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A52184 The liturgical-discourse of the holy sacrifice of the masse by omission of controversial questions; abridged and accommodated to the pious use of devout Christians in hearing masse, by A.F. the authour of the same at the instance of some devout friends. Angelus à Sancto Francisco, 1601-1678. 1675 (1675) Wing M938; ESTC R217659 145,436 447

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ye that pass by the way as wayfarers all you that are present at this Sacrifice behold and see what I suffered for your Redemption Behold and consider the love that I bear to you and say Hail O true body born of the Virgin Mary truly suffered and really offered on the Cross for me and from whose side flowed Water and Blood vouchsafe to be received by me at the hour of my death O most merciful Jesu Son of the living God have mercy on me 7. Of the Consecration Adoration and Elevation of the Chalice Q. What mean you by the Chalice A. In as much as Christ took it in his hand it is taken for the Cup containing Wine which could not be otherwise taken but in the form of Consecration it is called the Chalice of Christ's blood this is the Chalice which St. Paul calls the Chalice of Benediction affirming it to be the Communication of the blood of Christ Theophilact with divers others sayes That which is in the Chalice is that which did flow from Christ's side and receiving it we communicate that is we are united to Christ Q. What say you of the Consecration of the Chalice A. The same that I said before of the Consecration of the Bread for the Priest in the Person of Christ imitating his actions and words does consecrate the Chalice calling it as Christ did the New Testament unto Remission of sins Q. What say you of its Adoration A. The same also that I said of the Adoration of the holy Host for it is done in the same manner and for the self-same reasons as being the self-same thing under the variety of species or material forms the like we may say of this Elevation and therefore not necessary to be rehearsed here again Q. Sith it is the same in both why is the Consecration and Elevation made apart A. Although the example of our Saviour with his command thereto and the Churches practise in all ages as it plainly appears in all Liturgies and by the Testimony of Councels and Fathers are sufficient to answer you yet to satisfie your curiosity I will endeavour to give you some reasons for it St. Paul having proved the Translation of the Law and Priesthood tells us that Christ has obtained a better Ministery and a better Testament or better promises and again affirms that the first Law was not dedicated without blood and that all things according to the Law were cleansed with blood and without shedding of blood there is no Remission of sins Christ then being to establish the New Law did Dedicate and Consecrate it with his blood and all things thereof as Sacraments and Sacrifices have their effects from Christ's blood wherefore he calls it the blood of the New Testament as Theophilact says in opposition to the Old Law for the Old Testament had blood wherewith both people and book of the Law were sprinkled and again as the Old Testament had immolation of blood so the New Testament Whereof St. Leo gives this reason That shadows might yeild to the body and figures should cease in the presence of verity the antient observance is taken away by the New Sacrament Host passes into Hosts and Blood excludes Blood Christ therefore to make his Law complete did institute this Sacrifice in both species It was not sufficient to his great love and infinite goodness to give his body but he would also give his blood as a more perfect accomplishment and confirmation of his Law and in a more perfect presentation of his Passion For in the Eucharistical action the body is Consecrated apart and the blood apart in memory of the passion wherein the blood was separated from the body St. Paul sayes as often as ye shall eat this Bread and drink the Chalice ye shall shew the death of our Lord this could not be so well represented in one species as in both so that they both together do more fully represent Christ's Death and Passion Whence St. Alexander Pope and Martyr in the year 106. says In the Oblation of the Sacraments which are offered to our Lord in the Solemn Masses the passion of our Lord is to be mixed that the passion of him whose body and blood is represented may be celebrated and this for a particular representation of the blood and water which flowed from our Saviour's side on the Cross Lastly both species are required to correspond with the nature of Christ's Priesthood which as the Psalmist and St. Paul say was according to the Order of Melchisedeck and St Augustine says that he instituted a Sacrifice of his body and blood according to the Order of Melchisedech And St. Cyprian who is more a Priest of the high God than our Lord Jesus Christ who offered Sacrifice to God the Father and offered the very same which Melchisedech had offered that is Bread and Wine to wit his body and blood With them agrees Eusebius saying As he that is Melchisedech who was a Priest of the Gentiles was never seen to have offered any thing but only Wine and Bread when he blessed Abraham so truly first our Lord and Saviour himself then those who came from him the Priests in all Nations fulfilling the spiritual Office of Priesthood according to Ecclesiastical Ordination in Bread and Wine do represent the Mysteries of his body and Salutary blood Epiphanius tells us that the Priesthood of Melchisedech which was before Levi and Aaron was reassumed and now is in the Church from Christ's time Q. As there are two species are there two Sacrifices A. These two species in regard of their signification or rather in their manner of their proper signification may be said to be two Sacraments but in regard of the thing signified or contained therein they make but one Sacrifice for as the Bread and Wine are different things so in a different manner they signifie Christ's body as our food and Christ's blood as our drink and so make the full reflection of our Souls both making but one perfect Sacrament in as much as they contain the same one Christ God and Man in flesh and blood which in substance are equally contained aswell under the species of Bread as under the species of Wine for the substance body and blood is equally in the one and in the other producing the same effect of Grace and Glory In like manner these two species with their double signification do make but one Sacrifice in as much as they signifie one bloody Sacrifice made by Christ on the Cross in the effusion of his blood and separation of his Soul from his Body which is not so expresly signified by one only species and the two Consecrations do not multiply the Sacrifice no more then the daily Oblations which Priests do make in all places of the World For as St. Ambrose says Do not we offer every day surely we do But this Sacrifice is an extract of that for we offer always the self-same and not now one Lamb and
also St. Cyprian the Roman Councel under Sylvester and the Third Councel of Carthage held in the year 436. Was to light the Candles at Masse and to carry them in several times thereof as when the Gospel is read c. Q. What is the reason thereof A. In such things as are indifferent St. Augustin's Rule is the best we do not reprove but praising and inciting others thereto we follow and observe whatsoever is not contrary to Faith or contrary to good manners and has something of exhortation to a better life whensoever we see them to be instituted and know them so ordained For as the same Saint saith many things which are not found in the writings of the Apostles nor in later Councels nevertheless because they are observed by the whole Church are believed to have been delivered and commanded by the Apostles we find also mention of these Lamps or Candles in their Canons Now the Church uses them as a manifestation of the honour due to such a Sacrifice and an Embleme of our Faith to put us in mind that the light of our Faith should shine before Men that God may be glorified For in the Benediction of the Paschal-Candle in the honour of the Resurrection the Church sayes we pray that the Taper Consecrated in the honour of thy name and in the blessing of the Candles on Candle-masday prayes that we may bear them to the magnificence of his name and be enflamed by the light of the Divine Benediction and that as the Candles kindled by visible fire do expel darkness so our hearts may be illuminated by invisible fire that is by the splendour of the Holy Ghost Now that these Candles were also as a sign of honour is manifest by what we read in St. John Damascene in the life of Balaam and Josaphat innumerable multitudes from all the Cities and Regions did honourably flock to adore and see the bodies of those men with Hymns and Canticles and Lamps and Tapers burning And for the encrease of our Faith the Tapers or Candles represent unto us our Saviour who came to enlighten the World the Wax fitly represents Christ's humanity for as the wax is made by Virgin-Bees so the flesh of Christ was taken from the Virgin Mary and as the wax is consumed so Christ's flesh was consumed in the work of our Redemption the fire is a Symbole of the Diety for God is said to be a consuming fire the Week which joyns the wax to the fire represents the union of the Diety to his Humanity and the light proceeding from all three fitly signifies the Evangelical Doctrine which is the light of the World and which the Church represents by these burning Candles to put us in mind of the professing it before the whole World Again the white wick may signifie unto us the purity of Conscience requisite to the due performance or attendance to this dreadful Sacrifice the wax the Humility Obedience and Submission to the will of God that as the wax is moulded shaped figured and framed according to the will of the Artificer so with a willing and prompt mind we might submit our selves to the Divine operation in our Souls and Body and as the wax receives any impression so we might submit our selves to receive what ever God shall please to send us as Tribulations Afflictions and Persecutions yea Death it self When we shall do both if we burn with the love of God and as the flame ascends to its center so our minds enflamed with the love of God shall alwayes be elevated leaving the earthly dross tending to our center which is God Of other things which are on the Altar Q. Why is the Altar covered with Linnen A. The Church has ordained that the Altar be covered with Two Altar Cloths or Towels at least which are blessed by a Priest although in times of necessity we may take others not blessed ordinarily there are Three sometimes the undermost is of courser Linen all which seem convenient for the preventing of dangers which may happen by effusion out of the Chalice which the Church hath alwayes been careful to prevent and in case it should so happen the Towels being Linen might the better be washed whence the Church hath forbid Cloth or Silk for that end such was the Decree of Pope Eusebius who gives this reason because the Body of our Lord was buried in a Syndon or fine Linen Q. What is the little Cloth which is put above the others A. That is also of Linen and is more properly a representative of Christ's Syndon and is called the Corporal for that the Body of Christ is laid upon it and the Chalice by the Apostles in the 72 Canon it is called a Linen Vail Pope Soter calls them Sacred or Consecrated Palls St. Isidore saith that as the Corporal is of fine Linen purged from Earthly dross so the offerers intention ought to shine in simplicity and purity before God Now because this Corporal does immediatly touch the body of Christ under the species for that it is Consecrated by the Bishop or those who have Episcopal Authority to the end that it may be laid under the Sacred Host and Chalice therefore none but those who are in Holy Orders are to touch it as many Popes and Councels have ordained I cannot omit the Decree which was made in a Counsel held at Oxford which shews the care that our English had of this Corporal for Can 3. It commands the old corporals which are not fit to be used should be put in the place of or amongst the Reliques or be burnt in the presence of the Arch-Deacon who also is to take care that the Altar-Cloths and other Ornaments be Decent Q. What is the Chalice A. The Church uses the Chalice after the example of our Saviour who in the Institution of this Sacrifice did use it as necessary for the Consecration of the Wine as the Evangelists and St. Paul do testifie Now this Chalice both for that it contains the blood of our Lord under the species of Wine is Consecrated by the Bishop as the Corporal and therefore is no otherwise to be touched St. Hierome saith by this we may learn with what veneration we ought to receive these Holy things which serve to the Ministry of Christ's Altar the Holy Chalices and Holy Vails that is the Corporals and other things which belong to the Worship of Christ's Passion not as if these inanimate or senseless things had any Sanctity in them but from the conjunction of our Lord's Body and blood Q. What is the form of the Chalice A. The form of the Chalice was figured in the old Law for Josephus in his Observations of Antiquities describes the Jews Chalice in this manner saying It is a Golden Cup in form of a Globe cut in Two parts with a hollow space within by little and little decently dilating it self from the bottome as a Pomegranate cut in Two the Two halves put back to back
Symbole of Charity for as Charity covers a multitude of sins and contains all the Commandements of the Law So this Chasule covers all the other Vestments and hanging in Two parts before and behind may fitly represent the Two Tables of the Law or the Two Laws the part behind the old Law and the part before the new Law The Two sides open signifie Christian liberty or the open execution of the Law St. German and others commonly do say that this Chasule represents unto us the Purple Garment which the Souldiers did put on Christ the Priest therefore in Imitation of Christ puts on this Garment which for the most part on the back hath a Cross and before the form of a Pillar as if the Priest were between the Pillar and the Cross for the Pillar before represents the Pillar whereto Christ was bound and Scourged and the Cross behind represents our Saviour carrying the Cross and that very properly that the People beholding it may have the Cross and Passion before their eyes and continue in the contemplation thereof I will conclude with the Animadversion which Bishop Ivo gives saying These Vestments are not vertues but marks or signs of vertues whereby the users or beholders are admonished as by written Books what they ought to desire and what to shun and to whom they ought to direct their Actions Pope Innocent will give another Let the Priest attend diligently that he bears not the sign without what is signified and that he carry not the Vestment without vertue lest he be like to a Sepulcher outwardly whitened and inwardly full of uncleaness 3. Of Priest's Function Q. What do you mean by Priests A. I will not stand about the word Priest which comes from the word Presbyter But his office according to the custome of the Church is principally to offer Sacrifice as all Ages and Laws do declare for as in the Law of Nature and in the written Law their duty was to offer Sacrifice for themselves and others So in the new Law Priests had charge to offer the Sacrifice of the Masse for as the Altar and Sacrifice are correlatives so Sacrifice and Priest who in his Ordination is Consecrated by this form Receive power of offering Sacrifice in the Church for the Living and Dead St. Clement in his Constitutions puts this form O Almighty God give unto him by Christ the participation of the Holy Ghost that he may have power to remit sins according to thy command and loose all bonds according to the power which thou hast given to the Apostles and of pleasing thee in meekness and purity of heart by alwayes offering to thee without spot or stain the pure and unbloody Sacrifice which by Christ thou hast established as the Mystery of the New Testament The Canons of the Apostles suppose it to be the office of Priests as also the First General Council of Nice Can. 18. So most of the Councels and Fathers Q. Are Priests to be Honoured A. For many reasons they are but principally for Four to wit their Dignity Vtility Mediation and Power First for their Dignity for they are God's Vicars on Earth to feed cure and keep his People whence St. Augustine saith There is no greater under Heaven than God's Priests Consecrated to deliver the Heavenly Sacraments and humble St. Francis tells us that we ought to honour and reverence God's Priests who are higher and worthyer than all Men and he would sooner give reverence to a Priest than to an Angel St. Athanasius relates That the great Abbot Anthony as often as he met with a Priest would fall on his knees and would not rise from the ground until he had kissed his hand and obtained his Benediction Secondly For Vtility for by Priests the faithful are received into the Church and by their Function many spiritual graces are communicated unto them besides the benefits they receive by the Priests Preaching Instruction and Ministration of the Sacraments the Holy Scripture bids us to honour the Physitian for our necessity for the Highest hath created him how much more ought we to honour Priests who are Spiritual Physitians of our Souls for as they by their Office do make us Members of the Church so they cure us of all the Diseases of our Souls and preserve our spiritual lives and bring us to Eternal Life Thirdly For their Mediation for they are Mediatours between us and God for it is his charge to pray for the People and he obtains blessings for them Num. 6. Our Lord speaking to Moises and Aaron of Priests said They shall invocate my Name upon the Children of Israel and I the Lord will bless them The wise Man therefore advises us saying In all thy Soul fear our Lord and Sanctifie his Priests with all thy strength love him that made thee and forsake not his Ministers honour God with all thy Soul and honour the Priests and purge thy self with the arms of Grace to wit the grace that God communicates unto us by the Ministery of the Priest Lastly In consideration of the power which God hath given to them especially in Remission of sins and Consecrating of the Holy Eucharist for brevity sake I will cite One or Two of the Holy Fathers and so conclude for the first Let us hear the words of St. Chrysostome To those who live on Earth and are Conversant therein it is committed to dispose of those things which are in Heaven To them it is given to have that power which our Lord would not give to Angels nor Arch-Angels for it was not said to them whatsoever thou shalt bind upon Earth it shall be bound in Heaven Indeed the Princes on Earth have also power of binding but the bodies only but the bonds which I speak of in Priests concerns the Soul and reaches even to the Heavens in so much that what the Priest doth beneath the self-same God ratifies and our Lord confirms the sentence of his Servants what therefore other thing can you say but that all power of Celestial things is granted to them by God for he sayes whose sins ye retain are retained what power can be greater than this The Father gave all power to the Son and I see this power given to Priests by God the Son For the other let us hear what St. Augustine sayes At this so honourable a priviledge Heaven is amazed the Earth admires Man is terrified Hell dreads the Devils tremble and the Angels worship St. Bernard admires it saying O excellent and honourable power of Priests to which nothing in Heaven nothing on Earth can be compared in fine St. Francis gives us an Admonition saying We Catholicks ought to Worship and Reverence Priests for their Office and Administration of the most Holy Body and Blood of Christ which they Consecrate and receive and Administer to others The end of the First Part. The Second Part Containing a Brief Explication of the Masse SECT I. Of the First Part of the Masse from the beginning to
passion and hid themselves nevertheless there remains a little part uncovered which represents our Blessed Dady and St. John Evangelist who never left our Saviour but continued with him even to the Cross These Ceremonies duly considered may move our Souls to Devotion and make a good preparation for the better attention to the following mysteries we may do well here to joyn our prayers to the prayer which our Saviour made in the Garden and in union thereof to offer up our selves to God with a purpose never to separate our selves from him but to follow him even to the Cross 3. Of what occurs in the Oblation of the Chalice Q. Why doth the Priest take the Chalice A. He takes the Chalice to prepare the Wine for the other Oblation wherein he represents our Saviour accepting of the Chalice of his passion for when he had said Father if it be possible let this Chalice pass from me he adds nevertheless not as I will but as you as if he should say since it is thy will O Father that I should drink this Chalice I submit my self to thy will In conformity to this the Priest puts Wine and Water into the Chalice Q. Why doth he mingle Water with the Wine A The Church has alwayes done so and it is generally held to be an Apostolical Tradition and many are of opinion that our Saviour himself in his last Supper did mingle Water with his Wine So St. Clement expresly declares Pope Alexander Anno 106. tells us That in the Sacrifice of the Masse only Bread and Wine mixt with Water is to be offered In the Chalice of our Lord neither Wine alone nor Water alone ought to be offered but both mixed for we read that both did flow from Christ's side in his passion St. Cyprian gives a mystical reason for it When the Water is mingled with the Wine in the Chalice the people are united to Christ Jesus and the multitude as believers are united together and joyned to him in whom they believe This mixture or conjunction of Water and Wine in our Lord's Chalice is so done that this conjunction cannot be separated to signifie that nothing can separate the Church from Christ afterward he sayes Water cannot be offered alone nor Wine alone for if any one offers Wine alone the Blood of Jesus Christ begins to be without us and if Water alone the people begin to be without Christ but when the one and the other be mingled and by a confused mixture or union they are blended together then the Spiritual and Heavenly Sacrament is perfect So that the mixture of Wine and Water is an express Symbole of the union which Christians have with Christ in this Sacrament which is the fruit principally intended in this Sacrifice This mixture also assures us that Christ is united to us and we to him by this Eucharistical Sacrifice intimating that our Salvation cannot be without the participation of Christ's blood nor the effusion or offering of his blood without our Salvation Q. Why doth the Priest bless the Water and not the Wine A. Because the Wine as is said doth signifie him who needs no Blessing and the Water the People who stand in need of Benediction and therefore the Priest Blesses the people in the Water for a disposition to the union which by this Sacrifice we are to make to Christ In the Masses for the dead this Benediction is not given for the Souls in Purgatory are in the state of grace Q. Why doth the Priest put so little Water A. That it may the sooner be converted into Wine for it is convenient that the Water be converted into Wine and not the Wine into Water to signifie that we are to convert our selves to Christ and that the Church or People ought to be incorporated unto him Pope Honorius esteemed it a great abuse to do otherwise for the People represented by the Water are in no way to be equalized or compared to Christ repressed by the Wine Q. What doth he after the Oblation of the Chalice A. He sets down the Chalice on the Corporal with the Host and then devoutly prayes that God would accept this Sacrifice and withall begs that the Holy Ghost would Sanctifie these things ordained for the Sacrifice and still in making the sign of the Cross he shews that what he asks is expected by vertue of the Holy Cross and passion In consideration of these Ceremonies we may principally insist in the contemplation of the mixture of Water with Wine or rather the union of our Souls to Christ as it represents for it is one of the principal effects of the Eucharist of which Christ said He that eats my flesh and drinks my blood abides in me and I in him We may also consider the pious intention of the Church which in this Ceremony manifests her intention of uniting us by this Sacrifice to God in perfect love and to our neighbours to the end that being united as Members of Christ to the Priest in the whole course of the Masse 4. Of that which follows after the Oblation to the Preface Q. Why doth the Priest go then to the right end of the Altar A. He goes to wash the tops of his fingers because then such washing is undecent to be done before the Altar he goes to the end of the Altar where the Water is prepared for him Durand gives a mystical reason for it saying He washeth alwayes at the right end of the Altar the right signifies Prosperity as the left Adversity now we offend oftner in Prosperity than in Adversity according to that of the Psalmist A Thousand shall fall on this side to wit the left and Ten Thousand on thy right hand Q. Why doth he wash the tops of his fingers A. Lest any Crum or particle of the Host or any other thing might stick to his fingers to wit his thumb and his fore-finger wherewith only he touches the blessed Sacrament at the Consecration This is held to be an Apostolical Tradition whereof St. Denis gives this signification saying The washing is used to the tops or extreme parts of the fingers before the most Holy signs is observed as if it were before Christ beholding our most hidden thoughts c. For those who come to the most Holy Sacrifice ought to be expiated or cleansed from all imperfections in as much as they can St. Clement sayes that it is done to shew the necessary purity of the Soul and that this Sacrifice ought to be performed with all purity of Body and mind And St. Germane teaches that The Priest is admonished thereby to wash his Conscience with tears of Repentance And blessed Albert sayes that The Priest wants an ampler washing for venial Sins and reliques of iniquity We in seeing it may consider what purity of Soul and Body is required in those who come to this Sacrifice especially to the Holy Communion and thereby endeavour to cleanse our Souls with the Water of contrition and wipe
full of Gods Glory it is convenient that both Angels and Men should sing the praises of God as therefore in conjunction with the Angels we did sing Holy holy holy so in this Hymn we invite them to assist us or rather following their example we sing another Hymn or Canticle of praise Hosanna which signifies Triumph and has a certain kind of exultation and joy Blessed or praised be he that comes in the name of our Lord Blessed be he who by his infinite goodness came into the World to Redeem us by his passion in which sense the Priest signs himself with the sign of the Cross praised and blessed be he who comes to feed us in this holy Sacrament and Blessed be he who out of his infinite love is coming to us in this holy Sacrifice Hosanna all praise honour and glory be to God not only amongst us on Earth but also in the highest Heaven amongst the Celestial Spirits or in the highest manner we can give it Moved by all these Titles and Reasons let us bless and praise our Lord with Thanksgiving imitating the Prophet David who said I will bless our Lord at all times his praises are alwayes in my mouth Secondly Let us devoutly joyn with the Angels and all the Celestial Spirits in praising and adoring our God but then we ought to take good heed lest any thing be dissonant on our parts for if the strings of the heart be out of Tune or not sutable to them our voice will also be untunable one jar spoils the whole Consort we may also reflect that as David sayes we are here to sing to our Lord in the sight of Angels and that not only in their sight but we are to unite our hearts and voyces with them and that in the presence of God and withall we take their own words for as St. Gregory sayes We now praise God on Earth with the same voices or words wherewith the Holy Angels do praise him in Heaven not by pride of presumption but by humble Confession Thirdly Hearing the Seraphical and Cherubical Hymn Holy holy holy we ought to raise our minds to praise the blessed Trinity and with all Reverence adore and tremble before so great a Majesty Fourthly We may reflect on the Jews and their Children who praised our Lord as he was coming to Hierusalem where afterward he suffered his passion and Death And think with our selves that with greater reason we ought to rejoyce and praise our Saviour who now comes to apply unto us his passion as completed and here in the Masse presented unto us The Jews strew their Garments in the ways and cut boughs from the Trees and strew them in the way and shall not we with all submissive Reverence expect and attend the coming of our Saviour though in an invisible manner shall we not cast our Vestments that is our Bodies with all external Reverence possible and above all carry the boughs and branches of interiour Devotion and Piety that in true faith lively hope and inflamed charity in Tranquillity of Spirit we may be prepared for the coming of our Lord or to meet our God coming unto us Q. But why is there a litte Bell rung at this time A. It is and has been a custome among Catholicks to ring a little Bell and in Catholick Countryes to ring out the great Bell when the Priest sayes Sanctus or to make some other sign as by Mallets or Wooden Hammers as on Good-Fryday or by cryes or by singing Alleluja whereof Baronius makes mention to give warning to the faithful of this Solemn action to the end that in a special manner they may raise their hearts to more fervent Devotion and Reverence We have a figure of this in the Law where God ordained little Bells in the Hem of the Priest's Tunick to the end as the Text sayes That the Sound may be heard when he goes in and comes out of the Sanctuary in the sight of our Lord which was to move both Priest and People to a due Reverence to the Priest's Function and to an humble Adoration of Gods Majesty in that Holy place The Church does use here these little Bells for the same ends which here in England we call Sanctus Bel. SECT III. Of the Third part of the Masse which is from the Preface unto the Pater Noster 1. Of the Canon Q. WHat means the Canon A. Canon is a Greek word properly signifying a Rule or Order to be observed in any thing we are to do applyed by St. Gregory to this part of the Masse because it is constantly observed in all Masses according to the Churches Order whence St. Ambrose calls it the Ecclesiastical Rule and Optatus a Law or Ordinance established by the Church In the Missal it is called Action which name comes from St. Denis and is so called by way of Excellency for it contains the Consecration and Conversion of Bread and Wine into the Body and Blood of our Saviour and for the same reason it is called Sacrifice for in it the Sacrifice of the Masse is principally accomplished St. Basil calls it Secretum a secret or private mystery belonging only to the Priest and St. Irenaeus sayes that it is called Canon because the Priest therein follows the prescript and Rule of Christ in the Consecration and performs his Sacrifice and Sacrament in memory of Christs passion which in a more particular manner is therein presented and expressed in signs and actions It is true that before the Consecration there are other prayers and dispositions or preparations thereto and what follows are but applications of it to our comfort and consolation ordained for the better representation of the passion as in each particular shall be declared And here we may note that although the Masse be principally ordained as a representation of Christ's passion in whose memory it was first instituted yet there is in the Canon a Renovation of Christ's last Supper whence Durand notes with Pope Innocent 3. That in the Canon the Words signifie one thing and the Signs or Ceremonies another for the words principally belong to the Consecration of the Eucharist but the signs principally appertain to the remembrance of Christ's passion The words are in order to the Conversion of the Bread and Wine but the signs here before the Elevation in regard of what happened before his Crucifying and after in regard of what he suffered on the Cross which Pope Alexander the 1. confirms saying In the Sacramental Oblations which are offered amidst the Solemnity of the Masse to our Lord our Lords passion is to be mingled that the passion of him whose body and blood is made may be Celebrated or Remembered Now because this part of the Masse which solely belongs to the Priest is said all in silence I shall content my self to give a general notion of what the Priest is then doing that Christians may apply their Devotion to what occurs in the Canon and explicate the Signs or
Bread and will invocate the name of our Lord wherein we may note two things the first is of taking the celestial Bread the second of invocating the name of our Lord. Of the first St. Cyprian sayes we call it our Bread because Christ unto whose body we come is our Bread for Christ said I am the Bread of life which descended from Heaven It is true the Psalmist speaking of the Manna sayes Bread of Heaven he gave them Bread of Angels did man eat whence it may well be called celestial Bread because it came from Heaven yet being but a figure and shadow in comparison of this celestial Bread it comes short of such a real and true Denomination For this let us hear Christ's own Argument Our Fathers did eat Manna in the Desart as it is written Bread from Heaven he gave them to eat lo how gloriously they speak of this Manna and indeed standing in the Negative opinion of the reral presence they might glory even over that which is figured thereby taking it in all respects even in the nature of a sign But Christ says Amen Amen I say to you Moses gave you not the Bread from Heaven but my Father gives the true Bread from Heaven and again I am the living Bread that came down from Heaven Where we may note first That Moses who gave Manna was but a meer man and that to the Israelites only But Christ God and Man gives this celestial Bread to the whole World Secondly Manna is said to be from Heaven not properly but as Heaven is taken for the Air but this Bread is truly said to be celestial because it comes from the highest Heavens descending from the Bosome of the Father Thirdly Manna was framed by the Angel at the prayer of Moses But Christ himself did frame this Eucharistical Bread and gave it to us whence Christ sayes that it is true Bread from Heaven or truly celestial and that not only because it comes truly from Heaven but also because it is so by nature and substance Secondly Because it produces celestial or Heavenly effects as grace and life in Jesus Christ Thirdly It brings us to the celestial Kingdom by giving life Everlasting As for the second in saying celestial Bread he incites himself to Devotion reducing to his memory what he is to take and how he is to take it to wit by invocating the name of our Lord that so he may receive it with greater fear and reverence O Lord sayes St. Ambrose with how great contrition and fountain of Tears with how great reverence and fear with how great charity and purity of mind is this Divine and celestial Mystery to be celebrated where thy flesh is in verity received where thy blood is truly drunk and therefore in heart and voice he cryes out I will invocate the name of our Lord for it is he alone that can make me worthy to receive this celestial food Where we may note that to invocate the name of our Lord admits many interpretations for first it may signifie an act of Sacrifice as when Abraham had built an Altar to our Lord he called upon his name and in the Chapter following it is said there he called upon the name of our Lord that is Sacrificed to our Lord. Whence St. Ambrose sayes Where Bethel is that is the house of God there the Altars are where the Altars are there is the invocation of our God Secondly It is taken for Gods true Worship so Enoch began to invocate the name of our Lord that is in a publick manner to Worship God according to this St. Paul sayes whosoever shall invocate the name of our Lord shall be saved where under the title of invocation we may understand profession of the name of our Lord Jesus as also all Worship Thirdly David said We will confess to thee O God we will confess and will invocate thy name we will praise and bless thee O God we will confess to thee with heart mouth and work that so we may confidently invocate thy name which St. Bernardine thus explicates if we invocate with a perfect and devout heart and not with a polluted mouth for true invocation includes true contrition Fourthly This invocation of our Lords name or by our Lords name is the best manner of prayer which also our Saviour commended unto us saying Amen Amen I say to you if you shall ask the Father any thing in my name he will give it to you wherein as St. Chrysostome notes Christ did shew the vertue and power of his name for being only named invocated he doth wonderful things with the Father The name of Christ invocated is a great security or assurance of obtaining what we pray for Lastly This invocation of the name of our Lord proceeds from a firm hope and confidence in Gods mercy and goodness for as Solomon sayes The name of our Lord is a most strong Tower the just run into it and shall be exalted The name of our Lord is a refuge to all the only hope of sinners is to invocate his name whence the Prophet Esay cryes out Thy name O Lord and thy memorial are in the desires of the Soul I will alwayes invocate thy name and the whole desires of my Soul is that thy name may be invocated by all and that it may be a memorial of thy goodness to all that I with them may alwayes have in memory the glory of thy name Briefly in saying these words I will invocate the name of our Lord then consequently to the whole action of the Masse the Priest offers the celestial Bread to God the Father by invocating his name that this his Sacrifice which he is now to consummate may be acceptable to his Divine Majesty which in all sumbissive manner as he has exteriourly adored so interiourly in heart and affection he adores and worships what he is to receive and in a few words expresses the interiour Devotion of his Soul and the vehement desire which he hath that what he does therein may be to the glory of God which he principally intends in this Sacrifice and in spirit and desire his Soul lancheth forth to praise and glorifie the holy name of God who has vouchsafed to give him this celestial Bread this food of Angels the very Body and blood of Christ Jesus In the mean time whilst we seeing the Priest going to take the Holy Host we may make our prayers that God would accept of the Sacrifice which the Priest now is to conclude and if we are to communicate we may beg the same grace which the Priest now receives and here with the advice of the Prophet Esay Seek our Lord whilst he may be found and invocate him whilst he is near to us we need not go far to seek him for he is come to us and hath made himself susceptible by us in the most loving way imaginable For he is become our food our celestial Bread here on Earth we can never have
a better time to invocate him than when he is so near descending to our imbecility and frailty more willing to be with us than we to be with him O can we doubt but that if we truly invocate his name with fervent Devotion he will give us his grace his justice and his mercy yea whatsoever good we desire for as he hath given himself so with him all things We may also contemplate the great Devotion of the Apostles when they were to receive the holy Eucharist from the hands of our Saviour and imitate them therein believing that invisibly we are to receive the same from our Saviour by the Ministery of the Priests 6. Of Domine non sum dignus Q. What means Domine non sum dignus A. The Priest Devoutly bowing with eyes fixed on the Host saith Lord I am not worthy that thou shouldst enter under my Roof but only say the word and my Soul shall be healed repeating the same three times and at each time he strikes his breast the words are of the Centurion who desired Christ to cure his servant of a Palsey and when Christ said I will come and cure him he with a lively faith answered Lord I am not worthy that thou shouldst enter into my house neither is it necessary that thou come in person for by thy word alone thou canst cure him thy word therefore will suffice St. Chrysostome in his Liturgie makes here a large discourse saying O Lord I am not worthy that thou shouldest enter under this sordid Roof of my Soul but even as thou hast vouchsafed to be in the Cottage and Manger and hast been received in the house of Simon the Leper and didst receive even a Harlot like unto me coming unto thee so also vouchsafe to enter into the Cribb of my house void of reason and into my defiled dead and leprous body and as thou didst not abhor the foul mouth of the strumpet kissing thy feet So O Lord do not despise me a sinner but as good and clement vouchsafe to make me partaker of thy most holy Body and blood Q. Why does the Latin Church make use of the Centurion's words A. Our holy Mother the Church for the most part makes use of the sentences and words of holy Scripture and in this place applyes these words as much conducing to her purpose for although the words were then spoken on another occasion yet for their piety wherein they abound she appropriates to the sence of this present act of Communion for the words have great energy and force For first Lord is a name of fear and dread in him that invocates it the Prophet saying in the person of God If I be the Lord where is my fear with fear therefore and trembling we ought to come to this dreadful Sacrament This name Lord also is a name of Power and Majesty and therefore challenges all Reverence and Honour correspondent and therefore we may justly say we are not worthy And with St. Peter on our knees before the blessed Sacrament say Go forth from me because I am a sinful man for he thought himself unworthy of his presence because he was a sinner The sacred Text gives a reason why Peter thus humbled himself saying for he was astonished at so great a miracle have we not before our eyes the most wonderful work of Christ who Transports and Transforms himself in this stupendious manner to be our food That astonishment caused in Peter fear reverence and an humble acknowledgment of his own unworthiness what shall this immense love of Christ cause in us Secondly we are not worthy that Christ should enter into the Roof of our house which Palasius explicates thus Our body is worthily called a Roof most unworthy of Christ's entrance for as the Roof and covering of the house hinders us from seeing Heaven so the body aggravates the Soul that it may not see the light of Heaven nor be carried to supernal things or openly to see the things which are near us making our unbridled senses to domineer and rule over the faculties of the Soul and hinders the motives of the holy Ghost whence it is manifest that the body is not worthy of Christ's entrance into it for the body without all doubt is the root and fountain of all vice yea a Dunghil and a sink of sins where the Devils have left their ordure and filth and as it were exonerated their Bellies how loathsome a house is this for Christ truly Hell it self were a more fitting place for God if sin were not there than the house or Roof of a Sinner Q. Being he hath been at Confession before Masse why is it so fearful here A. St. Paul advises us To work our Salvation with fear and trembling for divers reasons First for the uncertainty of grace for we know not whether we be in grace the Ecclesiastes sayes No man knows whether he be worthy of love or hatred And Job Although I shall be simple the self-same my Soul shall be ignorant of St. Bernardine said Although my Conscience do not accuse me yet it does not secure me nay the Wise man adds if sins forgiven be not without fear for we do not see the depth of our heart not knowing whether some secret vice lies hid there or whether our good works were depraved by some perverse intention Secondly Because the judgments of God are secret whence Job said If I will justifie my self mine own mouth will condemn me If I will shew my self innocent he God shall prove me wicked Hence St. Augustine Woe even to the laudable life of Men if God withdrawing his mercy examins it And St. Hierome All the World stands in need of Gods mercy none can go securely to the Judge without it And therefore Job sayes again Although I have any just thing I will not answer but will beseech my Judge Thirdly Because man by his corrupted inclinations is in a manner necessitated to sin which by his frailty proneness and inconstancy he cannot avoid which as St. Leo sayes is the cause that holy men do fear and tremble lest puffed up even with works of piety they lose the help of grace and remain in Natures infirmity Fourthly Because we have cruel and strong Enemies who cruelly and secretly use all means imaginable to circumvent and intrap us So we read that when the Sons of God were come to assist before our Lord Satan was present among them amongst other his malicious attempts he is then most busied when men are imployed in Gods Service even in their most pious actions Lastly Because our perseverance in grace is altogether uncertain for although one be just and fervent in Devotion yet indulging to his appetite by little and little he may wax tepid frail and fall which even St. Paul did apprehend when he said I chastise my body and bring it into servitude lest perhaps when I have Preached to others my self become a Reprobate Well said St. Chrysostome if St.
meat as Ecclesiastical Histories do testifie None can deny but that it was a pious custome to Communicate daily yet not common to all for it is certain that many holy persons eminent in Sanctity did not take it Sacramentally for many years particularly those who did live in the Desarts yet St. Basil does not stick to say that those who did lead a solitary life in the Desart where there was no Priest did keep the Communion that is the Eucharist in their Cells and Communicate themselves nay in Alexandria and Egypt every one of the people for the most part did the same Great St. Hierome sayes I know that it is the custome at Rome that the faithful do alwayes take the body of Christ which I neither reprehend nor approve for every one abounds in his own sence St. Augustine has the like Discourse some will say that the Eucharist is not to be taken daily if you ask wherefore because sayes he the dayes are to be chosen wherein a man lives more purely and chastly that so he may come more worthily to so great a Sacrament for he that eats and drinks unworthily eats and drinks judgment to himself Another on the contrary affirms that it is to be taken daily c. Let every one do what according to his faith he piously believes is to be done for neither of these do dishonour our Lords body and blood sith they strive contending who may do best to honour this most holy Sacrament for Zaccheus and the Centurion did not contend among themselves nor did any of them prefer himself before the other when one of them did receive our Lord in his house with joy the other said I am not worthy thou shouldst enter under my Roof both honouring our Saviour though not in the same manner both miserable by sin both obtained mercy and concludes one in honouring God does not take it daily and another in honouring God does not omit any day Blessed be God in these our later times we have some who if not every day yet very frequently with Devotion receive the Eucharist and some who out of humility forbear but I fear we have too too many who under this cloak give way to the Temptations of the Enemy and more who neglectfully omit it To such I may say with St. Chrysostome Even as it is perillous for him that is cold to wit in mortal sin to come to it so no participation of that Mystical Supper is poyson or destruction for this Table is the strength of our Souls the nerves of the mind the bond of confidence our foundation hope salvation light and life surely if any one did justly consider this he would not easily forbear But alas we easily suck poyson and pestilential vanities of the World which lead us the way to Hell we gormandise our selves with what is pleasant to the Palate not rarely the readiest way to our Grave and still with danger of going further even to Hell and leave the means to prevent all evil But some will say we are sinners and so dare not appear c. To whom Cassian answers we ought not therefore suspend our selves from the Communion of our Lord because we acknowledge our selves sinners but rather more greedily hasten more and more to it both for the Medicine of our Soul and purification of the Spirit but yet with humility of mind and faith that judging our selves unworthy to receive so great grace we rather ask remedy for our wounds otherwise even the Aniversary Communion is not worthily to be presumed as some so measure the Dignity Sanctification and worth of the celestial Sacraments that they esteem none but Saints and unspotted should presume to take them and not rather that by their participation they might make us holy and clean Such truly incur more presumption of arrogance in declining it then as it seems to them of humility for when they receive them they judge themselves worthy to receive them It is much more reasonable that with that humility of heart whereby we believe and confess that according to our merits we can never come to those sacred Mysteries we presume to take them every Sunday for remedy of our infirmities than puffed up with a vain perswasion of mind that after a year we should believe our selves to be made worthy to partake thereof The counsel of St. Ambrose is very good Take that daily which daily profits thee so live that thou mayest deserve to take it daily he that deserves not to take it daily deserves not to take it after a year As holy Job did daily offer for his Sons lest perhaps they might some way have sinned Thou doest hear that as often as the Sacrifice is offered the death of our Lord his Resurrection and Ascention are declared and Remission Why then doest thou not take the daily Bread of life He that hath a wound seeks cure for the wound because we are in sin the Medicine and cure is the celestial and venerable Sacrament we say give us this day our daily Bread if thou takest it daily it is to thee daily that is every day I will conclude with the Golden words of St. Basil It is sayes he an excellent thing and very profitable to communicate every day and to participate of the body and blood of Christ he manifestly saying He that eats my Flesh and drinks my Blo●d has life Everlasting for who doubts but that the frequent participation of life is nothing else then to live many wayes We therefore communicate four times in a week on Sunday Wednesday Fryday and Saturday and other dayes if there be a memory of some Saint In fine take away mortal sin which is done by the Sacrament of pennance I see nothing but want of oppertunity may justly hinder us from daily Communion for the holy Eucharist is a fountain of grace and of its own nature take away daily and venial sins If we are sick here is our Medicine if wounded here is a cure if tempted a refuge if hungry Bread of life if thirsty here is a fountain of life if in necessity or want here is a Heavenly Treasure laid open to all If sinners here is remission and indulgence For our Saviour has left this holy Sacrament as a remedy for all our evils and daily offers himself to us continually invites us to this celestial Banquet I may say with St. Chrysostome Christ calls us to Heaven and we draw back and loyter and make no haste neither do we run to the thing which is the hope of our Salvation Some indeed may pretend imployments in secular affairs although I believe very few would neglect their corporal food for them but are those imployments lawful and good if not attend and repent if so will Communion hinder them no but rather impart a Benediction to their endeavours O but we have not time to prepare our selves for so great a Sacrament If urgent and necessary I will speak no further but
generally speaking it is strange that we should be so amorous and careful of temporal things that we cannot spare some time for spiritual things we can find time to feed our bodies for the most part with excess and yet we cannot allow some time to feed our Souls 9. Of the taking of the Chalice Q. How does the Priest take the Chalice A. The Priest having meditated a while on the holy Sacrament now received goes forward to accomplish the holy Sacrifice kneeling down to adore the blood of our Lord and taking the Chalice with prayer suitable in the same manner as he did with the holy Host he signs him with it importing as much as if he should say the blood of our Lord Jesus Christ which is the fountain and laver of our Sanctification the price of our Redemption and reparation shed on the Cross keep my Soul in security against all my Enemies and bring me to life everlasting whilst he is doing this we may say Hail sacred Blood for us still flowing To shew th● price of our Redemption Wash us from our sins always abounding And cleanse us by Christs bitter Passion Q. Why does the Priest after this take Wine A. Such is the Reverence which the Church bears to this holy Sacrament that she ordains this taking of Wine after the Communion of the Chalice lest any drops should remain in the Chalice as also to cleanse it after the holy species Q. Why does the Priest go to the corner of the Altar A. As he took Wine to cleanse the Chalice so now out of Reverence to the Altar where our Saviour was before offered he goes to the end of the Altar there to wash the tops of his fingers which had touched the Blessed Sacrament lest any remnant or particle of the Host should remain on them and also because it were unbeseeming that those fingers should touch any other thing before they were washed so that this Ceremony is rather for Decency than Mystery Q. But why does he do it with Wine and Water A. There is no necessity of both either may suffice but the Church uses both and not without Mystery for the Priest having received the holy Eucharist is to be washed with Water and Wine that is with spiritual exultation and joy signified by the Wine and compunction of our Saviours passion signified by the Water for this Sacrifice has a mixture of joy and sorrow of joy for the holy Eucharist of sorrow in regard of the passion represented therein of joy for the coming of our Saviour in so merciful profitable and most loving manner of sorrow for our sins which have been the cause of Christs so great Torment Dolours and Death on the Cross As therefore both those Mysteries are represented in the Masse and both concur to our Salvation so the joyning of Wine and Water in this action signifies the affections of the mind should correspond to what they signifie SECT V. Of what follows to the end of the Masse 1. Of the Versicle which is commonly called Communion Q. WHat does the Priest say after he has Communicated A. He sayes a verse most commonly out of the Psalms or other places of the holy Scripture proper for the time or Feasts in the same manner ordinarily conformable to the verse before the Offertory in correspondence also to the Subject and is commonly called Communion because it is sung or said immediately after the distribution of the blessed Sacrament when all do joyn together to praise God and to give thanks to his Divine Majesty for so great a benefit Some have noted that in St. Ambrose his time the Priest did say Simeons Canticle Now thou doest dismiss thy servant O Lord according to thy word in peace because mine eyes have seen thy Salvation which thou hast prepared before the face of all People a light to the Revelation of the Gentils and the glory of thy People Israel which is very proper for this place and may be said with Devotion by all present especially by those who have received the holy Eucharist Q. What does it represent here A. In order to the Eucharist it may well represent Christ's action after his last Supper which he ended with a Hymn The Arabick Text sayes They give praise to God for this Hymn was of Thanksgiving and praise to God Whence St. Clement sayes Having received Christs body and blood we give thanks to him who has made us worthy to receive his holy Mysteries and we ask that they be made to us not unto judgment but unto Salvation for the profit of our Soul and Body for the conservation of Piety unto Remission of sins and for the life of the World to come from hence we may gather that all which follows in the Masse tends to thanksgiving and prayer for the benefit and effects of the Masse Mystically as Pope Innocent 3. sayes it is a Symbole of joy representing the Apostles joy in seeing Christs Resurrection The Text says They were glad when they saw our Lord It may also be said to represent the joy of our holy Mother the Church in seeing her children fed with the Flesh and blood of her Spouse Christ Jesus whereby their pious desires are satisfied and they nourished with that celestial Viand which will bring them to the celestial joyes We may imitate the Apostles in their joy for Christs Resurrection for if they were glad to see Jesus and the Bethlemites when they saw the Ark we have seen in this Sacrifice of the Masse that which was represented by the Ark Christ Jesus himself who is offered for us in this Mystical manner we have therefore all reason to praise and glorifie our God who comes to make his abode with us those who have communicated have particular reason to rejoyce that he is risen in their Souls and hath given them a certain pledge of future glory Q. Why does the Priest say this at the right end of the Altar A. Because the Missal is brought to that side to end the Masse where it was begun and as before the reading of the Gospel the Missal was removed from thence to shew the Apostles going to preach Gods word to the Gentils forsaking the Jews who were obstinate and rejected Christs Law So now in the end of the Masse the Missal is brought back again to intimate unto us that in the end of the World the Jews shall receive true faith and be united to Christs Flock In this Ceremony therefore the Church represents the infinite mercy of God who notwithstanding the Jews great malice obdurateness and hardness of heart never ceaseth by his Ministers to call them and to shew the immensity of his goodness and clemency before the day of judgment by a miraculous hand as by force he will convert them The Church also groans sighs and prayes for the Conversion of all Nations expecting the fulness of them that is the Jews who at that time are to be converted when both Jews and
fructifie shew in your actions what you have promised in your Orisons you have received the pledge of eternity so walk that you may come to it Some very impertinently would have the custome of saying Ite missa est to have been used in the dismission of the Catechumens for although that after the Gospel they were dismissed because they were not permitted to be present at the holy Mysteries as is to be seen in St. Denis and in the Laodicean Council yet in no place do we find this manner of salutation unto them Only in the Liturgie of St. Basil and St. Chrysostome there is a command given that they should withdraw or go forth Discedite Catechumeni But this Ite missa est was alwayes said in the end of the Masse only to the faithful Christians after they had been partakers of the Mysteries It is true that as St. Clement teaches sometimes the Priest said Ite in pace Go in peace which words Christ did frequently use after some of his miraculous Works and imports as much as the God of peace be with you all not much differing in sence from the Ite missa est for the peace which that presents is that which is to be obtained by the Masse So that in saying it the Priest assures us that peace is imparted unto us by the Sacrifice of the Masse We may piously meditate that at Christs Ascention the Disciples were Devoutly kneeling praying and adoring our Saviour until such time as the Angels did cry out unto them Ye men of Galilee why stand you looking up to Heaven this Jesus who is assumpted from you into Heaven shall so come as you have seen going into Heaven as if they should say go and so lead your lives that ye may come to that glory which is promised us in Christs Ascention and let us Devoutly answer the Priest by saying Deo gratias imitating the Apostles who as St. Luke sayes adoring went back into Hierusalem with great joy and they were alwayes in the Temple praising and blessing God which is conformable to this part of the Mass which as is said before ought to be of praise and thanksgiving whence in Easter-time the Church adds Alleluja as a Canticle of joy and praise joy in our Souls and peace to God Q. What is the second Conclusion A. Sometimes the Church concludes the Mass with Benedicamus Domino which she uses in all penitential times as in Advent Lent The Ember days and Vigils as also in the Ferial days out of Easter time in which times as she omits the Gloria in excelsis which is a Hymn of joy so she omits the Ite missa est and in its place says Benedicamus Domino Let us bless our Lord. Durand gives a plausible reason for it saying that in the primitive Church when there was any solemn Congregation the Priests were wont to conclude with Ite missa est but when there were but a few or none of the faithful people with Benedicamas Domino and consequently to this when he says Ite He remains turned to the people after Dominus vobiscum but when he says Benedicamus he turns to the Altar it is not incongruously said that Ite missa est is used in times of joy in which the people are dismissed but in those primitive times they are referred to prayer for remission of their sins Q. What is the third Conclusion A. That which is only used in Masses for the dead when instead of the other there is said Requiescant in peace Let them rest in peace which is suitable to the whole course of the Masse wherein is no special prayer for the living but what is then said to the living is only to incite them to pray for the dead as the Priest does all along and consequently standing near to the Altar in the end he salutes not the people but prays for the dead and so passes on without giving any Benediction as in all others he does because the Benediction is not given but to them that are present whose part is only to say Amen as devoutly joyning with the Priest 3. Of the Priest's Benediction Q. What Prayer is that which the Priest then makes A. He prays that his service or Sacrifice not done by presumption but in Obedience to Christ and his Church may be pleasing and acceptable to the Divine Majesty as well for himself as for all those for whom he has offered it whereof we have a resemblance in Moses saying to Aaron Approach to the Altar and immolate for thy sin offer the Holocaust and pray for thy self and for the People and when thou hast slain the Peoples Host pray for them as our Lord hath commanded This prayer being made the Priest kisseth the Altar as in confidence of his Sacrifice being accepted by God he turns to the people and saying The Omnipotent God Father and Son and holy Ghost bless you Amen Making the sign of the Cross on all who are present where we may note that as formerly has been declared the Church in all Sacraments and Benedictions invocates the blessed Trinity and that as the Mass begins with the invocation of the holy Trinity so it ends Q. Whence comes the use of this Benediction A. The Church has taken it from the Law of Nature Moses his Law and from the Law of grace In the Law of Nature Melchisedech after he had offered his Sacrifice of Bread and Wine a true figure of the Sacrifice of the Mass as is declared in the first part he blessed Abraham Jacob also blessed Joseph's Children and particularly at the time of his death and when God taught Moses the manner of Consecration and Oblation he determined a set form of blessing the people Our Lord bless thee and keep thee Our Lord shew his face to thee and have mercy on thee our Lord turn his countenance unto thee and give thee Peace Where we may note that the form of the Benediction is virtually the same for in that form there is thrice our Lord presenting the Father Son and holy Ghost and they are but a more ample Declaration of Gods blessings which is sufficiently expressed in what the Priest says Omnipotent God who can by his power give all good gifts bless you Rabanus makes this application of it Our Lord God the Father bless thee and keep thee by his Omnipotency Our Lord God the Son shew his face to thee by his incarnation and have mercy on thee by his passion Our Lord God the holy Ghost turn his countenance unto thee by his gracious inspirations and give thee peace by the infusion of his grace It has been also used in Christ's Church even from the beginning as is to be seen in all antient Liturgies The Grecians who use St. Basils and St. Chrysostomes Liturgies have it to this day for the Priest turning about to the people says Our Lord keep ye all in his grace and goodness perpetually now always and for ever Amen But the