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

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precatur denuo LOrd God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob who because thou art the God not of the dead but of the Living shewest hereby that they are living and not dead and that with thee do live the spirits of all them that dye in the Lord and in whom the Souls of them that are Elect after they be delivered from the burden of this flesh be in joy and felicity thou hast said thou wilt turn men into small dust and after that wilt say Return again you Children of men Thou art the God of Truth and hast said it thou art the God of power and might and wilt do it by that power whereby thou art able to subdue all things unto thy self and bring to pass whatsoever pleaseth thee in Heaven and Earth with whom nothing is impossible Lord Jesu Christ who art the Resurrection and the Life in whom if we believe though we be dead yet shall we live who by thy death hast overcome death and by thy rising again hast opened to us the Gate of everlasting life who shalt send thine Angels and gather the bodies of thine Elect from all the Ends of the Earth and especially those who by a mystical union are flesh of thy flesh and in whose hearts thou hast dwelt by Faith we humbly beseech thee for them whose bodies shall in this place be gathered to their Fathers that they may rest in this hope of Resurrection to eternal life through thee O blessed Lord God who shalt change their vile bodies that they may be like thy Glorious body according to the mighty working whereby thou art able to bring all things even death and all into subjection to thy self Holy and blessed Spirit the Lord and giver of life whose Temples the bodies of thy Servants are by thy sanctifying Grace dwelling in them we verily trust that their bodies that have been thy Temples and those hearts in which Christ hath dwelt by Faith shall not ever dwell in corruption but that as by thy sending forth thy Breath at first we received our Being Motion and Life in the beginning of the Creation so at the last by the same Spirit sending forth the same breath in the end of the Consummation Life Being and Moving shall be restored us again so that after our dissolution as thou didst shew thy holy Prophet the dry bones shall come together again Bone to his Bone and Sinews and Flesh shall come upon them and thou shalt cause thy Breath to enter into them and we shall live and this Corruption shall put on Incorruption and this Mortal shall put on Immortality God the Father God the Son and God the Holy Ghost accept sanctifie and bless this place to that end whereunto according to thine own Ordinance we have ordain'd it even to bestow the Bodies of thy Servants in till the number of thine Elect being accomplished they with us and we with them and with all other departed in the true Faith of thy Holy Name shall have our consummation and Bliss both in Body and Soul in thy eternal everlasting glory Blessed Saviour that didst for this end dye and rise again that thou mightest be Lord both of the Living and the Dead whether we live or die thou art our Lord and we are thine living or dying we commend our selves unto thee have mercy upon us and keep us thine for evermore Reintrantes igitur Capellam cantant priorem partem Psal. 16. Conscendit suggestum Magister Matthaeus Wren Thema ei posterior pars vers 17. cap. 2. S. Ioan. Zelus domus tuae c. Agit de affectibus in Christo Zelo inter caeteros nec illo falso sed pro Deo nec caeco sed secundum scientiam pro Domo pro Cultu Dei de praesentia Dei praecipue in Templis magno non Morum solummodo nostrorum sed s●ei quoque Fidei incremento fulcimentoque Deum Locorum distinctione gaudere confirmat tum exemplo mirifice Jacobi tantopere distinguentis Bethel tum maximo omnium miraculo quo Christus Mercatores è Templo ejecit Enarratis Christi per hoc factum devotionibus concludit in debitam à nobis Templorum reveren●●●● atque istius Fundatoris Encomium meritissimum Cantatur pars reliqua Vespertinae precationes incipiendo jam à Symbolo Apostolico secundum communem Ecclesiae formulam finiuntur FINIS Balsam in Nom●ca● tit 2. 6. 2.
to the earth from whence it came and the spirit of man returneth unto God that gave it so to make diverse accompts of the Bodies of Mankind and the Bodies of other living Creatures in so much as the Body of Adam was resolved on and afterwards the workmanship of thine own hands and endued with a soul from thine own breath But much more since the second Adam thy blessed Son by taking upon him our nature exalted this flesh of ours to be flesh of his flesh whose flesh thou sufferedst not to see Corruption so that the Body returns to the earth and the soul to him that gave it It shall from thence return again it is but a rest and a rest in hope as saith the Psalmist for it is a righteous thing with God that the Body which was partaker with the soul both in doing and suffering should be rais'd again from the Earth to be partaker also with the soul of the reward or punishment which God in Mercy or Justice shall reward not to one of them alone but joyntly to them both There being then so great difference it is not thy will O Lord that our Bodies should be cast out as the Bodies of Beasts to become dung for the earth or our bones lye scatter'd abroad to the sight of the Sun But when thy servants are gathered to their Fathers their Bodies should be decently and seemly laid up in the bosom of the Earth from whence they were taken Neither is it thy pleasure O Lord that they should be buried as an Ass in the open fields but in a place chosen and set apart for that purpose For even so from the Beginning we find the holy Patriarch Abraham the Father of the faithful would not bury his dead in the common fields nay nor amongst the Bodies of Hethites who were heathen men but purchased a burial place for himself in the plain of Mamre which became as it were the Church-Yard of the Patriarchs therein they laid the dead bodies of Sarah his Wife of himself his son Isaac and Rebecca his wife after them Iacob and Leah were buried there After this manner did the Patriarchs in old time who trusted in God sever themselves places for Burial whose children we are so long as we do their works and walk in the steps of their most holy Faith Ensuing then the steps of the Faith of our Father Abraham we for the same purpose have made choise of the very same place wherein we now are that it may be as the Cave of Mamre even Gods store-house for the Bodies of such our Brethren and Sisters to be laid up in as he shall ordain there to be interred there to rest in the sleep of peace till the last Trump shall awake them for they shall awake and rise up that sleep in the dust for thy dew shall be as the dew of herbs and the earth shall yield forth her dead We beseech thee good Lord to accept this work of ours in ●hewing mercy to the dead and mercifully grant that they whose bodies shall be here bestowed and we all may never forget the day of putting off the Tabernacle of this flesh but that living we may think upon death and dying we may apprehend life and rising from the death of Sin to the life of Righteousness which is the first rising of Grace● we may have our parts in the second which is the 〈◊〉 to glory by thy Mercy O most gracious Lord God who doest live and govern all things world without end Priorem dein formulam per omnia secutus in Cathedram ibi se collocat atque Actum consecrationis promulgat IN Dei Nomine Amen Nos Lancelotus permissione divina Winton Episcopus hunc locum jacentem in vasto solo vulgo nuncupatum Ridgway-heath infra Parochiam Ecclesiae parochialis sanctae Mariae c. jam propriis sumptibus strenui viri Richardi Smith de Peer-tree Armigeri in circuitu Capellae noviter ab eo quoque propriis sumptibus suis constitutae palis inclusum arboribus consitum continentem in longitudine 148 pedes aut circiter in latitudine 124 pedes aut circiter in toto vero circuitu 435 pedes aut circiter a pristinis aliisque quibuscunque communibus usibus profanis in usus sacros separandum fore decernimus sic separamus ac eundem inhabitantibus vel degentibus in familia Ric. Smith in villa de Weston Hamlettis de Itchin Wolston Ridgeway in parte Manerii de Bitterne quae est de Parochia sancta Mariae juxta Southampt in Caemeterium sive locum Sepulturae pro corporibus inibi decedentium Christiano ritu humandis quantum in nobis est ac de jure Canonibus Ecclesiasticis ac de statutis hujus Regni Angliae possumus authoritate nostra ordinaria Episcopali assignamus ac per nomen Coemeterii Capellae IESU designamus dedicamus in usum praedictum consecramus ac sic assignatum dedicatum consecratum fuisse esse in futurum perpetuis temporibus remanere debere palam ac publice declaramus Ac Coemeterium Capellae IESU deinceps in perpetuum nuncupandum decernimus Privilegiis insuper omnibus fingulis Coemeteriis locis sepulturae ab antiquo consecratis dedicatis competent Coemeterium praedictum sive locum sepulturae ad omnem juris effectum munitum esse volumus quantum in nobis est de jure possumus sic munimus stabilimus per praesentes Proviso tamen quod praedict Richardus Haeredes Assignati sui ac reliqui in dicta villa Hamlettis c. inhabitantes propriis suis sumptibus dictum coemeterium de tempore in tempus in decenti statu conservabunt clausuras ejus quoties opus fuerit sufficienter convenienter reparabunt Salvis etiam omnino reservatis Rectori Ecclesie Parochialis sanctae Mariae praedictae ac Guardianis aliisque Ministris dictae Ecclesiae pro tempore existentibus in perpetuum omnibus singulis oblationibus mortuariis Feudis vadiis pro omnibus singulis sepulturis Mortuorum in hoc coemeterio aut ratione eorundem de jure sive consuetudine debitis in tam amplis modo forma ac si personae praedictae sepultae fuissent in Coemeterio Matricis Ecclesiae praedictae Quas quidem oblationes mortuaria feuda vadia omnia singula sic de jure ac consuetudine debita Rectori Guardianis Ministris dictae Matricis Ecclesiae pro tempore existentibus in perpetuum soltendi quantum in nobis est jura patiuntur reservamus per praesentes salva item nobis successoribus nostris tanquam loci Ordinariis potestate visitandi dictum Coemeterium de tempore in tempus inquirendi an sufficienter reparatum fuerit in clausuris an omnia ibi decenter et secundum ordinem fiant et si minus fiant per censuras Ecclesiasiicas corrigendi His finitis
gracious Lord hath so done his marvellous work of Christs Resurrection that it ought to be had in remembrance For which holy Church teaches us to sing as we are bound I will give thanks unto the Lord with my whole heart secretly amongst the faithful and in the Congregation Ver. 1. Evening Psalms are 113. 114. 118. The first is a Psalm of Thanksgiving especially for raising up Christ Ver. 6,7 Taking him out of the dust and lifting him out of the mi●e to set him with and above the Princes when he raised him from the dead and set him at his own right hand in the heavenly places far above all Principalities and powers and Might and Dominion and every name that is named not only in this world but also in that which is to come Ephes. 1. 21. The 118. Psal. is part of it at least of Christs Resurrection as it is expounded S. Matt. 21. and Acts 4. 11. The stone which the builders refused is become the the head of the corner this day And therefore This is the day which the Lord hath made we will rejoyce and be glad in it ver 27. The 114. Psal. may seem at first sight not so applyable to Christs Resurrection for it is a Thanksgiving for the Jews deliverance out of Egypt Yet notwithstanding if we look well into it we shall find it proper enough for the day For as the Apostle teaches us All things hapned to them in types and figures not only words but actions were typical Egypt was a type of Hell and their captivity there a type of our captivity under sin and the Devil Their deliverance from thence a type and figure of our deliverance from Hell and that which the Psalmist here gives thanks for as past in the History is understood to be meant as much or more in the prophesie of Christs Redemption of his Church the true Israelites that walk in the steps of the Faith of our Father Abraham from sin and Hell by the power of his glorious Resurrection this day The first Lesson Morn is Exod. 12. in which is mentioned the Institution of the Passeover proper for this day the feast of the Passeover For as S. Aug. observes Ep. 119. We do in this Feast not only call to mind the history of our Saviours Resurrection but also celebrate the mystery of ours That as Christ this day rose again from death to life so by Christ and the vertue of his Resurrection shall we be 〈◊〉 alive and rise from death to life eternal Christ is therefore our true Passeover where of the other was a type The Lesson then is proper for the day So is the first Lesson Even Exod. 14● For it is concerning the Israelites deliverance out of Egypt a type of our deliverance from Hell this day by Christs gloririous resurrection As that day Israel saw that great work which the Lord did upon Egypt Ver. 31. So this day we see the great conquest over Hell and Death finished by Christs triumphant Resurrection from the dead The Second Lessons are plain The Gospel gives us the full evidence of Christs Resurrection The Epistle tells what use we should make of it If Christ be risen seek those things that are above c. The Collect prayes for grace to make that use of it which the Epistle directs Thus holy Church is careful to teach and instruct all her children in the matter of the Feast preaching Christs Resurrection to us both in the type and Prophesie out of the Old Test. and in the History of it out of the New And she does not only teach us to know what God hath done for us this day but also she is careful that we may do our duty to God for this his marvellous goodness commanding and 〈◊〉 recting us to pray for grace to do our duty prescribing us excellent forms of adoring and blessing God for his mercy this day such methods as the Holy Ghost hath set down in which we may be sure to pray and praise God by the Spirit For the Antiquity of this Feast heaps of Testimonies might be brought but these two following may suffice 1. S. AVGVST Epist. 118. These things which are not written but we keep them by tradition if they be observed all the world over are to be understood to be commended to us and commanded either by General Councels whose authority in the Church is most safe or else by the Apostles as for example That the Passion of our Lord his Resurrection and Ascension into Heaven and the coming of the Holy Ghost should be observed by an Anniversary solemnity 2. CONSTANTINE The Great c. 17. The Feast of Easter we have kept from the first day of the Passion untill now Euseb. de vita Constant. l. 3. c. 17. And this was not in the practice of some few but of all Churches as he there testifies and is apparent from the great contention in the Church about the day Some following the Jewish accompt who kept this Feast the Fourteenth day of the first Month The first Month began with the new Moon whose fourteenth day or Moon as they call'd it was the day of the Vernal Equinox or if none such hapned then that whose fourteenth day came the soonest after the Equinox but the most Churches kept their Easter the first Sunday after the fourteenth day of the first Month which usage the Councel of Nice confirmed for these reasons First because it was the most general custome of the Churches Secendly because they would not in this particular comply with the Iews for though in some other cases they did it on purpose to sweeten them and make them plyable to Christianity as our Lord himself did and his Apostles Acts 21. 24. retaining many of their la●dable and useful Rites as of Ex●ommunication Benediction Imposition of hands with many more which you may see in Grotius Annot. in S. Matth. 18. and Append. p. 54. for they loved not Innovation nor measured the goodness of their Religion by their distance from the Iews in things lawful and useful though I say the Primitive Christians did not like the Jewish Rites ever the worse because they were Theirs i.e. of Gods Institution but did use as many of them that were useful as they had occasion for yet in this of the time of keeping Easter they would not because it was of ill signification and scandalous for the Jews keep their Easter as typical and prefiguring Christ to come the Christians kept their Easter in thankful remembrance of Christ Come and Risen from the dead and therefore differing so much in the main of the Feast they would not comply with them no not so much as in the Time lest by that they might have been though to have complyed also in the very Feast and so have seemed to have denied their Lord as the Jews did Thirdly because after the Jews fashion of keeping of Easter they following at that time an Erroneous Account which had
not due regard to the time of the Equinox it might happen that there might be two Easters in one year viz. one in the first Month and another in the last and none in the next year After our English Account Easter is found by finding out Shrove-Tuesday which is always the first Tuesday in the New Moon after Candlemas the Sunday six weeks after is Easter MVNDAY and TVESDAY in Easter-week THese two Holy days are added as Attendants upon Easter-day in honour of this high Feast and the more solemnity of it And we find S. Austin upon occasion mentioning them De civit Dei l. 22. c. 8. although both from him elsewhere and others we may gather that these two days were not all which at that time were added to the Feast For of old this Queen of Feasts as the Fathers call it was so highly esteemed that it was in a manner solemnized fifty days together even from Easter to Whitsuntide See Ambr. Ser. 61. Per hos quinquaginta dies nobis est jugis continuata Festivitas c. See also Euseb. de vit Constant. l. 4. c. 64. And Tertul. de Iejuniis And in his Book de Idol where he affirms that all the Heathen Festivals put together could not equal this one great and solemn Feast of the Christians From these and the like places some conclude and most probably That every day of that time the Christians met together in publick to sing with greatest joy Psalms and Allelujah to God Almighty and to take the Cup of Salvation the holy Communion praising the Name of the Lord. All which time they did not kneel at their prayers which was accounted a posture of mourners but Stand as upon Sundays they were wont in token of joy thus making every of those days equal in a manner to Sundays The reason of this so great and long Festivity at this time was principally because it was the Feast of Easter or of our blessed Lords Resurrection a principal Article of our faith for as S. Paul says 1 Cor. 15. If Christ be not risen we are yet in our sins and we Christians of all men m●st miserable Now that Christ is risen needs must there be in Christians hearts an overflowing of joy which in those times they expressed by such dayly publick exercises of Religion principally of receiving the holy communion the pledge of our resurrection as our Saviour says S. Iohn 6. He that eats my flesh shall live for ever that by this means the memory of the resurrection might be fixt deeply in their minds We must not think that the Christians then did keep all this Time holy so as to cease from labour for the poverty of many and the care and charity required in all would not permit that but only as to religious exercises and services As devotion abated the Feast was shortned yet long after Tertullian even till Gratians time and downward the whole week of Easter as also of Whitsuntide were reckoned among Holy-days Gratian. de Consec Dist. 3. And our Church though she enjoy●s only Munday and Tuesday of this week for Holy-days yet seems to me to commend the keeping holy of this whole week as also of the whole week after Christmas Ascension and Pentecost For she directs the proper Prefaces for Christmas Easter Ascen and Pentecost to be used every day the week after Which Prefaces are to be used only at the Communion as appears by the Rubricks so that by prescribing the Prefaces to be used upon every day of the week she doth withal prescribe the Communion every day likewise which is properly the keeping of a day Solemnly Holy and this weeks solemnity is principally as we have said for the expressing of our joy for our Lords Resurrection and the honour of the Feast which Christians were not willing to make shorter than the Jews Feast of unleavened Bread Among the Ancients there was another peculiar Reason for the keeping of the whole week of Easter Holy besides that of the Resurrection For they ministring Baptism except in case of necessity a● no other times but the Eves of Easter and Whitsunday did make it a part of their Festivity the week following to congratulate the access of a new Christian progeny the New Baptized coming each day to Church in white vestures with lights before them where Thanksgivings and Prayers were made for them with Instructions also to those that were of years of discretion for at that time there were many such that came in from Heathenism in the principles and ways of Christianity But afterwards when most of the baptized were Infants and so not capable of such solemnities this custome was altered and Baptism administred all times of the year as at the beginning of Christianity Tertul. de Bapt. S. Chrysost. Hom. 1. in Act. Apost 1. Sunday after Easter It was the custome of our fore-fathers to observe the Octave or Vtas of their high and principal Feasts and this is the Octave or eighth day after Easter Upon every Octave the use was to repeat some part of that Service which was perform'd upon the Feast it self and this is the reason that the Collect used upon Easter is renewed upon this day The Epistle exhorts the new baptized persons that are born of God to labour to overcome the World which at their baptism they vowed to do The Gospel shews how Christ conversed with his Disciples after his Resurrection instructing and confirming them in the faith of the Resurrection This Sunday is called Low-Sunday because it is Easter-day repeated the Octave of Easter but the Sunday before is high Easter and this is a lower Feast Low Easter in Latin Dominica in albis or rather Post Albas sc. depositas as some old Rituals call it because those that were baptized on Easter-eve wore seven days after white garments called Chrysoms signs of the purity which they received in Baptism which white clothes they this day put off 2. Sunday As the last Sunday instructed the young and new-born Christians how they should imitate Christ in a Resurrection from sin and death to life so this Sunday instructs the Shepherds of the flock how to imitate their great Shepherd And the Epipistle sets before us his great patience and goodness in the work of our redemption The Collect prayes for thankfulness and imitation of his holy life 3. Sunday after Easter Hitherto since Easter the Church hath been as it were overwhelmed in the joyful meditation of Christs Resurrection from the dead or chiefly about it and that hath been the subject of all the Collects since then Now in this Collect as somewhat also in one of the Readings aforegoing the Church reflects upon that other ancient Paschal Solemnity the general Baptism that was used at that time so that this Collect is for the new baptized or new Regenerates by Baptism desiring Almighty God who shews the light of his truth to them that be in error enlightning them by baptism which was therefore
mistake of Durandus was occasioned by this that in some old Martyrologists this Feast of Philip and Iacob was called the Feast of S. Philip and Iacob and all the Apostles and in some the Feast of Philip and Iacob and All-saints The reason of which was not because the Apostles had no other Feasts appointed them but only this but because the Feast of Philip and Iacob is upon the Kalends of May and so falls within the Paschal Solemnity betwixt Easter and Whitsuntide All which time the Church of old was wont to commemorate not one Saint alone but altogether and therefore not Philip and Iacob alone but all the Apostles and Saints together with them The reason of which was saies Gemma de Antiq Mis. rit cap. 140. Because in our heavenly Country which that time signifies the joy of all is the joy of every one and the joy of every Saint the common joy of all Or because as Micrologus says De Eccl. Offic. c. 55. At the general Resurrection of which Easter solemnity is a type there is a common Festivity and joy of the Righteous The Philip this day commemorated was Philip the Apostle whom the Gospel mentions not Philip the Deacon Yet the Church gives us a Lesson Acts 8. concerning him and it was a thing not unusual in ancient Martyrologies to commemorate divers of the same name on the same day The Iames that is commemorated this day is not one of the sons of Zebedee whose day is kept in Iuly but Iames who was called the brother of our Lord the first Bishop of Ierusalem who wrote the Epistle called the Epistle of S. Iames part of which is this day read This day hath no Fast because it falls betwixt Easter and Whitsuntide See the Feast of Circumcision S. Iohn Baptist. WE celebrate the birth of S. Iohn Baptist and of our Saviour For these reasons The Births of both were full of joy and mystery Our Saviours we have already observed Now for S. Iohns it is plain there was more than ordinary joy at his birth S. Luke 1. 14. And full of mystery and wonder it was As a Virgin conceived our Lord so a barren woman brought forth S. Iohn S. Luke 1. 36. Again his birth was prophetical of our Lord whom he saluted out of his mothers womb Lastly his birth was made memorable by the prediction of the Angel Gabriel S. Luke 1. 19. There was formerly another Holy-day for the beheading of S. Iohn Baptist but our Church keeps only this Holy-day in memory of him wherein though she principally commemorates his mysterious Nativity as you may see in the Gospel yet she does not omit his Life and Death his Life and Office in the Morning Lessons are recorded His death is related in the Second Lesson Evening and the Collect prayes for grace to imitate his example patiently suffering for the Truths sake S. Michael HOly Church holds a Feast in memory of the holy Angels First because they minister to us on earth Heb. 1. 14. being sent forth to minister to them that shall be heirs of salvation Secondly because they fight against the Devil for us by their prayers and recommendation of us and our condition at the throne of grace as appears bp the Epistle and the Gospel at the end of it The Church in this Feast particularly commemorates S. Michael because he was Prince or tutelar Angel of the Church of the Jews Daniel 10. 13. 12. 1. and so of the Christian Church For the Church which was once in the Jews is now in the Christians All-Saints BEcause we cannot particularly commemorate every one of those Saints in whom Gods graces have been eminent for that would be too heavy a burthen and because in these particular Feasts which we do celebrate we may justly be thought to have omitted some of our duty through infirmity or negligence therefore holy Church appoints this day in commemoration of the Saints in general Other Holy-dayes not here spoken of are either mentioned in other places or need no other explication than what already hath been said in general of Holy dayes and their Readings The COMMVNION or Second-Service IN the Liturgy it is called The Communion and well it were that the piety of the people were such as to make it alwayes a Commwnion The Church as appears by her pathetical Exhortation before the Communion and the Rubrick after it labours to bring men oftner to communicate than she usually obtains Private and solitary Communions of the Priest alone she allows not and therefore when other cannot be had she appoints only so much of the Service as relates not of necessity to a present Communion and that to be said at the Holy Table and upon good reason the Church thereby keeping as it were her ground visibly minding us of what she desires and labours towards our more frequent access to that holy Table and in the mean while that part of the Service which she uses may perhaps more fitly be called the Second Service than the Communion And so it is often called though not in the Rubr of the Liturgy yet in divers Fast books and the like set out by Authority If any should think that it cannot properly be called the Second Service because the Morning Service and Litany go before it which we prove in the following discourse to be two distinct Services whereby this should seem to be the Third rather than the Second Service it is Answered that sometimes the Communion-Service is used upon such dayes as the Litany is not and then it may without question be called the Second Service nay even then when the Litany and all is used the Communion Service may be very fitly called the Second Service For though in strictness of speech the Litany is a service distinct as is shewn yet in our usual acception of the word Service namely for a compleat Service with all the several parts of it Psalms Readings Creeds Thanksgivings and Prayers so the Litany is not a Service nor so esteemed but called The Litany or Supplications and lookt upon sometimes when other Offices follow as a kind of Preparative though a distinct form to them as to The Communion Commination c. And therefore it was a custome in some Churches that a Bell was tolled while the Litany was saying to give notice to the people that the Communion Service was now coming on This Service consists of Four parts The first reaches to the Offertory called anciently Missa Catechumenorum the service of the Catechumens The second is the Offertory which reaches to the Consecration The third begins at the Consecration and ends at the Angelical Hymn Glory be to God an high The last is the Post-Commwnion or Thanksgiving which with us is nothing but that holy Hymn Part. 1. We begin the first part as the Church was wont to begin her Services with the LORDS PRAYER concerning which see the Morning Service After this follows an excellent prayer to God
the rest of the Penitents were gone out and pray with the faithful but not receive the holy Sacrament 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Communicants they were received to the participation of Sacraments but were still to weare some marks of penance till by prayers and intreaties they had obtained the full Communion of the Churches favours and honours says Goar in Euch. Graec. These several degrees were poor penitents to go through in the Greek Church and as much affliction in the Latin unless the Bishop should think fit to remit any thing of it before they were fully admitted to the Churches favour but if any of these were desperately sick Holy Church took care that upon their desire they should have the Churches peace by Absolution 4. Carth. c. 78. and 77. and the holy Communion sayes the same Canon and Cypr. Epist. 54. lest they should want that great strengthening and refreshing of their souls in their last and greatest necessity Provided nevertheless that if they should recover then they should resume their several places and degrees of penance they were in before and go through and perfect their task of penance which having done they should receive Vltimam reconciliationem their last and highest reconciliation a favour which was denied to some that had been admitted to the Sacrament of the Eucharist as you may see Con. Vas. 2. c. 2. This last Reconciliation was a solemn Absolution from all the Churches censures and penances by the laying on of the hands of the Bishop and some of his Clergy says Cypr. l. 3. Ep. 14. A Declaration to all the Church that they were received not only to necessary Viatica and assisting such as the former Absolution mentioned 76. Can. 4. Carth. and the holy Sacrament of the Eucharist were which they were permitted to receive in case of necessity but also to all the honour and solemnities and priviledges of the faithful quite free from all brands and marks of penitents They were restored Legitimae Communioni to the Canonical and Legitimate Communion Orang c. 3. they might offer with the faithful and their offerings be received by the Church and they might receive the kiss of peace and all other favours of the Church This that hath been said may help us to understand the true meaning of the so much controverted Canon of Orange before mentioned together with the 78. Can. Carth. 4. Qui recedunt de corpore c. They that after penance received are ready to depart out of this life it hath pleased that they shall be received to the Communion without the Reconciliatory Imposition of hands that is they shall be admitted to the Communion without that last outward solemn Absolution in the Court of the Church which Balsam●n rightly calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the full reconciliation to the Churches honours and dignities 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a loosening of the Churches censures which those penitents in case of extremity could not receive because as by the Canons appears they were if they recovered to return to their several tasks of penance again till they had fulfilled them It was enough for them to be reconciled to the Altar and Sacrament by the Absolution in foro Coli in Heavens Court The power of which was granted to the Apostles and their Successors S. Iohn 20. Whose sins ye remit c. Which Balsamon calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the Absolution from sin and this they were to receive Can. 76. Carth. 4. and after that the holy Eucharist And this says the Canon of Orange was sufficient for a dying mans Reconciliation according to the definition of the Fathers And this the Church of England provides for all dying men that shall desire it And infinitely bound to their Mother for this her care are all true Sons of the Church For thrice happy souls are they who shall have the happiness at their last and greatest extremity worthily to receive the Reconciliation and the holy Communion the Bread of Heaven the Blood of God our Hope our Health our Light our Life For if we shall depart hence guarded with this Sacrifice we shall with much holy boldness ascend to the holy Heavens defended as it were with golden Arms says S. Chrys. We have seen the Churches care to provide all necessaries for sick persons salvation 'T were an happy thing to see in the people an answerable diligence in the use of these Ghostly Offices that they would when they are sick send for the Priest not verbally only to comfort them by rehearsing to them comfortable texts of Scripture whether they belong to them or not which is not to heal the sick but to tell them that they have no need of the spiritual Physician by which means precious souls perish for whom Christ died but to search and examine the state of their souls to shew them their sins to prepare them by ghostly counsel and exercises of penance for absolution and the holy Communion whereby they might indeed find comfort remission of sins and the holy Ghost the Comforter And this should be done while the sick person hath strength and ability to attend and joyn with him in these holy Services There is an excellent Canon to this purpose Decretal l. 5. tit 38. c. 13. By this present Decree we strictly charge and command all Physicians that when they shall be called to sick persons they first of all admonish and perswade them to send for the Physicians of souls that after provision hath been made for the spiritual health of the soul they may the more hopefully proceed to the use of corporal medicine For when the cause is taken away the effect may follow That which chiefly occasioned the making of this good Law was the supine carelesness of some sick persons who never used to call for the Physician of the soul till the Physician of the body had given them over And if the Physician did as his duty was timely admonish them to provide for their souls health they took it for a sentence of death and despair'd of remedy which hastned their end and hindred both the bodily Physician from working any cure upon their body and the ghostly Physician from applying any effectual means to their souls health It is good counsel that Eccles. gives c. 38 9. where we are advised not first to send for the Physician and when we despair of his help and are breathing our last then to send for the Priest when our weakness hath made him useless But first to make our peace with God by ghostly offices of the Priest and then give place to the Physician Which method our Saviour hath taught us also by his method of Cure who when any came to him for bodily cures first cured the soul of sin before he healed the bodily infirmity teaching us that sin is the cause of sickness and that cure first to be lookt after And by thus doing we may possibly save the body without the Physician S. Iames
5. 14. Is any sick let him send for the Elders or Priests of the Church to pray over him and the prayer of faith shall save the sick But if he fails of that bodily cure by these means yet he may be sure to obtain remission of sins by their means If he hath committed sins they shall be forgiven him ver 15. by the benefit of absolution so the words import For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sins being a feminine plural seems not to agree with the verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it shall be forgiven of the singular number and therefore this word more properly seems to be rendred impersonally thus If he hath committed sins pardon or absolution shall be given him and so by this means the sick person shall be sure if not to save his body yet at least to save his soul. There was an ancient Canon which that it might be truly practised and observed it must be the wish of all good men It is Can. 7. Con. Aurelian 5. ut qui pro quibuscunque culpis in carceribus deputantur ab Archidiacono seu à Praeposito Eccles. diebus singulis Dominicis requirantur at necessitas vinctorum secundum praeceptum divinum misericorditer sublevetur That all prisoners for what crime soever shall be call'd for and visited by the Archdeacon or Bishop of the Church every Lords day that the necessities bodily and ghostly of the prisoners according to Gods command may be mercifully relieved The neglect of which duty how dangerous it is we may read S. Mat. 25 43. Go ye cursed for I was sick and in prison and ye visited me not The Rubrick at the Communion of the sick directs the Priest to deliver the Communion to the sick but does not there set down how much of the Communion-Service shall be used at the delivering of the Communion to the sick and therefore seems to me to refer us to former directions in times past Now the direction formerly was this If the same day that the sick is to receive the Communinn there be a celebration of the holy Communion in the Church then shall the Priest reserve at the open Communion so much of the Sacrament of the body and blood as shall serve the sick person and so many as shall communicate with him And as soon as he may conveniently after the open Communion ended in the Church shall go and minister the same first to them that are appointed to communicate with the sick if there be any and last of all to the sick But before the Curate distribute the holy Communion the appointed general Confession in the Communion-Service must be made in the name of the Communicants the Curate adding the Absolution with the comfortable sentences of Scripture following in the open Communion immediately and so proceeding in the Communion-Service to the end of the Consecration and Distribution and after the Communion ended the Collect is to be used which begins Almighty and everliving God we most heartily thank thee c. But if the day wherein the sick person is to receive the Communion be not appointed for the open Communion in the Chruch then upon convenient warning given the Curate shall come and visit the sick person afore noon And cutting off the form of the visitation at the Psalm In thee O Lord shall go straight to the Communion Rubr. 3. Com. of sick that is after he hath said the Collect Epist. and Gosp. there directed he shall go to the Communion-Service K. Edw. 6th 1. BVRIAL THe Priest méeting the Corps at the Church stile shall go before it to the grave saying or singing I am the resurrection and the life This in triumph over death O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory thou mayest a while hold the corps but he that is the resurrection and the life will make the dead man live again Therefore thanks be to God who gives this victory through Iesus Christ our Lord. Much after this sort did the Ancients Hieron ep 30. ad Ocean de Fabiola Chrys. Hom. 4. in Hebr. Quid fibi volunt istae lampades tam splendidae nonne sicut athletas mortuos comitamur quid etiam aymni nonne ut Deum glorificemus quod jam coronavit discedentem quod à laboribus liberavit quod liberatum à timore apud se habeat What mean the bright burning torches do we not follow the dead like Champions what mean the Hymns do we not thereby glorifie God for that he hath crowned our departed brother that he hath freed him from labours that he hath him with himself freed from fear All these are expressions of joy whereby we do in a holy valour laugh at death saith Chrys. there And this is Christian-like whereas if we be sad and dejected as men without hope mortem Christi qua mors superata est Calumniamur we disgrace the death of Christ that hath conquered death and Heathens and Atheists will deride us saying how can these contemn death that cannot patiently behold a dead friend talk what you will of the Resurrection when you are out of passion it is no great matter nor perswades much but shew me a man in passion of grief for the loss of his friend playing the Philosopher and triumphantly singing to God for his happy deliverance and I will believe the Resurrection Of so good use are such triumphant hymns at this time and of this sort are the three first When they come to the Grave while the corps is made ready to be laid into the grave the Priest shall say or sing Man that is born of a Woman c. closing with a most devout prayer for grace and assistence in our last hour a prayer very suitable to such a time and such a spectacle before us Then they commit the body to the earth not as a lost and perished carkass but as having in it a seed of eternity in sure and certain hope of the resurrection to eternal life This is to bury it Christianly the hope of the resurrection being the proper hope of Christians Such was the Christians burial of old that it was accounted both an evident argument and presage of the resurrection and an honour done to that body which the Holy Ghost had once made his Temple for the Offices of piety Aug. de Civit. l. 1. c. 13. After follows another Triumphant Hymn Then a Lesson out of S. PAVL to the same purpose Then a Thanksgiving for that our brothers safe delivery out of misery Lastly a Prayer for his and our consummation in Glory and joyful Absolution at the last day By all which prayers praises and holy Lessons and decent solemnities we do glorifie God honour the dead and comfort the living Take away these prayers praises and holy lessons which were ordained to shew at Burials the peculiar hope of the Church of the Resurrection of the dead and in the manner of the dumb funerals what one thing is there whereby the world may
bright Stars the circling roof the Firmament the Priests within the Quire beginning the divine Hymns represent the first order of Angels that stand before God the Deacons with the Readers and Singers orderly succeeding the middle order or quire of heaven the whole company of true believers joyning with the Priests and Deacons in heart and affection saying Amen to the divine Hymns and prayers and so inviting and alluring the mercy of God resemble the lowest rank of Angels with whom no prophane Heretick or unclean notorious sinner is suffered to assemble for what fellowship hath light with darkness thus the whole Church typifies heaven but the Chancel parted and separated from the Nave or body of the Church so as that it cannot be seen into by those that are there typifies the invisible heaven or things above the heaven not to be seen by the eye of flesh The Nave or body resembles the lowest visible heaven or Paradise and as man for sin was cast out of Edens Paradise into the earth accursed to briars and thorns there to eat his bread in sorrow and not suffered by the flaming sword to enter again Gen. 3. till after much affliction and sorrow in this troublesome world he shall be reconciled to God by repentance and so his peace being made be received as the thief upon the Cross was to our Lord Christ in Paradise so in like manner notorious sinners were by the sentence of excommunication cast out of that Paradise the body of the Church abroad into the Church porch which represents the earth not to be received in again to the society of the fa●thful till after a wearisome attendance there in a place call'd of old Narthex or Ferula because those that stood there were under the Churches Ferula or censure begging the prayers entreating the tears hanging upon the knees of all that entred into the Church by much spiritual affliction and castigation they had made their peace and were reconciled In the Nave we shall mention but two things as observable here First the Doors called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beautiful Doors or Gate Acts 3. 2. because those that had entred them might see the whole beauty of the Church and the Pulpit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which stood in the midst or side of the Nave Sym. Thess. This signifies the stone rolled away from the Sepulchre and because the Angel sitting upon it preacht the Gospel of the Resurrection of Christ to the women S. Matth. 28. 6. the Priests and Deacons imitating the Angels pattern from this Pulpit publish and proclaim the glad tidings of the Gospel The Chancel was divided from the Body of the Church Cancellis whence it is called the Chancel This was as was said peculiar to the Priests and sacred persons In it were at least in some principal Churches these divisions Chorus Cantorum the Quire where was an high Seat for the Bishop and other Stalls or Seats for the rest of the Quire yet perhaps this Chorus as also the next called Soleas might be more properly reckoned a part of the Nave and the Chancel properly that which of old was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Sanctuary which was separated from the rest of the Church with rails and whither indeed none but sacred persons entered whereas the Laity entred into the other as will appear after but account it to which you please such a place there was and immediately beyond it divided from the Quire with boards on the one side and from the Sanctuary by the rails of the Altar on the other side was a place called Soleas from the Latine Solium or Throne because this was Christs lower Throne his higher or upper Throne was the Altar where the precious body and blood of Christ was consecrated and offered And this was his lower Throne where the Bishop or Priest in Christ his stead stood and distributed the holy Sacrament to the people Beyond this is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Sanctuary rail'd in of old as you may see plainly Syn. Calc Acts 1. that it might not be prest upon by the multitude Euseb. Hist. l. 10. c. 4. At the upper end of this Sanctuary or Chancel is a large Arch or Absis within that a Seat called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Seat or Seats built for the Bishop and his assistent Priests in the Celebration the middle of which is the highest where the chief Bishop sate which S. Chrys. in his Liturgie calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of this Seat is the 56. Can. of Laodic to be understood The Priests ought not to go into the Church and sit in Tribunalibus before the Bishop be entred unless he be sick and cannot come The Bishop sitting in this Seat by the Altar having his assistent Priests sitting with him resembles Christ with his Apostles by him instituting the holy Sacrament and blessing the prayers offered up at the Altar by the Priest Right under this Seat stood the Altar or holy Table the Propitiatory Christs Monument and the Tabernacle of his glory The Shop of the great Sacrifice Sym. Thessal Now that no man take offence at the word Altar Let him know that anciently both these names Altar or holy Table were used for the same things though most frequently the Fathers and Councils use the word Altar And both are fit names for that holy thing For the holy Eucharist being considered as a Sacrifice in the representation of the breaking of the Bread and pouring forth the Cup doing that to the holy Symbols which was done to Christs Body and Blood and so shewing forth and commemorating the Lords death and offering upon it the same Sacrifice that was offered upon the Cross or rather the commemoration of that Sacrifice S. Chrys. in Heb. 10. 9. may fitly be call'd an Altar which again is as fitly call'd an holy Table the Eucharist being considered as a Sacrament which is nothing else but a distribution and application of the Sacrifice to the several receivers To put all out of doubt it is questionless lawful and safe to speak the language of the New Testament and to give this holy thing the name which is given it there now there it is called an Altar Heb. 13 10. we have an Altar S. Paul in the verse before had perswaded that they should not be carried away with strange doctrines of Jewish and carnal observances which are grown unprofitable to those that walk in them For we have an Altar now whereof they that serve at the Tabernacle the Jewish Priests have no right to eat unless they will receive the Faith of Christ our Altar is better than theirs and theirs was but a shadow of ours the Sacrifices of their Altar but types of ours theirs are vanished and ours only continue And for this reason do you leave strange doctrines of legal observances and Jewish Altars and continue in the grace of the Gospel whose Altar is to continue for we have an Altar Again S.