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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
styling the one Canonical the other Apocryphal As for the second Lessons the Church in them goes on in her ordinary course The HYMNS Te Deum c. AFter the Lessons are appointed Hymns The Church observing S. Pauls Rule Singing to the Lord in Psalms and Hymns and Spiritual Songs every way expressing her thanks to God The antiquity of Hymns in the Christian Church doth sufficiently appear by that of our Saviour S. Matth 26. When they had sung an Hymn they went out upon which place S. Chrys. sayes They sung an Hymn to teach us to do the like Concerning singing of Psalms and Hymns in the Church we have both the Precepts and Examples of Christ and his Apostles S. Aug. Ep. 119. S. Paul ordered it in the Church of Coloss. Singing to your selves in Psalms and Hymns Col. 3. Which we find presently after practised in the Church of Alexandria founded by S. Mark Eus. Hist l. 2. c. 17. where Philo reports that the Christians had in every place Monasteries wherein they sang Hymns to God in several kinds of Meeter and Verse S. Ambrose brought them into Millaine to ease the peoples sad minds and to keep them from weariness who were praying night and day for their persecuted Bishop and from hence came all Hymns almost to be called Ambrosiani because that by him they were spread over the Latin Church With the Morning and Evening Hymns God is delighted saies S. Hierome and Possidius in the life of S. Augustine tells us c. 28. that towards the time of his dissolution S. Augustine wept abundantly because he saw the Cities destroyed the Bishops and Priests sequestred the Churches prophaned the holy Service and Sacraments neglected either because few or none desired them or else because there were scarce any Priests left to administer to them that did desire them lastly because the Hymns and Lauds of God were lost out of the Church These Hymns are to be said or sung but most properly to be sung else they are not so strictly and truly called Hymns that is Songs of praise and not only by the Church of England but by all Christian Churches of old was it so practised and so holy David directs Psal. 47. 6. O sing praises sing praises unto our God O sing praises sing praises unto our King The profit of which singing Hymns is much many wayes especially in this that they inkindle an holy flame in the minds and affections of the hearers O how I wept sayes S. Aug. in the Hymns and holy Canticles being enforc'd thereunto by the sweet voices of thy Melodious Church by reason of the proneness of our affections to that which delights it pleas'd the wisdom of the Spirit to borrow from melody that pleasure which mingled with heavenly mysteries causes the smoothness and softness of that which touches the ear to conveigh as it were by stealth the treasure of good things into mens minds to this purpose were those harmonious tunes of Psalms devised And S. Basil. in Psal. By pleasing thus the affections and delighting the mind of man Musick makes the service of God more easie When we sing or say these Hymns we stand which is the proper posture for Thanksgivings and Lauds Psal. 134. Praise the Name of the Lord standing in the Courts of the Lord. And 2 Chron. 7. 6. The Priests waited on their office the Levites also with instruments of musick of the Lord which David the King had made to praise the Lord with the 136. Psalm because his mercy endureth for ever when David praised by their ministery and the Priest sounded Trumpets before them and all Israel STOOD The erection of the body fitly expresses the lifting up of the heart in joy whence it is that rejoycing in Scripture is called the lifting up of the head S. Luke 21. 28. Lift up your heads for your redemption draweth nigh So then joy being a lifting up of the soul and praise and Thanksgiving being effects of joy cannot be more fitly expressed then by erection and lifting up of the body Standing in the Courts of the Lord when we sing praise unto him After the Morning first Lesson follows Te Deum We praise thee O God or O all ye works of the Lord c. called Benedicite The first of which We praise thee O God c. was as is credibly reported framed miraculously by ● Ambrose and S. Augustine at his Baptism and hath been in much esteem in the Church ever since as it deserves being both a Creed containing all the mysteries of Faith and a most solemn Form of Thanksgiving Praise Adoration and what not and so hath that other Canticle O all ye works of the Lord in the which the whole Creation praises God together been received and esteemed universally in the Church Concil Toletan 4. c. 13. After the Second Lesson at Morning Prayer is appointed Blessed be the Lord God of Israel called Benedictus or O be Ioyful in the Lord called Iubilate After the Evening Lessons are appointed Magnificat or My soul doth magnifie the Lord and Nunc dimittis Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace or else two Psalms And very fitly doth the Church appoint sacred Hymns after Lessons For who is there that hearing God speak from Heaven to him for his fouls health can do less than rise up and praise him and what Hymns can be fitter to praise God with for our salvation than those which were the first gratulations wherewith our Saviour was entertained into the world And such are these Yet as fit as they are some have quarrell'd them especially at Magnificat My soul doth magnifie the Lord and Nunc dimittis or Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace The Objections are these That the first of these was the Virgin Maries Hymn for bearing Christ in her womb The latter old Simeons for seeing and holding in his arms the blessed Babe neither of which can be done by us now and therefore neither can we say properly these Hymns The answer may be that bearing Christ in the womb suckling him holding him in our arms is not so great a blessing as the laying up his holy word in our hearts S. Luke 11. 27. by which Christ is formed in us Gal. 4. 19. and so there is as much thanks to be returned to God for this as for that He that does the will of God taught in his word may as well say My soul doth magnifie the Lord as the holy Virgin for Christ is formed in him as well as in the Virgins womb S. Matth. 12. 50. Whosoever doth the will of my Father which is in heaven the same is my brother and sister and mother And why may not we after the reading of a part of the new Testament say Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace as well as old Simeon for in that Scripture by the eye of Faith we see that salvation which he then saw and more clearly reveal'd We have then
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
the remaining Sundayes wherein without any consideration of the sequence of time which could only be regarded in great Feasts the holy Doctrine Deeds and Miracles of our Lord are the chief matters o● our meditations or else the other Holy dayes of which already hath been spoken And for all these Holy Times we have Epistles and Gospels very proper and seasonable for not only on high and special dayes but even in those also that are more general and indifferent some respect is had to the season and the holy affections the Church then aims at as Mortification in Lent Joy Hope newness of Life c. after Easter the Fruits and Gifts of the Spirit and preparation for Christs Second coming in the time between Pentecost and Advent But these things I shall shew in the Discourse of the Holy dayes severally As for the Les●ons although they have another Order and very profitable being for each day of the week following usually the method of Chapters and taking in the Old Testament also the Communion dealing chiefly with the New as most fit for the nature of that Service yet in them also regard is had to the more solemn times by select and proper readings as hath been shew'd This being the Churches Rule and Method as she hath it from the Apostle that all things be done unto edifying that we may be better acquainted with God and with our selves with what hath been done for us and what is to be done by us And this Visible as well as Audible preaching of Christian Doctrine by these Solemnities and Readings in such an admirable Order is so apt to infuse by degrees all necessary Christian knowledge into us and the use of it to the ignorant is so great that it may well be feared as a Reverend person hath forewarned that When the Festivals and Solemnities for the Birth of Christ and his other famous passages of life and death and Resurrection and Ascensi●● and Mission of the Holy Ghost and the Lessons Gospels and Collects and Ser●●ons upon them be turned out of the Church together with the Creeds also 't will not be in the power of weekly Sermons on some head of Religion to keep up the knowledge of Christ in mens hearts c. And no doubt for this and other good Reasons which he gives us it was that the primitive Christians were so exact and religious in these Solemnities and Meditations on the occasions of them and therefore the Sermons o● the Fathers were generally on the Readings of the Day as hereafter is shewed And we have from another the like hand thus The Blessings of God whereof these Solemnities renew the Remembrance are of that esteem to the Church that we are not able to express too much thankfulness in taking that occasion of Solemnizing his Service And the greatest part of Christians are such as will receive much improvement in the principal Mysteries of our Faith by the Sensible instruction which the Observation of such Solemnities yieldeth The remembrance of the Birth the Sufferings the Resurrection of Christ the Coming of the Holy Ghost the Conversion of the Gentiles by sending the Apostles the way made before his coming by the Annunciation of the Angel and the coming of the Baptist as it is a powerful mean to train the more ignorant sort in the Vnderstanding of such great Mysteries so it is a just occasion for all sorts to make that a particular time of Serving God upon which we solemnize those great works of his See Dr. Hammonds View of the Directory pag. 38. Mr. Thorndyke of publick Assemblies pag. 256. and what we have above said concerning the excellent use of Festival dayes at pag. 105. The same Method shall be observed in this Discourse of Holy-dayes which the Service-Book uses not that in the Title-Page in the beginning of the book which perhaps reckons for Holy-dayes only those days in which we are solemnly to worship God and also to rest from usual labour but that in the Services appointed by the Book which adds over and above that old Catalogue of Holy-dayes S. Paul And S. Barnabas Ashwednesday and the Holy-Week All which must be reckoned for Holy-dayes in the Churches account because they have Holy-day service Epistles and Gospels and Second-service appointed to them though there be no Law that inflicts a penalty upon them that do their usual works upon those dayes they being only desired to be present at the Churches service at the Hours appointed Of ADVENT Sunday THe Principal Holy-days as Christmas Easter and Whitsunday have some days appointed to attend upon them some to go before some to come after as it were to wait upon them for their greater solemnity Before Christmas are appointed four Advent-Sundays so called because they are to prepare us for Christ his Advent or coming in the flesh These are to Christmas-day as S. Iohn Baptist to Christ forerunners to prepare for it and point it out First Sunday Adv. The Gospel S. Matth. 21. 1. seems at first more proper to Christs Passion than his Birth yet is it read now principally for those words in it Blessed is he that cometh in the Name of the Lord. That is Blessed is he for coming in the Flesh the cause of all our joy for which we can never say enough Hosanna in the Highest The Epistle labours to prepare us to behold with joy this rising Sun bidding us awake from sleep according to the Prophet Esay 60. 1. Arise and shine for thy light is come The Collect is taken out of both and relates to both the first part of it is clearly the words of the Epistle That we may cast away the works of darkness and put upon us the armour of light That which follows In the time of this mortal life in the which thy Son Iesus Christ came to visit us in effect is the same with that in the Epistle Let us put off the works of darkness c. because the night is spent the day is at hand and our salvation is near that is our Saviour Christ the light of the world is coming into the world to visit us in great humility according to the Prophet Zach. 9. 9. which the Gospel records Tell ye the daughter of Sion to her great joy that behold Her King comes unto her meek or in great humility sitting upon an Asse 2. Sunday Adv. The Gospel treats of Christs second coming to judgment an excellent meditation to prepare us for the welcome and joyful entertainment of Christs first coming A Saviour must needs be welcome to him that is afraid of damnation The Epistle mentions the first coming of our Lord for the Salvation even of the Gentiles that is of us for which all praise is by us to be given to him Praise the Lord all ye Gentiles and laud him all ye nations together The Collect is taken out of the Epistle and though it seems not to relate to the day yet is it an excellent prayer
for all times and so not unseasonable for this 3. Sunday Adv. The Epistle mentions the second coming of Christ the Gospel the first The Collect prayes for the benefit of this light This week is one of the four Ember weeks concerning which see after the first Sunday in Lent 4. Sunday Adv. The Epistle and Gospel set Christ as it were before us not prophesied of but being even at hand yea standing among us pointing him out as S. Iohn Baptist did to the people Behold the Lamb of God that takes away the sins of the world The Collect Prayes most earnestly and passionately to him to succour us miserable sinners Feast of CHRISTMAS-day THe Epistle Gospel and Collect are plainly suitable to the day all mentioning the birth of Christ. Besides this Feast hath proper Psalms in which some Verses are peculiar to the day as will appear if they be well considered The First Psalm for the Morning Service is the 19. The heavens declare the glory of God very suitable to the Feast for at His Birth a a new Star appeared which declared his Glory and Deity so plainly that it fetcht the Sages of the East to come and worship him S. Matt. 2. Where is he that is born King of the Iews for we have seen his Star in the East and are come to worship him The Second Psalm for the Morning is 45. Which at the beginning of it is a Genethliack or Birth-song of Christ The fairest of the children of men v. 3 And of his mighty success in subduing the Devil a●d the world by the word of truth of meekness and righteous●ess vers 5. c. The third is Psal. 85. which is principally set for the Birth of Christ. For it is a thanksgiving to God for sending a Saviour which should save his people from their sins the greatest captivity that is and therefore cannot properly be meant of any but Christ who was therefore call'd Iesus because be should save his people from their sins S. Matt. 1. 21. And so the Primitive Church understood it and therefore selected it out as a part of their Office for this day as being proper and pertinent to the matter of the Feast For the meeting here specified ver 10. 11. of Mercy and Truth Righteousness and Peace was at Christs birth who said of himself that he was the Truth who as he had a birth from Heaven to wit his Divine nature so had he another as Man from Earth from the Virgin which birth drew Righteousness to look from Heaven upon poor sinners with a favourable look and made righteousness and peace kiss for the delivering of sinners from their captivity True it is the Prophet in the first Verses speaks of this delivery as of a thing past Lord thou hast turn'd away the captivity of Iacob Yet for all this it may be a prophesie of our salvation by the coming of Christ hereafter for as S. Peter sayes Acts. 2 30. David being a Prophet and seeing this before spake of Christs Nativity as if it were already past The Evening Psalms are 89 110 132. The first and last of which are thankful commemorations of Gods merciful promise of sending our Lord Christ into the world that seed of David which be had sworn to establish and set up his Throne for ever For which O Lord the very heavens shall praise thy wondrous works and thy truth in the congregation of the Saints v. 5. Psal. 89. The Church was in aff●iction now as is plain in both these Psalms but such was the joy that they were affected with at the promise of Christs birth and coming into the world that they could not contain but even in the midst of their misery break forth into Thanksgiving for it and how can the Church excite us better to Thanksgiving to God for the birth of Christ upon the day then by shewing us how much the promise of it afar off wrought upon the Saints of old The 110. Psalm expresly mentions the birth of Christ ver 3. The dew of thy birth is of the womb of the Morning as the morning dew brings forth innumerable fruit so shall the birth of Christ bring forth innumerable faithful people and therefore the Prophet here does as we should this day adore and praise the goodness of God for the birth of Christ the cause of so much good It is admirable to behold the frame of the Churches holy Office and Service this day In the First Lessons she reads us the prophesie of Christs coming in the flesh in the Second Lessons Epistle and Gospel she gives us the History of it In the Collect the teaches us to pray that we may be partakers of the benefit of his birth In the proper Preface for the day as also in the proper Psalms she sets us to our duty of Adoring and Glorifying God for his mercy In the Lessons and Gospels appointed holy Church does the Angels part brings us glad tydings of our Saviours Birth Behold I bring you glad tydings of great joy for unto you is born this day a Saviour which is Christ the Lord S. Luke 2. 10. In pointing the special Hymns and Psalms the calls upon us to do the Shepherds part to glorifie and Praise God for all the things that this day we hear and see ver 20. And to sing with the Angels Glory to God in the highest for this good will to Men. For the Antiquity of this day many testimonies might be brought out of the Ancients but because I intend brevity I shall be content with two beyond exception S. Augustine Ep. 119. witnesses that it was the custome of holy Church to keep this day And upon the five and twentieth of December in Psalm 132. S. Chrysostom makes a Sermon to prove that the keeping of Christmas-day was ancient even from the first times and that the Church kept the true day In the same same sermon he sayes It is a godly thing to keep this day Nay further that the keeping of this day was one of the greatest signs of our love to Christ. Amongst other Arguments which he uses there to perswade his hearers to keep this day he brings this that the custome of keeping this day was religious and of God or else it could never have been so early spread over the whole World in spight of so much opposition Orat. in Natal Dom. Tom. 5. Edit Savil. S. Stephen S. Iohn Innocents IMmediately after Christmas ●ollow as attendants upon this high Festival S. Stephen S. Iohn and Innocents not because this was the very time of their suffering but because none are thought fitter attendants on Christs Nativity than the blessed Martyrs who have laid down their lives for him from whose birth they received spiritual life And there being three kinds of Martyrdom I. In will and deed which is the highest 2. In will but not in deed 3. In deed but not in will in this order they attend S. Stephen first who suffered both
therefore is it called also the Constantinopolitan Creed This Creed began to be used in Churches at the Communion Service immediately after the Gospel in the year of our Lord 339. Afterward it was established in the Churches of Spain and France after the custome of the Eastern Church Conc. Tolet 3. c. 2. and continued down to our times The Reason why this Creed follows immediately after the Epistle and Gospel is the same that was given for the APOSTLES CREED following next after the Lessons at Morning and Evening prayer To which the Canon of Toledo last cited hath added Another Reason of the saying it here before the people draw neer to the holy Communion namely That the breasts of those that approach to those ●readful mysteries may be purified with a ●●ue and right faith A third reason is given by Dionys. Eccl. Hierar c. 3. par 2. 3. It will not be amiss to set down some passages of his at large because they will both give us a third reason of using the Creed in this place and discover to us as I conceive much of the ancient beautiful order of the Communion-Service The Bishop or Priest standing at the Altar begins the melody of Psalms all the degrees of Ecclesiasticks singing with him This Psalmody is used as in almost all Priestly Offices so in this to prepare and dispose our souls by holy affections to the celebration of the holy mysteries following and by the consent and singing together of divine Psalms to work in us an unanimous consent and concord one towards another Then is read by some of the Ministers first a Lesson out of the Old Testament then one out of the New in their order for the reasons before mentioned in the discourse of Lessons at Morning Service After this the Catechumens the possessed and the penitents are dismist and they only allowed to stay who are deem'd worthy to receive the holy Sacrament which being done some of the under Ministers keep the door of the Church that no Infidel or unworthy person may intrude into these sacred Mysteries Then the Ministers and devout people reverently beholding the holy signs not yet consecrated but blest and offered up to God on a by-standing Table called the Table of Proposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Praise and bless the Father of Lights from whom as all good gifts so this great blessing of the Communion does come with the Catholick hymn of praise which some call the Creed others more divinely The Pontifical Thanksgiving as containing in it all the spiritual gifts which flow from Heaven upon us the whole mystery of our salvation when this hymn of praise is finished the Deacons with the Priest set the holy Bread and Cup of Blessing upon the Altar after which the Priest or Bishop saies the most sacred that is the Lords Prayer gives the Blessing to the people then they in token of perfect charity a most necessary vertue at this time of offering at the Altar S. Mat. 5. 23. salute each other After which the names of holy Men that have lived and died in the faith of Christ are read out of the Diptychs and their memories celebrated to perswade others to a diligent imitation of their vertues and a stedfast expectation of their heavenly rewards This commemoration of the Saints presently upon the setting of the holy signs upon the Altar is not without some mystery to shew the inseparable sacred union of the Saints with Christ who is represented by those sacred signs These things being rightly performed the Bishop or Priest that is to Consecrate washes his hands a most decent Ceremony signifying that those that are to do these holy Offices should have a special care of purity I will wash mine hands in innocency O Lord and so will I compass thine Altar Psal. 26. 6. After he hath magnified these divine gifts and God that gave them then he consecrates the holy Mysteries and having uncovered them reverently shews them to the people inviting them to the receiving of them Himself and the Priests and Deacons receive first then the people receive in both kinds and having all received they end the Service with a Thanksgiving which was Psal. 34. After the Epistle and Gospel and the confession of that Faith which is taught in holy Writ follows THE SERMON Amb. ep 33. ad Marcel Leo 1. Ser. 2. de Pascha which usually was an exposition of some part of the Epistle or Gospel or proper Lesson for the day as we may see in S. Augustine in his Serm. de Temp. according to the pattern in Nehem. 8. 8. They read in the book in the law of God distinctly and gave the sense and caused the people to understand the reading And the Preacher was in his Exposition appointed to observe the Catholick interpretation of the old Doctors of the Church as we may see in the 19. Can. of the sixth Council of Constantinople held in Trull The Canon is this Let the Governors of Churches every Sunday at the least teach their Clergy and people the Oracles of pie●y and true Religion collecting out of Divine Scripture the sentences and Doctrines of truth not transgressing the ancient bounds and traditions of the holy Fathers And if any doubt or controversie arise about Scripture let them follow that interpretation which the Lights of the Church and the Doctors have left in their writings By which they shall more deserve commendation than by making private interpretations which if they adhere to they are in danger to fall from the truth To this agrees the Canon made in Queen Elizabeths time Anno Dom. 1571. The Preachers chiefly shall take heed that they teach nothing in their preaching which they would have the people religiously to observe and believe but that which is agreeable to the Doctrine of the Old Testament and the New and that which the Catholick Fathers and Ancient Bishops have gathered out of that Doctrine These Golden Canons had they been duly observed would have been a great preservative of Truth and the Churches peace The Sermon was not above an hour long Cyril Catech. 13. Before the Sermon no prayer is appointed but the Lords Prayer the petitions being first consigned upon the people by the Preacher or Minister who is appointed to bid the prayers as it is in Edw. 6. and Queen Eliz. Injunctions that is to tell the people beforehand what they are at that time especially to pray for in the Lords Prayer which in the 55. Can. of the Constit Anno Dom. 1603. is called moving the people to joyn with the Preacher in praying the Lords Prayer Of old nothing was said before the Sermon but Gemina Salutatio the double Salutation Clem. Const. l. 8. c. 5. Optat. 1. 7. The Bishop or Priest never begins to speak to the people but first in the Name of God he salutes the people and the salutation is doubled that is the Preacher says The Lord be with you and the people answer
unto him Other reasons for an Octave to great Feasts are given which are mystical The Octave or eighth day signifies Eternity for our whole life is but the repetition or revolution of seven dayes Then comes the eighth day of Eternity to which by Gods mercy we shall be brought if we continue the seven daies of our life in the due and constant service and worship of God or else which is much the same in sense the eighth day is a returning to the first it is the first day of the week begun again signifying that if we constantly serve God the seven days of our life we shall return to the first happy estate that we were created in The Second Quaere is how the Prefaces appointed for these eight daies can be properly used upon each of them for example how can we say eight days together Thou didst give thine only Son to be born this day for us as it is in the Preface To which the Answer may be That the Church does not use the word Day for a natural day of 24. hours or an ordinary artificial day reckoning from Sun to Sun but in the usual acception of it in holy Scripture where by the word Day is signified the whole time designed to one and the same purpose though it lasts several natural days Thus all the time that God appoints to the reclaiming of sinners by merciful chastisements or threatnings is called The day of their visitation Luke 19. 42 44. So all the time allotted us for the working out of our salvation though it be our whole life long is called a day Work while it is day the night comes when no man can work and most directly to our purpose speaks S. Paul Heb. 3. 13. Exhort one another daily while it is called to day or this day that is while you live here in this world In like manner all that time which is appointed by the Church for the thankful commemoration of the same grand blessing for the solemnity of one and the same Feast is as properly called a day and all that time it may be said daily to day as well as all our life S. Paul saies is called Hodie this day After which follows the thrice holy and triumphant song as it was called of old Therefore with Angels and Archangels and with all the company of heaven we laud and magnifie thy glorious name evermore praising thee and saying holy holy holy c. Here we do as it were invite the heavenly host to help bear a part in our thanks to make them full O praise the Lord with me and let us magnifie his name together And in this hymn we hold communion with the Church triumphant Which sweet hymn in all Communions is appointed to be said and though it should be said night and day yet could it never breed a loathing Conc. Vasen c. 6. All that is in our Service from these words Lift up your hearts to the end of the Communion-service is with very little difference to be seen in S. Chrys. Liturg. and in S. Cyrils Catech. mystag 5. Part. 3. Next is the CONSECRATION So you shall find in Chrysost. and Cyril last cited Which Consecration consists chiefly in rehearsing the words of our Saviours institution This is my body and this is my blood when the Bread and Wine is present upon the Communion-table Can. Anglie 21. S. Chrys. Ser. 2. in 2. ad Tim. The holy Sacrament of the Lords Supper which the Priest now makes is the same that Christ gave to his Apostles This is nothing less than that For this is not sanctified by men but by him that sanctified that for as the words which God our Saviour spake are the same which the Priest no● uses so is the Sacrament the same Again Ser. de Iuda lat Ed. tom 3. Christ is present at the Sacrament now that first instituted it He consecrates this also It is not man that makes the body and blood of Christ by consecrating the holy Elements but Christ that was crucified for us The words are pronounced by the mouth of the Priest but the Elements are consecrated by the power and grace of God THIS IS saith he MY BODY By this word the bread and wine are consecrated Before these words THIS IS MY BODY the bread and wine are common food fit only to nourish the body but since our Lord hath said Do this as oft as you do it in remembrance of me This is my body this my blood as often as by these words and in this faith they are consecrated the holy bread and blessed cup are profitable to the salvation of the whole man Cyprian de coena Dom. The same saies S. Ambr. l. 4. de Sacram. c. 4. 5. S. Aug. ser. 28. de verb. Dei And others After the Consecration the Priest first receives himself so is it ordain'd Conc. Tolet. 12. 5. wherein it is decreed that The Priest shall receive whensoever he offers up the Sacrifice For since the Apostle hath said Are not they which eat of the Sacrifice partakers of the Altar 1 Cor. 10. it is certain that they who sacrifice and eat not are guilty of the Lords Sacrament After he hath received he is to deliver it to the people in their hands So was it in Cyrils time Cat. mystag 5. and Let every one be careful to keep it for whosoever carelesly loses any part of it had better lose a part of himself saies he And Whosoever wilfully throws it away shall be for ever excluded from the Communion Conc. Tolet. 11. c. 11. It is to be given to the people KNEELING for a sin it is not to adore when we receive this Sacrament Aug. in Psal. 98. And the old custome was to receive it after the manner of Adoration Cyril ibidem When the Priest hath said at the delivery of the Sacrament the body of our Lord Jesus Christ which was given for thee preserve thy body and soul into everlasting life The Communicant is to answer AMEN Cyril Myst. 5. By this Amen professing his faith of the presence of Christs Body and Blood in that Sacrament The people were of old called out of the Body of the Church into the Chancel even up to the Rails of the Holy Table there to receive it of the Priest Niceph. l. 18. c. 45. So Clement Const. l. 2. c. 57. these be his words in English Afterwards let the Sacrifice be made all the people standing and praying secretly and after the Oblation let every Order apart receive the Body and precious Bloud of the Lord coming up in their Order with fear and reverence as to the Body of a King Where you see they were to come up to the Sacrament and to or near the Railes of the Holy Table saies S. Chrys. Liturgy For after the Priest and Deacons have received the Deacon goes to the door of the Rails 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and lifting up the holy Cup shews it to the people saying
between two hooks of which there are even still some remainders though now for the most part neglected 3. Neither does this our Translation always follow the LXX And Vulgar Lat. Even in Additions As for Example Not Psalm 1.5 in the repetition of the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Not Psalm 68. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Not Psalm 125.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Not Pslam 138.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Not Psalm 145. in the verse put in between the 13 and 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though it may seem to be wanting in our present Hebrew Copies all the rest of the verses of this Psalm going in the order of the Alphabet and this verse which should begin with ● only wanting in our present Copies but found or supposed by the LXX to begin with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. The Additions are not very many wherein it doth follow them The chiefest which I have observed are these Psal. Ver.   1. 5. from the face of the Earth 2. 11. unto him   12. right 3. 2. His 4. 8. and Oyle 7. 12. strong and patient 11. 5. the poor 13. 6. yea I will praise the Name of the Lord most Highest 14. 4. no not one 14. 5 6 7. Their throat is an open Sepulchre c. before their eyes   9. Even where no fear was 19. 12. my 14.   all way 22. 1. look upon me 31.   my and ver 32. the Heavens 23. 6. thy 24. 4. his neighbour 28. 3. neither destroy me 29. 1. bring young Rams unto the Lord the Hebrew words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 twice translated 30. 7. from me 33. 3. unto him and ver 10. and casteth out the counsels of Princes 36. 12. All 37. 29. * the unrighteous shall be punished Edit 1540. v. 37. his place 38. 16. Even mine Enemies v. 22 God 41. 1. And needy ver 11 And Amen 42. 12. That trouble me 45. 10. wrought about with divers colours 12. God in the Latin only not in the Greek 47. 6. Our 48. 3. of the Earth 50. 21. wickedly 51. 1. Great 55. 13. peradventure ver 25 O Lord 65. 1. In Jerusalem 67. 1. And be merciful unto us 71. 7. that I may sing of thy glory 73. 12. I said ver 27 In the Gates of the daughter of Sion 77. 23. Our 85. 8. Concerning me 92. 12. of the house 95. 7. the Lord 108. 1. my heart is ready repeated 111. 11. Praise the Lord for the returning again of Aggeus and Zachary the Prophets Edit 1540. 115. 9. thou house of 118. 2. That He is gracious and 119. 97. Lord 132. 4. Neither the Temples of my head to take any rest 134. 1. Now ver 2 Even in the Courts of the house of our God 136. 27. O give thanks unto the Lord of Lords for his mercy endureth for ever being in the Latin only not in the Greek 137. 1. Thee O 145. 15. The Lord 147. 8. And herb for the use of men 148. 5. He spake the word and they were made For Psal. 58. 8. Or ever your Pots c. I conceive our Translation to agree very well both with the sence and letter of the Hebrew Neither doth it go alone but so translated both Pagnin a little before and Castellio since who both keep as close to the sence of the Hebrew and Pagnin to the letter also as any that I have observed Pagnin whom Vetablus follows Antequam sentiant lebetes vestri ignem rhamni sicut care cruda sic ira ut turbo perdat cum Castellio Ac veluti si cujus ollae spinas Annot. ignem qui fieri solet ex spinis nondum senserint sic illi tanquam crudi per iram vexentur Annot. Pereant aetate immaturâ ut si carnes ex olla extrahantur semicrudae See also Calvin in Loc. For Psal. 105. 28. They were not obedient c. Herein our Translators follow the LXX who supposing this to be spoken of the Egyptians translate the Hebrew words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 leaving out the negative particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Et exacerbaverunt sermones ejus or according to another reading 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quia exacerbaverunt which is all one with our English They were not obedient that is they rebelled or were disobedient 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exchanging significations And this reading is also followed by the Syriack the Arabick and the Ethiopick translations Only which is strange the Vulgar Latin which usually in the Psalms is a meer translation of the LXX yet here differs from them and puts in the Negative Particle according to the Hebrew And in three other things in the same Hemistick it differs not only from the LXX but also from the Hebrew and from S. Hierome and from all other Translations that I have seen viz. Altering the Verb from the plural number to the singular 2. supposing Deus to be the Nominative case to it And so 3. making the Pronoun affixed to be reciprocal Et non exacerbavit sermones suos See Mr. HOOKERS Eccles. Polity lib. 5. Sect. 19. pag. 214. where he defends this our Translation thus far at least that it doth not contradict the present Hebrew as it seems was objected The Epistles and Gospels in our Liturgie seem to follow Coverdales Translation Printed 1540. Here ends the book of Common-prayer truly so called being composed by the publick spirit and prescribed by the publick Authority of the Church for the publick service and worship of God to be offered up to him in the name and spirit of the Church by those who are ordained for men in things pertaining to God to which every person of the Church may according to S. Paul say Amen with understanding because he knows before hand to what he is to say Amen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Come all together to the same prayer let there be one Common-prayer one and the same mind and Spirit Ignat. ad Magnesianos SOLI DEO GLORIA I will pray with the Spirit and I will pray with the understanding also Obsecrationem sacerdotalium Sacramenta respiciamus quae ab Apostolis tradita in toto Orbe at que in omni Catholica Ecclesia uniformiter celebrantur ut legem Credendi lex statuat supplicandi GENNAD Eccles. Dogm 30. FINIS THE TABLE A. THe Absolution by the Priest alone standing why pag. 13 19 20. Remission of sins by the Priest what it is not p. 15 16. What it is p. 16. Three parts of Repentance p. 17. The several forms of Absolution in the Service p. 18. All in sence and vertue the same p. 19. Advent Sundays p. 98. Ashwednesday 125. Caput Jejunii ibid. Dies Cinerum ibid. The solemnity then used upon sinners p. 126. S. Andrew p. 198. All-Saints why kept p. 206. Ascension-day hath proper Lessons and Psalms p. 162. the Antiquity thereof p. 170. B. Of Baptism p. 245. S. John 3. 5. expounded p. 246. The Benediction or Consecration of the Water