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

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the Apostle 1 Cor. 5.7 when he says Purge out the old Leven that ye may be a new lump as ye are unleven'd For Christ our Passover is sacrificed therefore let us banquet not with the old Leven nor with the Leven of malice and wickedness but with the unleven'd Bread of Sincerity and Truth Not that this Quality is to be thought so necessary XV. The Eucharist may be made of Leven'd Bread that if the Bread have it not the Sacrament cannot be made For either kind of Bread has the true and proper nature and name of Bread Altho no one ought by his own private authority or rashness rather alter the laudable Rite of his Church And by so much the less is it permitted to the Latin Priests to do it Conc. Floren. Sess ult lib. 3 decret de cel b Miss c. final whom the Popes have moreover commanded to perform the Sacred Mysteries with unleven'd Bread only And let this suffice for the explication of One part of the Matter of this Sacrament Where notwithstanding it is to be noted that it is not determin'd how much Matter ought to be us'd in making this Sacrament since the certain number of them who either may or ought to receive the Sacred Mysteries cannot be defin'd It remains now that we speak of the other Part of the Matter and Element of this Sacrament XVI Wine of the Grape the other Matter of the Eucharist And that is Wine press'd out of the fruit of the Vine wherewith a little Water is mixt For that our Lord and Savior us'd Wine in the Institution of this Sacrament the Catholic Church has ever taught seeing he himself said Mat 26.29 Mar. 14.25 I will not drink henceforth of the fruit of the Vine until that day In which place S. Chrysostom Hom. 83. in Mat. Of the fruit of the Vine says he which surely brought forth Wine not Water that so long before-hand he might be seen to pluck up by the roots the Heresy of them who thought that Water only was to be us'd in these Mysteries Yet the Church of God always mingl'd Water with the Wine XVII Water to be mingl'd with Wine Cypr. lib. 2. Epist. 3. Trid. Sess 22. de Sa●ris Miss c. 7. Can. 9. Apoc. 17.15 First because our Lord Christ himself did so as is prov'd by the authority of Councils and by the testimony of S. Cyprian And then that the memory of the Blood and Water which came out of his Side might be renew'd And then as we read in the Apocalyps Water signifies the People Wherefore Water mingl'd with Wine signifies the Conjunction of the Faithful with Christ their Head And this by Apostolical Tradition Holy Church has always observ'd But altho the Reasons for mingling the Water with the Wine are so weighty Note that it may not be neglected under mortal sin yet tho it should be wanting the Sacrament remains But the Priests ought to take care XVIII A little Water to be mingl'd that as in the Sacred Mysteries they ought to mingle Water with the Wine so also that they pour but a little thereinto For by the Opinion and Judgment of Ecclesiastical Writers That Water is turn'd into Wine Wherefore Pope Honorius writes thus concerning it There has bin for a long time in your parts a pernicious abuse to wit that there is us'd a greater quantity of Water in the Sacrifice Habetur lib. 3. Decretal d● celeb Miss c. 13. than of Wine when according to the reasonable practice of the general Church there ought to be us'd a far greater quantity of Wine than of Water Of this Sacrament therefore there are only these Two Elements Note and it has bin rightly setl'd by many Decrees Et vide de consec dist 2. c. 1 2. seq That none may offer any thing but Bread and Wine notwithstanding which there were some presum'd to do so But now we must see how sit these two Symbols of Bread and Wine are XIX How convenient this Matter of the Eucharist is First John 9. to declare those things whereof we believe and confess them to be Sacraments And first they signifie Christ to us as he is the true life of Men. For the Lord himself says My Flesh is Meat indeed and my Blood is Drink indeed Seeing therefore the Body of Christ our Lord yields nourishment of eternal Life to them who do purely and holily receive the Sacrament thereof rightly is it made of those things wherein this Life is contain'd that the Faithful may easily understand that by the Communion of the Body and Blood of Christ their mind and Soul is fed These Elements also are somewhat available to this end Secondly Damasc lib. 4. de fide Orthod c. 14. that Men may learn and know that the Truth of Christ's Body and Blood are in the Sacrament for when we observe that Bread and Wine is dayly chang'd into human Flesh and Blood by the strength of Nature We may the more easily be led by this similitude to believe that the Substance of Bread and Wine by the Heavenly Benediction is converted into the true Flesh and true Blood of Christ Thirdly This admirable Change of the Elements helps also to shadow what is done in the Soul For as tho there appears outwardly no change of the Bread and Wine yet their substance truly passes into the Flesh and Blood of Christ so also tho nothing seems to be chang'd in us yet inwardly we are renew'd to life while we receive the true life in the Sacrament of the Eucharist Add hereto Fourthly that since the Body of the Church is compos'd of many Members this conjunction is not by any thing more clear'd than by the Elements of Bread and Wine For Bread is made of many Grains and Wine is press'd out of a Multitude of Grapes And so we tho we are Many yet they shew us to be strictly held together by the bond of this Divine Mystery and as it were made One Body Now it follows that we treat of the Form which ought to be us'd at the consecrating the Bread XX. The Form of the Eucharist as to the Bread defin'd and prov'd Not that the faithful people need to be much taught these Mysteries unless there be necessity for it is not necessary to instruct those persons in these matters who are not initiated in Sacred Things But lest by ignorance of the Form the Priests in making this Sacrament may make any foul mistakes We are taught therefore by the Holy Evangelists Matthew and Luke By Scripture Mat. 26.26 Mar. 14.22 Luc. 26.19 1 Cor. 14.22 and by the Apostle that This is the Form This is my Body for it is written when they had supp'd Jesus took Bread and blessed it and brake it and gave it to his Disciples and said Take and eat This is my Body Which Form of consecration seeing it was observ'd of
in S. John says Which I will give is my Flesh for the Life of the World to wit calling the Bread his Flesh And a little after he subjoyns Vnless you shall eat the Flesh of the Son of Man and drink his Blood ye will not have Life in you And again My Flesh is Meat indeed and my Blood is Drink indeed When therefore in so plain and clear words he call'd his Flesh Bread and true Meat and his Blood true Drink It might well seem sufficient do have declar'd That there remains no Substance of Bread and Wine in the Sacrament And that all the Holy Fathers Fourthly by the Authority and consent of Fathers Lib. 4. de Sacr. c. 4. c. 5. always agreed in this Doctrin He that is so minded may easily understand For thus writes S. Ambrose Thou saist perhaps my Bread is us'd But that Bread is Bread before the words of the Sacraments But when the Consecration is added of Bread it is made the Flesh of Christ Which that he might the better make appear he thereupon brings divers examples and Similitudes And elsewhere De Cons dist 2. c. omnia interpreting those words All things whatsoever the Lord pleas'd he has done in Heaven and in Earth For tho says he the Figure of Bread and Wine be seen yet after consecration nothing is to be believ'd to be there but the Flesh and Blood of Christ The same sense St. Hilary has taught and almost in the same words Altho outwardly Bread and Wine appear yet there is truly the Body and Blood of the Lord. Hil. de Trin. l. 8. de Consec dist 2. c. 28. But let the Pastors admonish XXXVIII Why after the Consecration of of the Eucharist it is call'd Bread That in this place it is not to be wonder'd at if even after Consecration it be call'd Bread For the Eucharist is us'd to be call'd by this name both because it has the species or Resemblance of Bread and also because it still retains the natural vertue of feeding and nourishing the Body which is proper to Bread Now that it is the usual manner of the Holy Scripture to call things as they appear to be that plainly shews which is written in Genesis Gen. 18.2 Act. 1.10 That three Men appear'd to Abraham which yet were truly three Angels And those Two that appear'd to the Apostles at the Ascension of Christ our Lord into Heaven tho they were Angels yet are they call'd Men. See D. Thom. 3. p. q. 75. art 3 4. The explication of this Article is altogether extream difficult XXXIX How cautiously the Conversion which is in the Eucharist is to be explain'd to the people but yet the Pastors shall endeavor to instruct those who are more skill'd in the the Contemplation of Divine Matters for it may be fear'd that those who are yet more weak may be oppress'd with the Greatness of the thing they shall endeavor I say to teach the Manner of this admirable Conversion which is so done that the whole Substance of the Bread and Wine by the divine power is chang'd into the whole Substance of Christ's Body and the whole Substance of the Wine into the whole Substance of Christ's Blood and this without any change of our Lord. For Christ is neither begotten anew nor chang'd nor increases but remains whole in his own Substance Which Mystery when St. Ambrose had declar'd D. Amb. lib. 4. de Sacr. c. 4. Thou seest says he how operative Christ's Word is If therefore there be so great a power in the Word of the Lord Jesus that those things began to be which were not to wit the World how much more operative is it to make those things to be which were before and to change them into another thing According to which sense other very grave and antient Father have written Citatur de Consec dist 2 c. Nos Autem Lib. 4. de Orthod fid c. 14. St. Austin thus We faithfully confess that before Consecration it is Bread and Wine which Nature has form'd but after Consecration it is the Body and Blood of Christ which the Blessing has consecrated Damascen The Body according to Truth is join'd to the Divinity that Body which came of the Holy Virgin Not that that Body which he took comes down from Heaven but that this Bread and Wine are chang'd into the Body and Blood of Christ This admirable Change therefore is conveniently and properly call'd by the Catholic Church Transubstantiation XL. This Conversion call'd Transubstantiation as the sacred Council of Trent has taught For as the Natural Generation when the Form is chang'd in it may rightly and properly be call'd a Transformation so also because in the Sacrament of the Eucharist the whole Substance of One thing passes into the whole substance of another thing the word Transubstantiation was rightly and wisely invented by our Forefathers See Trid. sess 13. c. 4. de can de Consec dist 2. cap. Panis But the Faithful are to be admonish'd LXI We are not too narrowly to enquire into Transubstantiation that tho' this be very often repeated by the Holy Fathers yet that they enquire not too curiously by what means this Change is wrought for neither can it be perceiv'd by us neither have we any example of this matter in natural Changes or in the very Creation of things But whatsoever is here done it is to be known by Faith but how it is done must not too curiously be search'd into The Pastors ought also to give them no less a Caution in explaining that Mystery how the Body of Chritt our Lord is contain'd whole in the least particle of Bread XLII The whole Body of Christ contain'd in the smallest particle for scarce ever are there any disputations of this kind to be allow'd but yet when Christian Charity requires it let them first of all remember to fore-arm the minds of Faithful with this word Luke 1.37 There is no word impossible with God Vide D. Thom. 3. p. q. 76. Trid. sess 13. c. 5. can 3. Florentin Decret Eugenii And then let them teach XLIII After what manner Christ is in the Eucharist it is not in the Sacrament as in a Place for Place belongs to those things that have Magnitude But we say not that Christ is in the Sacrament after that manner as he is Great or Little because that belongs to Quantity but as he is a Substance For the Substance of Bread is chang'd into the Substance of Christ not into Magnitude or Quantity But no one doubts that a Substance is equally contain'd in a Little as in a Great space For it must needs be that the Substance of the Air and its whole Nature is the same in a little as in a great part of the Air so also the whole Nature of Water is no less in a little Pitcher than in a River When the Lords Body succeeds
not profit that Grace is given in the Eucharist the Pastors ought to admonish that it is not so to be understood as tho' it were not necessary that he who will indeed profitably receiv'd this Sacrament should not before obtain Grace For it is manifest that as natural Food does nothing at all profit a dead Body so also the sacred Mysteries profit not that Soul which lives not in Spirit And therefore they have the species or shew of Bread and Wine to signifie Note that they were instituted indeed not to call a dead Soul to Life again but to preserve Life But this is therefore spoken LII By the Eucharist is given the first Grace and why because even the First Grace which All ought to have before they presume to receive the sacred Eucharist in their mouth lest they eat and drink judgment to themselves is not given to any except in Wish and Desire they receive this very Sacrament For This is the End of all the Sacraments and the Symbol of Ecclesiastical Vnity and Conjunction neither can any one out of the Church obtain Grace And then Note because the Body is not only serv'd by Natural Food but also increas'd and the Taste daily receives new pleasure and sweetness from it so also the Meat of the sacred Eucharist does not only keep the Soul alive but it also adds strength to it and causes that the Spirit be more and more mov'd with the Delight of divine things Sap. 16.20 for this cause it is that Grace is rightly and most truly said to be given in this Sacrament for it may well be compar'd to Manna wherein every sweetness of Taste was perceiv'd Now that in the Eucharist are remitted and pardon'd the lesser sins LIII Lesser sins remitted thro the Eucharist which are commonly call'd Venial there 's no one ought to doubt for whatsoever the Soul has lost by the heat of desire while she committed some small offence in some light matter all That the Eucharist restores wiping away all those lesser faults even as for there seems no reason why we may not make use of the common similitude that which is daily lost and decays by the force of the innate Heat we feel to be refresh'd and renew'd by little and little by natural Sustenance Wherefore rightly was it said by St. Ambrose concerning this heavenly Sacrament Lib. 4. de sac c. 6. lib. 5. c. 4. This daily Bread is taken for a Remedy of our daily Infirmity Innocent 111. lib. 4. de Myst Miss c. 44. Cyril lib. 4. in Joan. c. 17. lib. 3. c. 36. Inter opera D. Bernardi habetur cujusdam Sermo Domini qui incipit Panem Angelorum singularis est de Euch. videatur D. Thom. 3. p. q. 79. Mark well But this is to be understood of those sins with the Sense and Pleasure whereof the Soul is not much mov'd There is moreover such Vertue in the sacred Mysteries LIV. The Eucharist strengthens against harms that it keeps us pure and clean from sin and safe from the violence of Temptations and prepares our Soul as it were with a heavenly Medicine or Antidote that it be not easily infected Aug. Tract 26. in Joan. l. 1. op 2. ad Cornel. or hurt with the Poyson of any deadly Contagion or Disease And for this Cause also as S. Cyprian testifies when in old times the Faithful were hal'd away by the Rabble to slaughter and Torments for the Confession of the name of Christ lest haply they being overcome with the bitterness of their Pains should faint in the Sacred Combat it was an old custom in the Catholic Church for the Bishops to give them the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of the Lord. And it also restrains and suppresses the Lust of the Flesh LV. The Eucharist restrains Lust For while it more and more inflames our Souls with the Fire of Charity it must needs quench the Heat of Concupiscence Lastly LVI The Eucharist clears the way to eternal Glory Joh. 6.53 That we may comprehend all the Advantages and Benefits of this Sacrament in one word The Sacred Eucharist has a mighty force to gain eternal Glory for it is written He that eats my Flesh and drinks my Blood has eternal Life and I will raise him up at the last day Vide Chrys de Sacerdotio dialogo 6. D. Thom. 3. p. q. 79. art 2. By the Grace of this Sacrament also the Faithful while they live here in this World enjoy the highest Peace and Tranquility of Conscience And then by the vertue hereof being strengthen'd even as Elias was 3 Reg. 19.8 who in the strength of his Cakes bak'd on the Ashes walk'd as far as to Horeb the Mount of God when the time shall come for them to pass out of this Life they shall ascend to eternal Glory and Bliss All these things will be very largely explain'd by the Pastors if they will but handle the sixth Chapter of S. John wherein are laid open the manifold Effects of this Sacrament or running through the admirable works of Christ our Lord shall shew since we rightly and deservedly account them bless'd who receiv'd him into their Houses while he liv'd in this mortal life or who by the very Touch only of his Garment or of his Sleve recover'd Health that we are much more happy and bless'd into whose Souls he disdains not to enter cloath'd now with immortal Glory to heal all their Wounds to adorn them with the most excellent endowments and to unite them to himself But it must be taught by Whom these mighty Fruits of the Eucharist LVII A threefold way of receiving the Eucharist De Consecr dist 2. c. 46. Sess 13. c. 8. now mention'd may be perceiv'd Nor is there One only way of Communicating that the Faithful may learn to emulate the better Gifts Rightly therefore and wisely have our Ancestors as we read in the Council of Trent distinguish'd three ways of taking this Sacrament For some receive the Sacrament only Sacramentally as those sinners who are not affraid to take the sacred Mysteries with an impure Mouth and Heart 1 Cor. 11.19 who as the Apostle says Do eat and drink the Lords Body unworthily Aug. in Joan. tract 16. contra Dom. l. 5. c. 8. Of these S. Austin writes thus He that abides not in Christ and in whom Christ abides not without all doubt he eats not Christ's Flesh altho carnally and visibly he press with his Teeth the Sacrament of his Flesh and Blood Those therefore that being thus affected receive the Sacred Mysteries not only hereby receive no fruit 1 Cor. 11.19 but as the Apostle himself testifies they eat and drink judgment to themselves But others are said to receive the Eucharist Spiritually only Spiritually Gal. 5.6 and they are those who being kindl'd with a lively Faith which works by Love eat that heavenly Bread in desire and
minister and steward 〈◊〉 25.23 and like a good and faithful servant may be found worthy to be preserr'd by his Lord over many things Nor ought he to think that men of one temper only are committed to his charge XVII The fifth Or that one certain Rule or prescrib'd Form is suitable and sufficient to teach and instruct all the faithful in Christian piety But whereas some are as it were 1 Pet. 2.2 infants new born others begin to grow to man-hood in Christ and some do grow in a manner to full age It is necessary to consider who they are that have need of milk who of more solid meat 1 Cor. 3.2 and so to provide for all such food of doctrin as may give spiritual increase Heb. 5.22 13. till we all come into the unity of the faith into the perfect man-hood of the knowledge of the Son of God into the measure of the stature of the fulness or age of Christ The Apostle yielded himself an example to be observ'd by all herein when he said Rom. 1.14 That he was debtor both to the Greeks and to the Barbarians both to the wise and to the unwise to wit That those that are call'd to the ministery might know that they ought so to accommodate their doctrin to the capacity and reach of their hearers in delivering the mysteries of faith and rules of life that when they have fill'd the souls of them Heb. 5.14 who have their senses exercis'd with spiritual meat they suffer not in the mean time the little ones to perish with hunger who ask for bread and there is none to distribute it to them Nor ought it at all to discourage any ones endeavors in teaching XVIII The sixth because it is sometimes necessary for the hearers to be taught the rules of those things which are common and despicable altho frequently it is not without some difficulty that they are handl'd by those whose minds are taken up with and take a kind of pleasure in the contemplation of the more sublime and lofty matters For 1 Thess 8.8 if the wisdom of the eternal Father came down to the earth in the meanness of our flesh to teach us the rules of the heav'nly life who is there whom the love of Christ cannot constrain to become little among his brethren and as a nurse fostering her little infants so earnestly to desire and endeavour the salvation of his neighbour 1 Thess 2.8 That as the Apostle testifies of himself he wou'd not only deliver the Gospel to them but even his own life for them Now the Rule of all that doctrin which the faithful are to be taught XIX Whence the Christian doctrin is to be fetched is contain'd in the word of God and is divided into Scripture and Tradition The Pastors therefore shou'd night and day be meditating on these things Always remembering S. Pauls admonition which he wrote to Timothy which also all that have cure of souls shou'd reckon as belonging to themselves and this is the admonition 1 Tim 4.13 2 Tim. 3.16 17. Attend to reading exhortation and doctrin For all Scripture written by divine inspiration is profitable for doctrin for reproof for correction for instruction in righteousness that the man of God might be perfect and ready to every good work But because the things deliver'd of God are many and divers XX. Whence is had the division of this Catechism that they cannot easily be comprehended in the mind and being comprehended cannot be kept in memory Therefore when there is offer'd an opportunity of teaching that the explaining of those things may be fit and easie our Ancestors have very wisely reduced the whole power and substance of the doctrin of salvation into these four heads viz. The Apostles Creed The Sacraments The Decalogue or ten Commandments And The Lords Prayer For all those things which are to be held by the discipline of Christian faith XXI The First part or which belong to the knowledge of God or to the Creation and Government of the world or to the Redemption of mankind or to the Rewards of the good or Punishment of the wicked are contain'd in the doctrin of the Creed But those things which are Signs and instruments XXII The Second part as it were for the obtaining of divine grace these the doctrin of the Seven Sacraments contains But those things which have reference to the Law XXIII The Third part 1 Tim. 1.5 the end whereof is Charity are set down in the Decalogue Lastly Whatsoever may be savingly wish'd XXIV The Fourth hop'd or pray'd for by any man is comprehended in the Lord's Prayer Whence it follows that these four which are as it were the common places of the holy Scriptures being explain'd there can be nothing wanting in a manner for the understanding of those things which are to be learn'd of a Christian It seem'd good therefore to admonish the parish Curates XXV The manner of dividing the Catechism into several Sundays that as often as it came in their way to interpret any place of the Gospel or any other place of holy Scripture they may know the meaning of that place whatsoever it be falls under one of these heads we have even now mention'd whither they may have recourse as to the fountain of all doctrin for explanation of it For example If the Gospel of the first Sunday in Advent be to be explain'd Luc. 21 25. There shall be signs in the sun and in the moon c. What is pertinent to the explanation thereof is handl'd under the article of the Creed He shall come to judge the quick and the dead which being thence taken the Pastor may with the same pains instruct the faithful people both in the Creed and in the Gospel Wherefore in all the parts of teaching and interpreting he will do well to hold to this practice of directing all things to those four chief points to which we thought fit to refer the whole power and doctrin of holy Scripture but yet to take that order in teaching as will be most proper both to the persons to be taught and to the season We following the authority of the Fathers XXVI Why it begins with the explication of the Creed who in bringing men to Christ our Lord and in instructing them in his discipline began at the doctrin of Faith have thought fit first to handle those things which belong to Faith But because in the word of God XXVII What Faith is the signification of Faith is manifold we here speak of that by vertue whereof we wholly assent to those things which are deliver'd by God Now that this Faith is necessary to the attaining everlasting salvation no one can justly doubt especially seeing it is written Heb. 11.6 Without Faith it is impossible to please God For whereas the end proposed to man for his happiness is far higher than for
Punishments Lastly The Third which is a very soul thing let them be advis'd not to take that preposterous Counsel in the Education and Teaching of their Children For very many are imploi'd in this only Study and Care to leave their Children Riches and Mony a fair and large Estate whom they perswade not to Religion or Piety or learning of good Arts but to Covetousness and to increase their Family Nor are they careful of the Esteem or Salvation of their Children so that they have but Mony and are very Rich than which what can be said or thought more base And so it comes to pass that they leave them not so properly their Wealth as their Wickedness and their Vices to whom they become Guides not towards Heaven but towards everlasting Punishment Let the Priest therefore instruct Parents with the best Precepts and stir them up to the Fxample and parallel Vertue of Tobias Tob. 4. that when they have well train'd up their Children to Holiness and the Worship of God they may receive the plentiful fruits of their Love Observance and Obedience The Fifth COMMANDMENT of the DECALOGVE Thou shalt not kill THe great Happiness which is propos'd to Peace-makers I. How profitable it i● to explain this Commandment because they shall be call'd the Children of God ought very much to move the Pastors diligently and exactly to teach the Faithful what is to be learn'd from this Commandment For there can be no better way to reconcile the minds of Men than that the Law of this Precept rightly explain'd be so holily kept as it ought to be of all because then we may hope that Men being joyn'd one to another with the strongest Agreement of Hearts may preserve Peace and Concord intire But how necessary it is that this Commandment should be explain'd II. How necessary appears from hence That immediately after the drowning of the whole Earth this was the only thing which God first forbad Men Gen. 9.5 The bloud of your Lives says he will I require at the hand of all Beasts and at the hand of Man And in the Gospel among the Old Laws which first were explain'd by our Lord this is first whereof it is thus written in S. Matthew Matth. 5.22 For it has been said Thou shalt not kill And the rest which in that very place are recorded concerning this Matter And the Faithful ought attentively and willingly to hear this Commandment III. How this Commandment to be heard For if the Force of it be observ'd it is very available to defend every ones Life because in those words Thou shalt not kill Man-slaughter is utterly forbidd'n Therefore all Men ought to receive it with so great a pleasure of mind IV. This Command pleasant to be heard as tho if Gods anger being propos'd it were specially forbidd'n under the heaviest Punishments that none should be hurt Therefore as this Commandment is pleasant to be heard So the caution against this Sin which is forbidden by this Commandment ought to be full of Delight But when our Lord explain'd the Force of this Law V. Two things here commanded he shews that two things are contain'd in it The One that we do not kill which we are forbidd'n to do The other which we are commanded to do That we embrace our Enemies with a friendly Agreement and Love have Peace with all Men and lastly patiently to suffer all Inconveniences Now that Killing is forbidd'n VI. What killing not forbidd'n here First Exod. 12. throughout it is first to be taught what kind of Killing is not forbidd'n by the Law of this Commandment For to kill Beasts is not forbidd'n for if it be allow'd of God that Men should be fed by them it is but meet they be kill'd Of which matter S. Austin says thus When we hear says he Thou shalt not kill we understand not this to be spoken of Fruits because they have no Sense nor of irrational Animals because they are joyn'd with us on no account De civit Dei lib. 1. c. 20. Item de morib Manich. lib. 2. c. 13 14 15. There is another sort of killing allow'd Secondly which belongs to such Magistrates as have the Power of Death whereby by the Rule and Judgment of the Laws they punish wicked Men and defend the Innocent In which Office so that they behave themselves justly they are not only not guilty of Murder but very exactly obey this Divine Law which forbids Murder For seeing the end of this Law is for the Preservation of Mans Life and Safety the Punishments appointed by the Magistrates who are the lawful Avengers of evil have respect hither that all Boldness and Injury being repress'd by Punishments Man's Life may be safe Wherefore David says Psal 108.8 I will soon slay all the Sinners of the Earth that I might destroy out of the city of the Lord all the workers of iniquity Aug. Epist 154. citatur 23. q. 5. c. de occidentibus Item Epist 54. citatur ibid. c. Non est iniquitatis vide adhuc Ibid. alia capita D. Thom. 2.2 q. 64. a. 2. q. 108. a. 3. For which reason Thirdly neither do they sin who in a just War not driv●● by Lust or Cruelty but with the only desire of the Public Good take away the Lives of the Enemies Aug. de Civit. Dei c. 26. citatur 23. q. 5. c. Miles Vide item de Bello D. Thom. 2.2 q. 40 per A. Articulos There are other Slaughters besides of the same kind Fourthly which are done expresly by God's Command The Sons of Levi sinn'd not tho they kill'd so many thousand Men in one day upon which Slaughter done God thus spake to them Exod. 23.26 Ye have consecrated your Hands this Day to the Lord. Nor is he guilty of this Commandment Fifthly who kills a Man not willingly nor advisedly but by accident Concerning which matter it is thus written in the Book of Deuteronomy Deut. 19. He that ignorantly slays his Neighbor and is prov'd to have had no hatred against him in time past but went with him honestly into the Wood to fell Timber and in the hewing down of Timber his Ax flew out of his Hand and the Head of his Ax slipping off the Handle struck his Friend and kill'd him These Slaughters are of that kind which because they are done not with a Will or Design are therefore in no case to be reckon'd sinful which is prov'd by S. Austin's Sentence for he says God forbid that those things we do either for a good or lawful End if beyond our Intention any Evil happen it should be laid to our charge Vide Aug. Epist 154. citatur 23. q. 5. c. de Occidendis Item vide multa capita dist 5. D. Thom. 2.2 q. 64. a. 8. Trid. Sess 14. de Reform c. 7. Where VII Two Cases to be observ'd notwithstanding Sin may be committed
of a certain Prince of the Pharisees on the Sabbath-day to eat Bread Luc. 14.1 by which word we see is signified whatsoever belongs to Meat and Drink For the perfect Signification of this Petition XIX We here pray for necessaries only we must further observe that by the Word Bread we are not to understand an abundant and exquisit plenty of Meat and Clothes but only what is simply necessary as the Apostle wrote Having Food and Raiment 1 Tim. 6.8 Prov. 30.8 let us therewith be content And Solomon as we said before pray'd Give me only necessary Food And of this Sparing and Frugality we are admonish'd in the next Word XX. We here pray for nothing for Luxury For when we say Our we pray for that Bread that is for our Need not for Wantonness Neither do we say Our as tho we were able to get it by our own Industry without God Psal 10● For David says All things wait on thee to give them Meat in season when thou givest it them they gather it when thou openest thy Hand all things are fill'd with Goodness And in another place The Eyes of all things hope in thee O Lord and thou givest them their Meat in due season but because it being necessary for us it is given us of God the Father of all who by his Providence feeds all things living And for this cause also it is call'd Our Bread XXI Why this Bread is call'd Ours because we are to get it lawfully not by Wrong Deceit or Theft For whatsoever we get to our selves by ill Arts it is not ours but other Mens and very commonly either the Getting of it or the Possession or at least the spending of it is very Calamitous but on the contrary according to the Sentence of the Prophet there is great Peace and Happiness in the honest and toilsom Profits of pious Men Psal 127.2 For says he because thou shalt eat the labors of thy hands happy art thou and well it will be for thee And now for those that seek their Bread by their honest Labor XXII God blesses the Laborious Deut. 28.8 God promises them the Fruit of his Blessing in that place The Lord will send his Blessing upon thy Stores and upon all the works of thy hands and he will bless thee Nor do we only beg of God for our selves XXIII What we pray for Thirdly that we may use that which thro our Sweat and Labor we have gotten by the help of his Bounty for that is truly call'd Ours but we pray also for a good Heart that what we have justly gott'n we may also well and wisely make use of Daily In this Word also lies an Admonition to Frugality and Parsimony XXIV By the word Daily we are taught Frugality of which we spake last for we pray not either for Dainties or many sorts of Meat but only for that which satisfies the Necessities of Nature so that here they may be asham'd who being weary of common Meat and Drink seek for the most rare sorts of Dainties and Wines Nor by this Word Daily XXV The same Word condemns Covetousness Isa 5.8 are they less blam'd against whom Isaias utters these dreadful Threats Wo to you that joyn house to house and field to feild even to the utmost extent of place will you only dwell in the midst of the Earth For the Covetousness of these Men is inexpressible of whom it is thus written by Solomon Eccle. 5.6 A covetous Man will not be satisfied with Mony Hitherto belongs also the Saying of the Apostle 1 Tim. 6.9 They that will become rich fall into temptation and the snare of the Devil Besides XXVI It shews us to be mortal we call it Our daily Bread because we are fed therewith for the Supply of our Vital Moisture which is daily consumed by the force of natural Heat Lastly XXVII It teaches us to pray diligently there is this Reason for this Word because it is to be pray'd for daily that we may be kept in this practice of loving and worshiping God and that we may assuredly perswade our selves as true it is that our Life and Health depends upon God Give us How much matter these two words afford XXVIII The Force of these words to be explain'd Luc. 4. to exhort the Faithful devoutly and holily to worship and reverence the infinite Power of God in whose hands are all things and to loath that wicked Pride of Satan All things are delivered to me and I give them to whom I will there is none that sees not for at the pleasure of God alone all things that are given are preserv'd and increas'd But what need is there XXIX The Rich beg their daily Bread may some one say for Rich Men to pray for their daily Bread seeing they abound with all things They have this Necessity for praying in this manner not that those things may be given them of which by Gods Bounty they have enough but that they lose not those things which they have in abundance Wherefore as the Apostle writes 1 Tim. 6.27 Let them hence learn not to be overwise nor to trust in uncertain riches but in the living God who gives to all men all things liberally to enjoy Note Now S. Chrysostom gives this Reason for this necessary Petition Hom. 14. oper imperfect in Matth. not only that he would supply us with Food but that when the Hand of the Lord does relieve us with giving to our daily Bread a wholsom and therefore a healthful Vertue he would cause our Food to nourish our Body and our Body to be serviceable to our Soul But what is the Reason why we say XXX Why we pray here in the plural Number Give us in the the Plural Number and not Give me Because it is the Property of Christian Charity not that every one be careful for himself only but that he take pains for his Neighbor also and in taking care for his own Advantage that he remember others also Add hereto Another Reason that the Gifts which God gives to any one he gives not to the End that he alone should possess them but that he should communicate to others what things he has above Necessity For says S. Basil Hom. 6. varior arg S. Ambrose Serm. 81. It is the Bread of the Needy which thou detain'st it is the Cloaths of the Naked which thou loock'st up it is the Redemption the Freedom the Mony of the Miserable which thou hidest in the Earth This Day This Word admonishes us of our common Infirmity XXXI What this word to Day signifies For who is there that if by his only Labor he be past Hope to be able to provide the necessary Expences of Life for a long while does not trust at least that he shall provide Food for one Day But neither does God allow us the Power of this Confidence since
he commands us to beg our Meat of him every Day Which Sentence has this necessary Reason XXXII The Lords Prayer to be said daily because we all want daily Bread therefore we must all daily use the Lords Prayer And thus much of the Bread which being receiv'd into our Mouth nourishes and sustains our Body which God of his admirable Bounty bestows upon all in common as well on the Faithful as Infidels as well on the Pious as Impious Matth. 5.46 Who causes his Sun to rise upon the Good and upon the Evil and rains upon the Just and on the Vnjust The other Bread XXXIII Fourthly we here pray for Spiritual Bread and which we also pray for in this place is Spiritual whereby all things are signified whatsoever are requir'd for the Safety and Salvation of the Spirit and Soul For as the meat wherewith the Body is nourished and sustaind is of many sorts so the Meat which preserves the Life of the Soul and Sprit is not of one kind only For the Word of God is the Food of the Soul First For Wisdom says Prov. 9.5 Come ye eat of my Bread and drink of my Wine which I have mingled for you Now when God takes away from Men the Use of this Word XXXIV When the Food of God's Word is taken away Amo● 8.11 which he uses to do when he is much provok'd by our Sins he is said to send a Famine upon Men For thus it is in Amos I will send a Famin upon the Earth not a Famin of Bread or a Thirst of Water but of hearing the Word of the Lord. Now as it is a certain Sign of Death approaching XXXV A singular Comparison when Men cannot take Food or having taken it cannot keep it so it is a very great Argument that their Salvation is in danger who either desire not God's Word or if they have it will not endure it and pour out that impious Cry against God Job 21.14 Depart from us we desire not the knowledge of thy Ways In this Madness of Soul XXXVI The Despisers of Gods Word in this Blindness of Mind they are taken who disregarding those Catholic both Bishops and Priests that are put over them and cutting themselves off from the Holy Roman Church have given themselves over to be govern'd by Heretics that corrupt the Word of God But then XXXVII Christ the Bread of the Soul Joh. 6.15 Christ our Lord is the Bread of the Soul For he says of himself I am the Living Bread that came down from Heaven It is past belief with how great Pleasure and Joy this Bread then fills devout Souls they are most afflicted with Earthly Troubles and Inconveniences That holy Quire of Apostles may serve us for an Example of whom it is thus recorded Act. 5.41 They went out from the presence of Council rejoycing The Books of the Lives of Holy Men are fill'd with Examples of this kind And of those inward Joys of Good Men God speaks thus Apoc. 2.17 To him that overcomes I will give the hidden Manna But especially this Bread is Christ our Lord XXXVIII Christ in the Eucharist is the Bread of the Soul which is substantially contain'd in the Sacrament of the Eucharist This unspeakable Pledge of his Love he gave us when he was about to return to his Father of which he said He that eats my Flesh and drinks my Blood dwells in me and I in him Take ye and eat This is my Body Job 6.65 Mat. 26.6 1 Cor. 11.64 And the Curat shall fetch those things which belong to the profit of the Faithful from that place where the Force and Vertue of this Sacrament is particularly explain'd Pag. 181. And here it is said XXXIX How Christ in the Eucharist is the Bread of the Soul Our Bread because it belongs to the Faithful i. e. to those who joyning Charity with Faith by the Sacrament of Penance wipe away the Spots of Sin who remembring themselves to be the Children of God take and worship this Divine Sacrament with the greatest Holiness and Veneration they are able Vide Tertul. lib. de Orat. Cypr. item de Orat. August alios locis citatis supra pag. 473. But why is it call'd Daily There is a twofold Reason XL. Why Christ is call'd our daily Bread Psal 54.25 The one is That in the Sacred Mysteries of the Christian Church it is offered to God daily and given to those that devoutly and holily desire it The other is That we ought daily to receive it or at least so to lead our Life as to be fit daily to take it and eat it Let those that think otherwise Note unless by reason of a long Interval they ought not to he fed with this saving Banquet of the Soul hear what S. Ambrose says If it be thy Daily Bread why dost thou take it but once a Year Lib. 5. Sap. c. 4. Vide etiam de Consec dist 2. But in this Petition the Faithful are specially to be exhorted XLI The Issue of this Petition to be left to God That when they have honestly and well advis'd and been industrious in getting the Necessaries of Life they leave the Success to God and refer their Desires to his Pleasure Psal 45.23 who will not always leave the Just in a tottering condition For either God will grant the things desired Note and so they shall have their Wish or else he will not grant them and that is a most certain Argument that what is desired is neither for their Salvation nor Advantage since God denies it to the Pious who takes greater care of their Welfare than themselves do Upon this Point the Curats may enlarge themselves in explaining those Reasons which are excellently collected by S. Austin in his Epistle to Proba The last thing in discoursing upon this Petition is this XLII Why God gives good things to Rich Men. That Rich Men well consider their Wealth and Plenty and that they receiv'd them from God and let them think with themselves that those good things are therefore heap'd upon them to distribute them to the Needy To which sense agree those things that are disputed by the Apostle in his first Epistile to Timothy 1 Tim. 6.17 whence the Curats may fetch Divine Precepts enow for the clearing this Point both profitably and savingly The FIFTH PETITION And forgive us our Debts as we alsso forgive our Debtors SInce there are so many things that signifie God's Infinit Power to be join'd with the like Infinit Wisdom and Goodness I. Christ's Passion a singular Token of his Love to us that whithersoever we turn our Eyes and thoughts we meet with the Tokens of his Immense Power and Goodness verily there is nothing that more evidently shews his most profound Love and admirable Charity towards us than that unspeakable Mystery of the Passion of Jesus Christ from whence sprang that