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

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spirit of thy grace The BLESSING We end our Service with a BLESSING which is to be pronounced by the Bishop if he be present See the Rubrick before the Blessing in the Communion-Service Then the Priest or Bishop if present shall let them depart with this Blessing This is order'd for the honour of the Bishops authority Heb. 7. 7. Without contradiction the less is blessed of the greater Therefore blessing being an act of Authority the Bishop ought not to be blest by the Priest but the Priest by the Bishop This blessing of the Bishop or Priest was so highly esteem'd in the Primitive times that none durst go out of the Church till they had received it according to the Councils of Agatha Can. 31. in the year 472. and Orleans the third Can. 22. And when they received it they did it kneeling or bowing down their heads And the Deacon to prepare them to it was wont to call out immediately before the time of the Blessing in such words as these Bow down your selves to the Blessing Chrys. Liturg. The Iews received it after the same manner Eccles. c. 50. v. 23. When the Service was finished the high Priest went down and lifted up his hands over the Congregation to give the blessing of the Lord with his lips and they bowed down themselvs to worship the Lord that they might receive the Blessing from the Lord the most high And doubtless did we consider the efficacy and vertue of this blessing of Priest or Bishop we could do no less than they did For it is God from heaven that blesses us by the mouth of his Minister We have his word for it Numb 6. 22. And the Lord spoke to Moses saying Speak to Aaron and his sons saying On this wise shall ye bless the children of Israel The Lord bless thee c. And they shall put my name upon the children of Israel And I will bless them And the same promise of Gods assistance and ratifying the Priests Blessing we have in the Gospel S. Matth. 10. 13. S. Luke 10. 5. where our Saviour charges his Apostles and Disciples that into whatsoever house they enter they should say not pray say with authority Peace be to this house and not if your prayers be servent or if they in the house joyn in prayer with you but if the Son of peace be there that is if he that dwells in the house hinders not nor resists your blessing if he be a person capable of so much good as your blessing for this is signified by this Hebrew phrase Son of peace your peace shall rest upon him but if he be not such a son of peace your blessing shall return to you again which it could not be said to do unless vertue together with the blessing had gone out from them The EVENING SERVICE differs little or nothing from the Morning and therefore what hath been said concerning the Morning office may be applyed to that The LITANY LItany signifies an humble an earnest Supplication These Forms of prayers call'd Litanies wherein the people are more exercised than in any other part of the Service by continual joyning in every passage of it are thought by some to have been brought into the Church about four hundred years after Christ in times of great calamity for the appeasing of Gods wrath True it is that they are very seasonable prayers in such times and therefore were by Gregory and others used in their Processions for the averting of Gods wrath in publick calamities but it is as true that they were long before that time even in the first Services that we find in the Church used at the Communion-Service and other Offices as Ordination of Priests and the like witness Clem. Const. l. 8. c. 5 6 10. where we find the Deacon ministring to the people and directing them from point to point what to pray for as it is in our Litany and the people are appointed to answer to every Petition Domine miserere Lord have mercy And in all Liturgies extant as Mr. Thorndyke hath well observed in his Book of Religious Assemblies the same Allocutions or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which are indeed Litanies may be seen And S. Aug. Ep. 119. c. 18 tells us of the Common-prayers which were indited or denounced by the voice of the Deacon All which make it probable that the practice of Litanies is derived from the Apostles and the custom of their time And S. C●rys in Rom. c. 8. seems to assert the same For upon that verse We know not what we should pray for as we ought but the Spirit helps our infirmities he saies thus In those daies amongst other miraculous gifts of the Spirit this was one Donum pr●●um the gift of making prayers for the Church to help the ignorance of the people that knew not what to pray for as they ought he that had this gift stood up and prayed for the whole Congregation and taught them what to pray for whose Office now the Deacon performs viz. by directing them from point to point what to pray for To every of which Petitions sayes Clem. above cited the people were to answer Domine Miserere This continual joyning of the people in every passage of it tends much both to the improving and evidencing that fervour and intention which is most necessary in prayers Hence was it that these Forms of prayers where the peoples devotion is so often excited● quickned and exercised by continual Suffrages such as Good Lord deliver us We beseech thee to hear us good Lord were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 earnest or intense Petitions In which if they were relished aright the earnest and vehement devotion of Primitive times still breaths and in these prayers if ever we pray with the Spirit Concerning the Litany of our Church we may boldly say and easily maintain it that there is not extant any where 1. A more particular excellent enumeration of all the Christians either private or common wants Nor 2. A more innocent blameless form against which there lies no just exception Nor 3. A more Artificial Composure for the raising of our devotion and keeping it up throughout than this part of our Liturgy In the beginning it directs our prayers to the right object the Glorious TRINITY For necessary it is that we should know whom we worship Then it proceeds to Deprecations or prayers against evil lastly to Petitions for good In the Deprecations as right method requires we first pray against sin then against punishment because sin is the greatest evil From all which we pray to be delivered by the holy actions and passions of CHRIST the only merits of all our good The like good order is observed in our Petitions for good First we pray for the Church Catholick the common mother of all Christians then for our own Church to which next the Church Catholick we owe the greatest observance and duty And therein in the first place for the principal
Priests power to pronounce pardon to the penitent He pardons you Or thus By vertue of a Commission granted to me from God I absolve you Or lastly God pardon you namely by me his servant according to his promise whose sins ye remit they are remitted All these are but several expressions of the same thing and are effectual to the penitent by virtue of that Commission mentioned Saint Ioh. 20. Whose sins ye remit they are remitted Which Commission in two of these forms is expressed and in the Last viz. that at the Communion is sufficiently implyed and supposed For the Priest is directed in using this form to stand up and turn to the people Rubr. immediately before it Which behaviour certainly signifies more than a bare prayer for the people for if it were only a prayer for the people he should not be directed to stand and turn to the People when he speaks but to God from the people this gesture of standing and turning to the people signifies a message of God to the people by the mouth of his Priest a part of his Ministery of Reconciliation a solemn application of pardon to the penitent by Gods Minister and is in sense thus much Almighty God pardon you by me Thus the Greek Church from whom this form is borrowed uses to express it and explain it Almighty God pardon you by me his unworthy Servant or Lord pardon him for thou hast said whose sins ye remit they are remitted sometime expressing always including Gods Commission So then in which form soever of these the Absolution be pronounced it is in substance the same an act of authority by virtue of Christs Commission effectual to remission of sins in the penitent Of all these Forms the last in the Communion-Service was most used in Primitive times by the Greek and Latin Church and scarce any other form to be found in their Rituals or Eccles. History till about four hundred years since say some Learned Men. But what then is another Form unlawful Hath not the Church power to vary the expression and to signifie Christs power granted to her provided the expression and words be agreeable to the sense of that Commission But it may easily be shown that those other Forms are not novelties For even of old in the Greek Church there was used as full a Form as any the Church of England uses It 's true it was not written nor set down in their Rituals but delivered from hand to hand down to these times and constantly used by them in their private Absolutions For when the Penitent came to the Spiritual Man so they call'd their Confessor for Absolution intreating him in their vulgar language 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I beseech you Sir absolve me The Confessor or Spiritual Man if he thought him fit for pardon answered 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I absolve thee See Arcadius de Sacra Poenit. l. 4. c. 3. Goar in Euchol Graec. where you may find instances of Forms of Absolution as full as any the Church of England uses The LORDS PRAYER THen follows the LORDS PRAYER The Church of Christ did use to begin and end her Services with the Lords Prayer this being the Foundation upon which all other Prayers should be built therefore we begin with it that so the right Foundation being laid we may justly proceed to our ensuing requests Tertul. de orat c. 9. And it being the perfection of all prayer therefore we conclude our prayers with it S. Augustine Ep. 59. Let no Man therefore quarrel with the Churches frequent use of the Lords Prayer For the Church Catholick ever did the same Besides if we hope to have our prayers accepted of the Father only for his Sons sake why should we not hope to have them most speedily accepted when they are offered up in his Sons own words Both in this place and other parts of the Service where the Lords prayer is appointed to be used the Doxology For thine is the Kingdom c. is left out The reason is given by Learned Men because the Doxology is ●o part of our Lords Prayer For though in S. Matt. 6. it be added in our usual Copies yet in the most ancient Manuscripts it is not to be found no nor in S. Lukes Copy S. Luke 11. and therefore is thought to be added by the Greek Church who indeed use it in their Liturgies as the Jews before them did but divided from the Prayer as if it were no part of it The Latin Church generally say it as this Church does without the Doxology following S. Lukes Copy who setting down our Lords Prayer exactly with this Introduction when you pray say not after this manner as S. Matthew hath it but say Our Father c. leaves out the Doxology and certainly it can be no just matter of offence to any reasonable Man that the Church uses that Form which S. Luke tells us was exactly the prayer of our Lord. In some places especially among those Ejaculations which the Priest and people make in course the People are to say the last words But deliver us from evil Amen That so they may not be interrupted from still bear●ing a part and especially in so divine a Pray●er as this thereby giving a fuller testification of their Concurrence and Communion Then follow the Verses O LORD open Thou our Lips And our mouth shall shew forth thy praise c. This is a most wise order of the Church in assigning this place to these Verses namely before the Psalms Lesson and Collects and yet after the Confession and Absolution insinuating that our mouths are silenced only by sin and opened only by God and therefore when we meet together in the Habitation of Gods Honour the Church to be thankful to him and speak good of his Name We must crave of God Almighty first pardon of our sins and then that he would put a New Song in our mouths that they may shew forth his praise And because without Gods Grace we can do nothing and because the Devil is then most busie to hinder us when we are most desirously bent to serve God therefore follow immediately those short and passionate Ejaculations O Lord open thou our Lips O God make spéed to save us which verses are a most excellent defence against all Incursions and invasions of the De●il against all unruly affections of Humane Nature for it is a Prayer and an earnest one to God for his help● an humble acknowledgement of our ow● inability to live without him a minute O God make haste to help us If any be ready to faint and sink with sorrow this raises him by relling him that God is at hand to help us If any be apt to be proud of spiritual success this is fit to humble him by minding him that he cannot live a moment without him It is fit for every Man in every state degree or condition sayes Cassian Col. 10. c. 10. The DOXOLOGY follows Glory be to
the same reason to say it that old Simeon had and we should have the same spirit to say it with There can nothing be more fitting for us as we have said than having heard the Lessons and the goodness of God therein Preach't unto us to break out into a Song of Praise and Thanksgiving and the Church hath appointed two to be used either of them after each Lesson but not so indifferently but that the Former Practice of exemplary Churches and Reason may guide us in the choice For the Te Deum Benedictus Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis being the most expressive-Jubilations and rejoycings for the redemption of the world may be said more often than the rest especially on Sundayes and other Festivals of our Lord excepting in Lent and Advent which being times of Humiliation and Meditations on Christ as in expectation or his sufferings are not so fitly enlarged with these Songs of highest Festivity the custom being for the same reason in many Churches in Lent to hide and conceal all the glory of their Altars covering them with black to comply with the season and therefore in these times may be rather used the following Psalms than the foregoing Canticles as at other times also when the Contents of the Lesson shall give occasion as when it speaks of the enlargement of the Church by bringing in the Gentiles into the Fold of it for divers passages of those three Psalms import that sense And for the Canticle Benedicite O all ye works of the Lord it may be used not only in the aforesaid times of Humiliation but when either the Lessons are out of Daniel or set before us the wonderful handy-work of God in any of the Creatures or the use he makes of them either ordinary or miraculous for the good of the Church Then it will be very seasonable to return this Song O all ye works of the Lord bless ye the Lord praise him and magnifie him for ever that is ye are great occasion of blessing the Lord who therefore be blessed praised and magnified for ever The APOSTLES CREED The Creed follows At ordinary Morning and Evening prayer and most Sundaies and Holy-daies the Apostles Creed is appointed which Creed was made by the Apostles upon this occasion sayes Ruffinus in Symb. n. 2. The Apostles having received a Commandment from our Lord to Teach all Nations and withal being commanded to tarry at Hierusalem till they should be furnish'd with gifts and graces of the holy Spirit sufficient for such a charge tarried patiently as they were enjoyned expecting the fulfilling of that promise In the time of the stay at Hierusalem they agreed upon this Creed as a Rule of Faith according to the analogy of which they and all others should reach and as a word of distinction by which they should know friends from foes For as the Gileadites distinguished their own men from the Berjamites by the word Shibboleth Iudges 12. 6. And as Souldiers know their own side from the Enemy by their Word so the Apostles and the Church should know who were the Churches friends and who were enemies who were right believers who false by this word of Faith for all that walkt according to this Rule and profest this faith she acknowledged for hers and gave them her peace but all others that went contrary to this rule and word she accounted Enemies Tertul. de praescrip led by false spirits For he that hears not us is not of God hereby know we the Spirit of truth and the spirit of error 1 Iohn 4. 6. This Creed is said daily twice Morning and Evening So it was of old Aug. l. 1. de Symb. ad Catech. cap. 1. Take the Rule of Faith which is call'd the Symbol or Creed say it daily in the Morning before you go forth at Night before you sleep And l. 50. Hom. 42. Say your Creed daily Morning and Evening Rehearse your Creed to God say not I said it yesterday I have said it to day already say it again say it every day guard your selves with your Faith And if the Adversary assault you let the redeemed know that he ought to meet him with the Banner of the Cross and the shield of Faith above all taking the shield of Faith Ephes. 6. Faith is rightly called a Shield S. Chrys. in loc For as a Shield is carried before the body as a wall to defend it so is faith to the soul for all things yield to that This is our victory whereby we overcome the world even our Faith Therefore we had need look well to our faith and be careful to keep that entire and for that purpose it is not amiss to rehearse it often and guard our soul with it Cum horr●mus aliquid recurrendum est ad Symbolum When we are affrighted run we to the Creed and say I believe in God the Father Almighty this will guard your soul from fear If you be tempted to despair guard your soul with the Creed say I believe in Jesus Christ his only Son our Lord who was crucified c. for us men and our salvation that may secure your soul from despair If you be tempted to Pride run to the Creed and a sight of Christs hanging upon the Cross will humble you If to Lust or uncleanness to the Creed and see the wounds of Christ and the remembrance of them if any thing will quench that fiery dart If we be tempted to presume and grow careless take up again this shield of Faith see Christ in the Creed coming to judgment and this terrour of the Lords will perswade men In a word the Creed is a guard and defence against all temptations of the world all the fiery darts of the Devil all the filthy lusts of the flesh Therefore above all take the shield of Faith saith S. Paul and be sure to guard your soul Morning and Evening with the Creed thy symbol of the most holy Faith Besides This solemn rehearsing of our Creed is a plighting of our faith and fidelity to God before Devils Angels and Men an engaging and devoting of our souls in the principal faculties and powers of it our reason and understanding and will wholly to God the Father Son and holy Ghost to believe in the ever blessed Trinity whatsoever flesh and blood shall tempt to the contrary which is an high piece of loyalty to God and cannot be too often perform'd It is that kind of Confession that S. Paul says is necessary to salvation as well as believing Rom. 10. 10. For it is there said Verse 9. If we confess with our mouth as well as if we believe with the heart we shall be saved it is that kind of Confession that our Lord Christ speaks of S. Matt. 10. 32. Whosoever shall confess me before men him will I confess also before my Father which is in Heaven And therefore since it is a service so acceptable it cannot be thought unreasonable for the Church to require it
were received to the Churches prayers but if those should fall into danger of death the ancient Canon shall be observed saith this Canon in the beginning that they shall be admitted notwithstanding the former Canon to the last Viaticum the reason is given in the later part of this Canon Because that to every one whatsoever that shall in danger of death desire the Eucharist it shall be given to him if he be found fit to receive it This could be no reason of the former part of the Canon namely of giving the last viaticum to penitents in danger of death unless that Viaticum and the Eucharist here be all one To that which may be objected that this Viaticum cannot be the same with the Eucharist mentioned in the last part of the Canon because this Viaticum here is allowed to persons in danger of death without any examination but the Eucharist is granted to persons in the same danger with this exception if the Bishop after examination shall find him fit It may be answered that notwithstanding this the Viaticum and the Eucharist may be all one for the Canon in the first part where it allows it to persons in necessity without examination speaks only of penitents who had already undergone the examination and had received their penance and submitted to the Churches discipline and so professed themselves truly penitents and were in such necessity desiring the Eucharist in the judgment of charity supposed fit to receive it though the Church denied the same to them when there was no such necessity for the maintenance of holy discipline and in terror of offendors But generaliter de quolibet for every one that should desire it before he had given testimony of his repentance there could not be sufficient ground of charity to believe so well and therefore they were to be examined by the Bishop or some others by his appointment So then I think the Canon may be interpreted thus of the holy Communion without any contradiction and that it ought to be so understood may I think be concluded by these Testimonies following Con. Ilerd c. 5. Const. Leon. 17. And most clearly by S. Cyprian Ep. 54. After consultation we have determined that those that have fal● in time of persecution and have defiled themselves with unlawful Sacrifices should do full penance yet if they were dangerously sick they should be received to peace For divine clemency does not suffer the Church to be shut against them that knock nor the succour of saving hope to be denied to those that mourn and beg it nor to send them out of the World without peace and the Communion This is exactly agreeable to that Canon of Nice What Communion that was he tells us soon after that it was not only Absolution but the holy Eucharist besides as appears by that which follows Formerly we made this rule That penitents unless in time of extream sickness should not receive the Communion And this rule was good while the Church was in peace and quiet but now in time of persecution not only to the sick but to the healthful peace is necessary not only to the dying but to the living the Communion is to be given that those whom we perswade to fight manfully under Christs Banner and to resist even to blood may not be left naked and unarmed but be defended with the protection of the body and blood of Christ which for this cause was instituted that it might be a strength and defence to them that receive it how shall we teach them to shed their blood for Christ if we deny them Christs blood to strengthen them Or how shall we fit them for the cup of Martyrdom if we do not admit them to the Communion of the Cup of the Lord Upon this very ground was it provided that all dying men might have the holy Sacrament of the Eucharist the great defence in that dangerous hour when the Devil is doing his worst and last Agreeable to this of S. Cyprian is the 76. Canon of the 4. Carth. Coune He that in time of sickness desires penance if happily while the Priest is coming to him he falls dumb or into a phrensie let them that heard his desire bear witness to it and let him receive penance and if he be like to die speedily Let him be reconciled by imposition of hands and let the Eucharist be put into his mouth If he recovers let him be acquainted with what was done by the former witnesses and be subject to the known laws of Penance And those penitents which in their sickness received the Viaticum of the Eucharist let them not think themselves absolved without imposition of hands if they shall recover c. 78. Car. 4. And the Coun. of Orange c. 3. saies the same They that after penance set them are ready to depart out of this life it hath pleased the Synod to give them the Communion without the reconciliatory Imposition of hands Which suffices for the reconciling of a dying man according to the definition of the Fathers who fitly call'd the Communion a Viaticum But if they recover let them stand in the rank of penitents that by shewing the necessary fruits of penance they may be received to the Canonical Communion by the reconciliatory Imposition of hands It will not be amiss for the clearer understanding of all passages in these Canons to consider the Church her discipline in this particular Holy Church for preserving of holy discipline and deterring men from sin did appoint for wasting sins such as Adultery Murder Idolatry and the like severe penance for three or four six or seven years more or less according to the quantity and quality of the offence In the Greek Church they had several degrees of penance to be gone through in this set time 1. First they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lugentes Mourners standing without the Church Porch they were to beg of all the faithful that entred into the Church to pray for them in this degree they continued a year or more according as their crime deserved 2. They were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Audiente8 Hearers these might come into the Church Porch into a place call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ferula so called because those that stood there were subjected to the Churches censure of Ferula where they might stand and hear the Scriptures read and Sermons but were not admitted to joyn with the Church in her prayers 3. They were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Substernentes the prostrate as we may say so called because they were all to prostrate themselves upon their faces and so continued till the Bishop said certain prayers over them and laid his hands upon them They might be present at Sermon and the first Service of the Catechumens and then go out Laodic Con. 19. apud Nicolin these were admitted into the Nave of the Church and to stand behind the Pulpit 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Consistents they might stay after