence it may plainly be known that the true Body and Blood of the Lord is contain'd in the Eucharist For after that the Apostle had remember'd That the Bread and Wine was consecrated by our Lord and the Sacred Mysteries administer'd to his Apostles he subjoyns But let a Man prove himself and so let him eat of that Bread and Drink of that Chalice for he that eats and drinks unworthily eats and drinks judgment to himself not differencing the Lords Body But if as Heretics say that nothing else were to be venerated in the Sacrament besides the memory and sign of Christ's Passion what need was there that the Faithful should be exhorted with such weighty words to prove themselves For by that weighty word Judgment the Apostle has declar'd that some horrid wickedness is committed by him who impurely taking the Lords Body which lies hid in the Eucharist does not difference it from other kinds of Meat Which also before in the same Epistle he more fully explain'd in these words 1 Cor. 11.26 The Chalice of Blessing which we bless is it not the Communication of the Blood of Christ and the Bread which we break is it not the participation of the Lords Body Which words verily shew the true substance of the Body and Blood of Christ our Lord. These places of Scripture therefore shall be explain'd by the Pastors
spoken concerning those things which somewhat displease which before pleas'd without any Consideration whether they be Good or Bad So all repent whose sorrow is according to the World 1 Cor. 7.10 and not according to God Such kind of Penance brings not Salvation but Death Another Penance is when any one for the sin he has committed The Second which yet before delighted him conceives Grief not for Gods but for his own sake The Third is The Third when not only for the sake of the sin committed we grieve with an inward sense of the Soul or shew some outward token also of that grief but are in that grief for God's sake only And indeed to all these kinds of Penitence the word Penance properly agrees For when we read in Holy Scripture that God did penance III. How God does Penance it is evident that that is done by translation For the Holy Scriptures use that kind of speech which is accommodated to the manners of Men when they declare that God had determin'd to alter any thing Gen. 6.6 which he may seem to do no otherwise than Men 1 Reg. 15.11 whom if they repent of any thing labor with their utmost endeavors to change or alter it Psal 105.45 It is thus written therefore Jer. 26.3 That it repented him that he made man And in another place that he had made Saul King But among these significations of Penance IV. The true Acceptation of Penance we ought to observe a great difference For the first is to be accounted vicious The second is a kind of Commotion and Affection of a disturb'd mind The third we say is both vertuous and also a Sacrament which signification is proper in this place And first we will treat of it as it is a Vertue V. Why we begin with Penance as it is a Vertue Not only because the Faithful ought to be instructed by the Pastors to every kind of Vertue but also because the actions of this Vertue do as it were afford matter wherein the Sacrament of Penance is imploy'd and unless it be rightly understood first what the Vertue of Penance is it must needs be that the Force of the Sacrament cannot be known Wherefore in the first place VI. Penance internal and external the Faithful are to be admonish'd and exhorted to labor with all earnestness and study for the inward Penance of the Soul without which that which is perform'd outwardly will profit them but very little Vide Amb. in serm de poenit citatur de poenit dist 3. c. poenitentia Aug. lib. de vera falsa poenit c. 8. habetur de poenit 3. c. 4. Greg. hom 34. in Evang. lib. 9. Regist. Epist. 39. But the inward Penance is this VII What internal Penance is When from our very Soul we turn to God and detest and hate the wickedness committed by us and also stedfastly purpose and resolve with our selves to amend the evil custom and naughty manners of our life not without Hope of obtaining Pardon of Gods Mercy Now after this there follows as the companion thereof Grief and Sorrow which is a Disturbance and Affliction and by many is call'd a Passion joyn'd with the Detestation of sin Wherefore according to many of the Holy Fathers the Definition of this kind of Penance is declar'd in the grief of the Soul But in him that does Penance VIII How Faith belongs to Penance it is necessary that Faith go before Penance For neither can any one turn himself to God that wants Faith whence it comes to pass that Faith can by no means be call'd a Part of Penance Vide Trid. Sess 14. de poenit c. 3. can 4. But that this inward Penance IX Penance is a Vertue as before was said belongs to Vertue many Rules or Precepts which have bin deliver'd concerning Penance plainly shew For the Law gives Rule concerning those things only which are begun with Vertue Besides no one can deny but that to grieve when how and so far as one ought belongs to Vertue but the Vertue of Penance performs this For sometimes it comes to pass that Men grieve less for their sins Prov. 2.4 than is meet as Solomon says There are some that rejoyce when they have done ill And again there are some that so give themselves over to grief and disorder of mind that they even altogether despair of their Salvation Such a one Cain perhaps may seem to be who said Gen. 4.13 My iniquity is greater than that I can obtain pardon for And such a one haply was Judas Matt. 3.27 who being led by Penance and hanging himself lost both Life and Soul That therefore we may keep a measure in sorrow we are holpen by the Vertue of Penance But the same may be gather'd from these things X. The Motives of the Vertue of Penance which he proposes to himself as his End who truly does Penance for his sins The First is The First That he purposes to abolish sin and to wipe away every fault and spot of the Soul The Second is The Second That he make satisfaction to God for the sins he has committed and that this is to be referr'd to Justice is evident For tho betwixt God and Men there can be no proper Measure of Justice since there is so great a distance betwixt them yet it is manifesf there may be some kind of Justice such as is betwixt a Father and his Children betwixt a Lord and his Servants The Third is The Third That a Man return into the Grace of God into whose displeasure and hatred he has run by reason of the Filthiness of sin Now all these things sufficiently declare that Penance has relation to Vertue But it must be taught also by what degrees we may ascend to this divine Vertue First XI Five Degrees of Penance The First Thren 3.1 The Second Heb. 11.6 therefore the Mercy of God prevents us and converts our Hearts to him Which when the Prophet Pray'd for he said Convert us O Lord and we shall be converted And then being enlighten'd with this Light we tend towards God in Soul by Faith For he that comes to God as the Apostle testifies must believe that He is and that he is a Rewarder of them that seek him Then follows the Motion of Fear The Third and the Bitterness of Punishment being propos'd the Soul is call'd back from sin and hither those words of Isayah seem to have regard Isa 26.17 As a Woman which has conceiv'd when she draws near to her travel grievously laments So are we fall'n in her Pains And then comes Hope of obtaining Mercy from God The Fourth wherewith being encourag'd we resolve to amend our Life and Manners Lastly The Fifth our Hearts are kindled with Charity whence that liberal Fear worthy honest and ingenuous Children arises And so fearing this one
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
ad Heliod Chrysost lib. 3. de Sacerd. Hom. 5. de verbis Isaiae Gregor Hom. 26. in Evang. Amb. lib. 2. de Cain c. 4. Trid. Sess 14. de Poenit. c. 5. Can. 7. The Pastors therefore shall teach these things which have bin decreed by the Holy Synod of Trent LV. The Confirmation of what was said before and always deliver'd by the Catholic Church For if we attentively read the most Holy Fathers we shall every where meet with most plain testimonies whereby it will be confirm'd that this Sacrament and the Law of Sacramental Confession which they call'd in Greek Exomologesis and Exagoreusis as receiv'd from the very Gospel was instituted by Christ our Lord. But if we desire Figures of the Old Testament also without doubt those various kinds of Sacrifices which were made by the Priests for the expiating of divers kinds of sins do seem to belong to the Confession of sins But because the Faithful are to be taught that Confession was instituted by our Lord and Savior LVI Ceremonies us'd at Confession It is fit that there should be also some Rites and solemn Ceremonies added by the Authority of the Church to admonish them which tho they belong not to the vertue of the Sacrament yet they put more plainly before mens Eyes the dignity thereof and dispose the Souls of them that Confess being already kindl'd with devotion the more easily to obtain the Grace of God For when with uncover'd Head cast down at the Priests feet with countenance down towards the Earth and hands stretch'd forth in a beseeching posture and giving other such like signs of Christian Humility which are not indeed necessary to the Reason or Vertue of the Sacrament we confess our sins from these things we may evidently understand both that there is a Heavenly Vertue in the Sacrament and also that the divine Mercy is to be sought and procur'd by us with the greatest study And now let no one think that Confession was indeed instituted of the Lord LVII The Necessity of Confession but yet so as tho he had not told us that the Use of it is necessary For let the Faithful be assur'd of this that he who is opprest by any Mortal Sin ought to be call'd back to Spiritual Life by the Sacrament of Confession Which thing indeed by a very fair Tradition from our Lord we see plainly signifi'd when he call'd the Power of administring this Sacrament the Key of the Kingdom of Heaven For as no one can go in to any place Mat. 16.19 without the help of him to whom are committed the Keys so we understand that no one is admitted into Heaven except the Doors are open'd them by the Priests to whose Trust the Lord has committed the Keys Otherwise there will plainly seem to be no Use at all of the Keys in the Church and in vain will he to whom the power of the Keys is given prohibit any one the entrance of Heaven if notwithstanding some other way to enter in there may be open'd Now this was excellently observ'd by S. Austin when he said Lib. 50. hom 49. Let no one say to himself I do Penance secretly before God God knows who pardons me what I do in my Heart Mat. 18. Is it therefore without reason said What ye loose on Earth shall be loos'd in Heaven Were the Keys therefore without cause given to the Church of God And to the same sense S. Ambrose in the Book he has left written concerning Penance where he would root up the Heresie of the Novatians Lib. 1. de Poenit. c. 12. who asserted that the Power of forgiving sins was reserv'd to the Lord alone And who says he reverence God more those that obey or those that resist his Commandments God has commanded us to obey his Ministers whom when we obey we give honor to God only But seeing it cannot be doubted LVIII At what Age we are bound to confess that the Law of Confession was made and establish'd by the Lord himself it remains that we see at what time of Age and Years men ought to obey it First therefore by the Canon of the Council of Lateran Lateran Concil c. 21. whose beginning is Omnis Vtriusque sexûs it is evident that no body is bound by the Law of Confession before that Age wherein he may have the Use of Reason Nor yet is that Age by any certain number of years defin'd But this seems to be held in general that Confession ought to be enjoyn'd to a Child from the time when he has the power of discerning betwixt Good and Evil and when his mind is capable of sorrow For when any one comes to that time of his Life when he can consider of his eternal Salvation then ought he to begin to confess his sins to a Priest when otherwise no one can hope for Salvation who is loaded with the Conscience of wickedness But at what time especially Confession ought to be made LIX At what time Confession must be made Holy Church has decreed in that Canon before mentioned For it commands all the Faithful to confess their sins at least once a year But if we consider what the Reason of our Salvation requires verily as often as the danger of Death hangs over us or that we set about any thing the doing whereof does not suit with a person polluted with sin as when we administer or receive the Sacraments so often Confession is not to be pretermitted And the same thing we ought strictly to observe when we fear or are likely to forget any sin we have done Neither can we confess sins which we remember not Neither can we get Pardon of God for those sins unless the Sacrament of Penance by Confession blot them out But because in Confession LX. Confession only to be intire many things are to be observ'd whereof some belong to the Nature of the Sacrament and others are not so necessary concerning these things it must be carefully treat'd For neither are there Books and Commentaries wanting from whence it is easie to fetch the Explication of these things But first of all let the Curats teach this that in Confession there must be care taken that it be intire and absolute For all Mortal sins must be reveal'd to a Priest LXI All Mortal sins altho hid must be confess'd For Venial Sins which do not pluck us away from the Grace of God altho rightly and profitably we confess them as the practice of devout men shews yet they may be pretermitted without Fault and may be expiated many other ways But deadly sins as was said before must be reckon'd up altho they were done never so secretly and undiscover'd and were of that sort which are forbid in the Two last Heads of the Decalogue For it often happens that they wound the Soul more than those which men are use to commit plainly and openly For so it has bin
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.
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
Extream-Unction is to be receiv'd that nothing may hinder the Grace of this Sacrament and yet that nothing is more contrary to it than the Conscience of any mortal sin the perpetual Practice of the Church Catholic is to be observ'd That before Extream-Unction the Sacraments of Penance and of the Eucharist are to be administer'd And then let the Curats endeavor to perswade the Sick Person to yield the same Faith to the Priests anointing him as those of old times were us'd to give when they were to be heal'd by the Apostles But first of all XXIV The intention of him that desires Extream-Unction the Health or Salvation of the Soul is to be pray'd for and then the Recovery of the Body with this Adjunct if it may be for his Eternal Glory Nor ought the Faithful to doubt XXV This Sacrament to be receiv'd with very great Trust but that those Holy and Solemn Prayers are heard of God which the Priest not bearing his own but the Person of the Church and of our Lord Jesus Christ uses Who in one thing especially are to be exhorted That they will take care Holily and Religiously to administer this Sacrament of the Oyl of Health and Salvation when a sharper Fight seems to begin and the strength both of Soul and Body seems to decay And now who the Minister of Extream-Unction is XXVI A Priest the Minister of this Sacrament we have learn'd of the same Apostle who has publish'd the Law of our Lord For he says Let him call for the Elders By which name he means not those who are elder in Age as by the Synod of Trent has wisely bin expounded or those who have chief place among the People but the Priests who are rightly ordain'd by the Bishops by the Imposition of Hands Ja. 5.14 Sess 14. c. 3. To the Priest therefore the Administration of this Sacrament is committed Nor yet XXVII Of whom this Sacrament to be receiv'd according to the Decree of Holy Church is this power giv'n to every Priest but to the proper Pastor who has Jurisdiction or to some other to whom he has given the Power to discharge his Office But this is specially to be observ'd Note that the Priest in this Administration as it is in the other Sacraments also carries the Person of Christ and of the Holy Church his Spouse The Advantages also of this Sacrament are diligently to be explain'd XXVIII The Fruit of this Sacrament That if nothing els would draw the people to the use thereof they may be led by the very advantage of it seeing it is so order'd as that we may turn almost all things to our own profit The Pastors therefore shall teach The First that in this Sacrament Grace is given which forgives sins and specially the Lesser and as they are commonly call'd Venial For Deadly Sins are taken away by the Sacrament of Penance For neither was this primarily instituted for the Remission of Greater Sins but Baptism only and Penance effect This. There is another Advantage of Sacred Unction The Second that it frees the Soul from Sickness and Infirmity which it has contracted by Sin and from all the other Relics of Sin But that time is to be thought most seasonable for this Cure when we are afflicted with any grievous Sickness and our Life is in danger For it is natural to Man to fear nothing in the World so much as Death Now the Remembrance of former sins very much increases this Fear especially when the Conscience most sharply accuses For as it is written Sap. 4.21 The Fearful shall come into the Consideration of their Sins and their Iniquities shall stand up against them And then the Care and Thought grievously presses them that shortly after they must stand before the Tribunal of God from whom we must receive a most just Sentence according as we have deserv'd But it often happens that the Faithful being strick'n with this Fear feel themselves wonderfully puzzl'd But there is nothing conduces more to the Tranquility of Death The Third than to cast away sorrow and cheerfully to wait for the Lords coming and to be ready willingly to restore what he has intrusted us with whensoever he pleases to call for it from us That therefore the Minds of the Faithful be freed from this Trouble and that the Soul be fill'd with a pious and Holy Joy The Sacrament of Extream-Unction brings to pass Besides The Fourth from hence we get another which may well seem the greatest of all For tho the Enemy of Mankind never ceases as long as we live to endeavor our Ruin and Destruction yet that he might destroy us and if he could possibly bring it about that he might take from us all Hope of God's Mercy he never uses his utmost might and main more violently than when he perceives we draw towards our End Wherefore there is Strength and Weapons minister'd to the Faithful in this Sacrament wherewith they may break the Force and Violence of the Adversary and stoutly fight against him For the Soul of the Sick is eas'd and encourag'd with the Hope of Gods Goodness and being confirm'd therewith she lightly endures all Inconveniencies and more easily escapes the Wiles and Subtilties of the Devil endeavouring treacherously to insnare her Lastly The Fifth follows Health of Body also if it be good for him But if at such Time XXIX Why this Sacrament not so effectual as ir might be the Sick Recover not their Health this comes not by the Fault of the Sacrament but it must be believ'd to come to pass for this Reason because in a great part The Faith either of those who are anointed with Sacred Oyl or of those by whom it is administer'd is weak For the Evangelist testifies Mat. 13.38 That the Lord did not do many mighty works among his own Countrymen because of their Vnbelief Altho it may truly be said That Christian Religion by how much the deeper it has taken Root in the Souls of Men does stand in less need of the proof of such Miracles as these than formerly in the Infancy of the Church it seem'd to do But yet our Faith is here to be excited For XXX The Faith and Hope of the Sick to be incourag'd Howsoever by the Will and Counsel of God it shall happen to the Health of the Body yet the Faithful ought to be strengthen'd with an assur'd Hope that by vertue of the Sacred Oyl they shall get Spiritual Health and that it shall be that if it chance that they go out of this Life they shall have the benefit of that excellent Word Apoc. 14.13 Blessed are the Dead which dye in the Lord. Thus much has bin spoken briefly concerning the Sacrament of Extream Unction But if these Heads of Matters be more largely explain'd by the Pastors and with the diligence as becomes them it is not to be doubted but the
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
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
unlucky XIII To bear false Witness is injurious even to the person that gives it that he is known to him whom by his Oath he did help and assist to be false and perjur'd and which evil succeeds to him of Sentence he daily takes a greater Practice and Custom of Lewdness and Impudence As therefore the Vanities XIV The lies of Lawyers forbidd'n Lies and Perjuries of Witnesses so also of Accusers of the Guilty of Patrons Kinsfolks Proctors and Advocates and even of all that are concern'd in Judgment are forbidd'n Lastly XV. To Witness a Falshood every where forbidd'n Levit. 19.11 God forbids all Testimony not only in Judgment but out of Judgment that may bring any wrong or hurt to another For in Leviticus where these Commandments are repeated we read thus Ye shall not steal ye shall not lye neither shall any one deceive his Neighbor So that no one can doubt but that every Lye is rejected of God and condemn'd in this Commandment VVhich thing David very plainly testifies in this manner Psal 5.7 Thou shalt destroy all them that speak lies Now by this Commandment is forbidd'n XVI The vice of Detraction detestable not only false Testimony but even the hateful Will and practice of speaking ill or another from which Plague it is incredible how many and how grievous Inconveniences and Evils do spring This Vice of Reviling and disparaging another secretly the Holy Scripture in many places reproves I did not so much as eat with such a One Psal 100.5 says David And S. James Jac. 4.11 Speak not evil one of another my Brethren But the Sacred Scriptures do not only afford us Precepts An Example Hester 13. but Examples also whereby the greatness of this Sin is shewn for Aman by forg'd Crimes had so incens'd Assuerus against the Jews that he commanded all that Nation to be kill'd Sacred History is full of Examples of this kind by remembrance whereof the Priests shall endeavour to deter the Faithful from the foulness of this thing But that the greatness of this Sin XVII Who are Detractors whereby anothers Credit is injur'd may evidently appear We must know that Mens Reputation is hurt First not only by Calumny or Slander But by increasing and amplifying their Faults Secondly and if any thing secretly has by any one bin committed which when it comes to be known becomes dangerous and hurtful to a Man's Credit he that publishes that matter where when and to whom there is no need so to do is truly call'd a Reviler and Slanderer But of all Slander there is none more deadly than that of those Thirdly who slander the Catholic Doctrin and the Preachers of it Fourthly They are in the same Fault that commend the Teachers of Errors and false Doctrins Nor are they to be left out of the Number of these Men Fifthly nor are they free from this Fault who lending their Ears to Revilers and Slanderers reprove them not but willingly assent to or belive them For to slander or to hearken to a Slanderer as S. Hierom and S. Bernard write it is not easily manifest whether of the two is more damnable For there would be no Slanderers if there were none to listen to their Slanders S. Hierom. Epist. ad Nepotianum circa finem D. Bernard lib. 2. de Consider ad Eugen. in fine Of the same sort are those Sixthly who by their Artifices cause Men to fall out and quarrel among themselves and are greatly delighted in keeping Differences So that breaking the strictest Friendships and Societies by their feigned words they compel the most friendly Men in the World to immortal Hatred and Quarrels This Plague the Lord exceedingly hates Lev. 19.6 Thou shalt not be a Tale-carrier nor Whisperer among the People Such were many of Sauls Counsellers who strove to estrange his Love from David and to provoke the King against him Lastly meer fair-spoken Men and Flatterers Seventhly Flatterers who by their smoothing and dissembling Praises buzz into those men's Ears and Minds whose Favors Mony and Honor they would purchase calling as the Prophet has it Isa 5.20 Evil good and good Evil offend against this part whom to drive away and rid our doors of them David admonishes us in that Saying Ps 140.5 Let the Just Man reprove me with mercy and let him chide me but let not the Oyl of the wicked anoint my Head For tho they revile not their Neighbor yet they wound him grievously who even by commending his Sins afford him a cause of persevering in his vices as long as he lives And indeed of this kind of Flattery The First kind of Flattery that is worst which is us'd for the Calamity and Hurt of our Neighbors So Saul when he desir'd to expose David to the Fury and Sword of the Philistines he sooth'd him with these words Behold my eldest Daughter Moreb 1. Reg. her will I give thee to wife only be thou valiant and fight the Lords battels So the Jews in that treacherous Speech of theirs thus spake to Christ our Lord Master Marc. 12.14 we know that thou art true and teachest the way of God in Truth But far more hurtful is the Speech of those Friends The worst sort of Flattery Relations and Kinsfolks which they sometimes flatteringly use to those who being sick to Death are now at their last Breath while they tell them that even then they are in no danger of Death and bid them be merry and cheerful and keep them from Confession of their Sins as from a sad melancholy Thought And lastly while they divert their Minds from all Care and Thought of their utmost Dangers in which they are very greatly involv'd Wherefore all kinds of Lyes are to be avoided But especially that whereby any one may be most damnifi'd But most wicked of all is that Lye which is made against Religion Note or about Religion God is also grievously offended with those Slanders and Reproaches which are committed by Libels Eighthly The Author of Libels such as they call Libellous Pamphlets and other Contumelies of the like kind De libel famos Vide Bull. Pij V. 147. datam Ann. 1572. Bull. Greg. XIII 4. datam eodem anno Besides XVIII A merry Lie forbidden either for Sport or for Office sake to deceive by a Lye altho no one thereby have any Gain or Loss yet it is altogether unworthy a Man For so the Apostle admonishes us Ephes 4.25 Putting away lying speak ye the Truth Vide D. Thom. 2.2 q. 110. art 3 4. For thereby comes a great Proneness to frequent and more grievous Lying Note the Reason and from telling of Lyes for Mirth Men take a custom of Lying whence they fall into a Reputation of not speaking Truth at all wherefore to gain Belief they are necessitated to swear at all times Lastly XIX All
what kind of Life they lead Note and what kind of Manners they use that profess Religion just so is the Unlearned Multitude us'd to judge of Religion it self and of the Author of it Wherefore they that live according to Christian Religion XIII To what Christians are oblig'd in this part which they have undertaken and square their Discourse and Actions according to its Rules give a great occasion to others of praising and celebrating with all Honor and Glory the Name of our Heavenly Father For the Lord himself has requir'd this of us that by our vertuous and illustrious Actions we provoke Men to praise and glorifie the Name of God to whom he thus speaks in the Gospel Matth. 6. Let your Light so shine before Men that they may see your good Works and glorifie your Father which is in Heaven And the Prince of the Apostles 1 Pet. 2.4 Having your Conversation honest among the Gentiles that considering you in your good Works they may glorifie God The SECOND PETITION Thy Kingdom come THe Kingdom of Heaven I The whole Gospel directs us to the Kingdom of God Mat. 3.2 which we pray for in this other Petition is of such a sort that thither is referr'd and terminated all the Preaching of the Gospel For thence S. John the Baptist began his Exhortation to Penance Do Penance says he for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand Nor did the Saviour of Mankind take the ground of his own Preaching elsewhere And in that saving Sermon of his wherein on the Mount he shew'd his Disciples the way of Bliss for the intended Argument of his Discourse as it were he took his Text from the Kingdom of Heaven Blessed says he Mat. 4.17 are the Poor in Spirit because theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven And to those that would have staid him he gave this Cause for the necessity of his Journy Mat. 5.3 Luc. 4.43 I must preach the Gospel of the Kingdom of God to other Cities also for therefore I am sent This Kingdom therefore he commanded the Apostles afterwards to preach as he answer'd him that said he would go bury his Father Mat. 10.17 Luc. 8. Act. 1.3 Go thou and preach the Kingdom of God And when he was risen from the Dead for those Forty days wherein he appear'd to his Apostles he spake concerning the Kingdom of God Wherefore the Curats shall diligently handle this Point of the second Petition II. The Pastors Duty that their Faithful Hearers may understand how great the Efficacy and Necessity of this Petition is And first III. Why this Petition distinct from the rest This Consideration will furnish them with abundance of Matter for the explaining of this Point well and wisely that tho this Petition be joyn'd with all the rest yet he commanded this also to be us'd separately from the rest that what we pray for we may seek with our utmost endeavor Mat. 6.33 For he says Seek first the Kingdom of God and the Righteousness thereof and all these things shall be added to you And indeed so great a confluence and plenty of Heavenly Gifts is contain'd in this Petition IV. What this Petition comprehends that it contains all things necessary for the Security of our both Corporal and Spiritual Life But how shall we call him worthy of the Name of a King Note who takes no care of those things that concern the Welfare of the Kingdom Now if Men be careful for the Safety of their Kingdom with how great Care and Providence must it be believ'd that the King of all Kings defends the Life and Welfare of Men In this Petition therefore of the Kingdom of God V. All things necessary are here pray'd for are comprehended all things whatsoever which in this Pilgrimage or Exile rather we stand in need of which God graciously promises that he will grant for immediately he subjoins All these things shall be added to you VVhereby he plainly declares VI. How great Gods Bounty is that he is a King that largely and bountifully supplies Mankind Upon the consideration of which infinit Bounty David being fix'd sings thus The Lord is my King therefore I shall want nothing Psal 22.1 But it is not enough earnestly to seek the Kingdom of God VII To be heard in this Petition what is necessary unless together with our Petition we use all other Means whereby it is sought and found For those Five Foolish Virgins indeed earnestly sought it after this manner Lord Lord open to us Mat. 25.21 but yet because they did not well guard their Petition they were shut out and not without cause for that Sentence came out of God's own Mouth Mat. 7.21 Not every one that says to me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven VVherefore the Priests VIII How to stir up the Desire of the Kingdom of Heaven and those that have Cure of Souls shall draw out of the most flowing Fountains of Sacred Scripture those things that may move in the Faithful the Study and Desire of the Kingdom of Heaven and which may put before their Eyes their calamitous State and Condition and which may affect them so as that looking about them and recollecting themselves they may be brought back to the remembrance of that highest Bliss and those unspeakable good things wherewith the everlasting House of God our Father abounds For here we are but mere Exiles IX How many and great the Miseries of this Life are Gal. 5.17 and Inhabitants of that place wherein the Devils dwell whose spite against us can be mitigated by no means for they are most hurtful and implacable to Mankind And what shall we say of those domestic and intestine Quarrels which the Soul and Body the Flesh and Spirit daily make among themselves wherein we ought always to fear lest we should be worsted And it is to be fear'd yea we should presently fall were we not defended by the Protection of Gods right Hand which weight of Miseries when the Apostle perceiv'd Rom. 7.24 he said O wretched Man that I am who will deliver me from the Body of this Death This Misery of Mankind X. How we come to know more readily the greatness of Mans Misery altho it be well known of it self yet it may more easily be understood from the Contention of other Natures and created things For we see it seldom happen in them whether void of Reason or Sense that a-any of their Natures so decline from their proper Actions Sense or Motions that were implanted in them as to forsake their appointed and determin'd End This appears in the Beasts of the Field in Fishes and Birds so that the Matter wants nothing to be said for the clearing of it If you look up to Heaven do ye not perceive it to be most true which was said by David Psal 118.89 Thy Word O Lord endures for ever in Heaven to
they are not to despair of Salvation because the Appetites of corrupt Nature are always striving and contending against Reason so that the Spirit persists in her Office and Resolution of Forgiving Injuries and of loving her Neighbors And because there have been some perhaps XXXVII Why this Prayer to be us'd by those that cannot as yet love their Enemies First who because they cannot yet resolve to forget Injuries and love their Enemies are therefore so frighted with the Condition before mentioned that they dare not use the Lords Prayer Let the Curat use these two Reasons for the taking away from them that Destructive Error For every one that is of the Number of the Faithful makes these Prayers in the Name of the whole Church wherein there must needs be some pious persons that have forgiven their Debtors those Debts that are here mentioned Add hereto Secondly that when we pray this of God we do at the same Time pray for whatsoever is necessarily to be bestow d upon us to do according to this Petition For we pray for Pardon of Sins and the Gift of true Penance We pray for the Faculty of inward Sorrow We pray that we may be able to hate our Sins and to confess them truly and devoutly to the Priest Therefore since it is necessary for us to pardon those that have done us any Wrong or Mischief when we pray God to pardon us we also pray him to give us Power to reconcile our selves to those against whom we have any Quarrel Wherefore they are to be deterr'd from this Opinion Note who are mov'd with that vain and wicked Fear lest by this Prayer they displease God the more against them And on the contrary they are to be exhorted to the frequent use of this Prayer that they pray to God our Father to give them a Heart to pardon those that have injur'd them and to love their Enemies And that our Prayer may be to good Purpose XXXVIII What is necessary to make this Prayer fruitful let us first take care and consider That we are Petitioners to God and seek Pardon of him which he gives not but to the Penitent and that we ought therefore to exercise so much Charity and Piety as is sutable to Penitents and that it is very convenient for such having their own Faults and Vices before their own Eyes to expiat them with Tears Together with this Consideration XXXIX The Occasions of Sin to be avoided there is to be joyn'd Caution for the future against those things which may give any Occasion of Sin and which may give us any Opportunity of Offending God our Father David was careful in this matter Psal 40.5 Psal 6.7 when he said My Sin is ever before me And in another place Every night will I wash my bed and water my couch with my tears Let every one further in their Prayers propose to himself the most ardent Intention of those who in their Prayers begg'd of God Pardon of their Sins XL. Examples to be followed as of that Publican who standing afar o●● and for Shame and Grief casting down his Eyes to the Ground smote upon his Breast and only pray'd thus Luc 18.13 Luc. 2 38. God be merciful to me a Sinner As also of that Woman the Sinner who having with her tears wash'd our Lords Feet and wip'd them with the Hairs of her Head kissed them And lastly of Peter the Prince of Apostles Matth. 27. who went out and wept bitterly And then they must consider XLI What Remedies to be used Penance Eucharist by how much the weaker Men are and by how much they are more prone to the Diseases of the Soul which are her Sins by so much the more and the more frequent Remedies they stand in need of Now the Remedies of a Sick Soul are Penance and the Eucharist these things therefore the Faithful ought frequently to use And then Alms. as the Sacred Scriptures teach us Alms are Medicins very proper for the Cure of the Soul Those therefore that desire to use this Prayer devoutly let them according to their power be good to the Poor For how great vertue it has to wipe away the Pollutions of Sin the Holy Angel of the Lord testifies in Tobias whose words are these Tob. 12.8 Alms deliver from Death and it is that which purges away Sin and causes us to find Mercy and everlasting Life And Daniel testifies who thus admonishes King Nebuchodonosor Dan. 4.24 Redeem thy Sins with Alms and thy Iniquities by shewing Mercy to the Poor The best way of giving and of shewing Mercy XLII Which the best kind Alms. is the forgetting of Injuries and shewing your Good-will towards them that wrong you in your Goods your Reputation your Body or any of yours Whosoever he be therefore that desires God to be very merciful to him let him deliver up to God all his Ill-will let him pardon every Offence done against him and let him pray most heartily for his Enemies taking all Opportunities of doing them good But because this Argument has been already explain'd Note when we treated of Murder we refer the Curats thither But let them shut up this Petition with this Conclusion XLIII Nothing more unjust than a merciles Man That nothing is or can be imagin'd more unjust than that he that is so cruel to Men as to shew himself favorable to none should desire God to be merciful and gracious to him The SIXTH PETITION And lead us not into Temptation THere is no doubt but that the Children of God I. They that are newly converted to God easily fall back again after that they have obtain'd the Pardon of their Sins being inflam'd with the Desire of giving Worship and Veneration to God both heartily pray for the Kingdom of Heaven and paying all the Offices of Piety to God wholly depend upon his Fatherly Will and Providence But withal by so much the more do's the Enemy of Mankind study all Arts against them prepares all his Engins wherewith they are so oppos'd that it is to be fear'd lest their Resolution being tir'd out and chang'd they return again to their Vices and grow far worse than they were before Of whom may rightly be said that of the Prince of Apostles 2 Pet. 2.11 It were better for them not to have known the way of Justice than after having known it to return back again from that holy Commandment which was deliver'd them Wherefore the Command of making this Petition was given us of Christ our Lord II. Why this Petition added to the rest that we should commend our selves daily to God and implore his Fatherly Care and Defence being well assur'd that if we were forsaken of his Divine Protection we should be entangled in the Snares of our most bitter Enemy Nor did he command us only in this Rule of Prayer III. Christ commanded this Prayer twice and why
to beg of God not to suffer us to be led into Temptation but also in that Sermon which he made to the Holy Apostles about the time of his Death when indeed he said that they were clean he admonish'd them of this Duty in these words Joh. 13.10 Mat. 26.4 Pray that ye enter not into Temptation Which Admonition being made again by Christ our Lord he said a great Charge upon those that have Cure of Souls to be diligent in stirring up the Faithful to the frequent use of this Prayer that when every hour there are so great Dangers of this kind intended against Men by their Enemy the Devil they may earnestly beg of God who alone is able to drive them away in this Prayer Lead us not into Temptation But the Faithful will understand how much need they have of this Divine Help IV. How great the necessity of this Petition is if they but remember their own Weakness and Ignorance if they remember that Sentence of Christ our Lord The Spirit indeed is ready but the Flesh is weak if they remember what heavy and destructive Accidents Men would fall into by the Devil's means if they were not upheld by the help of God's Right Hand What clearer Example of Man's Weakness can there be Examples of our Weakness than that of Sacred Quire of Apostles who before were of a stout Courage but upon the first Terror laid in their way forsook our Savior and fled Altho that of the Prince of Apostles himself is yet more clear who after so large a Profession of singular both Resolution and Love to Christ our Lord when but a little before being very confident of himself he said thus If I were to die with thee yet I will not deny thee yet presently at the Voice of a silly Maid he protested with Oaths that he knew not our Lord. Mat. 26.35 And the Reason is Note because his Strength was not answerable to that very great Willingness of his Spirit But if the most holy Men have grievously sinn'd thro the Weakness of Human Nature Note again to which they trusted too much how are others to fear who come far short of them in Holiness VVherefore let the Curat propose to the Faithful the Fights and Dangers wherein we are daily engag'd V. To how many Dangers of Temptations Men are expos'd while our Souls continue in these mortal Bodies which on every hand the Flesh the VVorld and Satan oppose VVhat Anger what Lust or Covetousness can do in us how few are there in the VVorld that are not compell'd to their great damage to feel VVho is there that is not wearied with these Goads who feels not these Thorns VVho is not scorch'd with these secret Firebrands And indeed their Blows are so many and their Importunities so various that it is a very hard matter not to receive some grievous VVounds And besides these Enemies which lodge and live with us there are moreover those most bitter Enemies of whom it is written Eph. 6 22● We wrestle not against Flesh and Blood but against the Rulers of this World of Darkness against Spiritual Wickedness in Heavenly things For to the inward Combats VI. How great the violence of the Devils is the outward Violence and Assaults of the Devils join themselves for they seek to catch us both by open Force and secret Snares cast upon our Souls so that we can very hardly escape them Now these the Apostle calls Princes for the Excellency of their Nature VII Why the Devils call'd Princes for by Nature they excel Men and all other Creatures that fall under Sense he also calls them Potestates or Powers because they not only excel in Strength of Nature but of Power also he also calls them Rulers of the World of Darkness for they govern not the Clear and Light VVorld i. e. Good and Pious Men but the Dark and Gloomy VVorld to wit those who being blinded with the Spots and Darkness of a naughty and wicked Life are delighted with the Devil the Prince of Darkness He also calls the Devils Spiritual Wickednesses VIII Why Spiritual Wickednesses What Carnal Wickedness What Spiritual Wickedness i.e. the VVickedness both of Flesh and Spirit The VVickedness which is call'd Carnal kindles our Desires to sensual Lusts and Pleasures But Spiritual Wickedness are evil Purposes and corrupt Desires which belong to the Superior part of the Soul which are by so much worse than the rest by how much the Mind and Reason it self is higher and more excellent Which Wickedness of Satan Note because he chiefly aims at this to deprive us of our Heavenly Inheritance therefore the Apostle said in Heavenly things Whence we may learn IX The Devil's Malice that the Enemies Forces are great their Courage undaunted their Hatred against us cruel and infinite That they wage perpetual War so that there can be no Peace or Truce with them And how bold they are that word of Satan shews which we read in the Prophet Isa 14.13 I will climb up even to Heaven He set upon our first Parents in Paradise he withstood the Prophets he sought for the Apostles and as our Lord says in the Evangelist Luc. 12.31 He would have winnow'd them as Wheat nor did the very Face of Christ himself make him blush or asham'd The Apostle therefore express'd his insatiable Desire and indefatigable Diligence when he said 1 Pet. 5.8 Your Adversary the Devil as a roaring Lion wheels about seeking whom he may devour And yet not one Devil only tempts Man X. Many Devils oppose one Man but sometimes many Devils join together against particular Men which thing that Devil confess'd who being ask'd of Christ our Lord what his Name was Marc. 5.9 Luc. 8.30 answered My Name is Legion to wit a Multitude of Devils which vex'd that miserable Man Mar. 12.45 And it is written of another That he took with him Seven other Spirits more wicked than himself and entring in they dwelt there There are many indeed who feel not the Impulse and Force of the Devil in themselves XI The Devils tempt not wicked Men and why and therefore think there is no such matter who that they are not oppos'd by the Devil there is no wonder seeing they have freely given up themselves to him They have no Piety no Charity none of that Vertue worthy a Christian and therefore they are wholly in the Power of the Devil nor is there any need of Temptations to destroy them in whose Souls they give him leave to abide But those that have dedicated themselves to God XII The Devil chiefly tempts the Pious leading a Heavenly life while they are on Earth Satan seeks most of all by his Incursions These he most bitterly hates for these at all times he says Snares The History of Sacred Scripture is full of the Examples of Holy Men whom tho they were of a strong Resolution
yet either by Force or Fraud he perverted Adam David Solomon and others whom it is hard to reckon up have felt the violent Impulses and wil● Craftiness of the Devils whom it is impossible to resist by Human VVisdom or Strength VVho therefore can think himself safe enough in his own Protection Note VVe must therefore pray heartily and devoutly of God That he would not suffer us to be tempted above what we are able but that he would make us a way to escape together with the Temptation that we may be able to bear it 1 Cor. 10. And here the Faithful are to be confirm'd XIII How those that fear the Devil are to be confirm'd who thro weakness of Mind or ignorance of the Matter are afraid of the Devil's Power that being toss'd with the Waves of Temptations may safely Anchor in this Port of Prayer For Satans Power and Obstinacy in his mortal Hatred to Mankind XIV God over-rules the Devils Power is not such as to be able to vex and tempt us as much and as long as he pleases but all his Power is govern'd by God's Pleasure and Permission We have a most noted Example in Job An Example concerning whom if God had not said to the Devil Behold all that he has is in thy Power Satan could not have touch'd any thing that was his but on the contrary if God had not added Only stretch not forth thy hand against him with one stroak of the Devil He together with his Children and all that he had had been utterly ruin'd Yea Note the Devils Power is so restraind that he could not so much as invade those Swine of which the Evangelists wrote without Gods Permission Matth. 8. Mar. 5.11 Luc. 8.32 But now for the understanding the Force of this Petition XV. The Words of this Petition explain'd it must be shew'd what Temptation here signifies and also what to be led into Temptation Now to Tempt XVI What it is to tempt First is to put him that is tempted into Danger that by drawing out of him what we desire we may force out the Truth this way of Tempting God uses not for what is there that God does not know For all things says the Scripture Heb. 4.13 are naked and open to his Eyes There is another kind of Tempting Secondly when by pooceeding farther some other thing is sought for either with a good or evil Design With a good Design XVII What it is to tempt with a good Design as when any one's Vertue is try'd in any thing which Vertue being known and discover'd the Person may be honored and advanc'd and his Example offer'd to others for Imitation and lastly that all Men for that Reason may be excited to give Glory to God And this way of tempting only is agreeable to God An Example of this kind of Temptation we have in Deuteronomy Deut. 13.3 The Lord your God tempts or trys you that it may be manifest whether you love him or not After this manner also God is said to tempt those that are his Note when he presses them hard with Want or Sickness or other kinds of Calamities which he does for proving of their Patience and that they may be for a Pattern of Christian Duty to others After this manner we read that Abraham was tempted to offer his Son An Example Gen. 22.1 which being done he became a singular Example of Obedience and Patience to be had in everlasting Remembrance of Men. In the same Sense it is said of Tobias Another Tob. 12. Because thou wast accepted of God it was necessary that Temptation should try thee But Men are tempted with an evil Design XVIII What it is to tempt with an evil Design when they are driven to Sin or to Destruction and this is properly the Devils Office for he tempts Men with a Design to deceive and carry them headlong Matth. 4. and therefore in Sacred Scripture he is call'd the Tempter Now in those Temptations XIX How eagerly the Devil tempts he one while applies his Trials to us inwardly and the means of the Affections and Commotions of the Mind another while exercising us from without he uses external Means either Prosperity to allure us or Adversity to break us sometimes he has his Emissaries and Skirmishes as wicked Men and Hereticks especially who sitting in the Chair of Pestilence sow the deadly Seeds of wicked Doctrins being such as make no choice or difference of Vertue and Vice Men naturally prone to Evil Men that are tottering and rush headlong downwards But we are said to be led into Temptation XX. What it is to be led into Temptation when we yield to Temptations Now are we led into Temptation two ways First First when being remov'd from our Station we rush into that Evil into which some one by tempting drives us But no one is thus led into Temptation by God because God is the Author of Sin to no one Psal 5.5 Jac. 1.13 yea He hates all the Workers of iniquity For thus says S. James Let not any one when he is tempted say that he is tempted of God for God tempts no one to evil And then Secondly he is said to be led into Temptation who tho he tempts not himself yet does his endeavour that we may be tempted yet he is said to tempt because when he could have hinder'd us to be tempted or to be overcome by the Temptation yet did not hinder After this manner the good God indeed has suffered pious Men to be tempted Note but yet he left them not without the Support of his Grace But yet sometimes by the just and secret judgment of God Note again being left to our selves for our own Wickedness we have fallen Besides Thirdly God is said to lead us into Temptation when we abuse the Benefits he has given us for our good to our own hurt and like that Prodigal Son wast our Fathers Substance in living luxuriously and following our own Lusts Whefore we may say as the Apostle did of the Law I found another Commandment which was for Life to me but this happens to be to Death Luc. 15.12 Rom. 7.10 A fit Example in this case as Ezekiel testifies An Example is the City Jerusalem which God had enrich'd and adorn'd with all kinds of Good so that God by the Mouth of that Prophet says Ezek. 16 14. Thou wast perfect in Beauty whom did I prefer before thee And yet that City so heap'd with the good things of God was so far from being thankful to him who had before and still did deserve so very well of her and from using those Heavenly Benefits which of his Grace she had receiv'd towards her obtaining of Happiness that being most ungrateful to God her Benefactor and casting away all Hope and Thought of Heavenly Fruits wantonly enjoy'd her present Plenty only and to her own
be call'd an Heretic 86 The Command of Honoring Parents 381 What Honor is Pag. 385 Parents of all kinds are to be honor'd ibid. The Duties of Honor which we owe to Parents 386 The Honor due to Parents after their Death 388 What Advantages they reap that honor their Parents 390 Who honor not their Parents may fear an untimely Death 391 392 Hope of obtaining is of great use to obtaining 467 How we ought to devote our selves to God in hope of the Reward of Heaven 506 Our Hope should be wholly plac'd in God's Love ibid. We ought to hope to obtain Pardon of Sin 520 How to get Hope even in Temptations 535 536 We are to hope in God's Protection when we are tempted ibid. Why a Husband ought to love his Wife 327 The Duty of a Husband to his Wife ibid. c. Hypocrites pray not from their Heart 470 The Hypocrites Practice in Praying to be avoided ibid. I JEsus the Son of God alone was able to reconcile us to God 29 How great profit they have that believe Jesus Christ to be the Son of God Pa. 29 What the Name Jesus signifies 31 How the Name Jesus contains all his other Names 3● Jesus Christ Supreme King Priest and Prophet 33 Jesus the Son of God true God 34 Jews see Hebrews To have the Images of Christ and of the Saints in the Church is not only lawful but very profitable for the Faithful 351 When any one before the Images of the Saints prays the Lord's Prayer what he ought to think 464 465 The Incarnation of the Word of how great value it is to us 38 One Person alone wrought not all the Mysteries of the Incarnation 39 No Confusion of the Natures made by the Incarnation 40 Why in a peculiar manner the Work of the Incarnation attributed to the Holy Ghost 39 In the Mystery of the Incarnation some things done beyond and some things by the Order of Nature 40 The Wonders that hapned in the Incarnation of the Word ibid. All Inconveniences to be born patiently 540 Infants see Baptism An Infidel being converted to the Faith is to keep his first Wife Pag. 323 Man's Ingratitude towards God 538 Inhumanity to be avoided by him that desires that God should hear him 466 Christians by all means to be perswaded to forget Injuries 528 How to perswade Men to forget Injuries ibid. Injuries to be forgiven of him that would be forgiven of God 531 God requires of us to forget Injuries ibid. What Advantages they get that forgive Injuries 402 The Inconveniencies they fall into that will not forgive Injuries 403 Remedies to lay aside Injuries 404 Forgetting of Injuries the best Alms. 402 Who are desirous to forget Injuries ought to use in the Lord's Prayer that Petition Forgive us c. and why 528 Why Christ will be the Judge of all 72 Of the Last Judgment ibid. Christ's Judgment of us twofold 73 The Necessity of a General Judgment 73 74 Judges that take Bribes are Robbers 418 Judgment in Civil Courts to be administer'd according to Justice and the Laws 428 429 The Power of Jurisdiction how prov'd Pag. 267 Original Justice given of God to Man beyond the Power of Nature 27 He cannot be justified that is not ready to obey all God's Commands 337 The Justification of a Sinner is a Work of God's Infinit Power 104 It is given by the Sacraments as by Instruments 134 K THe Dignity and large Power of the Keys 104 All have not the Power of the Keys ibid. Kings are to be obey'd 390 The Kingdom of Heaven 489 The Kingdom of Heaven to be pray'd for before all things else 490 The praying for the Kingdom of Heaven contains a great heap of excellent Gifts ibid. The Kingdom of Christ is not of this World 493 What the Kingdom of God is ibid. The Kingdom of God is within us ibid. VVhy the Kingdom of Christ call'd Justice ibid. The Kingdom of Grace put before the Kingdom of Glory 494 The Kingdom of Christ which is the Church 495 The Propagation of the Kingdom of the Church ibid. How the Kingdom of God comes upon Sinners P. 495 How the Kingdom of Christ is sought ibid. The Excellency of the Kingdom of Heaven 496 God affords us Assistances to obtain the Kingdom of Heaven 497 Those that would enter into the Kingdom of Heaven ought to beg of God that his Will be done 498 L THe Last Things to be often remembred 78 The Law of Nature the same with the Written Law 334 What the Law of Nature is ibid. They break the Law of Nature that spare not their Enemies 527 The Law of the Decalogue is no new Law but the Law of Nature illustrated 334 With how great Majesty the Law was given 335 The Laws of Nature not hard 336 The Law is to be obey'd ibid. The Benefit of observing the Law 337 To know God to be our Lord makes us more ready to keep his Law 341 Every Law induces Men to obey it either for love of Reward or fear of Punishment 352 The way and manner of keeping the Law God's Law is to be kept in the inward Sense of the Soul Pag. 440 The difference between Divine and Human Laws ibid. God's Law is as a Looking-glass wherein we may see the Deformities of our Nature ibid. Life eternal what it signifies 117 c. Man's Life on Earth a Temptation 539 Our Life and Salvation depend upon God 515 All kind of Lying is to be avoided c. See the Eighth Commandment M THe Honor due to Civil Magistrats 389 When Magistrats are to be obey'd and when not 390 Man form'd after God's Image and Likeness 27 Man last created made immortal by Divine Gift not by Natural Vertue ibid. The first Fall of Man 29 How much a Christian Man is oblig'd to Christ 37 Men ought to be studious of God's Honor. 354 How Man is oblig'd to God 478 Mans Misery 491 Mans Misery by reason of Adam's Sin 499 Men compar d to Sick Folks and to those that have lost their Taste 499 500 Men compar'd to Children Pag. 500 Man tho justified cannot so tame the Lusts of the Flesh as never more to stir in him 501 Voluptuous Men Strangers to Divine Pleasure 503 Mans Instability 491 Mans Weakness 510 With what kind of Curse Man was condemn'd after Adam's Sin ibid. Mans Folly and Weakness 533 Virgin Mary see the Third Article of the Cred. 32 463 The Sacrifice of Mass the same with that on the Cross 236 Mass a Propitiatory Sacrifice and not only Commemorative ibid. Mass offer'd for and profits the Dead 237 The Rites of Mass not superfluous ibid. The Matter or the Sacrament of the Eucharist see Eucharist The Matter of the Sacrament of Penance see Penance Matter of the Sacrament of Extream-Unction see Extream-Vnction Matrimony whence so call'd 314 The Sacrament of Matrimony call'd by divers Names ibid. The Definition of Matrimony and the Declaration thereof 315 They cannot enter into Matrimony
For as we believe that many were rais'd from death so must we believe that all shall be call'd again to life But that singular fruit which we ought to gather from Miracles of this kind Mat. 9.24 is this that we give the most certain belief to this Article There are many testimonies which even those Curates which are but indifferently skill'd in the Holy Scriptures may easily meet with but those places which are more clear in the Old Testament Job 19.25 are those we read in Job when he says that in his Flesh he shall see God and in Daniel concerning those who sleep in the dust of the earth Dan. 12.2 That some of them should awake to life everlasting and others to everlasting disgrace And in the New Testament Mar. 22.31 what S. Mathew relates of the dispute our Saviour had with the Sadducees besides what the Evangelists tell us of the last Judgment And hither is to be referr'd what the Apostle has exactly discours'd in his Epistle to the Corinthians and Thessalonians But tho to Faith this thing be most certain V. Similitudes where by the Resurrection is clear'd yet it will be very profitable both by Examples and Reasons to shew that That which Faith offers to be believ'd is not strange to Nature or Humane Understanding and therefore the Apostle to him that asks how the dead should rise again answers 1 Cor. 13.36 Thou Fool that which thou sowest is not quickn'd except it dye first and that which thou sowest thou sowest not that body which shall be but bare grain perhaps of wheat or some other grain but God gives it a body as it has pleas'd him And a little after he says it is sown in corruption it shall rise in incorruption There may be many other similitudes of the like kind added S. Greg. lib. 14. moral c. 21 29 30. as S. Gregory shews For the Light says he is daily as it were by Dying withdrawn from our Eyes and as by Rising again it is recall'd again and that Trees lose their greenness and again as by a kind of Resurrection they are repair'd and the Seed by putrifying dies and again by springing it rises again Besides VI. The Resurrection prov'd by Reason The First Those reasons which are brought by Ecclesiastical Writers seem to be sufficiently accommodated or suited to this matter And first since the Souls are immortal and as a part of Man have a natural propensity or inclination to the humane Bodies it may be thought praeternatural that they should for ever remain separate from their Bodies But because that which is against Nature The Second as being Violent cannot last long it seems agreeable that at last they should be joyn'd with their Bodies Whence it also follows that there will be a Resurrection of the Bodies Which kind of argument our Savior seems to have us'd Mat. 22.32 when disputing against the Sadducees he concluded that there would be a Resurrection of the Body from the Immortality of the Soul And seeing that there are Punishments propos'd by the most just God to the Wicked The Third Damasc l 4. de fide Orthod c. 28. Amb. lib. de fide Resur S. Chrisost hom 49. 50. and Rewards to the Good and that of the one sort very many depart out of this world before they have suffer'd their due punishments and of the other sort in a great measure without the rewards of their vertues it must needs be that the Soul be again joyn'd with the Body that so either for the wickedness committed or for the good they have done the Body which man uses as a Companion in sin may together with the Soul be either punish'd or rewarded Which Point has been excellently handled by S. Chrysostom in his Homilie to the People of Antioch Wherefore the Apostle discoursing of the Resurrection 1 Cor. 15.19 If says he in this life only we had hope in Christ we were of all men most miserable Which words none has thought applicable to the Soul which being immortal tho the Body should not rise again might nevertheless enjoy Happiness in the life to come but they are meant of the whole Man For unless the Body were to be rewarded for her labour it must needs follow that those who as the Apostles did have endur'd so many afflictions and calamities in this life would be of all men most miserable The same thing he much more plainly teaches in these words to the Thessalonians 2 Thess 1.4 We glory in the Churches of God for your patience and faith in all your persecutions and tribulations which ye endure for an example of the just judgment of God that ye may be counted worthy of the kingdom of God for which ye suffer if yet it be just with God to recompense tribulation to them which trouble you and to us who are troubl'd rest with you at the revelation of the Lord Jesus from Heaven with the Angels of his power in a flame of fire taking vingeance on them who have not known God and who obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ Add also The Fourth that men cannot so long as the Soul is separated from the Body enjoy compleat Happiness and full fraught with all good things For as every part being separated from the whole is imperfect so also is the Soul which is disjoyn'd from the Body Whence it follows that the Resurrection of the Body is necessary to make the Souls Happiness compleat It will be further necessary diligently to teach from the Apostles Doctrine VII The different condition of those that rise again 1 Cor. 15 22. Joh. 5.20 who they are that shall be rais'd to life For writing to the Corinthians he says As in Adam all dye so in Christ shall all be made alive All difference and distinction therefore of Good and Bad being laid aside All shall shall rise again from the dead tho the Condition of All will not be alike those that have done Good shall rise to the Resurrection of Life and they that have done Evil to the Resurrection of Judgment But when we say All VIII We shall all rise again S. Hier. Ep. 152. Aug. de Civit. Dei lib. 20. c. 20. 1 Thes 4.16 in 1 Epist ad Thes c. 4. we mean as well those who shall be dead before the coming of the judgment as those who shall then dye For that the Church does acquiesce in this Sentence or Opinion which affirms that All shall dye none excepted and that this sense is most agreable to Truth S. Hierom has written and S. Austin conceives the same Nor are the Apostles words which he wrote to the Thessalonians against this sense The dead which are in Christ shall rise first and then we that are left alive shall be caught up with them in the Clouds to meet Christ in the air For. S. Ambrose explaining this place says thus In that