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A64145 The worthy communicant, or, A discourse of the nature, effects, and blessings consequent to the worthy receiving of the Lords Supper and of all the duties required in order to a worthy preparation : together with the cases of conscience occurring in the duty of him that ministers, and of him that communicates : to which are added, devotions fitted to every part of the ministration / by Jeremy Taylor ... Taylor, Jeremy, 1613-1667. 1667 (1667) Wing T418; ESTC R11473 253,603 430

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Soter exhorted all persons to receive upon the day of the Institution or the vespers of the Passion he excepted those who were forbidden because they had committed any grievous sin But what was the Doctrine and what were the usages of the Primitive Church in the ministery of the Blessed Sacrament appears plainly in the two Epistles of St. Basil to Amphilochius in the Canons of Ancyra those of Peter of Alexandria Gregory Thaumaturgus and Nyss●en which make up the Penitential of the Greek Church and are explicated by Balsamo in which we find sometimes the penance of two years imposed for a single theft four years and seven years for an act of uncleannesse eleven years for perjury fifteen years for adultery and incest that is such persons were for so many years sep●rate from the Communion and by a holy life and strict observances of penitential impositions were to give testimony of their contrition and amends The like to which are to be seen in the Penitentials of the Western Church that of Theodorus Archbishop of Canterbury that of venerable Bede the old Roman and that of Rabanus Maurus Archbishop of Mentz The reason of which severity we find thus accounted in St. Basil All this is done that they may try the fruits of their repentance For we do not judge of these things by the time but by the manner of their repentance For the Bishop had power to shorten the days of their separation and abstention and he that was an excellent penitent was much sooner admitted but by the injunction of so long a trial they declar'd that much purification was necessary for such an address And if after or in these penitential years of abstention they did not mend their lives though they did perform their penances they were not admitted These were but the Churches signs by other accidents and manifestations if it hapned that a great contrition was signified or a secret incorrigibility became publick the Church would admit the first sooner and the latter not at all For it was purity and holinesse that the Church required of all her Communicants and what measure of it she required we find thus testified The faithful which hath been regenerated by baptism ought to be nourished by the participation of the divine Mysteries and being cloathed with Jesus Christ and having the quality of a child of God he ought to receive the nutriment of life eternal which the Son of God himself hath given us and this nutriment is obedience to the word of God and execution of his will of which Jesus Christ hath said Man lives not by bread alone but my meat is to do my Fathers will and a little after he affirms that whereas St. Paul saith that Jesus Christ hath appointed us to eat his body in memory of his death the true remembrance which we ought to have of his death is to place before our eyes that which the Apostle saith that we were wholly dead and Jesus Christ died for us to the end that we should no more live unto our selves but to him alone and that so we should do him honour and give him thanks for his death by the purity of our life without which we engage our selves in a terrible damnation if we receive the Eucharist And again He that not having this charity which presses us and causes us to live for him who died for us dares approach to the Eucharist grieves the holy Spirit For it is necessary that he who comes to the memorial of Jesus Christ who died and rose again for us should not only be clean from all impurity of flesh and spirit but that he should demonstrate the death of him who died and rose for us by being dead unto sin to the world and to himself and that he lives no more but only to God through Jesus Christ. And therefore St. Cyprian complains as of a new and worse persecution that lapsed persons are admitted to the Communion before they have brought forth fruits of a worthy repentance and affirms that such an admission of sinners is to them as hail to the young fruits as a blasting wind to the trees as the murren to the cattel as a tempest to the ships The ships are overturned and broken the fruits fall the trees are blasted the cattel die and the poor sinner by being admitted too soon to the ministeries of eternal life falls into eternall death And if we put together some words of S● Ambrose they clearly declare this Doctrine and are an excellent Sermon Thou comest to the Altar the Lord Jesus calls thee he sees thee to be clean from all sin because thy sins are wash'd away therefore he judges thee worthy of the c●lestial Sacraments and therefore he invites thee to the heavenly banquet Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth But some desire to be admitted to penance that presently they may receive the Communion These men do not so much desire themselves to be absolved as that the Priest be bound for they do not put off their own evil conscience But I would that the guilty man should hope for pardon let him require it with tears seek it with sighs beg to obtain it by the weepings of all the people and if he be denied the Communion again and again let him consider that his prayer was not sufficiently earnest let him weep more and pray more To which I shall add some like words of St. Austin Therefore my dearest Brethren let every one consider his conscience and when he finds himself wounded with any crime first let him take care with prayers and fastings and alms to cleanse his conscience and so let him receive the Eucharist .... for he that knowing his guilt shall humbly remove himself from the Altar for the amendment of his life shall not fear to be wholly ex-communicate from that eternal and celestial banquet For this Divine Sacrament is not to be eaten with confidence and boldnesse but with fear and all manner of purity saith St. Chrysostome for impudence in these approaches will certainly slay the souls For th●s is the body whither none but Eagles are to gather because they ought to be sublime and elevated souls such which have nothing of earthliness in them that do not sit and prey upon the ground that are not immerg'd in the love of Creatures but such whose flight is towards heaven whose spirit does behold the Sun of Righteousnesse with a penetrating contemplation and piercing eyes for this is the Table of Eagles and not of Owls And therefore this Saint complains of some who did approach to the Eucharist as it were by chance or rather by custom and constraint of Laws rather than by argument and choice In whatsoever estate their souls are they will partake of these Mysteries because it is Lent or because it i● the feast of the Epiphany but certain it is that it is not the time which puts us into
appellations before the internal and they that deny efficacy to the external work and wholly attribute the blessing and grace to the moral cooperation make too open a way for despisers to neglect the divine Institution and to lay aside or lightly esteem the Sacraments of the Church It is in the Sacraments as it is in the Word preached in which not the sound or the letters and syllables that is not the material part but the formal the sense and the signification prepare the mind of the hearer to receive the impresses of the holy spirit of God without which all preaching and all Sacraments are ineffectual so does the internal and formal part the signification and sense of the Sacrament dispose the spirit of the receiver the rather to admit and entertain the grace of the spirit of God there consigned and there exhibited and there collated but neither the outward nor the inward part does effect it neither the Sacrament nor the moral disposition only the spirit operates by the Sacrament and the Communicant receives it by his moral dispositions by the hand of faith And what have we to do to inquire into the philosophy of Sacraments these things do not work by the methods of nature But here the effect is imputed to this cause and yet can be produced without this cause because this cause is but a s●gn in the hand of God by which he tells the soul when he is willing to work Thus Baptism was the instrument and sign in the hands of God to confer the holy Spirit upon believers but the holy Ghost sometimes comes like lightning and will not stay the period of usual expectation for when Cornelius had heard St. Peter preach he received the holy Ghost and as sometimes the holy Ghost was given because they had been baptized now he and his company were to be baptized because they had received the holy Ghost and it is no good argument to say The graces of God are given to believers out of the Sacrament ergo not by or in the Sacrament but rather thus If Gods grace overflows sometimes and goes without his own instruments much more shall he give it in the use of them If God gives pardon without the Sacrament then rather also with the Sacrament For supposing the Sacraments in their design and institution to be nothing but signs and ceremonies yet they cannot hinder the work of God and therefore holinesse in the reception of them will do more than holinesse alone for God does nothing in vain the Sacraments do something in the hand of God at least they are Gods proper and accustomed times of grace they are his seasons and our opportunity when the Angel stirs the pool when the Spirit moves upon the waters then there is a ministry of healing For consider we the nature of a Sacrament in general then pass on to a particular enumeration of the blessings of this the most excellent When God appointed the bow in the clouds to be a Sacrament and the memorial of a promise he made it our comfort but his own sign I will remember my Covenant between me and the earth and the waters shall be no more a flood to d●stroy all flesh This is but a token of the Covenant and yet at the appearing of it God had thoughts of truth and mercy to mankind The bow shall be in the cloud and I will look upon it that I may remember the everlasting Covenant between me and every creature Thus when Elisha threw the wood into the waters of Jordan Sacramentum ligni the Sacrament of the wood Tertullian calls it that chip made the iron swim not by any natural or any infused power but that was the Sacrament or sign at which the Divine power then passed on to effect and emanation When Elisha talked with the King of Israel about the war with Syria he commanded him to smite upon the ground and he smote thrice and stayed This was Sacramentum victoriae the Sacrament of his future victory For the man of God was wroth with him and said Thou shouldest have smitten five or six times then thou hadst smitten Syria until thou hadst consumed it whereas now thou shalt smite Syria but thrice In which it is remarkable that though it was not that smiting that beat the Syrians but the ground yet God would effect the beating of the Syrians by the proportion of that Sacramental smiting The Sacraments are Gods signs the opportunities of grace and act●on Be baptized and wash away thy sins said Ananias to Saul and therefore it is cal●'d the laver of regeneration and of the ren●wing of the holy Gh●st that is in that Sacrament and at that corporal ablution the work of the spirit is done for although it is not that washing of it self yet God does so do it at that ablution which is but the similitude of Christs death that is the Sacrament and symbolical representation of it that to that very similitude a very glorious effect is imputed for if we have been planted together in the LIKENESSE of his death we shall be also in the LIKENESS of his Resurrection For the mystery is this by immersion in Baptism and emersion we are configured to Christs Burial and to his Resurrection that 's the outward part to which if we add the inward which is there intended and is expressed by the Apostle in the following words knowing that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serve sin that 's our spiritual death which answers to our configuration with the death of Christ in Baptism that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father even so we also should walk in n●wness of life there 's the correspondent of our configuration to the resurrection of Christ that is if we do that duty of Baptism we shall receive that grace God offers us the mercy at that time when we promise the duty and do our present portion This St. Peter calls the stipulation of a good conscience the postulate and bargain which man then makes with God who promises us pardon and immortality resurrection from the dead and life eternal if we repent toward God and have faith in the Lord Jesus and if we promise we have and will so abide The same is the case in the other most glorious Sacrament it is the same thing in neerer representation only what is begun in Baptism proceeds on to perfection in the holy Communion Baptism is the antitype of the passion of Christ and the Lords Supper 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that also represents Christs passion Baptism is the union of the members of Christ and the admission of them under one head into one body as the Apostle affirms we are all baptized into one body and so it is in the Communion the bread which we break it is the communion
There are some significations of repentance which charity never can refuse but must accept the offending person as a convert and a penitent 1. Such is open and plain confession of the fault with the circumstances of shame and dishonour for he that does so much rudeness to himself as to endure the shame of his sin rather than not to return to duty gives great testimony that he returns in earnest And this can no waies be abated unless he have done so before and that his confession is but formal and his shame is passed into shamelesness In this case we may expect some more real argument 2. Whatsoever are the great usual signs and expresses of repentance before God those also are to be accepted by us when they are done before men and though we may be deceived in these things and God cannot yet they are the best we can get and something we must rely upon And because like God we cannot discern the hearts of men yet we rightly follow his example when we do that which is the next best and expound the action to the best and most favourable sense of charity 3. An oath if it be not taken lightly is a great presumption of an innocent a sincere and a repenting soul. It is the sign of an ill mind not to trust him that swears seldom and alwaies solemnly and for ought we know justly said Amphides For a solemn sacred oath is a double hedge and it is guarded by a double fear lest I abuse my friend and lest I provoke my God and the blessed Apostle saith That an oath is the end of all strife meaning amongst persons who can cease to strive and can cease to be injurious It is so among them who have Religion and who can be fit for society For there is no man whose oath it can be fit to take but it is also fit that having sworn he should be trusted But it is seldom that our charity can be put to such extremities and in no conversation can it happen that a man shall do an injury and repent and do it again twenty times and a hundred times in the revolution of a few daies If such things could be those men are intolerable upon other accounts and though charity must refuse no man and forgiveness must alway stand at your door ready to let in all that knock yet the accidents of the world caution and prudence and innocent fears will dispose of our affairs in other channels of security and cut off the occasions of such disputes so certain is that observation of St. Heirom which I men●ioned before that we are tied to forgive oftner than our Brother can sin but then also so safe are we whose charity must be bigger than the greatest temptation and yet no temptation is like to happen but what is less than an ordinary charity Question V. Whether the injured person be bound to offer peace Or may he let it alone and worthily communicate if the offending party does not seek it To the Question whether of the parties must begin the peace I answer that both are bound For although he that did the injury is bound in conscience and justice to go to him whom he hath injured and he is not a true penitent if he does not and he must not for his part be accepted to the Communion of which I am to give account in the Chapter of repentance yet because we are now upon the title of Charity I am to add that if the Criminal does not come the offended person must offer peace he must go or send to him If others begin the quarrel do thou begin the peace said Seneca For sometimes the offender desires pardon but dares not ask it he begs it by interpretation and tacite desire consult therefore with his modesty his infirmity and his shame He is more bound to do it than thou art yet thou canst better do it than he can It is not alwaies safe for him it is never unsafe for thee It may be an extream shame to him it is ever honourable to thee it may be sometimes to his loss it is alwaies thy gain for this was the resolution of Hesiod's Riddle Half is more than the whole A dinner of herbs with peace is better than a stalled Oxe with contention and therefore upon all accounts it is for thy advantage to make the offer I add also it is thy duty I do not say that in justice thou art bound but in charity thou art and in obedience to thy Lord. If thy Brother offend thee go and tell him Go thou saies Christ. For by so doing we imitate God whom though we have so often so infinitely offended yet he thought thoughts of peace and sent to us Embassadors of peace and Ministers of reconciliation When Pompey and Marcus Crassus were to quit their Consulships Cueius Aurelius I know not upon what account ran into the Forum and cried out that Jupiter appearing to him in his dream commanded that they should be reconciled before they were discharged by the people which when the people also required Pompey stirred not but Crassus did he reached out his hand to his Collegue saying I do nothing unworthy of my self O Romans If I first offer peace to Pomp●y whom you honoured with the title of Great before he was a Man and with a Triumph before he was a Senator We cannot want better arguments of peacefulness It is no shame to thee to offer peace to thy offending Brother when thy God did so to thee who was greatly provoked by thee and could as greatly have been revenged and it is no disparagement that thou shouldest desire the reconcilement with him for whom Christ became a Sacrifice and to whom he offers as he does to thee the Communion of his body and bloud * Thou art I say bound in charity to thy Brothers soul whose repentance thou canst easily invite by thy kind offer and thou makest his return easie thou takest away his objection and temptation thou securest thy own right better and art invested in the greatest glory of mankind thou doest the work of God and the work of thy own soul thou carriest pardon and ease and mercy with thee and who would not run and strive to be first in carrying a pardon and bringing messages of peace and joyfulness Consider therefore that death divides with you every minute you quarrel in the morning and it may be you shall dye at night run quickly and be reconciled for fear you anger last longer than your life It was a pretty victory which Euclid got of his angry Brother who being highly displeased cried out Let me perish if I be not revenged But he answered And let me perish if I do no not make you kind and quickly to forget your anger That gentle answer did it and they were friends presently and for ever after It is a shame if we be out done by
and ambitious desires were the thorns that pricked thy sacred head my vanity was the knee that mocked thee my lusts disrobed thee and made thee naked to shame and cruel scourgings my anger and malice my peevishness and revenge were the bitter gall which thou did●t taste my bitter words and cursed speaking were the vinegar which thou didst drink and my scarlet sins made for thee a purple robe of mockery and derision and where shall I vile wretch appear who have put my Lord to death and expos'd him to an open shame and crucified the Lord of Life 8. Where should I appear but before my Saviour who died for them that have murdered him who hath lov'd them that hated him who is the Saviour of his enemies and the life of the dead and the redemption of captives and the advocate for sinners and all that we do need and all that we can desire 9. Grant that in thy wounds I may finde my safety in thy stripes my cure in thy pain my peace in thy cross my victory in thy resurrection my triumph and a crown of righteousness in the glories of thy eternal Kingdom Amen Amen S. Austins penitential Prayer Before thy eyes O gracious Lord we bring our crimes before thee we expose the wounds of our bleeding souls That which we suffer is but little but that which we deserve is intolerable We fear the punishment of our sins but cease not pertinaciously to proceed in sinning Our weakness is sometimes smitten with thy rod but our iniquity is not changed our grieved mind is troubled but our stiff neck is not bended with the flexures of a holy obedience our life spends in vanity and trouble but amends it self in nothing When thou smitest us then we confess our sin but when thy visitation is past then we forget that we have wept When thou stretchest forth thy hand then we promise to do our duty but when thou takest off thy hand we perform no promises If thou strikest we cry to thee to spare us but when thou sparest we again provoke thee to strike us Thus O God the guilty confess before thee and unless thou givest us pardon it is but just that we perish But O Almighty God our Father grant to us what we ask even though we deserve it not for thou madest us out of nothing else we had not any power to ask Pardon us O gracious Father and take away all our sin and destroy the work of the Devil and let the enemy have no part nor portion in us but acknowledg the work of thy own hands the price of thy own blood the sheep of thy own fold the members of thy own body the purchase of thine own inheritance and make us to be what thou hast commanded give unto us what thou hast designed for us enable us for the work thou hast injoin'd us and bring us to the place which thou hast prepared for us by the blood of the everlasting Covenant and by the pains of the Cross and the glories of thy Resurrection O blessed and most glorious Saviour and Redeemer Jesus Amen CHAP. IV. Of our Actual and Ornamental Preparation to the Reception of the Blessed Sacrament SECT I. HE that is dressed by the former measures is always worthy to communicate but he that is always well vested will against a wedding day be more adorn'd and the five wise Virgins that stood ready for the coming of the Bridegroom with oyl in their lamps and fire on their oyl yet at the notice of his coming trimm'd their lamps and made them to burn brighter The receiving of the Blessed Sacrament is a receiving of Christ and here the soul is united to her Lord and this Feast is the Supper of the Lamb and the Lamb is the Bridegroom and every faithful soul is the Bride and all this is but the image of the state of blessednesse in heaven where we shall see him without a vail whom here we receive under the vail of Sacraments and there we shall live upon him without a figure to whom we are now brought by significations and representments corporal But then as we here receive the same thing as there though after a less perfect manner it is also very fit we should have here the same that is a heavenly conversation though after the manner of men living upon the earth It is true that the blessed souls receive Christ always and they live accordingly in perpetual uninterrupted glorifications of his name and conformities to his excellencies Here we receive him at certain times and at such times we should make our conversation coelestial and our holiness actual when our addresses are so so that in our actual addresses to the reception of these divine Mysteries there is nothing else to be done but that what in our whole life is done habi●ually at that time be done actually No man is fit to die but he who is safe if he dies suddenly and yet he that is so fitted if he hears the noise of the Bridegrooms coming will snuff his lamp and stir up the fire and apply the oyl and so must he that hath warning of his Communion He that communicates every day must live a life of a continual Religion and so must he who in any sense communicates frequently if he does it at all worthily but he that lives carelesly and dresses his soul with the beginnings of vertues against a Communion day is like him that repents not till the day of his death if it succeeds well it is happy for him but if it does not he may blame himself for being confident without a promise Every worthy Communicant must prepare himself by a holy life by mortification of all his sins by the acquisition of all Christian graces and this is not the work of a day or a week but by how much the more these things are done by so much the better we are prepar'd So that the actual addresse and proper preparation to the Blessed Sacrament is indeed an inquiry whether we are habitually prepar'd that is whether we be in the state of grace whether we belong to Christ whether we have faith and charity whether we have repented truly If we be to communicate next week or it may be to morrow these things cannot be gotten to day and therefore we must stay till we be ready And if by our want of preparation we be compelled for the s●ving of our souls and lest we die to abstain from this holy feast let us consider what our case would be if this should be the last coming of the Brideg●oom This is but the warning of that this is but his last coming a little antedated and God graciously calls us now to be prepared here that we may not be unprepared then but it is a formidable thing to be thrust out when we see others enter And therefore when the Masters of spiritual life call upon us to set apart a day or two or three
it is but a suspicious state of life that can give no wise account to God and the Common-wealth 6. Examine thy self in the particulars of thy relation especially where thou governest and takest accounts of others and exactest their faults and art not so obnoxious to them as they to thee Princes and Generals and Parents and Husbands and Masters think more things are lawful to them towards their inferiours than indeed there are and as they may easily transgress in discipline and reproof so they very often fail in making provisions for the souls and bodies of their inferiours and proceed with more confidence and to greater progressions in evil because they pass without animadversion or the notice of laws These persons are not often responsible to their subordinates but alwaies for them and therefore it were good that we took great notice of it our selves because few else do 7. Let us examine our selves concerning the great and little accidents of our private entercourse and conversation in our family especially between man and wife in the little quarrellings and accidental unkindnesses wherein both think themselves innocent and it may be both are to blame If the matter be disputable then do thou dispute it with thy self or rather condemn thy self for if it be fit to be questioned it is certainly in some measure fit to be repented of For either in the thing it self or in the misapprehension of the thing or in the not expounding it well or in the not suffering it or in the not concealing it or in the not turning it into vertue or in the not forgiving it or not conducting it prudently it is great odds but thou art to blame These little rencontres between man and wife are great hindrances to prayer as St. Peter intimates and by consequence do infinitely indispose us to the greatest solennity of prayer the holy Sacrament and therefore ought to be strictly surveyed and the principles rescinded and the beginnings stopt or else we shall communicate without fruit 8. Be sure against a day of Communion to examine thy self in those things which no law condemns but yet are of ill report such as are sumptuous and expensive cloathing great feasts gaudy dressings going often to Taverns phantastick following of fashions inordinate merriments living beyond our means in these and the like we must take our measures by a proportion to the prudence and severity of Christian Religion and by observation of the customs and usages of the best and wisest persons in every condition of men and women For that we do things which are of good report is a precept of the Apostle and as by little illnesses in the body so by the smallest indispositions in the soul if they be proceeded in we may finish ●he method of an eternal death And these things although when they are argued may in many particulars by witty men be represented in themselves as innocent yet they proceed from an evil and unsafe principle and not from a spirit fitted to dwell with Christ and live upon Sacraments and secret participations 9. Let us with curiosity examine our souls in such actions which are condemned by the Laws of God and man respectively but are not defined and the guilty person cannot in many cases be argued and convinced such as are pride and covetousness For when external actions can proceed from many principles as a haughty gate from pride or an ill habit of body or imitation or carelesness or humour it will be hard for any man to say I am proud because I lift up my feet too high and who can say that a degree of care and thriftiness in my case and in my circumstances is covetousness Here as we must be gentle to others so we must be severe to our selves and not only condemn the very first entries of an infant sin but suspect his approaches and acknowledge a fault before it be certain and evident In these things we must the rather examine our selves because we can be the most certain accusers of our selves and the inquiries are of great concernment because they are that curiosity of piety and security of condition which becomes persons of growth in grace and such as are properly fitted to the Communion and indeed they are of things most commonly neglected men usually living at that rate that if they be not scandalous they suppose themselves to be Saints and fitted for the nearest entercourse with Christ. These instances of examination do suppose that we have already examined our selves concerning all habits of sin and laid aside every discernable weight and repented of every observed criminal action and broken every custome of lesser irregularities and are reformed by the measures of Laws and express Commandments and are changed from death to life and that we are persons so far advanced that we need not to regard what is behind but to press forward towards the state of a perfect man in Christ Jesus For he that is in that state of things that he is to examine how many actions of uncleanness or intemperance or slander he hath committed since the last Communion is not fit to come to another but must change his life and repent greatly before he comes hither SECT III. Of an actual supply to be made of such actions and degrees of good as are wanting against a Communion-day 1. IF on a Communion-day we need very much examination we can make but little supply of those many defects which it is likely a diligent inquiry will discover and therefore it is highly advisable that as we ought to repent every day and not put it all off till the day of our Communion or our death so we should every day examine our selves at the shutting in of the day or at our going to bed for so St. Basil St. Chrysostome St. Anthony and St. Austin St. Ephrem and St. Dorotheus do advise Others advise that it be done twice every day and indeed the oftner we recollect our selves 1. The more weaknesses we shall observe and 2. the more faults correct and 3. watch the better and 4. repent the more perfectly and 5. offend less and 6. be more prepared for death and 7. be more humble and 8. with ease prevent the contracting of evil habits and 9. interrupt the union of little sins into a chain of death and 10. more readily prevail upon our passions and 11. better understand our selves and 12. more frequently converse with God and 13. oftner pray and 14. have a more heavenly conversation and in fine 15. be more fitted for a frequent and holy Communion 2. The end of examination is 1. That we grieve for all our sins 2. That we resolve to amend all * 3. That we actually watch and pray against all Therefore it is necessary that when we have examined against a Communion day 1. We alwaies do actions of contrition for every thing we have observed to be amiss 2. That we renew our resolutions of better obedienc●
the spices and gums upon the Altar of Incense SECT II. What it is which we receive in the holy SACRAMENT IT is strange that Christians should pertinaciously insist upon carnal significations and natural effects in Sacraments and Mysteries when our blessed Lord hath given us a sufficient light to conduct and secure us from such mis-apprehensions The flesh profiteth nothing the words which I speak unto you they are spirit and they are life that is the flesh is corruption and its senses are Ministers of death and this one word alone was perpetually sufficient for Christ's Disciples For when upon occasion of the grosse understanding of their Masters words by the men of Capernaum they had been once clearly taught that the meaning of all these words was wholly spiritual they rested there and inquired no further insomuch that when Christ at the institution of the Supper affirmed of the bread and wine that they were his body and his blood they were not at all offended as being sufficiently before instructed in the nature of that Mystery And besides this they saw enough to tell them that what they eat was not the natural body of their Lord This was the body which himself did or might eat with his body one body did eat and the other was eaten both of them were his body but after a diverse manner For the case is briefly this We have two lives a natural and a spiritual and both must have bread for their support and maintenance in proportion to their needs and to their capacities and as it would be an intollerable charity to give nothing but spiritual nutriment to a hungry body and pour diagrams and wise propositions into an empty stomach so it would be as useless and impertinent to feed the Soul with wheat or flesh unless that were the conveyance of a spiritual delicacy In the holy Sacrament of the Eucharist the body of Christ according to the proper signification of a humane body is not at all but in a sense differing from the proper and natural body that is in a sense more agreeing to Sacraments so St. Hierom expresly Of this sacrifice which is wonderfully done in the commemoration of Christ we may eat but of that sacrifice which Christ offered on the altar of the Crosse by it self or in its own nature no man may eat For it is his flesh which is under the form of bread and his blood which is in the form and tast of wine for the flesh is the Sacrament of flesh and blood is the Sacrament of blood for by flesh and blood that is invisible spiritual intelligible the visible and tangible body of our Lord Jesus Christ is consigned full of the grace of all vertues and of Divine Majesty So St Augustine For therefore ye are not to eat that body which ye see nor to drink that blood which my crucifiers shall pour out it is the same and not the same the same invisibly but not the same visibly For until the world be finished the Lord is above but the truth of the Lord is with us The body in which he rose again must be in one place but the truth of it is every where diffused For there is one truth of the body in the Mystery and another truth simply and without Mystery It is truly Christs body both in the Sacrament and out of it but in the Sacrament it is not the natural truth but the spiritual and the mystical And therefore it was that our Blessed Saviour to them who apprehended him to promise his natural body and blood for our meat and drink spake of his ascension into heaven that we might learn to look from heaven to receive the food of our souls heavenly and spiritual nourishment said St. Athanasius For this is the letter which in the New Testament kills him who understands not spiritually what is spoken to him under the signification of meat and flesh and blood and drink So Origen For this bread does not go into the body for to how many might his body suffice for meat but the bread of eternal life supports the substance of our spirit and therefore it is not touch'd by the body nor seen with the eyes but by faith it is seen and touched So St. Ambrose And all this whole mystery hath in it neither carnal sense nor carnal consequence saith St. Chrysostom But to believe in Christ is to eat the bread and therefore why do you prepare your teeth and stomach believe him and you have eaten him they are the words of S. Austin For faith is that intellectual mouth as S. Brasil calls it which is within the man by which he takes in nourishment But what need we to draw this water from the lesser cisterns we see this truth reflected from the spring it self the fountains of our blessed Saviour I am the bread of life he that cometh unto me shall not hunger and he that believeth on me shall not thirst and again He that eats my flesh hath life abiding in him and I will raise him up at the last day The plain consequent of which words is this that therefore this eating and drinking of Christs flesh and blood can only be done by the Ministeries of life and of the spirit which is opposed to nature and flesh and death And when we consider that he who is not a spiritual and a holy person does not feed upon Christ who brings life eternal to them that feed on him it is apparent that our manducation must be spiritual and therefore so must the food and consequently it cannot be natural flesh however altered in circumstance and visibilities and impossible or incredible changes For it is not in this spiritual food as it was in Manna of which our Fathers did eat and died but whosoever eats this divine nutriment shall never die The Sacraments indeed and symbols the exterior part and ministeries may be taken unto condemnation but the food it self never For an unworthy person cannot feed on this food because here to eat Christs flesh is to do our duty and to be established in our title to the possession of the eternal promises For so Christ disposed the way of salvation not by flesh but by the spirit saith Tertullian that is according to his own exposition Christ is to be desired for life and to be devoured by hearing to be chewed by the understanding and to be digested by faith and all this is the method and oeconomy of heaven which whosoever uses and abides in it hath life abiding in him He that in this world does any other way look for Christ shall never find him and therefore if men say Loe here is Christ or loe there he is in the desart or he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Cupboards or Pantries where bread or flesh is laid believe it not Christs body is in heaven and it is not upon earth the heavens must contain
Christs death an act of obedience a ceremony of memorial but of no spiritual effect and of no proper advantage to the soul of the receiver Against this besides the preceding discourse convincing their fancy of weakness and derogation the consideration of the proper excellencies of this mystery in its own seperate nature will be very useful For now we are to consider how his natural body enters into his oeconomy and dispensation For the understanding of which are to consider that Christ besides his Spiritual body and blood did also give us his natural and we receive that by the means of this For this he gave us but once then when upon the Crosse he was broken for our sins this body could die but once and it could be but at one place at once and Heaven was the place appointed for it and at once all was sufficiently effected by it which was design'd in the Counsel of God ●or by the vertue of that death Christ is become the Author of life unto us and of salvation he is our Lord and our Lawgiver but it he received all power in heaven and earth and by it he reconciled his Father to the world and in vertue of that he intercedes for us in heaven and sends his spirit upon earth and feeds our souls by his word he instructs us to wisdom and admits us to repentance and gives us pardon and by means of his own appointment nourishes us up by holinesse to life eternal This body being carried from us into heaven cannot be touch'd or tasted by us on earth but yet Christ left to us symbols and Sacraments of this natural body not to be or to convey that natural body to us but to do more and better for us to convey all the blessings and graces procured for us by the breaking of that body and the effusion of the blood which blessings being spiritual are therefore called his body spiritually because procured by that body which died for us and are therefore called our food because by them we live a new life in the spirit and Christ is our bread and our life because by him after this manner we are nourished up to life eternal That is plainly thus Therefore we eat Christs spiritual body because he hath given us his natural body to be broken and his natural blood to be shed for the remission of our sins and for the obtaining the grace and acceptability of repentance For by this gift and by this death he hath obtained this favour from God that by faith in him and repentance from dead works by repentance towards God and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ we may be saved To this sense of the Mystery are those excellent words of the Apostle He bare our sins upon his own body on the Tree that he might deliver us from the present evil world and sanctifie and purge us from all pollution of flesh and spirit that he might destroy the works of the devil that he might redeem us from all iniquity that he might purchase to himself a peculiar people zealous of good works and that we being dead unto sin might live unto righteousnesse Totum Christiani nominis pondus fructus mors Christi All that we are or do or have is produced and effected by the death of Christ. Now because our life depends upon his death the ministry of this life must relate ●o the ministry of this death and we have nothing to glory in but the Crosse of Christ the Word preached is nothing but Jesus Christ crucified and the Sacraments are the most eminent way of declaring this word for by Baptism we are buried into his death and by the Lords Supper we are partakers of his death we communicate with the Lord Jesus as he is crucified but now since all belong to this that Word and that Mystery that is highest and neerest in this relation is the principal and chief of all the rest and that the Sacrament of the Lords Supper is so is evident beyond all necessity of inquiry it being instituted in the vespers of the Passion it being the Sacrament of the passion a sensible representation of the breaking Christs body of the effusion of Christs blood it being by Christ himself intituled to the passion and the symbols invested with the names of his broken body and his blood poured forth and the whole ministry being a great declaration of this death of Christ and commanded to be continued until his second coming Certainly by all these it appears that this Sacrament is the great ministry of life and salvation here is the publication of the great word of salvation here is set forth most illustriously the body and blood of Christ the food of our souls much more clearly than in Baptism much more effectually than in simple enunciation or preaching and declaration by words for this preaching is to strangers and infants in Christ to produce faith but this Sacramental enunciation is the declaration and confession of it by men in Christ a glorying in it giving praise for it a declaring it to be done and own'd and accepted and prevailing The consequent of these things is this That if any Mystery Rite or Sacrament be effective of any spiritual blessings then this is much more as having the prerogative and illustrious principality above every thing else in its own kind or of any other-kind in exteriour or interiour Religion I name them both because as in Baptism the water alone does nothing but the inward cooperation with the outward oblation does save us yet to Baptism the Scriptures attribute the effect so it is in this sacred solemnity the external act is indeed nothing but obedience and of it self only declares Christs death in rite and ceremony yet the worthy communicating of it does indeed make us feed upon Christ and unites him to the soul and makes us to become one spirit according to the words of S. Ambrose Ideo in similitudinem quidem accipis sacramentum sed verae naturae gratiam virtutemque consequeris thou rec●iv●st the Sacrament as the similitude of Christs body but thou shalt receive the grace and the virtue of the true nature I shall not enter into so useless a discourse as to inquire whether the Sacraments confer grace by their own excellency and power with which they are endued from above because they who affirm they do require so much duty on our parts as they also do who attribute the effect to our moral disposition but neither one nor the other say true for neither the external act nor the internal grace and morality does effect our pardon and salvation but the spirit of God who blesses the symbols and assists the duty makes them holy and this acceptable Only they that attribute the efficacy to the Ministration of the Sacrament chose to magnifie the immediate work of man rather than the immediate work of God and prefer the external at least in glorious
made one with Christ then it shall be to us in our proportion as it was to him we shall rise again and we shall enter into glory But it is certain we are united to Christ by it we eat his body and drink his blood Sacramentally by our mouths and therefore really and spiritually by our spirits and by spiritual actions cooperating For what good will it do us to partake of his body if we do not also partake of his spirit but certain it is if we do one we do both cum naturalis per sacramentum proprietas perfectae sacramentum sit unitatis as St. Hilaries expression is the natural propriety viz the outward elements by the Sacrament that is by the institution and blessing of God become the Sacrament of a perfect unity which beside all the premisses is distinctly affirmed in the words of the Apostle we which are sanctified and he which sanctifies are all of one and again the bread which we break is it not the communication of the body of Christ and the cup which we drink is it not the communication of the blood of Christ plainly saying that by this holy ministery we are joyned and partake of Christs body and blood and then we become spiritually one body and therefore shall receive in our bodies all the effects of that spiritual union the chief of which in relation to our bodies is resurrection from the grave And this is expresly taught by the Ancient Church So St. Irenaeus teaches us As the bread which grows from the earth receiving the calling of God that is blessed by prayer and the word of God is not now common bread but the Eucharist consisting of two things an earthly and an heavenly so also our bodies receiving the Eucharist are not now corruptible but have the hope of resurrection And again when the mingled calice and the made bread receives the word of God viz. is consecrated and blessed it is made the Eucharist of the body and blood of Christ out of those things by which our body is nourished and our substance does consist and how shall any one deny that the flesh is capable of the gift of God which is eternal life which is nourished by the body and blood of Christ And St. Ignatius calls the blessed Eucharist 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the medicine of immortallity for the drink is his blood who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 incorruptible love and eternal life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so the Fathers of the Nicene Councel the symbols of our resurrection the meat nourishing to immortallity and eternal life so Cyril of Alexandria for this is to drink the blood of Jesus to be partakers of the Lords incorruptibility said St. Clement For bread is food and blood is life but we drink the blood of Christ himself commanding us that together with him we may by him be partakers of eternal life So St. Cyprian aut quicunque sit author Sermon de coenâ Domini 6. Because this is a ministry of grace by bodily ceremonies and conveys spiritual blessings by temporal ministrations there is something also of temporal regard directly provided for our bodies by the holy Sacrament It sometimes is a means in the hand of God for the restoring and preserving respectively of our bodily health and secular advantages I will not insist upon that of St. Gorgonia who being oppressed with a violent head-ach threw her self down before the holy Table where the Sacrament was placed and prayed with passion and pertinacy till she obtained relief and ease in that very place Nor that of St. Ambrose who having trod upon a Gentlemans foot afflicted with the gout in the time of ministration gave him the holy smbols and told him it was good for his sicknesse also and that he presently found his cure I my self knew a person of great sanctity who was afflicted to deaths door with a vomiting and preparing her self to death by her viaticum the holy Sacrament to which she always bore a great reverence she was infinitely desirous and yet equally fearful to receive it lest she should reject that by her infirmity which in her spirit she passionately longed for but her desire was the greater passion and prevailed she received it and swallowed it and after great and earnest reluctancy being forced to cast it up in zeal and with a new passion took it in again and then retained it and from that instant speedily recovered against the hope of her Physician and the expectation of all her friends God does miracles every day and he who with spittle and clay cured the blind mans eyes may well be supposed to glorifie himself by the extraordinary contingences and Sacramental contacts of his own body But that which is most famous and remarked is that the Austrian Family do attribute the rise of their House to the present Grandeur to W●lliam Earl of Hasburgh and do acknowledg it to be a reward of his piety in the venerable treatment and usage of these Divine mysteries It were easier to heap together many rare contingences and miraculous effects of the holy Sacrament than to find faith to believe them now-adayes and therefore for this whole affair I relie upon the words of Saint Paul affirming that God sent sicknesses and sundry kinds of death to punish the Corinthian irreverent treatment of the Blessed Sacrament and therefore it is not to be deemed but that life and health will be the consequent of our holy usages of it for if by our fault it is a savour of death it is certain by the blessing and intention of God it is a favour of life But of these things in particular we have no promise and therefore such events as these cannot upon this account of faith and certain expectations be designed by us in our communions If God please to send any of them as sometimes he hath done it is to promote his own glory and our value of the Blessed Sacrament the great ministry of salvation 7. The sum of all I represent in these few words of St. Hilary These holy mysteries being taken cause that Christ shall be in us and we in Christ and if this be more than words we need no further inquiry into the particulars of blessing consequent to a worthy communion for if God hath given his Son unto us how shall not he with him give us all things else nay all things that we need are effected by this said St. Clement of Alexandria one of the most antient Fathers of the Church of Christ Eucharistia qui per fidem sunt participes sanctifi●antur corpore animâ They who by faith are partakers of the Eucharist are sanctified both in body and in soul. Fonte renascentes membris sanguine Christi Vescimur atque ideo templum Deitatis habemur Sedul How great therefore and how illustrious benefits it is the meditation of St. Eusebius Emissenus does the power of the Divine blessing
reason to think your selves prepared than by all the extempore piety and solemn Religion that rises at the sound of a Bell and keeps her time by the Calendar of the Church more than by the laws of God This is not so to be understood as if it were not fit that against a solemn time and against a communion day our souls should be more adorned and our lamps better dressed and our lights snuffed and our Religion more active and the habits of grace should exercise more acts But this is meant only that though the acts of virtue are not so frequent on ordinary dayes yet there must be no act of vice upon them at all and the habits of grace must be the same and the inclinations regular and the disposition ready and the desires prest and you shall better know the estate of your soul by examining how you converse with your Merchant than by considering how cautiously you converse with your Priest He that talks to a Prince will talk as wisely as he can but if you will know what the man is inquire after him in his house and how he is with all his relations For no man stands upon his Guard alwayes as he does sometimes If therefore upon examining you would understand what you are examine your self not by your cloaths but by your body not by the extraordinaries of a solemn religion but by the ordinaries of a daily conversation These are the best Signs I can tell of but they are to be made use of with the following cautions 1. Although in trying whether your resolutions are likely to hold and your affections to sin are gone you must not rely upon words but place your self in the scene and circumstances of your temptation and try whether you be likely to hold out when sin comes with all the offers of advantage yet be carefull that this examination of your own strength against temptation become not a temptation to you and this is especially to be attended to in the matter of lust and fear For the very imaginations of a lustfull object are of themselves a direct temptation and he that dresses his fancie with remembrances of this vanitie opens a door to let the sin in Murenia's little boy being afraid of the wolf at the door opened the door to see if he were gone and let the beast in and since the fancy is the proper scene of lust he that brings the temptation there brings it where it can best prevail Therefore in our examination concerning this evil and whether we be likely to stand in this war we are to examine our selves only whether we are perfectly resolved to fly and not to fight that is whether we will secure our selves by the proper arts of the spirit of prudence for if any thing can make us come neer this Devil we are lost without remedy The temptations in the matter of fear are something like it if you will examine whether you love God so well that you would dye for him inquire as well and wisely as you can but be not too particular Satisfie your self with a general answer and rest in this if you finde that the apprehension of death is not so great as the apprehension of sin if you pray against fear and heap up arguments to confirm your courage and your hope if you finde that you despise those instances of persecution that you meet with for the rest believe in God who it may be will not give strengths before you need them and therefore be satisfied with thus much that your present strength is sufficient for any present trial and when a greater comes God hath promised to give you more strength when you shall have need of more But examine your self by what is likely to fall upon you actually It may be you have cause to fear that you shall be made poor for a good conscience or imprisoned for your duty or banished for religion consider if you love God so well that you are likely to suffer that which is likely to happen to you but do not dress your examination with rare contingencies and unlikely accidents and impossible cases Do not ask your self whether you would endure the rack for God or the application of burning Basons to your eyes or the torment of a slow fire or whether you had rather go to hell than commit a sin this is too phantastick a trial and when God it may be knowing your weakness will never put you to it really do not you tempt your self by fancy and an afflictive representment Domitian was a cruel man false and bloody and to be neer him was a perpetual danger enough to try the constancy of the bravest Roman But once that he might be wanton in his cruelty he invited the chiefest of the Patricii to Supper who coming in obedience and fear enough entred into a Court all hanged with blacks and from thence were conducted into dining rooms by the Pollinctors who used to dress the bodies unto Funerals the lights of heaven we may suppose were quite shut out by the approaching night and arts of obscurity when they were in those charnel houses for so they seemed every one was placed in order a black Pillar or Coffin set by him and in it a dim taper besmeared with brimstone that it might burn faint and blew and solemn where when they had stood a while like designed sacrifices or as if the Prince were sending them on solemn Embassie to his brother the Prince of Darkness on a sudden entred so many naked Black-Moors or Children besmear'd with the horrid juice of the sepia who having danced a little in phantastick and Devils postures retired a while and then returned serving up a banquet as at solemn funerals and Wine brought to them in Urnes instead of Goblets with deepest silence now and then interrupted with fearful groans and shriekings Here the Senators who possibly could have strugled with the abstracted thoughts of death seeing it dressed in all the fearful imagerie and Ceremonies of the grave had no powers of Philosophy or Roman courage but falling into a lipothymie or deep swooning made up this pageantry of death with a representing of it unto the life This scene of sorrows was over-acted and it was a witty cruelty to kill a wise man by making him too imaginative and phantastical It is not good to break a staffe by too much trying the strength of it or to undo a mans soul by a useless and so phantastick a temptation For he that tries himself further than he hath need of is like Palaemons shepherd who fearing the foot-bridge was not strong enough to try it loaded it so long till by his unequal trial he broke that which would have born a bigger burden than he had to carry over it Some things will better suffer a long usage than an unequal trial 2. When any man hath by the former measures examined himself how his affections do stand to sin and folly
and God is appeas'd and God is reconciled and God gives us blessings and the fruits of Christs passion in the vertue of the sacrificed Lamb that is we believing and praying are blessed and sanctified and saved through Jesus Christ. So that as we pray so we communicate if we pray well we may communicate well else at no hand Now in this besides that we are to take account of our Prayers by all those measures of the Spirit which we have learned in the holy Scriptures there are two great lines of duty by which we can well examine our selves in this particular 1. That our Prayers must be the work of our hearts not of our lips that is that we heartily desire what we so carefully pray for and God knows this is not very ordinary For besides that we are not in love with the things of God and have no worthy value for Religion there are many things in our Prayer which we ask for and do not know what to do with if we had them and we do not feel any want of them and we care not whether we have them or no. We ask for the Spirit of God for Wisdom and for a right Judgment in all things and yet there are not many in our Christian Assemblies who use to trouble themselves at all with judging concerning the Mysteries of Godlinesse Men pray for humility and yet at the same time think that all that which is indeed humility is a pitiful poornesse of spirit pusilanimity and want of good breeding We pray for contrition and a broken heart and yet if we chance to be melancholy we long to be comforted and think that the Lectures of the Crosse bring Death and therefore are not the way of Eternal Life We pray sometimes that God may be first and last in all our thoughts and yet we conceive it no great matter whether he be or no but we are sure that he is not but the things of the world do take up the place of God and yet we hope to be saved for all that and consequently are very indifferent concerning the return of that Prayer We frequently call upon God for his grace that we may never fall into sin now in this besides that we have no hopes to be heard and think it impossible to arrive to a state of life in which we shall not commit sins yet if we do sin we know there is a remedy so ready that we believe we are not much the worse if we do Here are prayers enough but where are the desires all this while We pray against covetousnesse and pride and gluttony but nothing that we do but is either covetousnesse or pride so that our Prayers are terminated upon a word not upon a thing We do covetous actions and speak proud words and have high thoughts and do not passionately desire to have affections contrary to them but only to such notions of the sin as we have entertained which are such as will do no real prejudice or mortification to the sin and whatever our Prayers are yet it is certain our desires are so little and so content with any thing of this nature that for very many spiritual petitions we are indifferent whether they be granted or not But if we are poor or persecuted if we be in fear or danger if we be heart-sick or afflicted with an uncertain soul then we are true desirers of relief and mercy we long for health and desire earnestly to be safe our hearts are pinch'd with the desire and the sharpnesse of the appetite is a pain then we pray and mind what we do * He that is in fear of death does not when he prays for life think upon his money and his sheep the entring of a fair woman into the room does not bend his neck and make him look off from the Princes face of whom he sues for pardon And if we had desires as strong as our needs and apprehensions answerable to our duty it were not possible that a man should say his prayers and never think of what he speaks but as our attention is so is our desire trifling and impertinent it is frighted away like a bird which fears as much when you come to give it meat as if you came with a design of death When therefore you are to give sentence concerning your Prayers your ●rayer-book is the least thing that is to be examined your Desires are the principal for they are fountains both of action and passion Desire what you pray for for certain it is you will pray passionately if you desire ferven●ly Prayers are but the body of the bird Desires are its Angels wings 2. If you will know how it is with you in the matter of your Prayers examine whether or no the form of your Prayer be the rule of your life Every Petition to God is a Precept to man and when in your Litanies you pray to be delivered from malice and hypocrisie from pride and envy from fornication and every deadly sin all this is but a line of duty and tells us that we must never consent to an act of pride or a thought of envy to a temptation of uncleannesse or the besmearings and evil paintings of hypocrisie * But we when we pray against a sin think we have done enough and if we ask for a grace suppose there is no more required Now Prayer is an instrument of help a procuring auxilliaries of God that we may do our duty and why should we ask for help if we be not our selves bound to do the thing Look not therefore upon your prayers as a short method of ease and salvation but as a perpetual monition of duty and by what we require of God we see what he requires of us and if you want a system or collective body of holy precepts you need no more but your prayer book and if you look upon them first as duties then as prayers that is things fit to be desired and fit to be laboured for your prayers will be much more usefull not so often vain nor so subject to illusion not so destitute of effect or so failing of the promises The prayers of a Christian must be like the devotions of the husbandman God speed the plough that is labour and prayer together a prayer to bless our labour Thus then we must examine Is desire the measure of our prayer and is labour the fruit of our desire if so then what we ask we shall receive as the gift of God and the reward of our labour but unless this be the state of o●r prayer we shall finde that the receiving of the Sacrament will be as ineffective because it will be as imperfect as our prayer For prayer and Communion differ but as great and little in the same kinde of duty Communion is but a great publick and solemn addresse and prayer to God through Jesus Christ and if we be not faithful in a little we shall not be
the beloved Son the first born of every creature according to the Prophecies which went before him of the seed of of Abraham and David and of the Tribe of Judah He who is the maker of all that are born was conceived in the womb of a Virgin and he that is void of all flesh was incarnate and made flesh He was born in time who was begotten from eternity He conversed piously with men and instructed them with his holy Laws and doctrine He cured every disease and every infirmity He did signs and wonders among the people He slept and eat and drank who feeds all the living with food and fills them with his blessing He declared thy Name to them who knew it not He enlightned our ignorances He enkindled Godliness and fulfilled thy will and finished all that which thou gavest him to do All this when he had done he was taken by the hands of wicked men by the treachery of false Priests and an ungodly people he suffered many things of them and by thy permission suffered all shame and reproach He was delivered to Pilate the President who judged him that is the Judge of the quick and dead and condemned him who is the Saviour of all others He who is impassible was crucified and He died who is of an immortal nature and they buried him by whom others are made alive that by his death and passion he might free them for whom he came and might dissolve the bands of the Devil and deliver men from all his crafty malices But then he rose again from the dead he conversed with his Disciples forty days together and then was received up into heaven and there sits at the right hand of God his Father We therefore being mindful of these things which he did and suffered for us give thanks to thee Almighty God not as much as we should but as much as we can and here fulfil his Ordinance and believe all that he said and know and confess that he hath given us his body to be the food and his blood to be the drink of our souls that in him we live and move and have our being that by him we are taught by his strength enabled by his graces prevented by his spirit conducted by his death pardoned by his resurrection justified and by his intercession defended from all our enemies and set forward in the way of holinesse and life eternal O grant that we and all thy servants who by faith and Sacramental participation communicate with the Lord Jesus may obtain remission of our sins and be confirmed in piety and may be delivered from the power and illusions of the Devil and being filled with thy Spirit may become worthy members of Christ and at last may inherit eternal Life through the same our Lord Jesus Christ Amen CHAP. IV. Of Charity preparatory to the Blessed Sacrament SECT I. THE second great Instrument of preparation to the blessed Sacrament is Charity for though this be involved in faith as in its cause and moral principle yet we are to consider it in the proper effects also of it in its exercise and operations relative to the Mysteries For they that speak distinctly and give proprieties of employment to the two Sacraments by that which is most signal and eminent in them both respectively call Baptism the Sacrament of Faith and the Eucharist the Sacrament of Charity that is Faith in Baptism enters upon the work of a good life and in the holy Eucharist it is actually productive of that Charity which at first was designed and undertaken For Charity is that fire from heaven which unlesse it does enkindle the Sacrifice God will never accept it for an atonement This God declared to us by his Laws given to the sons of Israel and Aaron The Sacrifice that was Gods portion was to be eaten and consumed by himself and therefore to be devoured by the holy fire that came down from heaven And this was imitated by the Persians who worshipped the fire and thought what the fire devoured their god had plainly eaten So Maximus Tyrius tells of them that bringing their Sacrifices they were wont to say O Fire our Lord eat this meat And Pindar in his Olympiaes tells of the Rhodians that when they brought a Sacrifice to Jupiter and had by chance forgotten to bring their fire he accepting of their good intentions and pitying their forgetfulnesse rained down upon them a golden shower from a yellow cloud that is a shower of fire came and consumed their sacrifice Now this is the great emblem of Charity the flame consumes the feasters Sacrifice and makes it a divine nutriment our Charity it purifies the Oblation and makes their Prayers accepted The Tables of the Lord like the Delian Altars must not be defiled with blood and death with anger and revenge with wrath and indignation and this is to be in all senses of duty and ministration an unbloody Sacrifi●e The blood of the Crosse was ●he last that was to have been shed The Laws can shed more but nothing else For by remembring and representing the effusion of blood not by shedding it our expiation is now perfected and compleat but nothing hinders it more than the spirit of war and death not only by the emissions of the hand or the apertures of a wound but by the murder of the tongue and the cruelties of the heart or by an unpeaceable disposition It was love that first made Societies and love that must continue our Communions and God who made all things by his power does preserve them by his love and by union and society of parts every creature is preserved When a little w●ter is spilt from a full Vessel and falls into its enemy dust it curles it self into a drop and so stands equally armed in every point of the circle dividing the Forces of the enemy that by that little union it may stand as long as it can but if it be dissolved into flatnesse it is changed into the nature and possession of the dust War is one of Gods greatest plagues and therefore when God in this holy Sacrament pours forth the greatest effusion of his love peace in all capacities and in all dimensions and to all purposes he will not endure that they should come to these love-feasts who are unkind to their brethren quarrelsom with their neighbours implacable to their enemies apt to contentions hard to be reconciled soon angry scarcely appeased These are dogs and must not come within the holy place where God who is the Congregating Father and Christ the great minister of peace and the holy spirit of love are present in mysterious Symbols and most gracious Communications For although it be true that God loves us first yet he will not continue to love us or proceed in the methods of his kindnesse unlesse we become like unto him and love For by our love and charity he will pardon us and he will
comfort us and he will judge us and he will save us and it can never be well with us till love that governs heaven it self be the Prince of all our actions and our passions By this we know we are translated from death to life by our love unto our brethren That 's the testimonial of our comfort I was hungry and ye fed me I was hungry and ye fed me not These are the Tables of our fi●al judgment If ye love me keep my Commandments That 's the measure of our obedience In that ye have done kindnesse to one of these little ones ye have done it unto me That is the installing of the Saints in their Thrones of Glory If thou bringest a gift to the altar leave it there go and be reconciled to thy brother That 's the great instrument of our being accepted No man can love God and hate his brother That 's the rule of our examination in this particular This is a new Commandment that ye love one another There 's th● great precept of the Gospel This is an old Commandment that ye love one another There is the very Law of Nature And to sum up all Love is the fulfilling of the Law that 's the excellency and perfection of a man and there is the expectation of all reward and the doing all our du●y and the sanctification of every action and the spirit of life It is the heart and the fire and the salt of every Sacrifice it is the crown of every Communion And all this mysterious excellency is perfectly represented by that divine exhortation made by Saint Paul Purge out therefore the old leaven that ye may be a new lump as ye are unleavened For even Christ our Passeover is sacrificed for us Therefore let us keep the feast not with old leaven neither with the leaven of MALICE and wickednesse but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth Now concerning this grace if we will inquire after it in order to a worthy receiving the holy Communion we must inquire after the effects and offices of Charity and by the good we do or are ready to do take an account of our selves in this particular The offices and general duties are three 1. Doing good 2. Speaking good and 3. ●orgiving evil SECT II. Of doing good to our Neighbours HE that loves me does me good for until love be beneficial it is not my good but his fancy and pleasure that delights in me I do not examine this duty by our alms alone for although they are an excellent instrument of life for alms deliver from death said the Angel to old Tobit yet there are some who are bountiful to the poor and yet not charitable to their neighbour You can best tell whether you have charity to your brother by your willingnesse to oblige him and do him real benefit and keeping him from all harm we can Do you do good to all you can Will you willingly give friendly counsel Do you readily excuse your neighbours faults Do you rejoyce when he is made glad Do you delight in his honour and prosperity Do you stop his entry into folly and shame Do not you laugh at his miscarriages Do you stand ready in mind to do all good offices to all you can converse with For nothing makes Societies so fair and lasting as the mutual endearment of each other by good offices and never any man did a good turn to his brother but one time or other himself did eat the fruit of it The good man in the Greek Epigram that found a dead mans scul unburied in kindnesse digging a grave for it opened the inclosures of a Treasure And we read in the Annals of France that when Goutran King of Burgundy was sleeping by the murmurs of a little brook his Servant espied a Lizard coming from his Masters head and essayed to passe the water but seeming troubled because it could not he laid his sword over the brook and made an iron bridge for the little beast who passing entred into the earth and speedily returned back to the King and disturb'd him as it is supposed into a dream in which he saw an iron bridge which landed him at the foot of the mountain where if he did dig he should find a great heap of gold The servant expounded his Masters dream and shewed him the iron bridge and they digged where the Lizard had entred where they found indeed a Treasure and that the Servants piety was rewarded upon his Lords head and procured wealth to one and honour to the other There is in humane nature a strange kind of noblenesse and love to return and exchange good offices but because there are some dogs who bite your hand when you reach them bread God by the ministery of his little creatures tells that if we will not yet he will certainly recompence every act of piety and charity we do one to another * This the ●gyptians did well signifie in one of the new names of their Constellations For when the wife of Ptolomaeus Euergetes had vowed her hair to the Temple upon condition her husband might return in safety and she did consecrate the beauty of her head to the ornaments of Religion Comonus the Astronomer told her that the Gods had p●aced her hair among the Stars and to this day they call one knot of Stars by the name of Berenices hair For every such worthinesse like this will have an immortal name in some Record and it shall be written above the Stars and set by the names of the Sons of God who by doing worthy things have endeared Communions and Societies of mankind In all the Sacrifices of the Ancients they were hugely kind to one another they invited their friends to partake the Sacrifice and called them to a portion of the pardon that they might eat of that mercy and that forgivenesse which they expected from their God Then they sent portions to the absent then they renewed Leagues and re-established Peace and made marriages and joined Families and united hearts and knitted Interests by a thred and chain of mutual acts of kindness and endearment And so should we when we come to this holy Sacrifice we must keep our hearts entire to God and divide them amongst our Brethren and heartily love all them who feed upon the same Christ who live by the same faith who are entertained by the same hope and are confederate by the laws and the events and the causes by the acts and emanation of the same Charity * But this thing is plain no discourse here is useful but an exhortation all that can be said is this that it is decent and it is useful and it is necessary that we be very kind and very charitable to all the members of Christ with whom we are joyned by the ligatures of the same body and supported by the strength of the same nourishment and blessed by influences from the same Divine head
kindnesses which Christ requires of thee for thy enemy that is to pray for him and to love him But you may secure your selves by all means which his violence and your case hath m●de necessary But this I say is in case the evil be intolerable or that ●o avoid it be a matter of duty or charity to those to whom you are obliged Though my old friend and new enemy Ca●bo do me little spites and kill my Deer or shoot my Pigeons or trespasse upon my grasse I must not be avenged on him at the Law or right my self by afflicting him but strive for the rewards of patience and labour for the fruits of my charity and for the rest use all the guards of prudence that I can yet if he takes away my childrens portions or fires my houses or exposes me and mine to beggary or destitution I must do that duty which my charity to my children and my justice does oblige me I may defend my childrens right though that defence exposes him to evil that does the evil I may not let Carbo alone and suffer my children to be undone I must provide for my own according to their condition and states of life if this provision be but necessary or competent according to prudent modest and wise accounts and be not a contention for excesses and extravagancies of wealth He that goes to Law for another hath greater warrant than he that does it for himself for it is more likely to be charity in their case and revenge in my own and certainly in the disputes of charity our children are to be preferred before our enemies In short If the vexation that is brought by the suit of Law upon an injurious person be not revenge and if the defence be necessary or greatly charitable and if the injury be intolerable or greatly afflictive in all these cases Christ hath left us to the liberties of Nature and Reason and the Laws 5. No man must in his own case prosecute his enemy to death or capital punishment The reasons are because no mans temporal evil his injury his disgrace his money and his wound are not a competent value for the life of a man and when beyond this there is no evil that we can do it can in no sense consist with charity that goes so far He that prosecutes his enemy to death forgives nothing forbears nothing of that injury he means no good to his enemy desires not his amendment is not careful of his repentance is not ambitious to gain a brother to secure the interest of a soul for God to get himself the rewards of charity and it is a sad thing to make thy adversary pay the utmost farthing even whilst he is in the way and to send him to make his accounts to God reeking in his sins and his crimes broad blown about his ears There are not many cases in which it can consist with the spirit of Christianity for the Laws themselves to put a criminal hastily to death Whatsoever is necessary that is lawful and of the necessities of the publick publick persons are to judge only they are to judge according to the analogy and gentlenesse of the Christian Law by a Christian spirit and to take care of souls as well as of bodies and estates If the criminal can be amended as oftentimes he can it is much better for a Common-wealth that a good Citizen be made than that he be taken away while he is evil Strabo tells of some Nations dwelling about Caucasus that never put their greatest malefactors to death and Diodorus says that Sabacon a pious and good King of Egypt changed capital punishments into slavery and profitable works and that with excellent successe because it brought more profit to the publick and brought the criminal to repentance and a good mind Balsamo says the Greek Emperours did so and St. Augustin advises it as most fitting to be done But if this in some case be better in the publick it self it is necessary in the private and it is necessary in our present inquiry in order to charity preparatory to the holy Communion and in the Council of Eliberis there is a Canon If any Christian accuse another at the Law and prosecute him to banishment or death let him not be admitted to the Communion no not so much as in the article of death For he whose malice passed unto the death of his brother must not in his death receive the Communion of the faithful and the seal of the Charities of God But this was severe and it is to be understood only to be so unlesse when we are commanded to prosecute a criminal by the interest of necessary justice and publick charity and the command of the Laws But in other cases he that hath done so let him repent greatly and long and at last Communicate That 's the best expedient Question VII Whether the Laws of Forgiv●●esse and the Charities of the Communio● oblige the injured person to forgive the adulterous Husband or Wife if they do repent There are two cases in which it is so far from being necessary that it is not lawful to do some things of kindnesse which in all other cases are indeed true charity and highly significative of a soul truly merciful and worthy to Communicate 1. When to retain the adulterous person is scandalous as in the Primitive Church it was esteemed so in Clergy men then s●ch persons though they be penitent must no● be suffered to cohabit they must be pa●doned to a●l purposes which are not made unlawful by accident and to all purposes which may minister unto their repentance and salvation but charity must not be done to a single person with offence to ●he Chu●ch and a Criminal must not receive adv●ntage by the prejudice of the holy and the innocen● Against this I have nothing to oppose but t●at those ●hurches which di● fo●bid this forgiven●sse upon pretence of scandal should also have considered whether or no that the forgiveness of the Criminal and the charitable toleration of the injury and the patient labours of love and the endeavours of rep●●tance be not only more profitable to them both but also more exemplar to others 2. The other is the case of direct d●nger if the sin of the offending party be promoted by the charity of the injured man or woman it is made unlawful so far to forgive as to cohabit if this charity will let her loose to repent of her repentance it turns to uncharitablenesse and can n●ver be a duty But except it be in these cases it is not only lawful but infinitely agreeable to the duty of charity to restore the repenting person to his first condition of love and society But this is such a charity as although it be a counsel of perfection and a nobleness of forgivenesse yet that the forgivenesse shall extend to society and mutual endearments of cohabitation is under no Commandment
lamp he must stand readily prepared by a state of repentance and against the solemn time he must make that state more actual and his graces operative Now in order to this it is to be considered that preparation to death hath great latitude and not only he is fit to die who hath attained to the fulness of the stature of Christ to a perfect man in Christ Jesus but every one who hath renounced his sin with heartinesse and sincerity and hath begun to mortifie it But in these cases of beginning or of Infancy in Christ though it be certain that every one who is a new Creature though but newly become so is born of God and hath life abiding in him and therefore shall not passe into condemnation yet concerning such persons the Rulers of Souls and Ministers of Sacraments have nothing but a judgment of charity and the sentences of hope relating to the persons the state is so little and so allayed and so near to the late state of death from which they are recovering that God only knows how things are with them yet because we know that there is a beginning in which new converts are truly reconciled there is a first period of life and as we cannot say in many cases that this is it so in many we cannot say this is not therefore the Church hopes well of persons that die in their early progressions of piety and consequently refuses not to give to them these divine Mysteries Whoever are reconciled to God may be reconciled to the Church whose office it is only to declare the Divine Sentence and to administer it and to help towards the verification of it But because the Church cannot be surer of any person that his sins are pardoned that he is reconciled to God that he is in the state of Grace that if he then dies he shall be saved than a man himself can be of himself and in his own case which certainly he knows better than any man else and that our degrees of hope and confidence of being saved when it is not presumption but is prudent and reasonable does increase in proportion to our having well used and improved Gods grace and inlarges it self by our proportions of mortification and spiritual life and every man that is wise and prudent abides in fears and uncertain thoughts till he hath gotten a certain victory over all his sins and though he dies in hope yet not without trembling till he finds that he is more than conquerour therefore in proportion to this address to death must also be our address to the holy Sacrament For no man is fit to die but he that can be united unto Christ and ●he only that can be so must be admitted to a participation of his body and his bloud It is the same case in both we dwell with Christ and the two states differ but in degrees it is but a passing from altar to altar from that where the Minister of the Church officiates to that where the head of the Church does intercede There is this only difference there may be some proportions of haste to the Sacrament more than unto death upon this account because the reception of the Sacrament in worthy dispositions does increase those excellencies in which death ought to find us and therefore we may desire to communicate because we perceive a want of g●ace and yet for the same reason we may at the same time be afraid to die because after that we can receive no more but as that finds us we shall abide for ever But he that fears justly may yet in many cases die safely and he shall find that his fears when he was alive were useful to the caution and zeal and hastiness of repentance but were no certain indication that God was not reconciled unto him The best and severest persons do in the greatest parts of their spiritual life complain of their imperfect state and feel the load of their sins and apprehend with trembling the sad consequents of their sins and every day contend against them and forget all that is past of good actions done and press forwards still to more grace and are as hungry as if they had none at all and those men if they die go to Christ and shall reign with him for ever and yet many of them go with a trembling heart and though considering the infinite obliquity of them they cannot over-value their sins yet considering the infinite goodness of God and his readiness to accept it they undervalue their repentance and are safe in their humility and in Gods goodness when in many other regards they think themselves very unsafe Now such men as these must not be as much afraid to communicate as they are afraid to die but these and all men else must not communicate till they be in that condition that if they did die it would go well with them and the reason is plain because every friend of God dying so is certainly saved and he that is no friend of God is unworthy to partake of the Table of the Lord. But for the reducing the Answer of this Question to practice and to particular considerations I am to advise these things 1. Because no man of an ordinary life and a newly begun repentance ought hastily to pronounce himself acquitted and in the state of grace and in the state of salvation in this rule of proportion we are only to take the judgment of charity not of certainty and what is usually by wise and good men sup●osed to be the certain though the least measure of hopeful expectations in order to death that we must suppose also to be our least measure of repentance preparatory to the blessed Sacrament 2. This measure must not be taken in the daies of health and carelesness but when we are either actually in apprehension or at least in deep meditation of death when it is dressed with all such terrors and material considerations that it looks like the King of terrors and at least makes our spirits full of fear and of sobriety 3. This measure must be carefully taken without the allay of foolish principles or a careless spirit or extravagant confidences of personal predestination or of being in any sect but with the common measures which Christians take when they weigh sadly their sins and their fears of the Divine displeasure let them take such proportions which considering men relie upon when they indeed come to die for few sober men die upon such wild accounts as they rely upon in talk and interest when they are alive He that prepares himself to death considers how deeply God hath been displeased and what hath been done towards a reconciliation and he that can probably hope by the usual measures of the Gospel that he is in probability of pardon hath by that learnt by what measures he must prepare himself to the holy Sacrament 4. Some persons are of a timorous conscience and apt to irregular and
or prevails dangerously and because our returns to God and the mortifications of sin are divisible and done by parts and many steps of progression they that delay their Communion that they may be surer do very well provided that they do not stay too long th●t is that their fear do not t●rn to timorousness their religion do not change into superstition their distrust of themselves into a jealousie of God their apprehension of the greatness of their sin into a secret diffidence of the greatness of the Divine mercy And therefore in the first conversions of a sinner this reverence may be longer allowed to a good man than afterwards But it must be no longer allowed than till he hath once communicated For if he hath once been partaker of the Divine mysteries since his repentance he must no longer forbear for in this case it is true that he who is not fit to receive every day is fit to receive no day If he thinks that he ought wholly to abstain let him use his caution and his fear to the advantages of his repentance and the heightning of his longings but if he may saf●ly come once he may piously come often He ca●not long stand at this distance if he be the man he is supposed But for the time of his total abstention let him be conducted by a spiritual guide whom he may safely trust For if he cannot by the usual methods of repentance and the known Sermons of the Gospel be reduced to peace and a quiet conscience let him declare his estate to a spiritual Guide and if he thinks it fit to absolve him that is to declare him to be in the state of grace and pardon it is all the warrant which with the testimony of Gods Spirit bearing witness to our spirit we can expect in this world I remember what a religious person said to Petrus Celestinus who was a great Saint but of a timorous conscience in this particular Thou abstainest from the blessed Sacrament because it is a thing so sacred and formidable that thou canst not think thy self worthy of it Well suppose that But I pray who is worthy Is an Angel worthy enough No c●r●ainly if we consider the greatness of the mystery But consider the goodness of God and the usual measures of good men and the commands of Christ inviting us to come and commanding us and then Cum timore reverentiâ frequenter operare Receive it often with feare and reverence To which purpose these two things are fit to be considered 1. Supposing this fear and reverence to be good and commendable in his case who really is fit to communicate but does not think so yet if we compare it with that grace which prompts a good man to take it often we may quickly perceive which is best Certainly that act is in its own nature best which proceeds from the best and the most perfect grace but to abstain proceeds from fear and to come frequently being worthily disposed is certainly the product of love and holy hunger the effect of the good Spirit who by his holy fires makes us to thirst after the waters of salvation As much then as love is better than fear so much it is to be preferred that true penitents and well-grown Christians should frequently address themselves to these Sacramental Unions with their Lord. 2. The frequent use of this Divine Sacrament proceeds from more as well as from more noble vertues For here is obedience and zeal worship and love thanksgiving and oblation devotion and joy holy hunger and holy thirst an approach to God in the waies of God union and adherence confidence in the Divine goodness and not only hope of pardon but a going to receive it and the omission of all these excellencies cannot in the present case be recompenced by an act of religious fear For this can but by accident and upon supposition of something that is amiss be at all accounted good and therefore ought to give place to that which supposing all things to be as they ought is directly good and an obedience to a Divine Commandment For we may not deceive our selves the matter is not so indifferent as to be excused by every fair pretence It is unlawful for any man unprepared by repentance and its fruits to communicate but it is necessary that we should be prepared that we may come For plague and death threaten them that do not communicate in this mysterious banquet as certainly as danger is to them who come unduly and as it happens For the Sacrament of the Lords body is commanded to all men saith Tertullian and it is very remarkable what St. Austin said in this affair The force of the Sacraments is of an unspeakable value and therefore it is sacriledge to despise it For that is impiously despised without which we cannot come to the perfection of piety So that although it is not in all cases the meer not receiving that is to be blamed but the despising it yet when we consider that by this means we arrive at perfection all causless recusancy is next to contempt by interpretation One thing more I am to add whereas some persons abstain from a frequent Communion for fear lest by frequency of receiving they should less esteem the Divine mysteries and fall into lukewarmness and indevotion the consideration is good and such persons indeed may not receive it often but not for that reason but because they are not fit to receive it at all For whoever grows worse by the Sacrament as Judas after the Sop hath an evil spirit within him for this being by the design of God a savour of life it is the fault of the receiver if it passes into death and diminution of the spiritual life He therefore that grows less devout and less holy and less reverent must start back and take physick and throw out the evil spirit that is within him for there is a worm in the heart of the tree a peccant humour in the stomach it could not be else that this Divine nutriment should make him sick Question II. But is every man bound to communicate that is present or that comes into a Church where the Communion is prepared though but by accident and without design and may no man that is fit omit to communicate in every opportunity To this I answer That in the Primitive Church it was accounted scandalous and criminal to be present at the holy Offices and to go out at the celebration of the Mysteries What cause is there O Hearers that ye see the Table and come not to the Banquet said St. Austin If thou stand by and do not communicate thou art wicked thou art shameless thou art impudent So St. Chrysostome and to him that objects he is not worthy to communicate he answers that then neither is he fit to pray And the Council of Antioch and of Bracara commanded that those
3. And that we pray for particular strength against our failings 3. He that would communicate with fruit must so have ordered his examinations that he must not alwaies be in the same method He must not alwaies be walking with a candle in his hands and prying into corners but they must be swept and garnished and be kept clean and adorned His examinations must be made full and throughly and be productive of inferiour resolutions and must pass on to rules and exercises of caution That is 1. We must consider where we fail oftenest 2. From what principle this default comes 3. What are the best remedies 4. We must pass on to the real and vigorous use of them and when the case is thus stated and drawn into rules and resolutions of acting them we are only to take care we do so and every day examine whether we have or no. But we must not at all dwell in this relative and preparatory and ministring duty But if we find that we have reason to do so let us be sure that something is amiss we have played the hypocrites and done the work of the Lord negligently or falsly 4. If any passion be the daily exercise or temp●ation of our life let us be careful to put the greatest distress upon that and therefore against a Communion-day do something in defiance and diminution of that chastise it if it hath prevailed reenforce thy resolutions against it examine all thy aids see what hath been prosperous and pursue that point and if thou hast not at all prevailed then know all is not well for he communicates without fruit who makes no progressions in his mortifications and conquest over his passions It may be we shall be long exercised with the remains of the Canaanites for it is in the matter of Passions as Seneca said of Vices We fight against them not to conquer them intirely but that they may not ●onquer us not to kill them but to bring them under command and unless we do that we cannot be sure that we are in the state of grace and therefore cannot tell if we do or do not worthily communicate For by all the exteriour actions of our life we cannot so well tell how it is with us as by the observation of our affections and passions our wills and our desires For I can command my foot and it must obey and my hand and it cannot resist but when I bid my appetite obey or my anger be still or my will not to desire I find it very often to rebell against my word and against Gods word Therefore let us be sure to take some effective course with the appetite and place our guards upon the inward man and upon our preparation daies do some violence to our lusts and secret desires by holy resolutions and severe purposes and rules of caution and by designing a course of spiritual arts and exercises for the reducing them to reason and obedience something that may be remembred and something that will be done * But to this let this caution be added that of all things in the world we be careful of relapses into our old follies or infirmities for if things do not succeed well afterwards they were not well ordered at first 5. Upon our communion daies and daies of prep●ration let us endeavour to stir up every grace which we are to exercise in our conversation and thrust our selves forward in zeal of those graces that we begin to amend our lukewarmness and repair our sins of omission For this is a day of sacrifice and every sacrifice must be consumed by fire and therefore now is the day of improvement and the proper season for the zeal of duty and if upon the solemn day of the soul we do not take care of omissions and repair the great and little forgetfulnesses and omissions of duty and pass from the infirmities of a man to the affections of a Saint we may all our life time abide in a state of lukewarmness disimprovement and indifference To this purpose 6 Compare day with day week with week Communion with Communion time with time duty with duty and see if you can observe any advantage any ground gotten of a passion any further degree of the spirit of mortificaton any new permanent fires of devotion for by volatile sudden and transient flames we can never guess steadily But be sure never to think you are at all improved unless you observe your defects to be 1. fewer 2. or lighter or 3. at least not to be the same but of another kind and ins●ance against which you had not made particular provisions formerly but now upon this new observation and experience you must 7. Upon or against a Communion day endeavour to put your soul into that order and state of good things as if that day you were to die and consider that unless you dare die upon that day if God should call you there is but little reason you should dare to receive the Sacrament of life or the ministry of death He that communicates worthily is justified from sins and to him death can have no sting to whom the Sacrament brings life and health and therefore let every one that is to communicate place himself by meditation in the gates of death and suppose himself seated before the Tribunal of Gods Judgment and see whether he can reasonably hope that his sins are pardoned and cured and extinguished And then if you judge righteous judgement you will soon find what pinches most what makes you most afraid what was most criminal or what is least mortified and so you will learn to make provisions accordingly 8. If you find any thing yet amiss or too suspicious or remaining to evill purposes the reliques of the scattered enemy after a war resolve to use some general instrument of piety or repentance that may by being useful in all the parts of your life and conversation meet with every stragling irregularity and by perpetuity and an assiduous force clear the coast 1. Resolve to have the presence of God frequently in your thought 2. Or endeavour and resolve to bring it to pass to have so great a dread and reverence of God that you may be more ashamed and really troubled and confounded to sin in the presence of God than in the sight and observation of the best and severest man 3. Or else resolve to punish thy self with some proportionable affliction of the body or spirit for every irregularity or return of undecency in that instance in which thou sets thy self to mortifie any one special passion or temptation Or 4. Firmly to purpose in every thing which is not well not to stay a minute but to repent instantly of it severely to condemn it and to do something at the first opportunity for amends Or 5. To resolve against an instance of infirmity for some short sure and conquerable periods of time as if you be given to prating resolve to be silent
of thy Cross reconcile me to thy eternal Father and bring to me peace of Conscience let the victory of thy Cross mortifie all my evil and corrupt affections let the triumph of thy Cross lead me on to a state of holiness that I may sin no more but in all things please thee and in all things serve thee and in all things glorifie thee 7. Great and infinite are thy glories infinite and glorious are thy mercies who is like unto the Lord our God who dwelleth on high and yet humbleth himself to behold the things that are in Heaven and earth Heaven it self does wholly minister to our salvation God takes care of us God loves us first God will not suffer us to perish but imployes all his attributes for our good The Son of God dies for us the holy Spirit descends upon us and teaches us the Angels minister to us the Sacrament is our food Christ is married to our souls and heaven it self is offered to us for our portion 8. O God my God assist me now and ever graciously and greatly Grant that I may not receive bread alone for man cannot live by that but that I may eat Christ that I may not search into the secret of nature but inquire after the miracles of grace I do admire I worship and I love Thou hast overcome O Lord thou hast overcome Ride on triumphantly because of thy words of truth and peace load my soul in this triumph as thy own purchase thy love hath conquer'd and I am thy servant for ever 9. Thou wilt not dwell in a polluted house make my soul clean and do thou consecrate it into a Temple O thou great Bishop of our souls by the inhabitation of thy holy spirit of purity Let not these teeth that break the bread of Angels ever grind the face of the poor let not the hand of Judas be with thee in the dish let not the eyes which see the Lord any more behold vanity let not the members of Christ ever become the members of a harlot or the ministers of unrighteousness 10. I am nothing I have nothing I desire nothing but Jesus and to be in Jerusalem the holy City from above Make haste O Lord Behold my heart is ready my heart is ready Come Lord Jesus come quickly When the holy Man that Ministers reaches the consecrated Bread suppose thy Lord entring into his Courts and say Lord I am not worthy thou shouldest come under my roof but speak the word Lord and thy servant shall be whole After receiving of the Bread pray thus Blessed be the Name of our gracious God Hosannah to the Son of David Blessed is he that cometh in the name of our Lord. Hosannah in the highest Thou O blessed Saviour Jesus hast given me thy precious body to be the food of my soul and now O God I humbly present to thee my body and soul every member and every faculty every action and every passion Do thou make them fit for thy service Give me an understanding to know thee and wisdom like as thou didst to thy Apostles ingenuity and simplicity of heart like to that of Nathanael zeal and perfect repentance like the return of Zacheus Give me eyes to see thee as thy Martyr Stephen had an ear to hear thee as Mary a hand to touch thee as Thomas a mouth with Peter to confess thee an arm with Simeon to embrace thee feet to follow thee with thy Disciples an heart open like Lydia to entertain thee that as I have given my members to sin and to uncleanness so I may henceforth walk in righteousness and holiness before thee all the days of my life Amen Amen If there be any time more between the receiving the holy Body and the blessed Chalice then add O immense goodness unspeakable mercy delightful refection blessed peace-offering effectual medicine of our souls Holy Jesus the food of elect souls coelestial Manna the bread that came down from heaven sweetest Saviour grant that my soul may relish this divine Nutriment with spiritual ravishments and love great as the flames of Cherubims and grant that what thou hast given me for the remission of my sins may not ●y my fault become the increase of them Grant that in my heart I may so digest thee by a holy faith so convert thee into the unity of my spirit by a holy love that being conformed to the likeness of thy death and resurrection by the crucifying of the old man and the newness of a spiritual and a holy life I may be incorporated as a sound and living member into the body of thy holy Church a member of that body whereof thou art head that I m●y abide in thee and bring forth fruit in thee and in the resurrection of the Just my body of infirmity being reformed by thy power may be configured to the similitude of thy glorious body and my soul received into a participation of the eternal Supper of the Lamb that where thou art there I may be also beholding thy face in glory O blessed Saviour and Redeemer Jesus Amen When the holy Chalice is offered attend devoutly to the blessing and joyn in heart with the words of the Minister saying Amen I will receive the Cup of salvation and call upon the Name of our Lord. After receiving of the holy Cup pray thus It is finished Blessed be the name of our gracious God Blessing glory praise and honour love and obedience dominion and thanksgiving be to him that sitteth on the Throne and to the Lamb for ever and ever I bless and praise thy Name O eternal Father most merciful God that thou hast vouchsafed to admit me to a participation of these dreadful and desirable mysteries unworthy though I am yet thy love never fails and though I too often have repented of my repentances and fallen back into sin yet thou never repentest of thy loving kindness Be pleased therefore now in this day of mercy when thou openest the treasures of heaven and rainest Manna upon our souls to refresh them when they are weary of thy infinite goodness to grant that this holy Communion may not be to me unto judgment and condemnation but it may be sweetness to my soul health and safety in every temptation joy and peace in every trouble lig●t and strength in every word and work comfort and defence in the hour of my death against all the oppositions of the spirits of darkness and grant that no unclean thing may be in me who have received thee into my heart and soul. II. Thou dwellest in every sanctified soul she is the habitation of Sion and thou ta●est it for thine own and thou hast consecrated it to thy self by the operation of glorious mysteries within her O be pleased to receive my soul presented to thee in this holy Communion for thy dwelling place make it a house of prayer and holy meditations the seat of thy Spirit the repository of graces reveal to me
thy mysteries and communicate to me thy gifts and love me with that love thou bearest to the Sons of thy house Thou hast given me thy Son with him give me all things else which are needful to my body and soul in order to thy glory and my salvation through Jesus Christ our Lord. III. An act of Love and Eucharist to be added if there be time and opportunity O Lord Jesu Christ Fountain of true and holy love nothing is greater than thy love nothing is sweeter nothing more holy Thy love troubles none but is entertained by all that feel it with joy and exultation and it is still more desired and is ever more desirable Thy love O dearest Jesu gives liberty drives away fear feels no labour but suffers all it eases the weary and strengthens the weak it comforts them that mourn and feeds the hungry Thou art the beginning and the end of thy own love that thou mayest take occasion to do us good and by the methods of grace to bring us to glory Thou givest occasion and createst good things and producest affections and stirrest up the appetite and dost satisfie all holy desires Thou hast made me and fed me and blessed me and preserved me and sanctified me that I might love thee and thou would'st have me to love thee that thou mayest love me for ever O give me a love to thee that I may love thee as well as ever any of thy servants loved thee according to that love which thou by the Sacrament of love workest in thy secret ones Abraham excelled in faith Job in patience Isaac in fidelity Jacob in simplicity Joseph in chastity David in religion Josiah in zeal and Manasses in repentance but as yet thou hadst not communicated the Sacrament of love that grace was reserved till thou thy self shouldst converse with man and teach him love Thou hast put upon our hearts the sweetest and easiest yoke of love to enable us to bear the burden of man and the burden of the Lord give unto thy servant such a love that whatsoever in thy service may happen contrary to flesh and bloud I may not feel it that when I labour I may not be weary when I am despised I may not regard it that adversity may be tolerable and humility be my sanctuary and mortification of my passions the exercise of my daies and the service of my God the joy of my soul that loss to me may be gain so I win Christ and death it self the entrance of an eternal life when I may live with the Beloved the joy of my soul the light of my eyes My God and all things the blessed Saviour of the world my sweetest Redeemer Jesus Amen An Eucharistical Hymn taken from the Prophecies of the Old Testament relating to the blessed Sacrament Praise ye the Lord I will praise the Lord with my whole heart in the Assembly of the upright and in the Congregation He hath made his wonderful works to be remembred the Lord is gracious and full of compassion He hath given meat unto them that fear him he will ever be mindful of his Covenant His bread shall be fat and he shall yield royal dainties Binding his Foal unto the vine and his Asses colt unto the choice vine he washed his garment in wine and his cloaths in the bloud of grapes In this mountain shall the Lord of Hosts make unto all people a feast of fat things a feast of wine on the lees He will swallow up death in victory and the Lord God will wipe away tears from off all faces and the rebuke of his people shall he take away from off all the earth for the Lord hath spoken it And the Lord their God shall save them as the flock of his people for how great is his goodness and how great is his beauty Corn shall make the young men chearful and new wine the virgins The Lord whom ye seek shall suddenly come to his Temple even the messenger of the Covenant whom ye delight in He shall purifie the sons of Levi and purge them as gold and silver that they may offer unto the Lord an offering in righteousness O Israel return unto the Lord thy God for thou hast fallen by thine iniquity Take with you words and turn to the Lord saying Take away all iniquity and receive us graciously so will we render the calves of our lips for in thee the Fatherless findeth mercy The Lord hath said I will heal their backslidings I will love them freely for mine anger is turned away They that dwell under his shadow shall return they shall revive as the corn and blossom as the Vine the memorial thereof shall be as the wine of Lebanon The poor shall eat and be satisfied they shall praise the Lord that seek him your heart shall live for ever for he hath placed peace in our borders and fed us with the flower of wheat For from the rising of the Sun even unto the going down of the same the Name of the Lord shall be great among the Gentiles and in every place Incense shall be offered unto his Name and a pure offering for his Name shall be great among all Nations Who so is wise he shall understand these thi●gs and the prudent shall know them for the waies of the Lord are right and the just shall walk in them but the transgressors shall fall therein Glory be to the Father c. A Prayer to be said after the Communion in behalf of our souls and all Christian people 1. O most merciful and gracious God Father of our Lord Jesus Christ the Lord of glory thou art the great lover of souls and thou hast given thy holy Son to die for our salvation to redeem us from sin to destroy the work of the Devil and to present a Church to thee pure and spotless and undefiled relying upon thy goodness trusting in thy promises and having received my dearest Lord into my soul I humbly represent to thy divine Majesty the glorious sacrifice which our dearest Jesus made of himself upon the Cross and by a never ceasing intercession now exhibites to thee in heaven in the office of an eternal Priesthood in behalf of all that have communicated this day in the Divine Mysteries in all the Congregations of the Christian world and in behalf of all them that desire to communicate and are hindred by sickness or necessity by fear or scruple by censures Ecclesiastical or the sentence of their own consciences 2. Give unto me O God and unto them a portion of all the good prayers which are made in heaven and earth the intercession of our Lord and the supplications of all thy servants and unite us in the bands of the common faith and a holy charity that no interests or partialities no sects or opinions may keep us any longer in darkness and division 3. Give thy blessing to all Christian Kings and Princes all Republicks and Christian Governments grant to them the
of the body of Christ for we being many are one body and one bread in baptisme we partake of the death of Christ and in the Lords Supper we do the same in that as Babes in this as men in Christ so that what effects are affirmed of one the same are in greater measure true of the other they are but several rounds of Jacobs ladder reaching up to heaven upon which the Angels ascend and descend and the Lord sits upon the top And because the Sacraments Evangelical be of the like kind of mystery with the Sacraments of old from them we can understand that even signs of secret graces do exhibit as well as signifie for besides that there is a natural analogy between the ablution of the body and the purification of the soul between eating the holy bread and drinking the sacred calice and a participation of the body and blood of Christ it is also in the method of the divine oeconomy to dispense the grace which himself signifies in a ceremony of his own institution thus at the Unction of Kings Priests and of Prophets the sacred power was bestowed and as a Canon is invested in his dignity by the tradition of a book and an Abbat by his staffe a Bishop by a ring they are the words of St. Bernard so are divisions of graces imparted to the diverse Sacraments And therefore although it ought not to be denyed that when in Scripture and the writings of the holy Doctors of the Church the collation of grace is attributed to the s●gn it is by a metonymy and a Sacramental manner of speaking yet it is also a synecdoche of the part for the whole because both the Sacrament and the grace are joyned in the lawful and holy use of them by Sacramental union or rather by a confederation of the parts of the holy Covenant Our hearts are purified by faith and so our consciences are also made clean in the cestern of water By faith we are saved and yet he hath sav●d us by the laver of regeneration and they are both joyned together by St. Paul Christ gave himself for his Church that he might sanctifie and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word that is plainly by the Sacrament according to the famous Commentary of St. Austin accedat verbum ad elementum tum fit sacramentum when the word and the element are joyned then it is a perfect Sacrament and then it does effect all its purposes and intentions Thus we find that the grace of God is given by the imposition of hands and yet as Austin rightly affirmes God alone can give his holy spirit and the Apostles did not give the holy Ghost to them upon whom they laid their hands but prayed that God would give it and he did so at the imposition of their hands Thus God sanctified Aaron and yet he said to Moses thou shalt sanctifie Aaron that is not that Moses did it instead of God but Moses did it by his ministery and by visible Sacraments and rites of Gods appointment and though we are born of an immortal seed by the word of the living God yet St. Paul said to the Corinthians I have begotten you through the Gos●el and thus it is in the greatest as well as in the least he that drinks Christ's blood and eats his body hath life abiding in him it is true of the ●acrament and true of the spiritual manducation and may be indifferently affirmed of either when the other is not excluded for as the Sacrament operates only by the vertue of the spirit of God so the spirit ordinarily works by the instrumentality of the Sacraments And we may as well say that faith is not by hearing as that grace is not by the Sacraments for as without the spirit the word is but a dead letter so with the spirit the Sacrament is the means of life and grace And the meditation of St. Chrysostom is very pious and reasonable If we were wholly incorporeal God would have given us graces unclothed with signs and Sacraments but because our spirits are in earthen vessels God conveyes his graces to us by sensible ministrations The word of God operates as secretly as the Sacraments and the Sacraments as powerfully as the word nay the word is alwayes joyned in the worthy administration of the Sacrament which therefore operates both as word and sign by the ear and by the eyes and by both in the hand of God and the conduct of the spirit effect all that God intends and that a faithful receiver can require and pray for For justification and sanctification are continued acts they are like the issues of a Fountain into its receptacles God is alwayes giving and we are alwayes receiving and the signal effects of Gods holy spirit sometimes give great indications but most commonly come without observation and therefore in these things we must not discourse as in the conduct of o●her causes and operations natural for although in natural effects we can argue from the cause to the event yet in spiritual things we are to reckon only from the sign to the event And the signs of grace we are to place in stead of natural causes because a Sacrament in the hand of God is a proclamation of his graces he then gives us notice that the springs of heaven are opened and then is the time to draw living waters from the fountains of salvation When Jonathan shot his arrows beyond the boy he then by a Sacrament sent salvation unto David he bad him be gone and flie from his Fathers wrath and although Jonathan did do his business for him by a continual care and observation yet that symbol brought it unto David for so are we conducted to the joyes of God by the methods and possibilities of men In conclusion the sum is this The Sacraments and symbols if they be considered in their own nature are just such as they seem water and bread and wine they retain the names proper to their own natures but because they are made to be signs of a secret mystery and water is the symbol of purification of the soul from sin and bread and wine of Christs body and blood therefore the symbols and Sacraments receive the names of what themselves do sign they are the body and they are the blood of Christ they are Metonymically such But because yet further they are instruments of grace in the hand of God and by these his holy spirit changes our hearts and translates us into a Divine nature therefore the whole work is attributed to them by a Synecdoche that is they do in their manner the work for which God ordained them and they are placed there for our sakes and speak Gods language in our accent and they appear in the outside we receive the benefit of their ministery and God receives the glory SECT IV. The blessings and Graces of the Holy Sacrament enumerated and proved