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

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some things hard to be understood which the unlearned and unstable wrest as they do the other Scriptures to their own Destruction Furthermore Tenthly the Sacred Scripture is defil'd by soul and dishonest Blots when wicked Men turn the Words and Sentences thereof which ought to be us'd with all reverence to any Prophaness as to Raillery fabulous and vain Conceits Flatteries Detractions Fortune-telling Enchantments and such like Of which Sin the Sacred Synod of Trent commands to beware And then as they honor God Eleventhly who implore his Aid and Help in their Calamities So he denies God his due Honor that calls not upon him for help whom David reproves when he says They have not call'd upon God Psal 15.5 they tremble for fear where no Fear was But they intangle themselves in a far more detestable Sin Twelfthly who with an impure and defil'd mouth presume to curse and blaspheme the Holy Name of God which is to be bless'd and extol'd by all Creatures with the highest Praises or even the Name of the Saints that reign with God Which Sin is verily of so high and cursed a Nature Note that sometime the Sacred Scripture 3 Reg. 21.13 Job 1.12.29 when the Discourse is of Blasphemy uses the word Benediction But because the terror of Pain and Punishment is us'd very much to restrain Men from the Liberty of Sinning XXIX The Appendix to the second Commandment Therefore the Curat the better to stir up the minds of Men and more easily to prevail with them to keep this Commandment shall diligently explain the other Part of it Exod. 27. which is as it were the Appendix For the Lord will not hold him guitless that takes his Name in vain And first he may teach XXX Why Threats joyn'd to this Commandment that it was very reasonably done to joyn Threatnings to this Commandment that so both the weight of the Sin and the goodness of God towards us who is not delighted with Men's Destruction might be acknowledg'd that we might not undergo his Wrath and Displeasure he terrifies us by these saving Threatnings to the end that we may rather experience his Kindness than his Displeasure The Curat may press this Point XXXI What the Curats are to do First and may insist earnestly upon it that the People may know the grievousness of the Sin and loath it the more heartily and use the greater diligence and caution against it He may further shew Secondly how prone and ready Men are to commit this Sin So that it was not enough to establish a Law about it without adding Threatnings also For it is incredible how profitable this Consideration is For as nothing is so hurtful as Carelesness and Security of Mind Thirdly So the knowledg of our own Weakness is very profitable And then he may also shew XXXII What mischiefs the Transgression of the second Commandment brings that there is no certain Punishment appointed of God but only that threatens in general that whosoever intangle themselves in this Sin shall not go unpuish'd Wherefore the various Punishments wherewith we are daily afflicted ought to warn us of this Sin For we may easily conjecture hence that Men fall into very great Calamities because they obey not this Commandment The Consideration whereof it is likely will make them more wary for the Time to come Let the Faithful therefore being terrifi'd with a Holy Fear with all their endeavour avoid this Sin Mat. 12.36 For if an Account must be given in the last Judgment of every idle word what shall be said concerning the most heinous Crimes which carry in them a great Spight and Contempt of Gods Name The Third COMMANDMENT of the DECALOGVE Remember that thou sanctifie the Sabbath Day Six Days shalt thou labor and do all thy Work But the seventh Day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God Thou shalt not do every work therein thou and thy Son and thy Daughter and thy Servant and thy Maid thy Cattle and the Stranger that is within thy gates For in six Days the Lord made Heaven and Earth the Sea and all things that are in them and he rested in the Seventh Day therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath Day and sanctified it IN this Commandment of the Law I. What is commanded in this third Commandment the Outward VVorship which we owe to God is rightly and orderly appointed For this is a kind of Fruit as it were of the former Commandment Because whom we devoutly worship inwardly being led by the Faith and Hope we have in him we cannot chuse but honor him with external VVorship and render him thanks Vide Trid. Decr. de ciborum delectu festu diebus sess ult sub finem Item D. Thom. 2.2 q. 122. art 4 item de Consec dist 3. multis capitibus And because these things cannot easily be done by those who are occupi'd with worldly Businesses II How indulgent God is there is a certain Time appointed wherein they may conveniently be done Since therefore this Commandment is of that very kind III. Very useful often to explain this Commandment as brings forth admirable and profitable Fruit It much concerns the Curat to be very diligent in explaining thereof And to beget an ardent Study therein the first word of this Commandment Remember has great Force For as the Faithful ought to remember such a Commandment So it is the Office of the Pastor both by teaching and admonishing often to bring it into their Remembrance But how greatly it concerns the Faithful to obey this Commandment is perceiv'd from hence IV. How profitable to observe this Commandment That by a diligent Observance of this they are more easily induc'd to the keeping of the other Commandments of the Law For since among other things which they ought to do on Festival Days V. Why we must come to Church on Holy Days they have need to come to Church to hear Gods VVord and when they have learn'd what the VVill of God is that they also follow it that with their whole Heart they may keep the Law of the Lord VVherefore in Sacred Scripture the VVorship and Celebration of the Sabbath is very frequently commanded Exod. 16.20.31 Lev. 16.19.23 ●6 Deut 3. ●s 66. ●4 Hier. 1. ●ze 10.22.46 as we may see in Exodus Leviticus Deuteronomy and in the Prophecies of Isayah Jeremy and Ezekiel In all which places there is given a Commandment concerning this VVorship of the Sabbath De praedic verbi Dei Vide Trid. Sess 5. c. 2. Vide singularem hac de re libellum S. Caroli Borrom in actis Eccles Mediol Vide etiam acta Eccles Bononiens But Princes and Magistrates are to be exhorted to help the Prelates of the Church with their Authority VI. The Magistrates Duty to promote Gods worship in those things especially which belong to the Support and Increase of this Worship of God
and to command the People to obey the Precepts of the Priests Now as to the explaining of this Commandment VII The way of explaining his Commandment pains must be taken to teach the Faithful in what things this Commandment agrees with the rest and in what it differs from them For by this means they shall know the cause and reason why we honor and keep Holy not the Sabbath but the Lord's Day There seems therefore a manifest Difference VIII How this Commandment differs from the other Nine because the other Commandments of the Decalogue are natural and perpetual nor may they be alterd for any Reason Whence it comes to pass that tho Moses's Law be abrogated yet Christians observe all the Commandments contain'd in the Two Tables Wich they do Note not because Moses commanded so but because they are agreeable to Nature by Vertue whereof Men are driven to observe them Now this Commandment of keeping Holy the Sabbath IX This Command as to time is ceremonial if we consider the appointed time it is not fixd and constant but alterable nor does it belong to Manners but to Ceremonies Nor is it Natural because we are not instructed or taught by Nature on that Day rather than on any other to give Worship to God But from that Time when the People of Israel were deliver'd from the Bondage of Pharaob they kept Holy the Sabbath Day But the Time when the Observance of the Sabbath was to be taken away X. Why and when the Sabbath Day ought to be changed into the Lord's Day was the same with that wherein the rest of the Jewish VVorship and antiquated Ceremonies were remov'd to wit at Christ's Death For since those Ceremonies were as it were certain shadows or images of the Light and Truth it was therefore but necessary that at the coming of that Light and Truth which is Jesus Christ they should be remov'd Gal. 4.10 for which cause S. Paul to the Galatians when he reprov'd the Observers of the Mosaical Rites wrote thus Ye observe Days and Months and Times and Years I am afraid of you lest haply I have bestow'd on you labor in vain Col. 2.16 On which score he wrote also to the Colossians And thus much concerning the Difference But this Commandment agrees with the rest XI Wherein this Commandment agrees with the rest not in Rites and Ceremonies but because it has something which belongs to Manners and the Law of Nature For God's Worship and Religion which is express'd in this Commandment has its Being from the Law of Nature since it is natural to spend some Hours about those things which belong to the Worship of God whereof this is an Argument That among all Nations we see there were certain appointed Days and those Public ones too which were consecrated to the performance of Sacred and Divine Matters For it is natural to Man to allow some certain Time to those things that are necessary to the discharge of Business as to the Sleep and Rest of the Body and such like And as to the Body Observe this Similitude so by the same Natural Reason it is that we allow some Time to the Mind that she may refresh her self with Divine Contemplation And therefore since there ought to be some part of Time for performance of Divine Matters and giving due Worship to God this belongs to the Commandments of Manners For which cause the Apostles decreed to consecrate the First day of the Seven XII Why the Sabbath chang'd into the Lords day Apoc. 1.10 1 Cor. 16.2 to Divine Worship which they call'd The Lord's Day For S. John in the Apocalyps makes mention of the Lord's Day and the Apostle on the Moon of the Sabbaths which is the Lord's Day as S. Chrysostom interprets it commands Collections to be made that we may know that even then already the Lord's Day was accounted Holy Chrysost Hom. 13. in Corinth Amb. item Theophylact. Vide etiam Can. Ap. c. 67. Ignat. Epist ad Magnes Just Apol. 2. Tertul. in Apol c. 16. de Coron Milit. c. 3. de Idol c. 14. Cypr. Epist. 33. Clement Alexand. l. 5. Strom. satis ante finem Orig. Hom. 7. in Exod. And now that the Faithful may know what they ought to do on that Day XIII Four Parts in this Commandment and from what Actions they ought to abstain it will not be amiss for the Curat diligently and to a Word to explain this Commandment which may well be divided into Four Parts The First therefore in general proposes what is prescrib'd in these words XIV What the Words teach Remember that thou sanctifie the Sabbath-day Now for this cause in the beginning of the Commandment is that word Remember fitly added because the Sanctification of that Day belongs to Ceremonies Of which thing it seem'd the People are to be admonish'd First since tho the Law of Nature teaches that at some time or other God is religiously to be worship'd yet it has not appointed any certain Day whereon this ought chiefly to be done Moreover Secondly the Faithful are to be taught that from those Words may be gather'd the Way and Manner how it is convenient to do Work all the Week to wit so as always to have regard to the Holy-day on which Day seeing an Account is to be given to God as it were of our Works and Actions it must needs be that we do such Works as will neither be rejected by the Judgment of God and which 1 Reg. 2.5 as it is written shall not wound or offend our own Conscience Lastly Thirdly VVe are taught which we ought carefully to observe to wit That there are not wanting Occasions to make us forgetful of this Commandment either being led by the Example of others that neglect it or out of love to Shews and Plays whereby we are very much led away from the holy and religious Observance of this Day And now come we to the Signification of the Sabbath Sabbath is an Hebrew word XV. What the Sabbath is which in English signifies a Cessation to keep Sabbath is therefore call'd in English Gen. 23. Exod. 20.12 Deut. 5.14 to cease and rest In which Signification the Seventh day was call'd by the name of Sabbath because the whole VVorld being finish'd and perfected God rested from all his VVork which he had done for so the Lord in Exodus calls this Day But afterwards Note not only this Seventh Day but for the Dignity of that Day even the whole VVeek also was call'd by that name in which sense the Pharisee in S. Luke said Luc. 18.12 I fast twice in a Sabbath And thus much of the Signification of Sabbath Now the Sanctification of the Sabbath in Sacred Scripture is a Cessation from all Bodily Labor and Business XVI What it is to sanctifie as plainly appears from these words of the Commandment which
the first Person of the Trinity call'd Father Ibid. What belongs to the Divine Persons ought not to be curiously search'd into Ibid. Christian Philosophy differs from the wisdom of the World 16 What the Philosophers thought of God Ibid. The Pope of Rome is the Head of the Catholic Church 92 The Supreme Dignity and Jurisdiction of the Pope of Divine Right Ibid. The Pope is the Supreme Governour of the Universal Church the Successor of St. Peter and Christ's true and lawful Vicar Ibid. God is first to be pray'd to and then the Saints 464 The best way of praying 457 For whom we must pray 461 The Saints are to be pray'd to and after what manner we beg them to take pity on us 464 The manner of Prayer 469 We must pray in Spirit and Truth Ibid. Infidels cannot pray in Spirit and Truth 470 We must pray in Christ's name 471 By praying to God we honour him 452 The Divine Majesty approaches to him that prays 551 They that pray converse with God Ibid. The benefits and advantages of such as pray 452 Many degrees of Prayer and Thanksgiving 455 c. The manner of vocal Prayer 469 What sinners God hears and helps when they pray 558 Prayer to God necessary 450 Christ pray'd all night 470 The power that Prayer has with God 471 The profitableness and advantage of Prayer 452 c. Prayer is an argument of Religion Ibid. By Prayer we acknowledge our subjection to God Ibid. Prayer is the Key of Heaven Ibid. The Vertue and Advantage of Prayer Ibid. Of what parts Prayer consists 455 The two principal parts of Prayer 456 The Prayer of such as have not yet receiv'd the light of Faith 458 The Prayer of such as God hears not 459 Prayers for the wicked have great influence 462 Prayers for the Dead in Purgatory flow'd from the Apostles Ibid. Prayers for such as are in mortal sin not very efficacious Ibid. What he ought to think that pronounces the Lord's Prayer before the Images of the Saints 465 Prayer must be humble Ibid. The preparation of Prayer Ibid. What sins they must avoid that would have their Prayers heard of God 466 Contempt of God's Laws makes our Prayers execrable Ibid. Prayer admits of no doubting 467 Mental Prayer excludes not vocal 469 Mental Prayer is more excellent Ibid. The proper advantage and necessity of vocal Prayer Ibid. Private and public Prayer 470 The Exposition of the Lord's Prayer 472 The Preface of the Lord's Prayer Prayer made for another profits himself 481 Prayer is a weapon against the Devil 541 The order to be observed in Prayer 545 The preposterous order us'd by some in their Prayers 544 The Preaching of God's word never to be intermitted In the Preface The authority of the Preachers of God's word Ibid. Preparation to Prayer wherein it consists 465 Preparation before the Communion what it ought to be and how necessary 225 226 Preparation to the Communion requires us to come fasting 227 The Priest alone has the power of consecrating the Eucharist 232 VVhen Christ instituted Prists 235 Priests are to conceal in perpetual silence the sins reveal'd to them in Confession 268 Priests call'd Gods and Angels 293 The Priests of the New Testament more excellent than all others 293 297 The Priests Power very great 294 VVhat they ought to propose to themselves that are to be initiated into Holy Orders Ibid. Mercenary Priests 294 295 Priests entring in by the door of the Church 295 VVhen the Power is given to the Priest by the Bishop Pag. 298 The Ceremonies used in Ordaining Priests and other Clerks 298 c. The Order of Priesthood tho it be burdensom yet it has divers degrees of Dignity and Power 308 VVhat is requir'd in him that is to be made Priest 311 VVhat knowledge is required in a Priest Ibid. Two duties of a Priest Ibid. The Nobility and Excellency of a Priest 236 The charge of a Priest to be lay'd upon none rashly 310 VVho are said to be call'd to the Priesthood 294 The Power of the Priesthood double 296 The Power of the Priesthood of the Law of the Gospel far more excellent than that of the written Law or Law of Nature 297 The Power of the Priesthood of the Gospel has its Original from Christ Ibid. That Priesthood two-fold 306 The Office of the Priesthood 307 The duty of Prosecutors and Advocates 434 God's Providence towards Men. 490 c. Purgatory 57 R REdemption the great benefits we receive thereby 54 Remedies against evil desires Pag. 447 The remedies of a sick soul are Penance and the Eucharist 289 Remission of sins to be had in the Church 102 With how great thankfulness the benefit of remission of sins is to be receiv'd 103 Christ has given the power of remitting sins in the Church to the Bishops and Priests Ibid. Our sins remitted by Christ's blood 105 None can obtain remission of sins without Penance 526 Restitution necessary to a Penitent 419 Who are to be compell'd to make restitution 419 420 The Resurrection of Christ and the glorious Mystery of it 62 c. Christ rose again by his own power 61 By the benefit of the Resurrection Christ is become the first fruits of all Ibid. That Christ rose again the third day how to be understood 62 The mystery of Christ's Resurrection very necessary 63 The end of Christ's Resurrection 64 What examples Christ's Resurrection proposes to us 65 The signs of spiritual Resurrection Ibid. Our Faith establish'd by the belief of the Resurrection of the dead 107. Why the Resurrection of man is called the Resurrection of the Flesh 107 The Resurrection of the Flesh proved by Examples and Testimonies 108 The different condition of them that shall rise again 111 Before the Resurrection all then alive shall die without exception Ibid. Our Bodies shall rise again immortal 114. The powers of those that rise again Ibid c. What fruits we gather by the Article of the Resurrection 116 Robbery and its kinds 417 Robbery a greater sin than Theft 414 Robbery and the various kinds of Rapine 417 S THe celebration of the Sabbath why so often commanded in holy Scripture 369 What Sabbath signifies 373 What the signification of Sabbath is ibid. Why the Sabbath consecrated to God 375 The Sabbath was a sign Ibid. The Sabbath in Heaven Ibid. Why the Sabbath transferr'd to the Lord's day 376 After what manner the Sabbath is to be observ'd 377 The name Sacrament how taken 127 What a Sacrament is 128 Justice and Salvation attain'd by the Sacraments 128 St. Austin's definition of a Sacrament Ibid. Sacraments referr'd to those things they signifie 129 c. Sacraments are signs appointed of God 130 A sacred thing and the Grace of God 131 A Sacrament signifies and works Holiness Ibid. Sacraments signifie divers things 132 The Sacraments of the Law of the Gospel why instituted 133 Every Sacrament consists of two things Matter and Form 135 Among all signs words have
follow Thou shalt not work Nor do's it signifie that only for otherwise it would be sufficient to say in Deuteronomy Observe the Day of the Sabbath Deut. 12. But seeing that in the same Place it is added to sanctifie it by this word is shew'd that the Day of the Sabbath is Religious and consecrated to divine Actions and holy Duties We therefore do then fully and perfectly celebrate the Sabbath-day XVII The true Sanctification of the Sabbath Esay 58.13 when we perform Duties of Piety and Religion to God And that this is evidently a Sabbath which Esay calls delightful because Holy-days are as it were the Delights of God and Pious Men. Wherefore if to this religious and holy Observance of the Sabbath we add Works of Mercy Esay 58.6 surely they are many and very great Rewards which in the same Chapter are propos'd to us The true and proper Sense of this Commandment therefore is XVIII What the true sense of this Commandment is That Man both in Soul and Body might be careful to set apart some certain determin'd Time from Bodily Business and Labor to worship and reverence God devoutly Now in the next part of this Commandment is shew'd XIX What the second Part of the Commandment requires That the Seventh day is dedicated by God to Divine Worship for thus it is written Six days shalt thou labor and do all thy work but the Seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God The meaning of which words is That Sabbath is consecrated to the Lord and that on that Day we pay him our Duties of Religion and that we know the Seventh day to be Sign of the Lord's Rest Now this Day is dedicated to God XX. Why this Day is dedicated to God because it was not fit that the rude People should have the power of chusing the Time after their own Will lest haply they might imitate the Religion of the Egyptians Therefore of the Seven days the last was chosen for the Worship of God XXI Why God chose One Day Which thing indeed is full of Mystery Wherefore in Exodus and in Ezekiel the Lord calls it a Sign See therefore says he that ye keep my Sabbath For it is a Sign between me and you in your Generations The First Reason that ye may know that I am the Lord who sanctifie you It was a Sign therefore which shew'd that Men ought to dedicate themselves to God and to keep themselves holy to him since we see even the very Day to be dedicated to him for that Day is Holy because then especially Men ought to exercise Holiness and Religion And then it is a Sign and Monument The Second as it were of the wonderful Creation of the World And it was moreover given as a Sign to remember and warn the Israelites The Third that they might remember that they were delivered and freed by God's help from the most hard Yoak of the Egyptian Bondage And this the Lord shew'd in these words Deut. 5.25 Remember that thou also didst serve in Egypt and the Lord thy God brought thee out thence with a strong hand and stretched-out arm therefore he has commanded thee to keep the Sabbath-day The Fourth And it is also a Sign both of the Spiritual and Eternal Sabbath Now the Spiritual Sabbath consists in a holy and mystical kind of Rest XXII What the Spiritual Sabbath is to wit when the old Man being buried with Christ is renew'd to Life and studiously exercises it self in those Actions which are agreeable to Christian Piety Ephes 5 2. For they who sometimes were Darkness but now are Light in the Lord ought to walk as Children of the Light in all Goodnes● Justice and Truth and not to communicate with the unfruitful Works of Darkness But the Heavenly Sabbath as S. Cyril says upon that place of the Apostle XXIII What the Heavenly Sabbath is S. Cyril lat l. 4 in Jo. c. 5 1. There remains therefore a Rest to the People of God is that Life wherein we shall live with Christ and enjoy all good things and Sin be utterly pluck'd up by the Roots according to that Esa 53.8 There shall no Lion nor evil Beast go up thither but there shall be a pure way and it shall be called Holy For the Soul of the Saints in the Vision of God gets all good things Wherefore the Pastor must exhort and encourage the Faithful with these words Heb. 4.2 Let us make haste to enter into that Rest Now besides the Seventh day XXIV That Jews had other Feasts besides the Sabbaths the Jews had other Festival and Sacred Days appointed by God's Law whereby the Memory of their greatest Benefits was renew'd Of those other Feasts see Levit. 23. Num. 29. Deut. 16. and if you would know the moral meaning of the Feasts of this kind see Cyril de Adoratione in spiritu verit lib. 17. D. Thom. 1.2 q. 102. art 4. ad 10. But it pleas'd the Church of God XXV Why the Sabbath chang'd The First Reason that the Worship and Celebration of the Sabbath-day should be transferr'd to the Lord's-day For as on that Day the Light did first shine upon the World so by the Resurrection of our Redeemer which open'd us an Entrance to Eternal Life which hapned on that Day our Life was recall'd out of Darkness into Light and for this cause the Apostles would have it call'd The Lord's Day Besides The Second Reason in Sacred Scripture we find that this was a Solemn Day because therein the Creation of the World began and because the Holy Ghost was given to the Apostles But the Apostles in the beginning of the Church XXVI Why other Feasts apopointed and aftewards in the sollowing Times our Holy Fathers appointed other Holy-days that we might devoutly and holily call to remembrance God's Benefits Now among these are to be reckon'd as the most remarkable XXVII The Order of Holy-days those Days that are consecrated to Religion for the Mysteries of our Redemption and then those that are dedicated to the most Holy Virgin Mother Note and to the Apostles and Martyrs and the other Saints which reign with Christ in whose Victory the Goodness and Power of God is prais'd due Honor done to them and the Faithful stirr'd up to the Imitation of them And because to the keeping of this Commandment XXVIII Idleness forbidd'n that part of it has great Force which is express'd in these words Six Days shalt thou labor but the Seventh Day is the Sabbath of God The Curat ought diligently to explain that part For from these words it may be gather'd That the Faithful are to be admonish'd that they lead not their Life in Sloth and Idleness But rather being mindful of the Apostles Advice 1 Thes 4.11 That every one do his own business and labor with his hands as he commanded Besides XXIX No
servile work to be put off to the Lords Day in this Commandment the Lord requires that In Six Days we do our Work Lest any of those things which ought to be done on the other Days of the VVeek should be put off to the Holy Day and so the Mind be call'd off from the care and study of Divine matters In the next place XXX What the third part of the Commandment forbids the third Part of the Commandment is to be explain'd which in a manner shews how we ought to keep Holy the Sabbath Day But especially it explain's what we are forbidden to do on that Day wherefore says the Lord Thou shalt not do any Work therein thou and thy Son and thy Daughter thy Servant and thy Maid thy Cattel and the Stranger that is within thy Gates By which VVords we are taught XXXI Whatever withdraws our mind from the divine Worship is forbidd'n first wholly to avoid whatsoever may hinder the VVorship of God For it may easily be perceived that every kind of servile VVork is forbidden not because it is naturally either base or evil but because it withdraws our mind from the VVorship of God which is the End of this Commandment VVhere Note and I teach this the Faithful are the rather to avoid those Sins which not only call off our Minds from the Study of Divine matters but wholly separate us from the Love of God Vid. Aug. tract 3. in Joan. in Psal 31. Serm. lib. de decem chordis c. 3. Yet those Actions and those VVorks which belong to Divine VVorship XXXII What works are not forbid'n on Holy Days The first sort altho they be servile as to cover or deck the Altar to adorn the Churches for some Festival Days and our like are not forbidd'n and therefore the Lord says The Priests in the Temple violate the Sabbath and yet are without Sin Nor is it to be thought The second sort that the doing of those things which otherwise will be lost if not done on the Holy Day are forbidden by this Commandment even as also it is permitted by the Sacred Canons There are many other things which our Lord in the Gospel has declar'd The third sort may be done on Holy Days which the Curat may easily observe in S. Matthew and S. John But that nothing may be omitted XXXIII Cattel not to be part to labor on Holy Days by the doing whereof the Sanctification of the Sabbath may be hindred here is mention made of Cattel by which sort of living Creatures Men are hindred from keeping the Sabbath For if on the Sabbath Day the use of Cattel be design'd to the doing of any VVork the Labor of Man is also necessary to make them work The Beast therefore can do no work of it self but helps the Man who manages him But on that Day it is not lawful for any to do work therefore not for the Cattel whose Labor Men make use of for their work This Commandment requires also XXXIV Cruel y to Cattel forbidd'n that if God would have Men to spare the Labor of their Cattel they ought surely to be so much the more wary that they be not cruel to them whose Labor and Industry they use Nor ought the Curat to omit XXXV What to be done on Holy Days To be present at Ma s. but diligently to teach in what VVorks and Actions Christians ought to exercise themselves on Holy Days Of which kind are these To come to Gods Church and to be there present at the Holy Sacrifice of Mass with a sincere and devout Attention of Mind Conc. Agath c. 47. Aurel. c. 8. Tribur c. 35. vide de consec dist 1. capite Missas cum ad celebrandas omnes Fideles Often to make use of the Sacraments of the Church To frequent the Sacraments which were instituted for our Salvation and to cure the VVounds of our Souls Aug. de Eccle. dogm c. 53. citatur de cons dist 2. c. quotidie Nor is there any thing which can be either more seasonable or better for Christians To confess Sins than often to confess their Sins to the Priests For doing of which the Curat may exhort the People taking for clearing of this matter a Pattern and Example from those things which have already in their proper place bin deliver'd and taught in the Sacrament of Penance Nor shall he only stir up the People to that Sacrament To receive the Eucharist but he shall diligently again and again exhort them to it that they may frequently receive the Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist Moreover To hear Sermons the Sacred Sermons are diligently and attentively to be heard by the Faithful For there is nothing les● to be indur'd nor indeed is there any thing so unworthy as to despise or negligently to hear Christs Word Justin Apol. 2. ex Actis Apost c. 20.7 Aug. lib. 50. Hom. hom 26. citatur 1. q. l. cap. interroga Also the Exercise and Study of the Faithful in Prayers To pray to and praise God and Praises of God ought to be frequent And hereof a chief care should be To be present at Catechising diligently to learn those things which belong to the Institution of a Christian Life And let him exercise himself in those Duties which contain Christian Piety To do works of Mercy by giving Alms to the Poor and Needy by visiting the Sick and piously comforting those that are in Heaviness and Affliction Jac. 1. For as S. James says Pure Religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this To visit the fatherless and Widows in their tribulation So the ancient Christians did as do testifie Justin apol 2. Tertul. in apol in lib. ad Martyres in lib. 2. ad Vxorem prope finem From what has bin said XXXVI The fourth part of this Commandment it is easy to gather what things are committed contrary to the Rule of this Commandment And let the Curat reckon it as his Duty to gather Reasons and Arguments strongly to perswade the People with their utmost Study XXXVII How just it is to observe the Festivals Care and Diligence to keep the Law of this Commandment And to this end it will be very useful for the People to understand and perceive plainly how just and agreeable to Reason it is that we should have some certain Days which we may bestow wholly upon Divine Worship and wherein we may acknowledge worship and venerate our Lord from whom we have receiv'd most excellent and innumerable Benefits For if he had commanded us every Day to render him the Worship of Religion Note ought we not to do our utmost endeavour with a ready and cheerful mind for all Benefits towards us which are very great and infinite to hearken to his VVord But now there being but a few Days set apart to his VVorship there is no cause why
nations Matt. 28 19. baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Again There are three which bear record in Heav'n 1 Joh. 5.7 the Father the Word and the holy Spirit and these three are one Yet let him diligently pray and beseech God and the Father who made all things of nothing and sweetly orders all things who gave us power to become the sons of God who has reveal'd this mystery of the Trinity to the soul of man let him I say who by the gift of God believs these things pray without ceasing that being at last receiv'd into everlasting Tabernacles he may be found worthy to see what the fruitfulness of God the Father is whereby beholding and understanding himself he cou'd beget a Son like and equal to himself And how of two the very same and an equal love of Charity which is the Holy Spirit proceeding from the Father and the Son knits together both the Begetter and the Begotten each to other with an eternal and indissoluble Band. And thus these is but one Essence and yet a perfect distinction of the Three Persons of the divine Trinity Almighty The Holy Scripture is us'd to express that supream Power and infinite Majesty of God by many names XV. Why gloriou●l p the●● are given God to shew with how great religion and devotion his most holy name is to be worshipp'd but chiefly let the Curat teach that An Almighty Power is most commonly attributed to him For so he says of himself I am the Lord Almighty Again Gen. 17.1 when Jacob sent his sons to Joseph Gen. 43.14 he thus prays for them Now God Almighty give you favour before the man It is also written in the Revelations Rev. 1.8.16.5 The Lord God Almighty who was and is and is to come and elsewhere The great day is call'd the day of the Almighty God Sometimes also it is us'd to signifie the same thing in many words Pertinent to this place is that which is written Act. 2.20 Numb 11.23 ●●nd 12.8 There is no word impossible with God Is the hand of the Lord weakend Thou canst do● whatsoever thou wilt There are many other expressions of the like kind In all which various forms of speech any one may easily perceiv the same to be understood which is comprehended in this single word Almighty Now by this Name of God we plainly perceiv XVI What the word Almighty signifies that there is nothing nay that we cannot so much as conceiv any thing in our mind or thought which God cannot bring to pass For he has power to do not those things only which fall under our apprehension tho they indeed are very great to wit to reduce all things into nothing and presently out of nothing again to make many worlds But he has power to do many mightier things than these and which our weak minds and understandings cannot conceive And yet tho God can do all things yet he cannot lye deceiv be deceiv'd or sin or be ignorant at all or perish for such things belong only to a Nature or Being whose actions are imperfect but we say God cannot do these things because his actions are always most perfect because to be able to do these things is a sign of weakness and not of that supreme and unlimited Power which God has We therefore so believ God to be Almighty that we abhor to think or imagine any thing of him which is not most agreeable to the most perfect Being The Curate may shew it was well and wisely done to omit other names of God in the Creed XVII Why in the Creed God is offerd to be believed Almighty and only to offer this one to us to believ For when we acknowledg God to be Almighty we must needs confess that he knows all things and that all things are subject to his Rule and Government And when we doubt not in the least of his Ability to do all things it must needs follow that we must allow all those other things which if he shou'd not have we cannot understand how he is Almighty Besides there is nothing so powerful to strengthen our Faith and Hope as to have this always settl'd in our mind that there is nothing which God cannot do For whatsoever we ought to believ tho it be great tho it be wonderful tho it exceeds the Order and Measure of things yet humane Reason easily and without any doubting yields and assents to it when once it owns that God is Almighty Yea rather by how much the greater those things are which the Oracles of God teach by so much the more readily does it account them to be believ'd And if any great good thing be promis'd and expected the mind is not discourag'd altho the thing it desires were too great But it chears and comforts it self often calling to remembrance that there is nothing which Almighty God cannot do With this Faith therefore we shou'd especially fortifie our selves XVIII The profitableness of Faith in God Almighty either when we are requir'd to do some wonderful works for the use and profit of our Neighbours or when we would beg any thing of God The one our Lord himself has taught us when reproving the Apostles for unbelief Matt. 17.20 he said If ye had Faith as a grain of Mustard-seed ye might say to this Mountain remove from hence to another place and it shall remove and nothing shall be impossible to you But of the other S. James testifies Jam. 1.6 7. Let him says he ask in Faith nothing doubting For he that doubts is like a Wave of the Sea which is mov'd and carry'd about with the Wind let not that Man therefore think that he shall receiv any thing of the Lord. This Faith does moreover afford us many profits and advantages It first teaches us all humility and lowliness of mind 1 Pet 5.6 for so says the Prince of Apostles Be ye humbl'd under the Mighty hand of God It also teaches us not to fear where no fear is but to fear that One God in whose power both we and all that belongs to us is Luc. 12.5 for so says our Saviour I will shew you whom ye shall fear Fear ye him who after he has kill'd has power to cast into Hell This Faith serves us also both to know and celebrate the infinite benefits of God towards us for he that does but think that God is Almighty cannot be so ungrateful as not oft'n to cry out Luc. ● 49 He that is Mighty has done great things for me But now when in this Article we call the Father Almighty XIX In the Trinity there are not three Almight s. let no one be so far deceiv'd as to think that we so ascribe that name to him as tho it belong'd not to the Son and Holy Ghost also For as we say The Father is God the Son is
Apostle us'd Eph. 5.2 when he said Christ lov'd us and gave himself a Sacrifice and oblation for us to God for a sweet-smelling Savor Furthermore this is the Oblation whereof we read in the Prince of Apostles 1 Pet. 1.18.19 Ye were not redeem'd with corruptible things as Silver and Gold from your vain conversation of the Tradition of your Fathers but with the precious Blood of Crist as of a Lamb without spot or blemish And the Apostle teaches us Gal. 3.13 That Christ was made a Curse for us that he might redeem us from the curse of the Law But besides these immense Benefits XXVI In Christs Passion are examples of all Vertues we have this very great one over and above that in this only Passion we have the most Glorious Patterns of all Vertues For he shew'd forth his Patience Humility the most profound Love Charity Meekness and Obedience and most unshaken Constancy and Resolution of Mind not only in suffering Injuries for Righteousness or Justice sake but also even in Death it self and that in such a manner as we can truly say That our Savior in the very height of his Sufferings did most lively express in himself all those Rules and Precepts of Life which throw all the time of his Preaching he taught by Words And this shall suffice to have bin spoken briefly of the most saving Death and Passion of Christ our Lord. And wou'd God these Mysteries were seriously impress'd upon our Souls and Hearts and that we wou'd learn to suffer to dye and to be bury'd together with our Lord that then every spot of Sin being wip'd away and rising with him to newness of Life by his Mercy we may be found worthy to be made partakers of his Kingdom of Heav'n and Glory ARTICLE V. HE descended into Hell the third Day He rose again from the Dead It is of very great use to know the glory of the Burial of our Lord Jesus Christ I. 〈◊〉 very useful o unde●●t●●● this Article of which we have spoken last But it more concerns the Faithful to know the glorious Triumphs he bore away by conquering the Devil and spoiling the Powers of Hell Of which and also of the Resurection we are now to speak Which Point altho it may well be handl'd distinctly and by it self yet we following the Authority of the Holy Fathers have thought fit to joyn it with that of his descent into Hell In the first part therefore this is propos'd to our Belief II. What is propes'd in the first Part. That Christ being now dead his Soul went down to Hell and there continu'd so long as his Body was in the Sepulchre But in these words we also confess That the very same person of Christ at the same time was both with the Spirits below and also lay in the Sepulchre Which when we say no one ought to wonder because as we have often said before That though his Soul departed from his Body yet his Divinity was never separated either from his Soul or his Body But because it may bring much light to the Explication of this Article III. The various signification of Hell if the Curat teach what in this place is to be understood by the Word Hell It is necessary to admonish That in this place by Hell is not meant the Sepulchre as some no less impiously than unskilfully have thought for by the former Article we are taught That Christ our Lord was bury'd neither was there any Reason why in the Creed the same thing shou'd by the Holy Apostles be repeated in another and a more obscure form of Speech But the Word Hell signifies those hidd'n Receptacles wherein the Souls are kept IV. The First The Receptacle of the damn'd Phil. 2.10 which have not attain'd to the Blessedness of Heav'n For so the Holy Scriptures use this Word in many places For thus we read in the Apostle At the name of Jesus every Knee shall bow of those in Heav'n of those in Earth and those under the Earth And in the Acts of the Apostles S. Peter testifies Act 2.24 That Christ the Lord was risen again having loos'd the Pains of Hell Nor are all those Receptacles of one and the same kind For there is that worst and most dismal place of all where the Souls of the damn'd together with the unclean Spirits shall be tormented for ever and that with unquenchable Fire which is call'd the Bottomles-Pit and by its own proper signification Hell There is besides V. The Fire of Purgatory The Fire of Purgatory wherein the Souls of the Pious for a certain determin'd time are cleans'd by Sufferings that so the entrance to the Heav'nly Country may be laid open into which no polluted thing can be admitted And of the truth of this Doctrin Apoc. 21 27. Con. Trent Sess 25. which the Holy Councils declare to be confirm'd both by Testimonies of Scripture and by Apostolic Tradition the Curat shall discourse and argue by so much the more industriously and frequently because we are fall'n upon those times wherein Men will not endure Sound Doctrin Lastly VI. Limbus where the Souls of the Father were The third kind of Receptacle is that wherein the Souls of the Saints were receiv'd before the coming of Christ our Lord and there being refresh'd with the bless'd hope of Redemption and free from all sense of Pain enjoy'd a peaceable Habitation The Souls therefore of these Pious Persons who in the bosome of Abraham expected the Savior Christ our Lord descending to Hell deliver'd Nor are we to think that he so descended to Hell VII Christ's Soul truly went down to Hell as that only his Influence and Vertue and not also his Soul went thither But we are verily to believ That his very Soul indeed and in presence descended to Hell Ps 15.10 of which there is this most certain Testimony of David Thou shall not leave my Soul is Hell But tho Christ went down to Hell yet this was no damage to his Supreme Power nor was the Splendor of his Holiness stain'd in the least seeing that by thus doing it rather was most evidently prov'd that all those things are most true which are celebrated concerning his Holiness and that he is the very Son of God as he had before made appear by so many prodigious Miracles And this we may easily perceiv VIII Two differences betwixt Christ's and the damned's going to Hell if we but consider the Causes why Christ and other Men came into those places For all others went thither as Captives but he as free among the Dead and Conquerer to Master the Devils by whom they were there kept shut up and imprison'd by reason of sin Furthermore All others who descended thither partly were tormented with most bitter pains and partly tho they wanted all other sense of sorrow yet being depriv'd of the sight of God and with-held in the Hope only of
Bliss and Glory which they waited for they were in a kind of Torment But Christ our Lord descended not to suffer any more but to free the Saints and Righteous Men from the Misery and Trouble of that Imprisonment and to bestow upon them the Fruits of his Passion That therefore he went down to Hell was no lessening of his supream Dignity and Power These things being explain'd IX Why Christ went down to Hell it must be taught that Christ our Lord went down to Hell that after he had spoil'd the Devils he might lead those Holy Fathers and other pious persons being now freed from Prison with him to Heav'n which wonderfully and gloriously he has accomplish'd For immediatly the sight of him gave transcendant Light to the Captiv's and fill'd their souls with immense joy and gladness on whom he also bestow'd that most desir'd Bliss which consists in the Vision of God which done it is manifest what it was he promis'd the Thief in these words Luc. 23.43 This day thou shalt be with me in Paradice But of this deliverance of the Godly the Prophet Osee so long before propheci'd in this manner O death I will be thy death O Hell I will be thy destruction The Prophet Zachary signifi'd the same thing when he said Thou also by the blood of thy Testament hast sent them that are bound out of the lake wherein there is no water Lastly the same thing the Apostle expresses in these words Col. 2.15 in taking the spoils of principalities and powers he made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in himself But that we may understand the force of this mystery the better X. Who are sav'd by the benefit of Christs Passion we ought often to call to remembrance that devout men not only who were born after the coming of our Lord but those who after Adam were before him or who hereafter shall be to the end of the World have and shall attain Salvation by the benefit of his Passion Wherefore before he dy'd and rose again the Gates of Heav'n were never open to any but the Souls of the Godly when they departed this life were either carry'd into Abraham's Bosome or as now it fares with them who have somewhat to be purg'd or satisfi'd were cleans'd by the fire of Purgatory There is besides XI Another Reason of Christ's going down to Hell Phil. 2.10 another Reason why Christ our Lord went down to Hell namely that he might there shew his Might and Power as he had done in Heav'n and Earth and that as every knee both of things in Heav'n and things in Earth bow'd at the name of him so also of things below and under the Earth At consideration whereof who is there who admires not and even stands not amaz'd at the immense bounty of God towards mankind who was willing not only to undergo the most bitter Death for us but also to go down to the very lowest parts of the Earth that he might carry with him the Souls so very dear to him which he thence victoriously bore away to bliss and happiness Now follows the other part of the Article XII The other Part of the Article concerning the Resurrection 2 Tim. 2.8 in explaining whereof how painful the Curat ought to be appears by those words of the Apostle Remember that the Lord Jesus Christ arose again from the dead For what he commanded Timothy it is not to be doubted but that it is also commanded to all others that have the Cure of Souls And this is the meaning of the Article After that Christ our Lord had giv'n up the Ghost on the Cross upon Friday at the ninth hour of the day and the same day at Even he was bury'd by his Disciples who by leav of Pilate the President laid the body of our Lord when they had tak'n it down from the Cross into a new Tomb in a Garden near at hand the third day after his death which was the Lords day early in the morning his soul was again join'd to his body and so he who was dead those three days arose again and return'd to life out of which he departed by death but by the word Resurrection we are not to understand only that Christ was rais'd from the dead which was a thing common to many others but that he rose again by his own power and vertue which was a singular thing and proper to Him alone For it is contrary to Nature XIV No man can naturally rise again from the dead 2 Cor. 13.4 nor was it even granted to any man to be able by his own power to rais'e himself from death to life but this belongs to the supream power of God only as we learn from those words of the Apostle Altho he was crucifi'd throw weakness yet he liv's by the power of God which seeing it was never separated from Christ's Body in the Sepulchre nor from his Soul when it went down into Hell his Divine Power was both in his Body so that it cou'd be joyn'd again to his Soul and in his Soul so that it cou'd again be brought back to his Body so that by his own power he might revive and rise again from the dead And this thing XV. The Resurrection soretold Psa 97.2 David being full of the Spirit of God foretold in these words His right hand and his Holy arm hath gott'n himself the victory And the Lord himself by the divine testimony of his own mouth has confirm'd it I lay down my life and I will take it up again Joh. 10.17 and I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it up again And also to the Jews for confirmation of his doctrin he said Joh. 2.19 Dissolve this temple and in three days I will raise it up again Which tho they indeed understood of that Temple magnificently built of Stones yet he as is declar'd in the same place by the words of Scripture Act. 1.24 spake of the Temple of his Body Now although we sometimes read in Scripture that Christ our Lord was raised by the Father this is to be understood of Christ as Man ev'n as those things again relate to himself as God whereby is signifi'd that he rose again by his own Power And this also belongs specially to Christ XVI Christ first rose from the dead Apoc. 1.5 1 Cor. 15.20 that He was the First who enjoy'd this divine benefit of the Resurrection For in Scripture he is called the First begotten among the dead and the First begotten of the dead And as the Apostle has it Christ arose again from the dead being the First-fruits of them that sleep for verily by Man came death and by Man came the Resurrection of the dead and as in Adam all dye so in Christ shall all be made alive but every one in his own order Christ the First fruits and afterwards those that are Christ's Which
words are to be understood of the compleat Resurrection because then we are rais'd to everlasting life all necessity of dying being wholly tak'n away And in this kind Christ our Lord obtains the First place For if we speak of such a Resurrection or of such a Return to life as after which there remains a necessity of dying again 3 Reg. 17.22 there were many others so rais'd from the dead 4 Reg. 4.34 Christ all which notwithstanding reviv'd on this condition that they were to dye again But Christ our Lord so arose again from Death which he had subdu'd and conquer'd that he cou'd dye no more And this is confirm'd by that most plain Testimony Rom. 6 9. Christ being now ris'n from the Dead dyes no more Death shall no more domineer over him And now follows what is added to the Article The third Day The Curat must instruct the Faithful not to believ that our Lord was all those three days in the Sepulchre XVII Christ rose again the third day For because he lay in the Sepulchre a Whole Natural Day and Part of the Day before it and Part of the Day after it for this Reason it is truly said That he lay in the Sepulchre Three days and that the Third Day he arose again from the Dead Now that he might manifest his Divinity XVIII Why the third day he wou'd not put off his Resurrection till the end of the World and again that we might believ him to be truly Man and to be truly dead he did not immediately after his death revive but on the Third Day after his Death Which space of time seem'd to be sufficient to prove he was truly dead The Fathers of the first Council of Constantinople have added to this place XIX Why according to the Scriptures is added in the Creed 1 Cor. 15.14 ACCORDING TO THE SCRIPTURES Which being receiv'd from the Apostle they therefore plac'd in the Creed And that the Mystery of the Resurrection is very necessary the same Apostle has taught us in these words If Christ have not ris'n again then is our preaching vain and your Faith is vain And if Christ have not ris'n again your Faith is vain and you are yet in your sins Wherefore S. Austin admiring the Faith of this Article wrote thus De August in Ps 120. v. 4. It is no great matter to believ that Christ dyed for this do the Heathens Jews and all the wicked believ This all believ that he dy'd But the Resurrection of Christ is the Faith of Christians only This we account a great matter to believ that he rose again Hence it was that our Lord most commonly spake of his Resurrection Note and scarce ever did he talk with his Disciples about his Passion but he spake of his Resurrection When therefore he said Mat. 16.21 The Son of Man shall be deliver'd to the Gentiles and be mock'd and beat'n and spit upon and after that they have beat'n they will kill him Luc. 18.32 At last he added And the third day he shall rise again and when the Jews requir'd him to prove his Doctrin by some Sign or Miracle Luc. 11.29 he answer'd There shall no other sign be giv'n them than the sign of the Prophet Jonas for as Jonas was three Days and three Nights in the Whales Belly so he affirm'd Mat. 12.39 That the Son of Man shou'd be three Days and three Nights in the Heart of the Earth Now the better to perceiv the Force and meaning of this Article XX. Three things to be explain'd here we must know and observ three things First Why it was needful that Christ shou'd rise again Then What the Scope and End of his Resurrection was And also what Profits and Advantages redound to us thereby As to the first XXI First The necessity of Christs Resurrection Phil. 2.8 9. It was necessary for him to rise again that the Justice of God might be manifest by whom it was very meet that he shou'd be rais'd up who in obedience to him was cast down and loaded with all kinds of Disgrace This Reason the Apostle brings when he says to the Philippians He humbl'd himself and became obedient to Death ev'n the death of the Cross wherefore God has also exalted him Besides for confirmation of our Faith without which Man can attain to no Righteousness For this ought to be a main Argument That Christ was the true Son of God because by his own Power he rais'd himself from the dead and then to cherish and support our Hope For since Christ rose again we have a sure Hope that we also shall rise again for it is necessary that the Members enjoy the same state and condition with the Head For so the Apostle seems to argue when he writes both to the Corinthians and Thessalonians and Peter the Prince of the Apostles says 1 Cor. 15.12 1 Thes 4.14 1 Pet. 2.8 Bless'd be God and the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who of his great mercy has begott'n us again to a lively Hope throw the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the Dead to an Inheritance incorruptible Lastly XXII The Second The End of the Resurrection For this reason also it must be taught That the Resurrection of our Lord was necessary That the Mystery of our Salvation and Redemption might be compleated For Christ by his Death has freed us from Sin but by Rising again he has restor'd us to all those good things which we lost by our sins Wherefore the Apostle says Rom. 4.15 Christ was deliver'd to Death for our Sins and Rose again for our Justification That nothing therefore might be wanting to the Salvation and Happiness of Mankind as it behov'd him to Dy so also it did to Rise again Now from what has bin said XXIII The Third The Advantages The first we may perceiv How great advantage the Resurrection of Christ our Lord brings to the Faithful For by his very Resurrection We acknowledg him to be God Immortal and full of Glory and conqueror of the Devil which without all doubt we are to believ and confess concerning Christ Jesus Besides The Second The Resurrection of Christ has produc'd the Resurrection of our Bodies also Because it was the efficient cause of this Mystery And also because after the example of our Lord we all ought to rise again For as to the Resurrection of the Body the Apostle thus testifies 1 Cor. 15. By Man came Death by Man came also the Resurrection of the Dead For there is use of Christ's Humanity as of the efficient instrument to all those things whatsoever they are which God did in the Mystery of our Redemption Wherefore his Resurrection was a kind of Instrument to bring to pass our Resurrection And it may be call'd a Pattern because the Resurrection of Christ was of all the most perfect And as the Body of Christ rising to immortal
whom thou hast given me should be where I am And then This also Third as a very great benefit we have obtain'd that he has drawn up our love to Heav'n and inflam'd us with his Divine Spirit For most true is that saying Mat. 6.21 There our Heart is where our Treasure is And indeed if Christ our Lord were dwelling on the Earth all our thoughts wou'd be fix'd upon the face and acquaintance of the Man and we shou'd behold him only as Man who bestow'd so great benefits upon us and we shou'd affect him only with a kind of earthly Good Will But now being gone up into Heav'n he has render'd our Love Spiritual and makes us to love and reverence him as God whom we now consider as absent And this we understand partly by the Example of the Apostles Joh. 19.7 with whom while our Lord was present they seem'd to judge of him in a manner according to Human Sense And partly it is confirm'd by the testimony of our Lord himself when he says It is expedient for you that I go away For that imperfect Love wherewith they lov'd Jesus Christ when present with them was to be perfected by Divine Love and that by the coming of the Holy Ghost Wherefore he presently adds For if I go not away the Paraclet or Comforter will not come to you To this may be added Fourth that he has inlarg'd his House Eph. 4.22 i.e. his Church in the earth which was to be govern'd by the power and guidance of the Holy Spirit and he left Peter the Prince of Apostles the chief Pastor and Prelate of the whole Church among Men and then he gave some Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists some Pastors and Teachers and so sitting at the Right Hand of his Father he always bestows divers gifts upon divers persons for the Apostle testifies Eph. 5.7 That to every one of us is giv'n grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ But lastly Fifth The Faithful are to believe the same thing also concerning Christ's Ascension which we taught before concerning the mystery of his Death and Resurrection for tho we owe our Salvation and Redemption to the Passion of Christ who by his own Merit open'd to the Just an entrance to Heav'n yet his Ascension is not only propos'd to us as an example whereby we learn to look up on high and ascend up into Heav'n in Spirit but it has giv'n us Divine Power whereby we are enabl'd to do it ARTICLE VII FRom thence he shall come to judge the quick and the Dead There are three of excellent Offices and Functions which our Lord Jesus Christ has for the adorning and illustrating of his Church I. The Three Offices of Christ Of Redemption Patronage or Defence and Judgment But whereas from the former Articles it is manifest that he has redeem'd mankind by his Passion and Death and that he has undertak'n sorever to defend and patronize our cause by his Ascension into Heav'n it remains that in this Article we declare his Judgment The reason and force of which Article is this II. What we must believe conc●●●nig the last judgment That in the last day Christ our Lord will judge all mankind For the Holy Scriptures testifie that there are Two comings of Christ The One when for our salvation he took flesh and was made Man in the Womb of the Virgin The Other when he shall come to judge all men at the end of the World This Coming of his in Holy Scripture is call'd The Day of the Lord whereof the Apostle speaks 1 Thes 5.2 The day of the Lord so comes as a Thief in the night Ma● 24.20 and our Saviour himself Ma● 23.32 But of that Day and Hour no man knows 1 Cor. 5.10 Concerning which last judgment the authority of the Apostle is sufficient We must all appear before the judgment-seat of Christ that every one may give an account of what he has done in the body whether good or evil For the Holy Scripture is full of testimonies which the Curat may find scatter'd up and down not only for proof of this matter but to lay before the eyes of the Faithful that as from the begining of the World that Day of the Lord wherein he put on Human Flesh was always much longed for of all because in that Mystery they had the hope of their deliverance plac'd So from thence forth after the Death of the Son of God and his Ascension into Heav'n we might most earnestly desire that Other Day of the Lord waiting for that bless'd Hope and the coming of the Glory of the great God But for the explication of this matter the Curat shall observe and teach that there are Two times wherein every one must needs come in presnce before the Lord and give an account of all his particular Thoughts Actions and Words and must abide the present Sentence of the Judge The First is when every one of us goes out of this life for immediately he is placed before the Judgment-seat of God and there is a most just examination made of all things whatsoever he ever did spake or thought and this is call'd The Private Judgment But The Other is when in one day and in one place All men shall stand together before the Seat of Judgment that in the sight and hearing of all men of all ages every one may know what is judg'd and decree'd concerning himse lf The very Pronouncing of which Sentence to Ungodly and Wicked men will not be the least part of their punishments and torments And on the other side the Godly and the Just will from thence receive no small Reward and Profit when it shall truly appear what kind of persons every one of them was in this life And this is call'd the General Judgment Concerning which it must needs be shew'd what the Cause is V. Why a General Judgment to come why besides the Private Judgment concerning every one in particular there will also be held another Judgment concerning all men in general For since First Cause even when men are dead they sometimes leave behind them some surviving persons to imitate them as Children to imitate Parents Dependents and Scholars who are lovers and favourers of their Examples Discourses Actions whereby it must needs come to pass that the rewards and punishments of the dead shall be increas'd and whereas this either Advantage or Calamity which belongs to so very many cannot have an end before the coming of the last day of the World It was but meet that there should be a perfect examination of this General Account of good and evil Words and Actions And this could not be done except at one General Judgment of all men And besides The Second forasmuch as the Fame of the Godly is often times unjustly wounded and the wicked commended as innocent the justice of God requir'd that the
godly should even in the Public assembly and judgment of all mankind recover that esteem which by injustice they were depriv'd of among men And then whereas both the Good and the Bad did The Third not without their bodies whatsoever they did on all accounts it is just that whatsoever was well or ill done belongs also to their Bodies which were the Instruments of those Actions It was therefore very convenient that the due rewards of eternal glory or punishment should be difpens'd to the Bodies and Souls together which verily could not be done without a Ressurrection of all men and without a General Judgment Lastly The Fourth Because in mens adversity and prosperity which sometimes happen alike both to the Good and Bad it was to appear that nothing was done or over-rul'd without the Infinite Wisdom and Justice of God it was meet not only that Rewards should be appointed to the Good and Punishments to the Wicked in the world to come but also that this should be determin'd in a Public and General Judgment whereby they might be more known and conspicuous to all and that praise might by all be given to the Justice and Providence of God instead of that unjust complaint which even sometimes the Saints themselves as men have been used to make when they observ'd wicked Men prospering in Wealth and flourishing in Honors For Ps 72.2,3 says the Prophet My feet were amost mov'd my treadings had well nigh slipt because I was griev'd at the unjust seeing the peace of sinners And a little after Behold the very sinners and the wealthy of the world they get riches and I said Then have I cleans'd my heart in vain and have washed my hands in innocency I was punish'd every day and chastn'd every morning And this was the frequent complaint of many It was needful therefore that there should be a General Judgment Joh. 22.14 lest haply men should say That God indeed takes care of the motions of the Heavens but regards not what is done on the Earth This word of Truth therefore is rightly made One of the Twelve Articles of our Christian Faith that if the minds of any should doubt concerning the Providence and Jultice of God by means of this Doctrin they may be confirm'd Besides The Fifth at the apprehension of the Judgment it is fit that the Godly be comforted and the Wicked terrifi'd that considering the Justice of God the Good should not be dejected and the Evil may be recall'd from their wickedness by the fear and expectation of Eternal Punishment Wherefore our Lord and Saviour speaking of the Last Day has declar'd that there will sometime be a General Judgement Mat. 24 29. and has describ'd the Signs of the approach of the Time thereof that when we shall see those Signs come to pass we may know that the End of the World is at hand and then at his Ascension into Heaven he sent Angels who comforted the Apostles grieving for his absence in these words Act. 2.11 This Jesus which is taken from you up into Heaven shall so come as ye have seen him go into Heaven But that this Judgment is given to Christ VI. Christ as Man also is Judge of all not only as God but as Man the Holy Scriptures declare For tho the power of Judging be common to all the persons of the Holy Trinity yet we specially attribute it to the Son Because we say that Wisdom suits to him But that as Man he will judge the World our Lord's testimony assures us who says Joh. 5.26 As the Father has life in himself so has he given to the Son to have life in himself and has given him power to Judge as he is the Son of Man And it was very meet VII Why Christ a● Man will be Judge that this Judgment should be exercised by Christ our Lord that when the Judgment was concerning Men they might see the Judge with their Eyes and with their Ears hear the Sentence which should be pronounc'd and truly perceive the Judgment with their Senses And it was moreover mosl just that That man who was condemn'd by the most unjust sentences of Men should be seen to sit afterwards as Judge of all wherefore the Prince of Apostles when in the House of Cornelius Act. 10.24 he was expounding the chief heads of Christian Religion and had taught that Christ was by the Jews hang'd on a Tree and kill'd and the third day rose again to life he subjoyn'd And he has commanded us to preach and to testifie to the people that This is he who was appointed of God to be the Judge of quick and dead And the Holy Scriptures declare VIII Signs foregoing the Judgment Damase de fide Or●hod lib. 4.7.27 that these Three principal Signs will go before the Judgment The Preaching of the Gospel throughout the world a Departure from the Faith and Antichrist For our Lord says This Gospel of the kingdom shall be preach'd through the whole world for a testimony to all the Gentils and then shall the End come And the Apostle warns us that we be not seduc'd by any as tho the Day of the Lord were at hand Mat. 22.14 2 Thess 2.3 Dan. 7.9 For unless there first come a departure and that Man of sin be reveal'd the judgment will not come But what will be the Manner and Way of the Judgment the Curate may easily know from the Oracles of Daniel and from the Doctrin of the Evangelists and of the Apostles Moreover IX The Pronouncing and Exposition of the Sentence of the last Judgment Mat. 24.34 the Sentence to be pronounc'd by the Judge should be in this place more diligently consider'd For Christ our Saviour beholding with a chearful countenance the Godly at his Right hand shall with the greatest love and good-will thus pronounce Sentence concerning them Come ye the blessed of my Father possess the Kingdom which is prepar'd for you from the foundation of the world Than which words they will know that there can be nothing heard more sweet who but compare them with the Sentence of Condemnation of the Wicked and when in their mind they shall have consider'd that by those words Pious and Just men are call'd from their Labours to Rest from a Vally of Tears to the highest Joy and from all their Miseries to everlasting Happiness which they by their Duties of Charity have deserv'd And then turning to those who stand at his Left hand he will pour forth his Justice upon them in these words Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire which is prepar'd for the Devil and his Angels In those former words X. The Sentence of the Reprobate consider'd Chrysost in Mat. Hom. 23. August Ser. 181 de Temp. Greg. lib. 9. Moral c. 46. Mat. 25 4● Depart from me is signifi'd that most extream punishment wherewith the wicked shall be tormented when they shall be
cast out far from the sight of God nor can they receive any comfort from any Hope that they shall ever enjoy so great a Good And This by Divines is call'd the Pain of Loss viz. That the Wicked in Hell shall for ever want the Light of the Vision of God But that which is added ye Cursed does wonderfully increase their misery and calamity For if when they are to be driven out from the presence of God they might be thought worthy of some small Blessing this might truly be some considerable comfort to them But for as much as they must expect nothing that can alleviate their misery when they are cast out the Divine Justice will rightly follow them with every Malediction and Curse And then follows Into everlasting-fire which other kind of Pain Divines call the Pain of Sense because it can be felt by the bodily Senses as in Stripes Buffetings and other more grievous kinds of punishments among which there can be no doubt that the torments of Fire do cause the most exquisite sense of Pain to which evil when it is added that all this wilt be For ever it is thereby shew'd that the pains of the Damn'd will be loaded with all kinds of punishments And This those words which are plac'd in the latter part of the Sentence more fully declare Which is prepar'd for the Devil and his Angels For whereas so it is that we can more easily endure all troubles if we have some Companion and Consort of our Calamity by whose prudence and humanity we may in some measure be reliev'd what at last will be the Misery of the Damn'd who tho loaded with so great Torments shall notwithstanding never be deliver'd from the company of the most accursed Devils And this indeed is the Sentence that shall most justly be denounc'd by our Lord and Savior upon the Wicked as being they who neglected all works of true Piety and gave neither Meat nor Drink to the Hungry and Thirsty took not in the Stranger cloath'd not the Naked and visited not the Sick and Imprison'd These are the things which the Curats ought often to inculcate into the ears of the Faithful XI Discourse of the last Judgment should be frequent and why Eccles 40. Aug. Ser. 120. de Temp. Greg. Hom. 3 9. in E●●●ng Berna●● Serm. 1. in sesto omnium sanctorum For the Truth of this Article being rightly believ'd will have great force to bridle the wicked desires of the mind and hold men back from sinning Wherefore in Ecclesiasticus it is said In all thy works remember thy latter end and thou wilt not sin forever And indeed hardly will any one be carri'd head-long into wickedness whom this Consideration cannot recal to the study of Piety That sometime or other he must give an Account before the most just Judge not only of all his Actions and Words but also of his most hidden Thoughts and must suffer Punishment according to his desert But it must needs be that the Just will be more stirr'd up to do Justice and to rejoyce exceedingly tho he here lead his life in Want in Disgrace and Afflictions when he thinks in his mind of that Day when after the combat of this troublesome life he shall in the hearing of all Men be proclaim'd a Conquerer and shall be receiv'd into his heav'nly Country and adorn'd with Divine Honour What remains therefore but that the Faithful be exhorted to take the best manner of life and exercise themselves in the study of all Piety that so they may with the greater Joy and Security of Mind wait for and expect the coming of that great Day of the Lord and so as becomes Children with the greatest Earnestness to desire it ARTICLE VIII I Believ in the Holy Ghost Hitherto those things have bin expounded I. Fith in the Holy Ghost necessary so far as the Reason of the Argument seem'd to require which belong'd to the First and Second Person of the Holy Trinity Now it follows That those things also which in the Creed are deliver'd concerning the Third Person that is the Holy Ghost shou'd be explain'd In treating of which matter the Pastors shou'd use their utmost Endeavor and Diligence Act. 19.2 seeing it is to be suppos'd That a Christian Man may no more be ignorant of This part or not believe rightly concerning it than of the other former Articles Wherefore the Apostle would not suffer certain of the Ephesians to be ignorant of the Person of the Holy Ghost Of whom when he ask'd Whether they had receiv'd the Holy Ghost and when they answer'd That they knew not whether there was an Holy Ghost he presently ask'd them In whom therefore were ye baptiz'd In which words he signify'd That the distinct knowledg of this Article is necessary to the Faithful from which they have this Fruit especially that when they consider attentively That whatsoever they have they have it of the Gift and Bounty of the Holy Ghost then do they begin to think more modestly and humbly of themselves and to place all their Hope in Gods Protection which ought to be the First Step of a Christian to the highest Wisdom and Happiness We must therefore begin the explanation of this Article from the Force and Notion which here is included in that Name of the Holy Ghost or Holy Spirit for the very same may indifferently and rightly be said both of the Father and of the Son II What the Holy Ghost properly signifies for either of them is a Spirit and Holy for we confess that God is a Spirit and besides that the Angels and the Souls of the Pious are signify'd by this word there must care be taken lest the people by the ambiguity of the Word be led into Eror In this Article therefore it must be taught That the Third Person of the Trinity is understood by the name of the Holy Ghost after which manner in the Holy Scriptures both of the Old Testament sometimes and of the New Testament very frequently he is taken for David prays Ps 50.12 Wisd 9 17. 〈◊〉 1.9 Matt. 1.20 Luc. 1.35 And take not thy Holy Spirit from me In the Book of Wisdom we read Who has known thy counsel except thou give Wisdom and send thy Holy Spirit from above And elsewhere He created it by his Holy Spirit And in the New Testament we are commanded to be baptiz d In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost And we read That the most Holy Virgin did conceive by the Holy Ghost and we are also sent by S. John to Christ Joh. 1.15 who baptizes us with the Holy Ghost and in many other places besides in reading we may meet with this Word And no one ought to wonder III. Why the H ly Ghost h●s no proper name That a proper name is not giv'n to the Third Person as there is to the First and Second for the Second Person
remission both of Sin and Punishment Trid. Sess 5. Can. 5. Aug. 12. de ●eccat Me●● c. 28. when at our first profession of Faith we are cleans'd by Holy Baptism is so fully given us that nothing either of Sin whether contracted by Birth or Wilfully committed remains to be wip'd away or of Punishment to be endur'd But yet by the Grace of Baptism no one is wholly freed from the Infirmity of Nature But rather whereas every one ought to strive against the motions of Concupiscence which forbear not to provoke us to sin hardly can there be found any one who resists either so stoutly or guards his own safety so watchfully as to be able to shun all miscarriages Since therefore it was needful that in the Church there should be a power of Forgiving Sins IV. The Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven deliver'd to the Church Matt. 16.19 and also by some other way than by the Sacrament of Baptism the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven were committed to her Trust whereby sins might be forgiven to every penitent person altho he had sinn'd to the last day of his Life Of this matter we have most clear Testimonies in Holy Scripture Matt. 18.18 For in S. Matthew the Lord says thus to Peter I will give thee the Keys of Heaven and whatsoever Thou shalt bind on Earth shall be bound also in Heaven and whatsoever thou shalt loose on Earth shall be loos'd also in Heaven So also Whatsoever ye shall bind on Earth shall be bound also in Heaven and whatsoever ye shall loose on Earth shall be loos'd also in Heaven And then S. John testifies That the Lord when he breath'd upon the Apostles said Joh. 20.23 Receive ye the Holy Ghost whose Sins soever ye remit they are remitted to them and whose soever Sins ye retain they are retain'd Nor are we to think that this Power is restrained to some certain kinds of Sins For there is no Sin so heinous can be either committed or imagin'd for pardoning whereof the Holy Church has not a Power even as there is no one so vile and wicked to whom if he truly repent him of his Errors a certain hope of Pardon ought not to be offer'd But neither is this very Power so limited as that it may be us'd at some appointed Time only For at what hour soever a sinner will return to Health he is not to be rejected as our Savior has taught when to the Prince of Apostles asking him how oft we must pardon those that offend whether seven times he answered Matt. 18.11 Not to seven times only but even to seventy times seven But if we consider the Ministers of this Divine Power VI. This Power committed to the Bishops and Priests Trid. Sess 14. c. 6. Hieron Ep. 1 p●st med Amb de Can Abet c. 4. it will seem not so large For the Lord gave not the Power of this so Holy a Gift to All but only to the Bishops and Priests The same thing is to be believ'd as to the Way or Manner of exercising this Power For by the Sacraments only so that the Form of them be kept sins may be forgiven but otherwise there is no Power of absolving from sin given to the Church Whence it follows that as well the Priests as the Sacraments are as it were Instruments to the forgiveness of Sins by which Christ our Lord who is the very Author and giver of Salvation works in us Forgiveness of Sins and Righteousness But that the Faithful may with the deepest thankfulness lay hold of and embrace this heavenly Gift VII How great a Grace the Remission of Sins is which by the special Mercy of God is given to his Church Trid. Sess 6. c. 7. Sess 14. c. 1. and that they may come to the use and practice thereof with the more ardent study of Piety the Curat shall endeavour to evidence the dignity and largeness of this Grace and this may be seen chiefly from hence if he shall have well expounded of what efficacy it is that sins are forgiven and that unjust men are made just For it is manifest that this is done by the infinite and immense Power of God which we must needs believe to be the very same with that of raising up the Dead and creating of the World But if Aug Tract 72. in Joan. Aug. lib. 1. de p●ccat merit c. 23. lib. 50. Hom. 23. Amb. de Abel c. 4. as is confirm'd by that saying of S. Austin it be to be thought a harder work to make a wicked Man Good than to create Heaven and Earth out of nothing since that creation cannot be but by an Infinite Power it consequently follows That the Forgiveness of Sinners is much more to be attributed to an Infinite Power Wherefore we own that those sayings of the ancient Fathers are most true wherein they confess that Sins are pardon'd to Men by God only Nor is so wonderful a work to be referr'd to any other Author Isay 43. than to his supream Goodness and Power I am He says the Lord himself by the Prophet I am he that blot out your Iniquities For there seems to be the same Reason in the forgiving of Sins as ought to be observ'd in a Debt of Mony As therefore Mony which is owing cannot be forgiven by any but the Creditor so when we are bound to God only by reason of Sin for we dayly pray Forgive us our Debts it is manifest our Debts can be forgiven us by no body but by himself But this admirable and divine Gift VIII Christ first of all had the Power of forgiving Sins Matt. 9.6 Mar. 2.9 before God was made Man was never imparted to any created Nature Christ our Savior first of all as Man tho he was true God also received this Gift of his Heavenly Father That ye may know that the Son of Man has power on Earth to forgive Sins says he to the lame Man Rise take up thy Couch and go to thy own Home When therefore he was made Man that he might bestow this Forgiveness of Sins upon Men before he ascended up into Heaven there to sit forever at the right-hand of God he granted this Power to the Bishops and Priests in the Church Altho as before we said Christ forgives sins by his own Authority but all the rest only as his Ministers Wherefore if we ought to admire and receive those things chiefly which are done by an Infinite Power IX The Power of forgiving Sins the greatest of Christ's Gifts 1 Pet. 3.18 we may wel enough perceive that this Gift which by the bounty of Christ our Lord is given to his Church is the most precious Yea very Reason also will powerfully stir up the minds of the Faithful to contemplate the greatness of this benefit whereby God our most merciful Father has determin'd to blot out the Sins of the World For he was willing to expiate
call to mind how he has by solemn promise oblig'd himself to God when he was initiated in Baptism and will also consider with himself whether in his Life and Conversation he has behav'd himself in such a manner as the very Profession of Christianity obliges and undertakes That therefore what is to be taught III. What the Name Batism signifies Eight kinds of Baptism See Damass lib. 4. de fide Orthod 10 might be made the more intelligible it must be declar'd what the Nature and Substance of Baptism is after that the signification of the word Baptism shall have bin explain'd There is none who know not that Baptism is a Greek word which tho in Holy Scripture it signifies not only that Washing or Cleansing which is joyn'd with this Sacrament but even all other kinds of Washing yea and sometimes is extended to signifie Suffering also Yet among Church-Writers it signifies not every kind of Washing of the Body but that which is annext to the Sacrament and is not ministred without the prescrib'd Form of Words which signification the Apostles by the Institution of Christ frequently made use of Now the Holy Fathers made use of other names also to signifie the same thing For S. Austin testifies that it was call'd the Sacrament of Faith IV. By what other names the Sacrament of Baptism is call'd D. Aug. Epist 25. in sin Heb. 10.15 because they who receiv'd it made profession of the Faith or Belief of the whole Christian Religion Others call'd this Sacrament Illumination because the heart is illuminated by the Faith we profess in Baptism For thus says the Apostle Remember the former days wherein being illuminated ye underwent a great fight of sufferings to wit signifying when they were Baptiz'd Besides S. Chry. 10.5 Chrysostom in his Oration to those who were baptiz'd calls it both a Purgation whereby through Baptism we purge away the Old Leven that we may be a New Lump and a Burying and a Planting and Christ's Cross The reason of all which Names may be gather'd from the Epistle to the Romans And why S. Denys call'd it the Beginning of the most Holy Commandments S. Dionys de Eccl. Hier. c. 2. is evident seeing that this Sacrament is the Gate as it were through which we enter into the fellowship of Christian Life and from thenceforth begin to obey Gods commands and this will suffice briefly to be taught concerning the Name of Baptism Of the various Names of Baptism See Greg. Naz. Orat. in Sancta Lumina Clem. Alex. lib. 1. Paedag. c. 6. But as to the Definition of the Thing Tho there may many others be gather'd out of Sacred Writers V. The Definition of Baptism yet That seems more fit and suitable which we may learn from our Lords own words in S. John's Gospel and from the Apostle in his Epistle to the Ephesians Joh. 3.5 Except a man be born again of Water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God And the Apostle when he spake of the Church Ephes 5.26 Cleansing her in the Laver of Water in the Word For through Adam by nature we are born the Children of Wrath but by Baptism we are born again in Christ the Children of Grace For he gave power to men to become the Sons of God Joh. 1.13 even to them that believe in his Name who are not born of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the wi●l of man but of God But in what words soever the nature of Baptism chances to be explain'd VI. How the Sacrament of Baptism is made the people are to be taught That this Sacrament is made by Washing with which according to the institution of our Lord and Saviour must needs be us'd certain and solemn words as the Holy Fathers have always taught as is shew'd by the plain testimony of S. Austin The Word is added to the Element and so the Sacrament is made But the Faithful must be carefully taught An Error to be mark'd not to fall into that Error not to think as it is vulgarly us'd to be said that That Water which is kept in the Holy Font to make the Sacrament is the Sacrament For then only is it to be call'd the Sacrament of Baptism when in truth we use Water to wash any one adding those words which were instituted by our Lord. Of this see Chrysost hom 24. in Joan. Aug. l. 6. contra Donatist c. 25. Conc. Florent Trid. item August Tract 80. in Joan. Now because in the Beginning when we spake of Sacraments in general VII The Matter of Bap ●●m is natural Water we said that every Sacrament consists of Matter and Form therefore what each of these is in the Sacrament of Baptism must be declar'd by the Pastors The Matter therefore or the Element of this Sacrament is any kind of natural Water whether of the Sea or the River or a Pond or a Well or a Fountain that is us'd to be call'd Water without any adjunct Joh 3.5 For our Savior has taught Except a man be born again of Water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdom of God ● h. 2.26 and the Apostle says That the Church was cleans'd by the Laver of Water And we read in the Epistle of S. John 1 Joh. 5.8 There are Three which bear record in Earth The Spirit the Water and the Blood● this may be prov'd also from other testimonies of Holy Scipture But that which S. John the Baptist said Ma● 3. that the Lord was coming that would baptize with the Holy Ghost and with Fire this can by no means be understood of the Matter of Baptism but ought to be apply'd either to the inward working of the Holy Ghost or at least to the Miracle which appear'd on the day of Pentecost Act. 2.3 when the Holy Ghost came down from Heaven upon the Apostles in the likeness of Fire whereof in another place Christ our Lord foretold Act. 1.5 John indeed baptiz'd with Water but ye shall be baptiz'd with the Holy Ghost not many days hence But this we may observe from the Holy Scriptures to have bin signifi'd before-hand by the Lord VIII The Matter of Baptism figur'd in the Old Testament Gen. 6.5 2 Pet. 3.10 both in Figures and in the Oracles of the Prophets For the Flood whereby the World was cleans'd because the wickedness of man was great in the Earth and all the thoughts of his heart wholly set upon evil carri'd the Figure and Resemblance of This Water as the Prince of Apostles in his former Epistle shews And the Passage through the Red-Sea signifi'd this Water 1 Cor. 10.1 as S. Paul writing to the Corinthians expounds it 4 Reg 5.24 to omit the cleansing of Naaman the Syrian and the admirable virtue of the Pool of Bethsaiday Job 5.2 and many others of the like kind Wherein it plainly appears
there remain in us the infirmity of the Body The Second Reason Diseases sense of Grief and the motions of Concupiscence is This to wit that we may account them as the Husbandry and Matter whereupon our vertues are to exercise themselves whence we may get a more plentiful Harvest and larger Rewards For when with a patient mind we endure all the inconveniences of this life and by the Divine Assistance bring all the evil affections of our Hearts under the government of Reason we ought assuredly to hope that the time will come 1 Tim. 4.7 when if with the Apostle We have fought the good fight and finish'd the course and kept the faith the Lord the righteous judge in that day will give us also the crown of righteousness which is laid up for us And thus the Lord seem'd to do also with the children of Israel whom tho be deliver'd from the bondage of the Egyptians and drown'd Pharaoh A Figure and his armies in the Sea yet he did not immediately bring them into that blessed Land of Promise ● but first exercis'd them with many and various fortunes and then when he put them into the possession of the Promis'd Land he put the other Inhabitants out of the possessions of their Fathers and some other Nations which they could not destroy were left remaining that God's people might never want occasion of exercising their Warlike Vertue and Courage To these may added The Third Reason that if through Baptism besidse those heavenly gifts wherewith the Soul is adorn'd there were given Bodily endowments also it might well be suspected that many would come to Baptism seeking rather the advantages of This Life than the Glory which is to be hop'd for in the Future Whenas yet what is seen is not false and uncertain 2 Cor. 4. but those good things which a Christian ought always to propose to himself and which are not seen are true and eternal But yet in the mean time the condition of this Life which is full of Miseries XLIX Christians are not without comfort when they suffer wants not its pleasures and joys For what can be more pleasant or desirable to us who now by Baptism are grafted into Christ as branches than to follow him our Captain with the Cross on our Shoulders and not to be tir'd by any labours nor hinder'd by any dangers so as not to press forward with all diligence to the reward of the high calling of God Some to receive of the Lord the Laurel of Virginity others the Crown of Teaching and Preaching others the Palm of Martyrdom and others the other Ornaments of their Vertues Which excellent Badges of Renown and Tokens of Honor would not be given to any unless first we exercis'd our selves in the Stage of this troublesom Life and stoutly kept our ground in the Battel But to return to the Effects of Baptism I. The Third Effect of Baptism Infusion of Grace It must be explain'd that by vertue of this Sacrament we are not only deliver'd from those evils which are truly said to be the greatest of all but also We are enrich'd with the best and most excellent endowments For our Souls are fill'd with Divine Grace whereby being made just and the children of God Mar. 16.17 Eph. 5.26 Sess 6. c. 7. de justifie we are train'd up to be heirs of eternal Salvation also For as it is written he that believes and is Baptiz'd shall be sav'd and the Apostle testifies The Church is cleans'd by the Laver of Water in the Word But Grace as the Council of Trent has decreed to be believ'd of all under pain of an Anathema is not only that by which we have Remission of Sins but it is a Divine Quality inherent in tho Soul and as it were a kind of Splendor and Light which wipes away all the Stains and Spots of our Souls and makes our Souls more beautiful and glorious and this is plainly gather'd from Holy Scripture when it says that Grace is pour'd out and it is us'd to call that Grace the Pledge of the Holy Ghost And to This is added a most noble Train of all Vertues LI. The fourth Effect of Baptism Infusion of Vertues Tit. 3. D. Aug. 23. which together with Grace is pour'd of God into the Soul Wherefore when the Apostle to Timothy says He has sav'd us by the Laver of Regeneration and Renewing of the Holy Ghost which he has pour'd abundantly upon us through Jesus Christ our Saviour S. Austin expounds those words Abundantly pour'd to wit says he For the Remission of Sins and for an abundance of Vertues Of this Effect of Baptism see Chrysost hom ad Neoph. Baptiz Damasc lib. 2. de fide Orthod cap. 36. Lactant. lib. 3. Divin Instit c. 25. Aug. Epist 23. ad Bonifac. item l. 1. de peccat meritis remiss cap. 29. Prosp l. 1. de vocation gent. cap. 9. And then by Baptism we are joyn'd and knit to Christ as Members to the Head As therefore from the Head flows Vertue and Spirit LII The fifth Effect Connexion to Christ our Head whereby all the several parts of the Body are fitly mov'd to perform their proper functions so also of the Fulness of Christ our Lord is shed upon all those who are justifi'd Divine Grace and Vertue which renders us fit and ready for all Offices of Christian Piety That by Baptism we are knit to Christ as Members to the Head See Aug. Ep. 23. item l. 1. de peccat meritis remiss c. 16. Prosp de vocat Gent. lib. 1. c. 9. Bernard Serm. 1. in Coena Dom. D. Thom. 3. p. 7.69 art 5. Nor ought it to seem strange to any LIII Whence the Difficulty of doing well even in those that are Baptiz'd if tho thus we are furnish'd and adorn'd with plenty of vertues yet we find a great deal of difficulty and pains in the very beginning or at least before the compleating of pious and honest actions For it so happens for this reason not as though those vertues from which those pious actions spring are not given us of the Divine Bounty but because after Baptism there remains a sharp strugling of the carnal Desire against the Spirit in which contest notwithstanding it would ill become a Christian either to faint or grow cowardly Phil. 4.8 Since being encourag'd with the goodness of God we ought to strengthen our selves with an assur'd Hope that time will be when by daily use and exercise of living well 2 Cor. 3.11 Whatsoever things are comely whatsoever things are just whatsoever things are holy all these will seem easie and pleasant These things let us willingly consider these things let us chearfully perform that the God of Peace may be with us Besides LIV. The sixth Effect of Baptism A Character by Baptism we are sign'd with a Character which can never be blotted out of our Soul of which there is
rusty with the most filthy stains of sin And now we must speak concerning the Minister of this Sacrament And that he is a Priest LXXI An ordinary Priest the lawful Minister of Confession who has the Ordinary or Delegated Power of Absolving sufficiently appears from the Ecclesiastical Laws For he must have not only the Power of Order but of Jurisdiction also that discharges this Office A clear testimony of this Ministery we have from our Lords words in S. John Joh. 20.23 Whose sins ye remit they are remitted and whose sins ye retain they are retain'd And it is manifest that this was spoken not to all but to the Apostles only to whom the Priests succeeded in this Office And this is very consentaneous for whereas every kind of Grace which is given in this Sacrament is deriv'd to the Members from Christ the Head rightly ought they to administer this to Christ's mystic Body i. e. to the Faithful who only have power of consecrating his true Body especially seeing the Faithful by this Sacrament of Penance are made fit and well dispos'd for receiving the Sacred Eucharist But with how great Religion in old times Note in the Primitive Church the Right of the ordinary Priest was preserv'd is easily gather'd from the antient Decrees of the Fathers Whereby it is provided That no Bishop or Priest shall presume to act any thing in another's Diocess or Parish either by his authority who is over him or unless a great necessity seems to compel it And it was so decreed by the Apostle when he commanded Titus Tit. 1.5 That he should appoint Priests in every City to wit who might feed and educate the Faithful with the Heavenly Food of Doctrin and of the Sacraments Altho if there be imminent danger of Death LXXII At the Point of Death every Priest is the Minister of Confession and the proper Priest cannot be had that by this occasion none might perish the Council of Trent teaches That it has bin observ'd in the Church of God that it is lawful for any Priest not only to remit all kinds of sins to whose jurisdiction soever they belong but even to absolve them from the Bond of Excommunication also Sess 14. c. 6. de Peonit Now besides the Power of Order LXXIII The Qualities of the Minister of Confession and of Jurisdiction which are very necessary It is first Necessary that the Minister of this Sacrament be indu'd both with knowledg and Learning and Prudence For he bears the Person both of a Judg and of a Physician As to the First That he be Learn'd It is evident enough that it is not a common Knowledg which is necessary and which enables him to discover sins of the divers kinds of sins to judg which are weighty which are lighter according to the Rank and quality of the Person But as he is a Physician Prudent Ex Basilio in reg br●vib q. 229. he has need of the greatest prudence also For great care must be taken that those Remedies be apply'd to the sick person which seem to be proper to heal his Soul and to strengthen it for the future against the force of the Distemper Whence the Faithful may understand Of upright Life that every one ought to take extraordinary care to choose himself a Priest whose Integrity of Life Learning and prudent Judgment may commend him Who understands well of how grat weight and Moment the Office is wherein he is plac'd and what Punishment is suitable to every offence and who are to be absolv'd and who to be bound But because there is no one who does not earnestly desire LXXIV Most strictly forbid to reveal the sins of the Penitent that his Wickedness and Shame might be hid The Faithful are to be admonish'd that there is no reason to fear lest those things which they reveal in Confession shall ever be made known to any one by the Priest or lest he may at any time fall into danger thereby For the Sacred Laws will most severely revenge it upon those Priests who shall not have conceal'd with perpetual and religious silence all sins which any one shall have confess'd to them Wherefore in the great Council of Lateran we read thus Cap. 21. Let the Priest take special heed that neither by Word or Sign or by any other way he at any time betray the sinner And now the Order of the Matter requires LXXV The Negligence of sinners reprov'd since we have spoken of the Minister that some special Heads should be explain'd which are not a little suitable to the Use and Practice of Confession For a great part of the Faithful to whom commonly nothing seems more tedious than the passing away of those days which by Ecclesiastical Law are appointed for confession are so far from Christian Perfection that scarcely do they remember those sins which are to be reveal'd to the Priest nor yet do they diligently take care of those things which it is plain have a very great Power to reconcile the Divine Grace to them Wherefore since all endeavor must be us'd to further their Salvation The Priest shall carefully observe in the Penitent LXXVI It must be well observ'd whether the Penitent be contrite whether he have a true contrition for his sins and be stedfastly resolv'd for the time to come to leave them off And if they shall observe him to be so affected LXXVII When the Penitent is found contrite what he is to be exhorted to they shall earnestly admonish and exhort him that for so great and singular a benefit he give God his greatest thanks and never cease to seek of him the protection of his Heavenly Grace Wherewith being arm'd and secur'd he may easily resist and oppose his evil lusts He is also to be taught that he suffer no day to pass without meditating somewhat of the Mysteries of the Passion of our Lord and stir up and inflame himself to imitate him and to love him with the greatest Charity for by this Meditation he will obtain this that he will feel himself every day more and more safe from all the Temptations of the Devil For neither is there any other cause why we yield both our courage and our strength so soon and so easily to be overcome by the Enemy than that we labor not by the Meditation of heavenly things to conceive the Fire of divine Love whereby our Mind might be refresh'd and supported But if the Priest shall understand LXXVIII If he seem not to be contrite what is then to be done that he that is willing to confess does not so bewail his sins as that he may truly be said to be contrite he shall endeavor to affect him with an earnest desire of Contrition that thenceforth being inflam'd with the desire of this excellent Gift he may resolve with himself to beg and beseech it of the mercy of God But first of
proper to the Children of God to be so inflamed with Love and Devotion towards him that being spent with most bitter labors they either feel almost no inconvenience or else they bear all things with a most chearful Spirit But the Pastors shall teach CIV The works of Satisfaction are Prayer Fasting Alms. that every kind of satisfaction is to be referr'd to these three especially Prayer Fasting Alms which indeed answer to those three sorts of Goods of the Soul of the Body and those which are call'd outward Goods all which we have receiv'd of God But there can be nothing more fit and convenient to pluck up the very Roots of sin CV Three Remedies for the Three Sicknesses of the Soul For whereas every thing that is in the world is either the Lust of the Flesh the Lust of the Eyes or the Pride of Life there is no one who sees not that to these three Causes of Sickness are very rightly oppos'd so many Medicins to wit Fasting to the First Alms to the Second and Prayer to the Third Moreover CVI. By Prayers we satisfie to God by Fasting to our selves by Alms to our neighbor if we consider those who are offended by our sins we shall easily understand why to these Three especially all satisfaction is referr'd Now these are God our Neighbor and our Selves wherefore we appease God by Prayer we satisfie our Neighbor by Alms and we chastise our selves by Fasting But because many and divers Afflictions and Calamities press us while we are in this Life CVII A good use of the Afflictions of this Life the Faithful are chiefly to be taught that they who with a patient mind endure whatsoever Labor and Inconvenience God sends upon them have gotten full Matter of Satisfaction and Merit But those who against their Will and resisting as much as they can are forc'd to bear this kind of punishment deprive themselves of all the Fruit of Satisfaction and bear only the Revenge and Punishment of God revenging their sins by his just judgment But herein the immense Goodness and Mercy of God is to be celebrated with the highest Praises and Thanksgivings CVIII One can satisfie for another who has granted this to Human Frailty that One can satisfie for another And this indeed is very proper to this Part of Penance But then as to Contrition and Confession CIX None can be Contrite or Confess for another as there is no one can Grieve or Confess sor another so those that are indu'd with divine Grace can pay in another mans name what is owing to God Wherefore it comes to pass that after a certain sort one may seem to bear anothers Burthen Nor is there any place left for any of the Faithful to doubt of This CX How it comes that one can satisfie for ●nother seeing that in the Apostles Creed we confess the Communion of Saints For since we all are born again to Christ being cleans'd by the same Baptism and are partakers of the same Sacraments but above all since we are strengthen'd with the Meat and Drink of the same Body and Blood of Christ our Lord This most evidently shews that we all are Members of the same Body As therefore neither the Foot performs its Office for its own Profit A similitude but for the profit of the Eyes also and again that the Eyes see is not to be limited to their own advantage only but for the common advantage of all the Members So among us the Offices of Satisfaction ought to be esteem'd common Nor yet is this true without an Exception CXI Medicinal Satisfaction cannot be fulfilled by another if we consider All the Advantages which are receiv'd hereby For the Works of Satisfaction are a kind of Medicin and Cure which is prescrib'd the Penitent for curing the corrupt Affections of his Mind Which kind of Fruit of Advantage it is evident that they altogether want who satisfie not for themselves These things therefore shall be largely and clearly explain'd concerning the Three Parts of Penance Contrition Confession and Satisfaction But this ought specially to be observ'd by the Priests CXII When Absolution is to be deny'd that having heard Confession before they absolve the Penitent from his sins they are to take diligent Care that if haply he has taken away any thing either of the Goods or of the Credit of his Neighbor let him make full recompence for the sin whereof he seems deservedly to be condemn'd For no one is to be absolv'd unless he first promises to restore every one his own But because there are many Note who tho they largely promise that they will sufficiently do their duty yet it is certain that they never perform their promise Such are by all means to be compell'd to make restitution And that of the Apostle is often to be inculcated That he who stole now steal no more Ephes 4.10 but rather let him labor working with his hands that which is Good that he may have wherewith to give to him that suffers need But in appointing the punishment of Satisfaction CXIII How great Satisfaction is to be impos'd the Priests will consider that nothing is to be appointed by them for their own pleasure but that all things are to be directed by Justice Prudence and Piety And that sins may seem to be measur'd CXIV The Old Canons of Penance to be propos'd and Penitents may the better know the weight of their sins it will be worth the while sometimes to signifie to them what punishments have bin appointed for certain Faults Note by the Prescription of antient Canons Note The Nature of the Fault therefore shall temper the measure of all Satisfaction But of all kinds of Satisfaction CXV What kind● of satisfaction especially is to be impos'd it will be most suitable to appoint Penitents to give themselves to Prayer upon certain determin'd days and that they make Prayers to God for all men and especially for them who are gon out of this Life to the Lord. And they must also be exhorted CXVI The Vertue of Voluntary Penance to be added to the vertue of Sacramental that they often take upon themselves freely of their own accord to repeat those services of Satisfaction which were appointed by the Priest And that they so order their manners that when all those things which belong to the Sacrament of Confession are diligently perform'd yet that they never intermit the studies of the Vertue of Penance But if sometimes also Public Penance is to be prescrib'd for Public Offence CXVII Public Satisfaction to be impos'd upon public Offenders altho' the Penitent may refuse and pray to be excus'd yet he is not easily to he heard But he must he perswaded that those things which are wholsom or saving both to himself and others he accept with a free and chearful mind These things concerning the Sacrament of Penance and the several
50. in c. 12. Zach. super illud In die planctûs magnus erit fructus thori immaculati THE CATECHISM FOR THE CURATES BY THE DECREE OF THE Council of TRENT PART III. Of Gods COMMANDMENTS contain'd in the DECALOG THat the Decalogue is the Sum and Epitome of all Laws S. Augustin has observ'd in his Writings For tho the Lord spake many things I. The Decalog the Sum of all Laws Quaest. 140. super Exod. Matth. 22. yet there were but Two Tables of Stone given to Moses which are call'd the Tables of the Testimony to be in the Ark. And all the other things which God commanded if they are diligently observ'd so as to be understood do depend upon those Ten Commandments which were written in the Two Tables And how again those Ten Precepts depend upon these Two to wit of the Love of God and of a man's Neighbor upon which depends the whole Law and the Prophets Seeing therefore that it is the Sum of the whole Law II. The Pastors rightly to understand and explain the Decalog the Pastors ought to be conversant in the contemplation thereof Day and Night not only to direct their own Life according to this Rule but also to instruct the People committed to their charge in the Law of the Lord. For Mal. 2.7 Let the Priests mark this the Priests Lips preserve Knowledge and they enquire of the Law at his mouth because he is the Angel of the Lord of Hosts Which thing most especially belongs to the Pastors of the New Law who are nearer to God and ought to be transformed from Brightness to Brightness as by the Spirit of the Lord And seeing that Christ our Lord call'd them by the name of Light it is properly their Parts 2 Cor. 3. ● Gal. 6.1 to be a Light to those that are in Darkness the Teachers of the Vnwise the Instructors of Babes and if any one be overtaken in any fault those who are Spiritual ought to restore such a one But in Confessions they bear the person of a Judge III. The knowledg of the Decalog very necessary to Confession and give Sentence according to the quality and kind of the Offence Wherefore unless they are minded that their own Ignorance shall betray themselves and deceive others it is necessary that they be very watchful and very well skill'd in the Interpretation of the Divine Laws that they may make a right Judgment concerning every Action and the Omission of every Duty and as the Apostle has it 2 Tim. 4.16 That they teach found Doctrin i.e. free from Error and that they heal the Diseases of Souls Tit. 2.14 which are their Sins that the People may be acceptable to God following good works And now in Discourses of this kind IV. Why the Decalog so religiou●●ly to be observ'd the Pastor shall propose both to himself and to others such Arguments as may perswade to the Obedience of the Law And amongst other things which may well drive men to the Observance of the Commands of this Law This has very great force That God is the Author of this Law For tho it be said to be given by Angels Gal. 13.29 yet no one can doubt that God himself is the Author of the Law Of the truth whereof not only the Words of the Lawgiver himself which shall by and by be explain'd afford sufficient testimony but almost infinite other places of Scripture which the Pastors will easily meet with For there is no one who feels not V. God the Author of the Law of Nature that a Law is implanted in his Soul by God whereby he can discern good from evil that which is honest from that which is dishonest what is just from what is unjust The force and Vertue of which Law seeing it differs not from that which is written who is there that dares deny that God is the Author as of the inward so also of the written Law Therefore when God gave the Law to Moses VI. Why he gave the Written Law it must be taught that he rather made this Divine Light which by ill manners and daily perversness was now almost darkn'd much more illustrious than that he gave a new one lest happly the People hearing the Law of Moses spoken irreverently of might think themselves not bound to the Observation of it For most certain it is that we are not to obey these Commandments because they were given by Moses VII Why we must obey the Laws of the Decalog but because they are implanted in our Souls and are explain'd and confirmed by Christ our Lord. Now this Consideration will help much VIII Obedience to the Law of God how to be enforc'd and has great force to perswade that it is God who made this Law Of whose Wisdom and Justice we cannot doubt nor can we escape his infinite Power and Vertue Wherefore when by the Prophets God commanded that the Law should be observ'd he said that he was the Lord God and in the beginning of the Decalog I am the Lord thy God Exod. 20.1 and elsewhere Malach. 1.6 If I am a Lord where is my Fear Now that God has declar'd his Will IX God to be thanked for the giving of the Law wherein is contain'd our Salvation will stir up the minds of the Faithful not only to keep the Commandments of God but also to be thankful to him And therefore the Scripture in many places declaring this very great Benefit warns people to observe its Dignity and God's Beneficence as in Deuteronomy Deut. 4.6 This says it is your Wisdom and your Understanding before the People that all hearing these Commandments may say This is a wise and an understanding People and a great Nation And again in the Psalms Psal 147.10 He has not dealt so with every Nation and he has not manifested his judgments to them But if the Curat shall moreover declare the manner of the giving of the Law from the Authority of Scripture X. With how great Majesty the Law was given the Faithful will easily understand how piously and humbly they ought to honor or reverence the Law receiv'd from God himself Exod. 19.10 for it was commanded of God to all that Three Days before the giving of the Law they should wash their Clothes and not touch their Wives that so they might be more holy and better prepar'd to receive the Law and be present on the Third Day and then when they were brought to the Mountain from whence the Lord by Moses was about to deliver the Law Moses alone was commanded to ascend up into the Mountain whither the Lord came with very great Majesty and fill'd the place with Thunder and Lightning with Fire and thick Clouds and began to speak with Moses and gave him the Law Which thing the Divine Wisdom would not have done XI Why the Law given in this terrible manner but to admonish
shall shew that out of all the Nations under heaven God chose One which had its Original from Abraham whom he would have to be a Sojourner in the land of Canaan The possession whereof when he had promis'd him yet both he and his Posterity were Pilgrims for more than five hundred years before they inhabited the promis'd Land In which Pilgrimage he never left the care of them Psal 10.4 they went indeed from Country to Country and from one Kingdom to another People but yet he suffer'd no injury to be done them but punish'd even Kings for their sakes But before they went down into Egypt he sent a Man before by whose Wisdom both they and the Egpytians might be deliver'd from Famin. But in Egypt he embrac'd them with so much kindness that tho Pharaoh oppos'd and set himself upon their destruction yet were they increas'd after a wonderful manner and when they were grievously afflicted and very hardly us'd as Bondslaves he gave them Moses for their Leader who led them forth with a mighty hand Of this deliverance especially the Lord makes mention in the beginning of the Law in these words I am the Lord thy God who brought thee out of the Land of Egypt out of the house of Bondage From hence this is chiefly to be observ'd by the Curat III. Why God chose the small Family of Abraham Deut. 7. that there was One chosen out of all Nations by God which he call'd his People and to whom he was pleas'd to grant the knowledge and worship of himself not that this One was more just or numerous than the rest even as God admonishes the Hebrews but because so it pleas'd God rather to propagate and enrich a small and poor Nation whereby his Power and Goodness might be made more apparent and illustrious to all Seeing therefore that this was the Condition of those men Note he stuck close to them and lov'd them so that tho he were the Lord of Heaven and Earth yet he was not asham'd to be call'd their God Deut. 10.15 whereby he provok'd the other Nations to emulation that the Israelite's happiness being perfect all men might be take them selves to the worship of the true God even as S. Paul also testifies that he provok'd to emulation his own Flesh Rom. 11.14 by proposing the happiness of the Gentiles and the true knowledge of God wherein he had instructed them And then he shall teach the Faithful that God suffer'd the Hebrew Fathers to pilgrimage for a long while IV. Why the People of Israel suffer'd so long and permitted their Posterity to be oppressed with a cruel Bondage and to be vex'd for this cause that we might be taught that none are made God's Friends but the Worlds Enemies and Strangers in the Earth And therefore that we are more easily receiv'd into familiarity with God if we have nothing to do with the World And also that being restor'd to the service of God we may know how much more happy they are that serve God than they that serve the World Of which things the Scripture warns us 2 Par. 8. for it says Nevertheless they shall serve them that they may know the difference betwixt my service and the service of the kingdom of the Earth He shall further shew V. Why God perform'd not his promise so long that after five hundred years God perform'd his Promise that that People might be sustain'd with Faith and Hope For God will have his Children always to depend upon himself and put all their Hope in his Goodnes● as shall be said in the Explication of the first Commandment Lastly VI. Why the Law given at such a time and place he shall observe the Time and Place when and where the people of Israel receiv'd this Law from God to wit after they were brought out of Egypt and came into the Wilderness that being allur'd with the remembrance of a fresh benefit and yet affrighted with the ruggedness of the place in which they were they might be better dispos'd to receive the Law for Men are very much bound to those whose Bounty they have experienc'd and betake themselves to the Protection of God when they find themselves destitute of all human hope Whence we may learn Note that the Faithful are so much the more willing to receive the heavenly Doctrin by how much the more they have abstracted themselves from the deceits of the World and the pleasures of the Flesh as it is written by the Prophet Isay 28.9 Whom shall he teach knowledge and whom shall he make to understand doctrin them that are wean'd from the Milk and drawn from the Breasts The Curat therefore shall endeavor VII The beginning of the Law of God and as much as he can cause the Faithful always to have these words in their minds I am the Lord thy God Whence they may learn that they have the Creator by whom they were made are preserv'd for their Law-giver And therefore that they can rightly take up that saying He is the Lord our God and we are the people of his pasture and the sheep of his hand the frequent and earnest admonition of which words will have this Efficacy that the Faithful will be made more ready to observe the Law and abstain from sin But that which follows Who brought thee out of the Land of Egypt VIII A Motive of singular Piety out of the house of Bondage Altho this seems to agree only to the deliverance of the Jews from the Bondage of the Egyptians Yet if we consider the inward nature of universal Salvation it much more properly belongs to Christians Colos 1.13 who are taken of God not out of an Egyptian servitude but from the dominion of Sin and from the power of Darkness and are translated into the Kingdom of the Son of his Love The Greatness of which Benefit the Prophet Jeremy considering Hierom 10.14 propheci'd thus Behold the days come says the Lord and it shall no more be said The Lord lives who brought the Children of Israel out of the Land of Egypt But the Lord lives who brought the Children of Israel out of the Land of the North and from all Countries whither I had scatter'd them and I will bring them back into their own Land which I gave to their Fathers Behold I will send many Fishers says the Lord and they shall fish them And the rest For our most indulgent Father thro his own Son has gather'd together his Children that were scatter'd abroad that now being no longer the servants of Sin Luc. 1.24 but of Justice We might serve him in Holiness and Justice before him all our days Wherefore against all Temptations the Faithful shall use as a Buckler IX How we must resist Temptations Rom. 6. that of the Apostle How shall we who are dead to Sin live any longer therein We are not now our own but his who dy'd and
to be another Commandment will have the two last to have the Force of one Commandment only● but S. Austin dividing those last will have these Words to belong to the First Commandment which Opinion because it is most celebrated in the Church we willingly follow Altho we have in readiness that most true Reason that it was fit that every one's Reward and Punishment should be joynd with the First Commandment Vid. Aug. super Exod. quaest 71. in Ps 32. Serm. 2 sententia D. Aug. de praeceptorum distinctione magis placet Eccelesiae Vide D. Thom. 1 2 q. 100. art 4. And let no one think that the Art of Painting Carving or making Images is forbid by this Commandment XXXIII The use of Images not against this Commandment for in Scripture by God's Command we find that there were made Figures and Images of Cherubims and the Brasen Serpent It remains therefore that we teach Images to be forbidden for this Reason that nothing should be withdrawn from the true Worship of God to the Worshiping of Images as Gods Now as to this Commandment XXXIV Two things here forbidden First to worship Idols there are two VVays especially whereby it is evident that the Majesty of God is very grievously offended The One is when Idols and Images are worship'd as Gods or when it is believ'd that there is any Divinity or Vertue in them for which they are to be worship'd or that any thing is to be begg'd of them or that any Trust is to be put in them as of Old the Gentils did who plac'd their Hopes in Idols which thing the Sacred Scriptures in many places reprove The Other is Secondly by Art to frame any likeness of the Divinty when any one endeavours to make any Shape of the Divinity as tho he could be seen with bodily Eyes or express'd in Figures For who as Damascen says can describe God who cannot be seen who has no Body who can be circumscrib'd with no Limits nor describ'd under any Figure VVhich thing is more largly explain'd in the Second Council of Nice Damasc lib. 4. de Ortho. Fid. c. 17. Concil Nicen. 2. Act. 3. Therefore the Apostle said excellently Rom. 1.23 That they had changed the Glory of the incorruptible God into the likeness of Birds Beasts and Serpents For they reverenec'd all these things as Gods when they put up their Images wherefore the Israelites when they proclaim'd before the Image of the Calf Exod. 24. These are thy Gods ô Israel which brought thee out of the Land of Egypt were call'd Idolaters because they chang'd their Glory into the likeness of a Calf which eats Hay When therefore the Lord forbids other Gods to be worship'd XXXV The meaning of this last part of the Commandment Isay 40.18 Act. 7. utterly to take away all Idolatry he forbad any Image of the Divinity to be drawn or made in Metal or any other matter which Esaias declaring says Like to what will ye make God or what Image will ye make for him Now that this is the meaning of this Commandment besides the Writings of the Holy Fathers who as has bin shew'd in the seventh Council do thus interpret it Deut. 4.16 those words in Deuteronomy also do sufficiently declare where Moses willing to draw the People from Idolatry said Ye saw not any likeness in the Day wherein the Lord spake with you in Horeb out of the midst of the Fire Which the most wise Lawgiver therefore said lest being led by any error they might make the Image of the Divinity and give to a Creature the Honor due to God Moreover XXXVI It is lawful by some figures to shadow out the Trinity let no one think that any Offence is committed against Religion and the Law of God when any Person of the most holy Trinity is express'd by certain signs which have appear'd as well in the Old as in the New Testament For there is none so rude as to think that the Divinity is express'd by that Image but let the Pastor teach that by them are declar'd some Properties or Actions which are attributed to God As when by Daniel the Ancient of Days is describ'd siting in a Throne before whom the Books were opened there was signified Gods Eternity and infinite VVisdom whereby he beholds all both the Thoughts and Actions of Men that he might judge concerning them Angels also are painted in Human shape with Wings XXXVII The manner of Painting Angels approv'd that the Faithful may understand how prone and ready they are to perform Service of the Lord for Mankind for they all are ministring Spirits for them who receive the Inheritance of Salvation But the shape of a Dove XXXVIII Figures of the holy Ghost and Tongues like as of Fire which in the Gospel and in the Acts of the Apostles signifie the Properties of one Holy Ghost are much better known than to need a larger Explication Heb. 1.14 Matth. 3.16 Mar. 1.10 Luc. 3.21 Joan 1.32 Act. 2.2 But when Christ our Lord XXXIX The use of Images of Christ and of the Saints approv'd and his most Holy and Pure Mother and all the other Saints endu'd with Human Nature bore the likeness of Men To make and honor their Images was not only not forbidd'n by this Commandment but was always accounted Holy and a most certain Argument of a grateful mind which thing both the Monuments of the Apostles Times and of the General Council and the Writings of so many of the most Holy Fathers agreeing among themselves do evidence But the Curat shall shew not only that it is lawful to have Images in the Church and to give them Honor and Worship seeing that the Honor which is given to them is to be referr'd to the Prototype but he shall also declare That this has bin done to this very day with the great Advantage of the Faithful Lib. 4. de fid orth c. 17. Nic. Syn. passim as we may learn from Damascen's Book which he wrote concerning Images and from the Seventh Council which is the Second Council of Nice But because the Enemy of Mankind by his Deceits and Fallacies endeavors to abuse every the most holy Institution But if haply any Offence shall be committed by the People about this Matter following the Decree of the Council of Trent Trid. Conc. sess 25. as far as may be he shall study to correct it and shall explain the Decree it self also to the People when there is occasion Then he shall teach the unlearned LX. The lawful use of Images and those that understand not the use of Images that Images were made to learn the History of both Testaments and to renew the Memory thereof because being stirr'd up with the remembrance of Divine Matters they inflame more earnestly to the Worship and Love of God himself and he shall also shew that the Images of the Saints are plac'd in the Churches both
of God tho they durst write it as tho the Divine Power were in those Letters and not in the thing But tho this be put in the singular Number Thou shalt not take the Name of God VII The same honor to be given to all the Names of God This is not to be understood of any one Name but of all the Names which are us'd to be attributed to God for there are many Names ascrib'd to God as Lord Almighty Lord of hosts King of Kings Strong and others of the like sort which we read in Scripture all which have the like and the same Veneration And then it must be taught VIII We are bound to know and to honor Gods Name after what manner due Honor is to be given to Gods Name for it is not fit that any should be ignorant how very profitable and necessary it is to Christian People in whose mouth the Prayers of God are daily celebrated Now tho there be many ways of honoring Gods Name IX By what means Gods Name to be honor'd First yet in those whereof we are presently to speak the whole force and weight of all seems to be First therefore God is honor'd when in the face of all the World we faithfully confess him to be God and our Lord and both acknowledge and declare Christ to be the Author of Salvation As also when we give holy and diligent heed to Gods Word Secondly wherein his Will is reveal'd and are daily meditating thereon and studiously learn it according to every ones Ability and Imployment And again Thirdly we honor and worship Gods Name when for Duty and Religion sake we celebrate Gods Praises and render him singular Thanks for all things Psal 20.2 as well for Adversity as for Prosperity For thus says the Prophet Bless the Lord ô my Soul and forget not all his Benefits And there are very many of Davids Psalms wherein with an excellent kind of Piety toward God he most sweetly sings the Divine Praises There is the Admirable Example of the Patience of Job who when he fell into those exceeding great and horrible Calamities yet he never forbore to praise God with an exalted and unconquer'd Soul When therefore we are afflicted with grief of Mind or Body with Miseries and Troubles let us presently turn all our Study and all the Powers of our Souls to praise God saying that of Job Job 1.21 The Lords Name be praised Nor is Gods Name less honor'd if we faithfully implore his help Fourthly to wit that either he would free us from them or else would give us Constancy and Strength couragiously to endure them Psal 49.15 For this the Lord requires Call upon me says he in the day of tribulation and I will deliver thee and thou shalt honor me Clear Examples of which kind of Imploring God are found both in many other places and especially in the 26.13 and 118 Psalms Moreover Fifthly we honor Gods Name when for more assurance and belief we call God to be a witness and this way differs much from the former For those things which we mentioned before are of their own nature so good and excellent that to Man nothing can be more happy nothing can be more desirable than diligently to exercise himself Night and Day in performing them I will bless the Lord Psal 33.1 says David at all times his praise shall ever be in my mouth But tho an Oath be good X. Why the frequent use of Swearing forbidd'n yet the frequent use thereof is not commendable Now the reason of this difference lies herein that an Oath is appointed for this cause only to be a kind of Remedy of Human Frailty and a necessary means to prove what we say For as it is not fit to take Physick for the Body A Similitude unless there be need and the frequent use thereof is very hurtful so also it is not good to use any Oath but when there is some just and weighty cause which to use frequently is so far from being profitable that indeed it is very hurtful Wherefore S. Chrysostom excellently teaches XI Whence the Custom of Swearing Ad pop Antioch hom 26. That Not at the beginning of the World but when it began to grow old and when Wickedness had far and wide spread it self over the whole Earth and when nothing contain'd it self in its own Place and Order but all things being jumbled together and troubled were tumbled upside down and brought into utter Confusion then at last after a long time that Custom of Swearing broke in upon Men For when Mens Perfidiousness and Wickedness was grown to that pass that no one could easily be brought to believe one another then did they call God as a Witness But whereas in this part of the Commandment XII The first way of Swearing the best way is to teach the Faithful how they ought to Swear piously and holily it must first be said That to Swear is nothing else but to call God as a Witness by what Form or Conception of Words soever it be done For to say God it Witness and by God is the same thing That is also an Oath XIII The second way of Swearing when for more Belief we swear by Creatures as by the Holy Gospel of God by the Cross by the Relics of the Saints their Name and such like Yet these things of themselves give not any Strength or Authority to an Oath but it is God himself that does it the Splendor of whose Divine Majesty shines forth in those things VVhence it follows that they who Swear by the Gospel Swear by God himself whose Truth is contain'd and declar'd in the Gospel And in like manner they that do Swear by the Saints who are the Temple of God and who believ'd the Truth of the Gospel and with all Reverence obey'd it and dispers'd it abroad in all Countries and Nations That Oath that is made with a Curse XIV The third way of Swearing is of the same nature such as is that of S. Paul I call God to witness upon my Soul For by this means he that swears thus subjects himself to the Judgment of God as to the Revenger of a Lye Yet we deny not therefore that some of these Forms may so be tak'n as not to have the Force of an Oath but yet it is useful even in these cases also to observe what was said concerning an Oath and wholly to direct and reduce them to the same Rule and Order Now there are two kinds of an Oath XV. An Oath Twofold Assertory The First is that which is Assertory to wit when we religiously affirm any thing concerning any Matter present or past as the Apostle in the Epistles to the Galatians Gal. 1.20 Behold before God I lye not But the other is call'd Promissory Promissory to which also belong Threatnings and have Ralation to the Time to
we should be negligent and uneasy in the Discharge of this Duty which without very grievous Sin we cannot omit Vide de Consecr dist 1. in Decret Titul de Feriis Conc. Matisc 2. c. 1. 37. Tribur c. 35. Ignat. in Epist ad Philip. Leon. serm 3. de Quadrag August Serm. 251. de tempore And then the Curat may shew XXXVIII How good and profitable it is to observe this Commandment how great the Vertue of this Commandment is since those who truly observe it seem to be in the Presence of God and to speak freely with him For in making Prayers we both contemplate the Majesty of God and freely talk with him And in hearing the Preachers we receive the Voice of God which throw their Labor who preach of Divine Matters holily and devoutly reaches even to our Ears And then we adore Christ our Lord present in the Sacrifice of tile Altar and these are the good things which they enjoy especially who diligently obey this Commandment But those who altogether neglect this Law XXXIX How great a Sin to break this Commandment seeing that they obey not God and his Church and hear not his Commandments are Enemies both of God and of his Holy Laws which may be observ'd from hence because this Precept is of such a kind as may be observ'd without any pains For since God imposes no labor upon us which yet were it the hardest in the VVorld we ought to undergo for his sake but only commands us to be free and quiet on the Holy Days from wordly cares it is a sign of great rashness to refuse Obedience to this Commandment Hereof the Punishments which God has inflicted upon those that violated it Numb 1.15 ought to be for an Example to us as we may see from the Book of Numbers That therefore we may not run into Gods Displeasure Note it will be worth our while often to think upon this word Remember and to lay before our Eyes those mighty Profits and Advantages which as has been shew'd before may be had by the ●bservance of Holy Days And many other things belonging to the same purpose which a good and diligent Pastor can largely and fully discuss as Occasion shall require The Fourth COMMANDMENT of the DECALOGVE Honor thy Father and thy Mother that thou mayst live long upon the Land which the Lord thy God shall give thee SInce the highest Vertue and Dignity is in the former Commandments I. How this Commandment agrees with the former those which we now proceed upon because they are very necessary rightly claim the next place For those directly have Regard to God as their End but these teach us Charity towards our Neighbor altho at the long Run they lead to God himself that is to that ultimate End for the sake whereof we love our Neighbor Matt. 22.39 Mar. 12.31 wherefore Christ our Lord said that those two Commandments of loving God and our Neighbor are like one to the other Vide Aug. in Psal 32. Serm. 1. item lib. 3. de Doctr. Christ cap. 10. lib. 50. Hom. hom 38. D. Thom. 2.2 quaest 17. art 8. Now it can hardly be express'd how great Advantages this Point has II. The Love of God shines forth in the Love of our Parents 1 Joh. 6.20 since it both bears its own fruits and those large and excellent and is as it were a Sign whereby the Obedience and Duty of the First Commandment is apparent He that loves not his Brother says S. John whom he sees how can he love God whom he sees not After the same manner if we do not Reverence and Honor our Parents whom we ought to love 〈◊〉 to God seeing they are almost always in our Sight what Honor what Worship will we give to God the Supream and Best Parent who is above our Sight Whence it is plain that both Commandments agree among themselves Now the use of this Commandment is very large III How large this Commandment is For besides those that have begotten us there are many other besides whom we ought to Honor as Parents by reason either of their Power or Dignity or Profitableness or some other excellent Function or Office Besides it eases the Labor of Parents and Superiors For seeing their chief Care is that those whom they have in their Power live well and agreeably to the Divine Law this Care will be very easy if all Men understood that even by Gods Authority and Admonition the greatest Honor is to be given to Parents Which that we may do it is needful to know a kind of Difference between the Commandments of the First and those of the Second Table These things therefore are first to be explain'd by the Curat and first of all let him Teach That the Divine Laws of the Decalogue were cut in Two Tables In one of which as we are taught by the Holy Fathers those Three were contain'd which have already been explain'd but the rest were included in the other Table Vide Clem. Alexand. lib. 6. Strom. satis ante finem August in Exod. q. 71. Epist 119. cap. 11. D. Thom. 1.2 q. 100. art 4. And this Description was very fit for us IV. Mark this Reason that the very Order of the Commandments might distinguish the Reason of them For whatsoever in Sacred Scripture is commanded by the Divine Law it arises from one of these Two Kinds For in every Duty our Love either towards God or towards Man is seen Now the Three first Commandments teach our Love towards God But that which belongs to the Conjunction and Society of Men is contain'd in the other Seven Commandments Wherefore it was not without Reason that such a Distinction was made that 〈◊〉 Commandments 〈…〉 to the First and others to the Last Table For in the Three first Commandments V. The first Difference betwixt the Commandments of the first and second Table whereof has bin spoken God who is the Supreme Good is as it where the subject Matter which they handle but in the rest the good of our Neighbor In the First is propos'd our greatest Love in the rest our next Love the First respect their End the rest those things that are referr'd to the End Vide Aug. in Psal 32. Ser. 1. D. Thom. 22. q. 122. art 1 2. in opusc 7. c. p. de primo praecept Besides The second difference the Love of God depends thereupon For God is of himself and not for the sake of any other thing to be lov'd above all things but the Love of our Neighbor has its beginning from our Love of God and is to be directed to it as to a certain Rule For if we account our Parents Dear if we obey our Masters if we reverence our Betters we must do it specially for this Cause because God is their Procreator and would have them above others by whose Labor he rules and defends the rest Who
Punishments Lastly The Third which is a very soul thing let them be advis'd not to take that preposterous Counsel in the Education and Teaching of their Children For very many are imploi'd in this only Study and Care to leave their Children Riches and Mony a fair and large Estate whom they perswade not to Religion or Piety or learning of good Arts but to Covetousness and to increase their Family Nor are they careful of the Esteem or Salvation of their Children so that they have but Mony and are very Rich than which what can be said or thought more base And so it comes to pass that they leave them not so properly their Wealth as their Wickedness and their Vices to whom they become Guides not towards Heaven but towards everlasting Punishment Let the Priest therefore instruct Parents with the best Precepts and stir them up to the Fxample and parallel Vertue of Tobias Tob. 4. that when they have well train'd up their Children to Holiness and the Worship of God they may receive the plentiful fruits of their Love Observance and Obedience The Fifth COMMANDMENT of the DECALOGVE Thou shalt not kill THe great Happiness which is propos'd to Peace-makers I. How profitable it i● to explain this Commandment because they shall be call'd the Children of God ought very much to move the Pastors diligently and exactly to teach the Faithful what is to be learn'd from this Commandment For there can be no better way to reconcile the minds of Men than that the Law of this Precept rightly explain'd be so holily kept as it ought to be of all because then we may hope that Men being joyn'd one to another with the strongest Agreement of Hearts may preserve Peace and Concord intire But how necessary it is that this Commandment should be explain'd II. How necessary appears from hence That immediately after the drowning of the whole Earth this was the only thing which God first forbad Men Gen. 9.5 The bloud of your Lives says he will I require at the hand of all Beasts and at the hand of Man And in the Gospel among the Old Laws which first were explain'd by our Lord this is first whereof it is thus written in S. Matthew Matth. 5.22 For it has been said Thou shalt not kill And the rest which in that very place are recorded concerning this Matter And the Faithful ought attentively and willingly to hear this Commandment III. How this Commandment to be heard For if the Force of it be observ'd it is very available to defend every ones Life because in those words Thou shalt not kill Man-slaughter is utterly forbidd'n Therefore all Men ought to receive it with so great a pleasure of mind IV. This Command pleasant to be heard as tho if Gods anger being propos'd it were specially forbidd'n under the heaviest Punishments that none should be hurt Therefore as this Commandment is pleasant to be heard So the caution against this Sin which is forbidden by this Commandment ought to be full of Delight But when our Lord explain'd the Force of this Law V. Two things here commanded he shews that two things are contain'd in it The One that we do not kill which we are forbidd'n to do The other which we are commanded to do That we embrace our Enemies with a friendly Agreement and Love have Peace with all Men and lastly patiently to suffer all Inconveniences Now that Killing is forbidd'n VI. What killing not forbidd'n here First Exod. 12. throughout it is first to be taught what kind of Killing is not forbidd'n by the Law of this Commandment For to kill Beasts is not forbidd'n for if it be allow'd of God that Men should be fed by them it is but meet they be kill'd Of which matter S. Austin says thus When we hear says he Thou shalt not kill we understand not this to be spoken of Fruits because they have no Sense nor of irrational Animals because they are joyn'd with us on no account De civit Dei lib. 1. c. 20. Item de morib Manich. lib. 2. c. 13 14 15. There is another sort of killing allow'd Secondly which belongs to such Magistrates as have the Power of Death whereby by the Rule and Judgment of the Laws they punish wicked Men and defend the Innocent In which Office so that they behave themselves justly they are not only not guilty of Murder but very exactly obey this Divine Law which forbids Murder For seeing the end of this Law is for the Preservation of Mans Life and Safety the Punishments appointed by the Magistrates who are the lawful Avengers of evil have respect hither that all Boldness and Injury being repress'd by Punishments Man's Life may be safe Wherefore David says Psal 108.8 I will soon slay all the Sinners of the Earth that I might destroy out of the city of the Lord all the workers of iniquity Aug. Epist 154. citatur 23. q. 5. c. de occidentibus Item Epist 54. citatur ibid. c. Non est iniquitatis vide adhuc Ibid. alia capita D. Thom. 2.2 q. 64. a. 2. q. 108. a. 3. For which reason Thirdly neither do they sin who in a just War not driv●● by Lust or Cruelty but with the only desire of the Public Good take away the Lives of the Enemies Aug. de Civit. Dei c. 26. citatur 23. q. 5. c. Miles Vide item de Bello D. Thom. 2.2 q. 40 per A. Articulos There are other Slaughters besides of the same kind Fourthly which are done expresly by God's Command The Sons of Levi sinn'd not tho they kill'd so many thousand Men in one day upon which Slaughter done God thus spake to them Exod. 23.26 Ye have consecrated your Hands this Day to the Lord. Nor is he guilty of this Commandment Fifthly who kills a Man not willingly nor advisedly but by accident Concerning which matter it is thus written in the Book of Deuteronomy Deut. 19. He that ignorantly slays his Neighbor and is prov'd to have had no hatred against him in time past but went with him honestly into the Wood to fell Timber and in the hewing down of Timber his Ax flew out of his Hand and the Head of his Ax slipping off the Handle struck his Friend and kill'd him These Slaughters are of that kind which because they are done not with a Will or Design are therefore in no case to be reckon'd sinful which is prov'd by S. Austin's Sentence for he says God forbid that those things we do either for a good or lawful End if beyond our Intention any Evil happen it should be laid to our charge Vide Aug. Epist 154. citatur 23. q. 5. c. de Occidendis Item vide multa capita dist 5. D. Thom. 2.2 q. 64. a. 8. Trid. Sess 14. de Reform c. 7. Where VII Two Cases to be observ'd notwithstanding Sin may be committed
and scarcer Which thing belongs also to all things necessary for Food and Life to whom pertains that Curse of Solomon He that with-holds Corn shall be cursed by the People Which kind of Persons the Curats shall admonish of their Wickedness and chide them soundly and plainly shew them the Punishments threatned to those Sins Thus far of what is forbidden XXI Of Restitution Now we come to what is commanded Where Satisfaction or Restitution has the first place for the Sin is not forgiven unless the Thing taken away be restor'd But because not He only who committed the Theft XXII Who are bound to Restitution or who stole ought to restore it but all they also who were Partakers of the Theft are bound to this Law of Restitution it must be shew'd who they are that cannot be excus'd from this Necessity of making Satisfaction and Restitution Now there are many sorts of them First Those that command Theft and the first is of those that command others to steal and these are not only the Companions and Authors of Thefts but even the very wors t Thieves of all Another sort is of those Secondly Th●se that perswade to it who being like the former in Will but not in Powor are notwithstanding to be rank'd in that Degree of Thieves who tho they cannot command are yet the Persuaders and Procurers of Thefts Thirdly Those that consent to it The third sort is of those that consent with Thieves The fourth sort is of those Fourthly Those that partake od it Psal 49. that being Partners in the Thefts make a Gain to themselves from thence if so be that it may be call'd Gain which unless they reject exposes them to eternal Torments to whom David speaks thus When thou saw'st a Thief thou consentedst with him The fifth sort of Thieves is of those Fifthly Those that do not hinder it who when they could hinder Thefts to be done are so far from opposing and hindring them that they permit and give them leave The sixth sort is of those Sixthly Those that do not discover it who certainly know both that the Theft was committed and where it was done and yet do not discover it but make as tho they were ignorant of it The last sort is that which contains all the Helpers Seventhly Those that protect the Thief Concealers and Defenders of Thieves and those who give them House and Harbor All which kind of Persons ought to satisfie those who had the Damage and are earnestly to be exhorted to that Duty Nor are they altogether clear of this Sin Eighthly Those that com nend him Ninthly who approve and commend Theft Nor are those Children and Wives free from this Fault that privily take Mony from their Fathers and Husbands But now XXIII Of Works of Mercy in this Commandment there is this further Meaning That we compassionate the Poor and Needy and relieve their Streights and Hardships with our Ability and Power Which Argument because it is very often and very largely to be handled the Curats may gather Matter enough whereby to perform this Duty out of the Books of these most Holy Men Cyprian John Chrysostom Gregory Nazianzen and others who have wrote excellently of Alms-deeds Cyprian lib. de Opera Eleemosyn Chrysost Hom. 32. ad Pop. Antioch Hom. 32. 34. in Matth. Vide etiam Hom. 16.37 ad Pop. Antioch Nazianz Orat. de Pauperum amore Aug. Serm. 50. 227. de Tempore item Hom. 18 19 28 45. XXIV Motives to persuade to Mercy The First For the Faithful are to be inflam'd to the Study and Chearfulness of helping those who are to live upon others Mercy And they are also to be taught how necessary Alms-deeds are to wit that we be liberal in our Work and Deed towards those that want and that by the most true Argument That in the last Day of Judgment God will detest and condemn to everlasting Flames those that omit and neglect the Duties of Alms-deeds but will commend and bring into his Heavenly Kingdom those that have been bountiful to the Needy Both which Sentences were pronounc'd by the Mouth of Christ our Lord Come ye blessed of my Father possess the Kingdom prepar'd for you and Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting Fire Besides The Second Luke 6.38 the Priests shall use those Places very fit to perswade hereto Give and it shall be given you They shall produce the Promise of God The Third than which nothing can be imagin'd more full nothing more glorious For Mar. 10.29 there is no one that shall have left c. that shall not only receive an hundred-fold now in this World but in the World to come Life everlasting And they shall add that which was spoken by Christ our Lord The Fourth Luc. 16.9 Make ye Friends of the Mamnton of Vnrighteousness that when ye fail they may receive you into everlasting Tabernacles And they shall expound the Parts of this necessary Duty XXV We must lend freely for nothing that those that cannot give to the Needy for Maintenance of Life may yet at least lend to the Poor according to Christ our Lord 's Appointment Lend ye to them that need Luc. 6.34 hoping for nothing from thence And the Blessedness of so doing David has express'd Psal 111.5 Blessed is the Man that takes pity and lends Now it is the Part of Christian Piety XXVI We must labor to relieve the Poor unless they have some other way of doing them good who have need of other Mens Mercy to relieve them with Food as also for avoiding of Idleness with their Work their Labor and their Hands to get those things whereby they may relieve the Want of the Needy To this the Apostle exhorts all by his own Example in his Epistle to the Thessalonians 2 Thess 5.7 1 Thess 4. ●1 in these words For ye know how ye ought to imitate us And to the same Do your endeavor to be quiet and to do your Business and labor with your Hands as we have commanded you Eph. 4.25 And to the Ephesians Let him that stole steal no more but rather let him labor working with his Hands that which is good that he may have wherewith to give to him that suffers want We must also use Frugality XXVII We must have frugally and not be over-chargeable to others lest we be troublesom and burdensom to them And this kind of Temperance was very apparent in all the Apostles but it shone most bright in S. Paul who wrote thus to the Thessalonians 1 Thess 2 9. Ye remember Brethren our Labor and Travel laboring night and day that we might not be chargeable to any of you we preach'd to you the Gospel of God And the same Apostle in another place In labor and travel working night and day that we might not be burdensom to any of you But that the
1.13 But XXXII What we are to meditate on from this Petition that in the last place that may be explain'd which belongs to the Meditation of this Petition we must return to that which we touch'd upon in the Beginning that the Faithful in the Pronouncing of this Petition ought to be of an humble and lowly Spirit considering with themselves the violence of Desires which yet is rooted in their very Nature and repugnant to the Will of God thinking it self while containing it self in its own Duty to be below all other Natures whereof it is thus written All things serve thee and especially that he is but feeble who cannot only not do some Work acceptable to God but cannot so much as design it unless assisted by Gods Help Psal 118.91 Now because nothing is more great or magnificent XXXIII Wherein Man's greatest glory is plac'd nothing more excellent than as we said before to serve God and to lead our Life according to his Law and Commandments what can be more desirable to a Christian than to walk in the Ways of the Lord than to think nothing in his Mind than to undertake to do nothing that may be contrary to Gods Will He therefore that would follow this Exercise XXXIV All things out ill to them that submit not themselves to God and would keep himself carefully to that Resolution let him search out of the Divine Books for the Examples of those to whom all things succeeded ill when they would not reduce the Reason of their own Counsels to the Will of God Lastly let the Faithful be admonish'd to rest satisfied in the simple and absolute Will of God And let him that seems to himself to be in a lower Condition than his Dignity requires bear it patiently Let him not forsake his own Order but abide in his own Vocation in which he is call'd And let him subject his own Judgment to Gods Will who does better for us than we can wish to our selves If we are press'd with Poverty or Want XXXV How Men may live contented if with Sickness of Body if with Persecutions if with other Troubles and Difficulties we must certainly assure our selves that none of these things could come upon us without the Will of God which is the highest Rule of all things and therefore that we ought not to be much mov'd but to bear them with an undaunted courage always having in our Mouths that Saying Joh 1.21 The Will of the Lord be done And that of blessed Job As it pleas'd the Lord so has it been done The Lords Name be prais'd The FOVRTH PETITION Give us this Day our daily Bread THE Fourth Petition I. The Reason of the Order of the seven Petitions and the rest that follow afterwards wherein we properly and namely beg necessary Reliefs for our Souls and Bodies are referr'd to the former Petitions For our Lords Prayer has this Order and Rule that the begging of those things which belong to the Body and to the Defence of this Life follows after the Petitioning for Divine Matters For as Men are referr'd to God II. All our concerns to be referr'd to God as to their ultimate End So after the same manner the Goods of this Life are directed to the Divine good things which indeed are therefore to be wish'd and prayd for either because the Order of God so requires it or because we want those Assistances to the obtaining of Divine good things that by their Help we may attain to the End propos'd which consists in the Kingdom and Glory of our Heavenly Father and in doing and performing of those Commands which we know to be the Will of God Note Wherefore we ought to referr all the Power and Reason of this Petition to God and to his Glory The Curats therefore shall discharge their Duty to their Faithful Hearers III. Temporal things to be pray'd for according to Gods appointment that they may know that in praying for those things that belong to the Use and Advantage of Earthly Matters that our Minds and Desires are to be directed according to Gods Appointment nor are we to go aside from that in the least For what does the Apostle write in this Case We know not what to pray for as we ought We sin very much in these Petitions for Earthly and fading things These good things therefore are to be pray'd for as we ought Note lest making Request for any thing amiss we receive this Answer of God Ye know not what ye pray for Matt. 20.22 Now the Purpose and Design of him that prays IV. How to know whether our Prayer be good or bad will be a sure note of judging which Petition is evil which good For if any one prays for Earthly things with such a Heart as to think those things to be altogether good and to rest satisfied in them as in his desir'd End and seeks nothing else without doubt he prays not as he ought For as S. Austin says we seek not these Temporal things as our Goods but as our Necessaries Lib. 2. de Serm. Domini in monte Cap. 16. Item Epist 121. c. 6. And the Apostle in his Epistle to the Corinthians teaches Note That all things belonging to the necessary Uses of Life are to be referr'd to God's Glory 1 Cor. 10.31 For whether ye eat says he or drink or whatsoever else ye do do all to the Glory of God But that Gods Faithful may see of how great necessity this Petition is V. How the necessity of thi● Petition is to be shew'd the Curats shall observe how great need we have of these outward things for Food and Preservation of Life which they will the better understand if they compare those things together which were needful to our first Father and to the rest of Mankind afterwards for Life For tho he in the most ample Estate of Innocency VI. The difference between the State of Innocency and of Nature after the Fall from whence he and all his Posterity thro his Fault fell had need of Food to refresh his Strength yet there is a great difference betwixt the Necessities of his and of our Life For he had no need of Clothes to cover his Body nor of a House for his shelter nor of Arms for his Defence nor of Physick for his Health nor of other things the Help whereof we stand in need of to defend the Weakness and Frailty of our Nature that Fruit which the blessed Tree of Life yielded was sufficient to him for an immortal Life which since it never gave for any Labor of his or his Posterity Nor was Man to be idle in those so great Delights of Paradice VII Adam labor'd in Paradice to occupy which God plac'd him in that Habitation of Pleasure but no Labor had bin troublesom no Discharge of Duty had bin at all unpleasant to him he had for ever enjoy'd the most delightful Fruits from
he commands us to beg our Meat of him every Day Which Sentence has this necessary Reason XXXII The Lords Prayer to be said daily because we all want daily Bread therefore we must all daily use the Lords Prayer And thus much of the Bread which being receiv'd into our Mouth nourishes and sustains our Body which God of his admirable Bounty bestows upon all in common as well on the Faithful as Infidels as well on the Pious as Impious Matth. 5.46 Who causes his Sun to rise upon the Good and upon the Evil and rains upon the Just and on the Vnjust The other Bread XXXIII Fourthly we here pray for Spiritual Bread and which we also pray for in this place is Spiritual whereby all things are signified whatsoever are requir'd for the Safety and Salvation of the Spirit and Soul For as the meat wherewith the Body is nourished and sustaind is of many sorts so the Meat which preserves the Life of the Soul and Sprit is not of one kind only For the Word of God is the Food of the Soul First For Wisdom says Prov. 9.5 Come ye eat of my Bread and drink of my Wine which I have mingled for you Now when God takes away from Men the Use of this Word XXXIV When the Food of God's Word is taken away Amo● 8.11 which he uses to do when he is much provok'd by our Sins he is said to send a Famine upon Men For thus it is in Amos I will send a Famin upon the Earth not a Famin of Bread or a Thirst of Water but of hearing the Word of the Lord. Now as it is a certain Sign of Death approaching XXXV A singular Comparison when Men cannot take Food or having taken it cannot keep it so it is a very great Argument that their Salvation is in danger who either desire not God's Word or if they have it will not endure it and pour out that impious Cry against God Job 21.14 Depart from us we desire not the knowledge of thy Ways In this Madness of Soul XXXVI The Despisers of Gods Word in this Blindness of Mind they are taken who disregarding those Catholic both Bishops and Priests that are put over them and cutting themselves off from the Holy Roman Church have given themselves over to be govern'd by Heretics that corrupt the Word of God But then XXXVII Christ the Bread of the Soul Joh. 6.15 Christ our Lord is the Bread of the Soul For he says of himself I am the Living Bread that came down from Heaven It is past belief with how great Pleasure and Joy this Bread then fills devout Souls they are most afflicted with Earthly Troubles and Inconveniences That holy Quire of Apostles may serve us for an Example of whom it is thus recorded Act. 5.41 They went out from the presence of Council rejoycing The Books of the Lives of Holy Men are fill'd with Examples of this kind And of those inward Joys of Good Men God speaks thus Apoc. 2.17 To him that overcomes I will give the hidden Manna But especially this Bread is Christ our Lord XXXVIII Christ in the Eucharist is the Bread of the Soul which is substantially contain'd in the Sacrament of the Eucharist This unspeakable Pledge of his Love he gave us when he was about to return to his Father of which he said He that eats my Flesh and drinks my Blood dwells in me and I in him Take ye and eat This is my Body Job 6.65 Mat. 26.6 1 Cor. 11.64 And the Curat shall fetch those things which belong to the profit of the Faithful from that place where the Force and Vertue of this Sacrament is particularly explain'd Pag. 181. And here it is said XXXIX How Christ in the Eucharist is the Bread of the Soul Our Bread because it belongs to the Faithful i. e. to those who joyning Charity with Faith by the Sacrament of Penance wipe away the Spots of Sin who remembring themselves to be the Children of God take and worship this Divine Sacrament with the greatest Holiness and Veneration they are able Vide Tertul. lib. de Orat. Cypr. item de Orat. August alios locis citatis supra pag. 473. But why is it call'd Daily There is a twofold Reason XL. Why Christ is call'd our daily Bread Psal 54.25 The one is That in the Sacred Mysteries of the Christian Church it is offered to God daily and given to those that devoutly and holily desire it The other is That we ought daily to receive it or at least so to lead our Life as to be fit daily to take it and eat it Let those that think otherwise Note unless by reason of a long Interval they ought not to he fed with this saving Banquet of the Soul hear what S. Ambrose says If it be thy Daily Bread why dost thou take it but once a Year Lib. 5. Sap. c. 4. Vide etiam de Consec dist 2. But in this Petition the Faithful are specially to be exhorted XLI The Issue of this Petition to be left to God That when they have honestly and well advis'd and been industrious in getting the Necessaries of Life they leave the Success to God and refer their Desires to his Pleasure Psal 45.23 who will not always leave the Just in a tottering condition For either God will grant the things desired Note and so they shall have their Wish or else he will not grant them and that is a most certain Argument that what is desired is neither for their Salvation nor Advantage since God denies it to the Pious who takes greater care of their Welfare than themselves do Upon this Point the Curats may enlarge themselves in explaining those Reasons which are excellently collected by S. Austin in his Epistle to Proba The last thing in discoursing upon this Petition is this XLII Why God gives good things to Rich Men. That Rich Men well consider their Wealth and Plenty and that they receiv'd them from God and let them think with themselves that those good things are therefore heap'd upon them to distribute them to the Needy To which sense agree those things that are disputed by the Apostle in his first Epistile to Timothy 1 Tim. 6.17 whence the Curats may fetch Divine Precepts enow for the clearing this Point both profitably and savingly The FIFTH PETITION And forgive us our Debts as we alsso forgive our Debtors SInce there are so many things that signifie God's Infinit Power to be join'd with the like Infinit Wisdom and Goodness I. Christ's Passion a singular Token of his Love to us that whithersoever we turn our Eyes and thoughts we meet with the Tokens of his Immense Power and Goodness verily there is nothing that more evidently shews his most profound Love and admirable Charity towards us than that unspeakable Mystery of the Passion of Jesus Christ from whence sprang that
to undergo the Temptations and Violence of our Enemy the Devil for this our Nature our Weakness is not able to do But the Strength whereby we throw to the Ground Satans Accomplices XXVII Without Gods help we can do nothing 1 Reg. 2 4 Psal 17 3● is given of God Who makes our arms as a bow of brass by whose help the bow of the mighty is overcome and the weak are girded with strength who gives us the protection of Salvation whose right hand upholds us who teaches our hands to war and our fingers to fight that we may ascribe the Thanks for the Victory to God alone by whose Help and Conduct only we can overcome which thing the Apostle did 1 Cor. 15. for he says But Thanks be to God that gives us the Victory thro our Lord Jesus Christ And that Voice in Heaven whereof we read in the Revelations proves the same to be the Author of our Victory Apoc. 12.10 Now is come Salvation and Strength and the Kingdom of our God and the power of his Christ because the accuser of our Brethren is cast down and they bound him by reason of the blood of the Lamb. And the same Book testifies that the Victory gotten over the VVorld and the Flesh is Christ our Lords Apoc. 17.14 where we read These shall fight with the Lamb and the Lamb shall overcome them And thus much concerning the cause and manner of overcoming VVhich things being explain'd XXVIII The Rewards propos'd to them that fight Apoc. 5.5 the Curat shall propose to the Faithful the Crowns that are prepar'd and the everlasting fulness of the Rewards appointed of God for those that overcome Divine Testimonies whereof they may produce out of the same Revelations He that overcomes shall not be hurt by the second Death And in another place He that overcomes shall be clothed with white Garments and I will not blot out his name out of the Book of Life and I will confess his Name before my Father and before his Angels And a little after Apoc 5.12 God himself and our Lord thus spake to S. John Him that overcomes I will make a Pillar in the Temple of my God and he shall go forth no more And also he says To him that overcomes I will give to fit with me in my Throne as I also have overcome and sate with my Father in his Throne Lastly Apoc. 2.7 When he had shew'd the Glory of the Saints and that perpetual Store of Good Things which they shall enjoy in Heaven he added He that overcomes shall possess these things The SEVENTH PETITION But deliver us from Evil. THis last Petition I. This Petition comprehends all the rest wherewith the Son of God conclu●●s this Divine Prayer is all in a manner Whose Weight and Efficacy when he would shew at such time as he was about to go out of this Life he besought his Father for the Salvation of Men using the Close of this Prayer For says he Joh. 17.16 I pray that thou wouldst keep them from Evil. In this Form of Prayer therefore which he deliver'd by Precept and confirm'd by Example as in a kind of Epitome he summarily comprehended the Vertue and Efficacy of the other Petitions For when we have once but obtain'd what is contain'd in this Prayer there is nothing left as S. Cyprian says Lib de Orat. citato for us to ask further when once we have begg'd God's Defence against Evil which having obtain'd we stand secure and safe against all that the World and the Devil can do against us Wherefore since this Petition is such as we have said the Curat shall use his utmost Diligence in explaining it to the Faithful Now this Petition differs from the last II. The difference betwixt thi●● and the Sixth Petition because in the other we begg'd to escape Sin but in this to be deliver'd from Punishment Wherefore in this place there is no need to admonish the Faithful III. Why this Petition to be often repeated how many Inconveniences and Calamities they labor under and how much they stand in need of the help of Heaven For to how many and how great Miserie 's the Life of Men is expos'd besides that both Sacred and Profane Writers have very fully prosecuted this Argument there is scarcely any one but understands both to his own and others hazard For all are convinc'd of that which the Example of Job remember us of Job 14. Man that is born of a Woman has but a short time to live and is full of many Miseries He grows up as a Flower and is cut down he flees away as a Shadow and never continues in the same state And that there is no Day passes that may not be mark'd with some Trouble of its own as that Word of Christ our Lord witnesses Mat. 6.34 Sufficient to the Day is the Evil thereof Altho that Admonition of our Lord himself wherein he taught Luc. 9.23 That we must take up the Cross daily and follow him shews the Condition of Mans Life As therefore every one feels how painful and dangerous this Life is IV. We easily pray in Adversity so the Faithful will easily be perswaded that they are to beg of God Deliverance from Evil since Men are brought to pray by nothing more than by the Desire and Hope of Deliverance from those Evils wherewith they are opprest or which hang over their Heads For this is naturally implanted in the Souls of Men Note in their Distress presently to fly to God's Help of which matter it is thus written Psal 82.17 Fill thou their Faces with Ignominy O Lord and they will seek thy Name And if Men naturally do this V. The Curats to teach the manner how to pray and call upon God in their Calamities and Dangers surely they are specially to be taught by those to whose Trust and Prudence their Salvation is committed how to do it rightly For VI. An ill way of praying to be amended there are not wanting some who contrary to the Command of Christ our Lord use a preposterous Order of Prayer For he that commanded us to fly to him in the Day of Tribulation the same has prescrib'd us the Order of Prayer For before we pray to be deliver'd from Evil he would have us to pray That God's Name may be sanctified that his Kingdom may come and the rest whereby as by certain Steps we come at last to this But some there are that if their Head their Side their Foot ake if they suffer any loss in their Goods if they are threatned or are in danger of their Enemies in time of Famin of War of Pestilence omitting the other Degrees of the Lords Prayer pray only to be delivered out of those Evils but Christ our Lord's Command is against this Custom Mat. 6.33 Seek ye first the Kingdom of God Those therefore that pray
253 There is no Measure set to the Hatred of Sin 253 The proper Grief of Contrition to be apply'd to every Mortal Sin 254 What things are necessary to true Contrition ibid. A Motive to stir up Contrition 256 257 The Fruit of Contrition ibid. The various Names of Contrition 251 Creation 24 c. What God created he preserves 27 28 What a New Creature in Christ is Pag. 336 337 The Cross of Christ how precious it is 525 The Crowns prepar'd of God for them that overcome 542 543 The Curse wherewith Man was condemn'd after Adam's Sin 510 511 D ON the Lord's Day what the Faithful ought to do and from what they ought to abstain 373 The Commandment for keeping Holy-days 369 c. Why the Observation of Holy-days appointed 370 Other Holy-days besides the Sabboth among the Jews 376 Why other Holy-days besides the Lord's-day appointed by the Church ibid. The most celebrated Days in the Church ibid. In what Works Christians ought to exercise themselves on Holy-days 377 Debts what they are which we pray to be forgiven 525 Why those Debts call'd Ours 526 The Precepts of the Decalogue 332 The Decalogue the Sum of all Laws ibid. The Ten Commandments of the Decalogue depend upon Two of Charity 333 With how great Majesty the Law of the Decalogue was given Pag. 335 To believe that God is the Author of the Decalogue is of very great use for the observing of the Law ibid. The Cause of Christ's Descent into Hell 59 Detraction or Defamation see the Eighth Commandment 426 The Devil's Malice against Men. 534 The Devil counterfeiting an Angel of Light persuades Men to seek those things as good which are not so 504 VVhy the Devil call'd the Prince and Ruler of the VVorld of Darkness 534 VVho they are that the Devil opposes not 535 VVhy the Devil is specially call'd the Evil one 548 VVe ascribe to the Devil as the Author and Persuader of it all the Evil we suffer from our Neighbor 549 The proper Office of the Devil 537 VVith what intent the Devil tempts Men. ibid. VVhy the Devil call'd the Tempter ibid. VVhat Means the Devil uses to tempt ibid. E TO love Enemies the most excellent Office of Charity 400 401 VVho love their Enemies are the Children of God Pag. 528 VVe must not be angry at our Enemies but at the Devil 549 VVe must forgive our Enemies if we would be forgiven 527 VVe must love our Enemies 528 VVhat they ought to beg of God who forgive not their Enemies 529 Visible Enemies of what sort they are 533 The Enemies of Mankind use all their Arts against us ibid. They that abstain long from the Eucharist suffer exceeding great loss 228 The Institution of the Eucharist 194 The Dignity and Excellency of the Eucharist ibid. The Sacrament of the Eucharist call'd by many Nanes 185 VVhy the Eucharist call'd a Communion ibid. Not lawful after Meat and Drink to receive the Eucharist 196 The Eucharist truly a Sacrament and One of the Seven ibid. In the Sacrament of the Eucharist we adore the Body and Blood of Christ 197 VVhat things properly have the Nature of a Sacrament in the Eucharist ibid. The Difference between the Eucharist and other Sacraments Pag. 197 The Consecration of the Matter makes the Sacrament of the Eucharist perfect ibid. The Eucharist is only One Sacrament and no more 198 The Sacrament of the Eucharist signifies Three things ibid. The Matter of the Sacrament of the Eucharist double ibid. VVhy a little VVater is mingled with the VVine 201 What the Bread and Wine signifie in the Sacrament of the Eucharist 202 The Form of the Sacrament of the Eucharist 203 The Form of Consecration of the Wine and the Declaration thereof 204 In the Sacrament of the Eucharist Three things very admirable 208 In the Eucharist the true Body and Blood of Christ are contain'd ibid. The Sacrament of the Eucharist not only a Sign of Christ's Body 209 The Fruit of the Eucharist 212 In the Sacrament of the Eucharist whole Christ is contain'd ibid. In the Sacrament of the Eucharist what things are by Concomitancy 213 Why in the Sacrament of the Eucharist are made two several Consecrations 214 In every Particle of both kinds of the Sacrament of the Eucharist is contain'd whole Christ Pag. 214 The Substance of Bread and Wine in the Sacrament of the Eucharist do not remain after Consecration ibid. Why after Consecration the Sacrament of the Eucharist is call'd Bread and VVine 216 The admirable Conversion in the Sacrament of the Eucharist is call'd Transubstantiation 217 The Sacrament of the Eucharist not curiously to be pry'd into ibid. After what manner Christ is in the Sacrament of the Eucharist 218 The Resemblance of Bread and Wine remain in the Sacrament of the Eucharist without any Subject matter ibid. Why Christ appointed the Sacrament of the Eucharist to be administred under the Species of Bread and Wine 219 The Eucharist is the Fountain of all Graces 220 How the Eucharist gives Grace 221 The first Grace not given to Man unless he have first receiv'd the Sacrament of the Eucharist at least in desire 221 222 The Eucharist is the End of all the Sacraments ibid. Manna a Figure of the Eucharist Pag. 222 The Advantages of the Eucharist 223 Three Ways of Receiving the Eucharist 224 They deprive themselves of very great Good that being prepar'd to receive Christ's Body Sacramentally receive it only Spiritually ibid. None may receive the Eucharist before Sacramental Confession if a Priest may be had and if they be conscious of Mortal Sin 226 The Sacrament of the Eucharist ought to be receiv'd Fasting 227 Who are Married ought to abstain from their VVives certain Days before they come to the Communion ibid. The Communion of the Eucharist often to be iterated 227 228 The Soul is daily to be fed with the Sacrament of the Eucharist 228 In old times the Faithful did daily receive the Eucharist ibid. They are excepted from the Communion of the Eucharist who by reason of Age have not the use of Reason 229 VVhy the Eucharist denied to Infants 230 The Eucharist not to be given Mad-men ibid. Lay-people may not receive the Eucharist in both Kinds Pag. 231 VVhy the Church prohibited the Custom of Communicating under both Species ibid. The Power of Consecrating the Sacrament of the Eucharist given to the Priests only 232 VVho is not Consecrated ought not to touch the Sacred Vessels ibid. The Eucharist is a Sacrifice 233 The Eucharist is a Sacrifice most acceptable to God ibid. The Eucharist instituted of Christ for two Causes ibid. The Eucharist as it is a Sacrifice has the Vertue not only of Meriting but also of Satisfying 234 VVhen the Sacrifice of the Eucharist was instituted ibid. The Figures and Prophecies of the Eucharist 235 The Sacrament of the Eucharist an inexpressible Pledge of Charity 517 VVhy the Sacrament of the Eucharist call'd Our Bread 518 VVhy the Sacrament of the
of a certain Prince of the Pharisees on the Sabbath-day to eat Bread Luc. 14.1 by which word we see is signified whatsoever belongs to Meat and Drink For the perfect Signification of this Petition XIX We here pray for necessaries only we must further observe that by the Word Bread we are not to understand an abundant and exquisit plenty of Meat and Clothes but only what is simply necessary as the Apostle wrote Having Food and Raiment 1 Tim. 6.8 Prov. 30.8 let us therewith be content And Solomon as we said before pray'd Give me only necessary Food And of this Sparing and Frugality we are admonish'd in the next Word XX. We here pray for nothing for Luxury For when we say Our we pray for that Bread that is for our Need not for Wantonness Neither do we say Our as tho we were able to get it by our own Industry without God Psal 10● For David says All things wait on thee to give them Meat in season when thou givest it them they gather it when thou openest thy Hand all things are fill'd with Goodness And in another place The Eyes of all things hope in thee O Lord and thou givest them their Meat in due season but because it being necessary for us it is given us of God the Father of all who by his Providence feeds all things living And for this cause also it is call'd Our Bread XXI Why this Bread is call'd Ours because we are to get it lawfully not by Wrong Deceit or Theft For whatsoever we get to our selves by ill Arts it is not ours but other Mens and very commonly either the Getting of it or the Possession or at least the spending of it is very Calamitous but on the contrary according to the Sentence of the Prophet there is great Peace and Happiness in the honest and toilsom Profits of pious Men Psal 127.2 For says he because thou shalt eat the labors of thy hands happy art thou and well it will be for thee And now for those that seek their Bread by their honest Labor XXII God blesses the Laborious Deut. 28.8 God promises them the Fruit of his Blessing in that place The Lord will send his Blessing upon thy Stores and upon all the works of thy hands and he will bless thee Nor do we only beg of God for our selves XXIII What we pray for Thirdly that we may use that which thro our Sweat and Labor we have gotten by the help of his Bounty for that is truly call'd Ours but we pray also for a good Heart that what we have justly gott'n we may also well and wisely make use of Daily In this Word also lies an Admonition to Frugality and Parsimony XXIV By the word Daily we are taught Frugality of which we spake last for we pray not either for Dainties or many sorts of Meat but only for that which satisfies the Necessities of Nature so that here they may be asham'd who being weary of common Meat and Drink seek for the most rare sorts of Dainties and Wines Nor by this Word Daily XXV The same Word condemns Covetousness Isa 5.8 are they less blam'd against whom Isaias utters these dreadful Threats Wo to you that joyn house to house and field to feild even to the utmost extent of place will you only dwell in the midst of the Earth For the Covetousness of these Men is inexpressible of whom it is thus written by Solomon Eccle. 5.6 A covetous Man will not be satisfied with Mony Hitherto belongs also the Saying of the Apostle 1 Tim. 6.9 They that will become rich fall into temptation and the snare of the Devil Besides XXVI It shews us to be mortal we call it Our daily Bread because we are fed therewith for the Supply of our Vital Moisture which is daily consumed by the force of natural Heat Lastly XXVII It teaches us to pray diligently there is this Reason for this Word because it is to be pray'd for daily that we may be kept in this practice of loving and worshiping God and that we may assuredly perswade our selves as true it is that our Life and Health depends upon God Give us How much matter these two words afford XXVIII The Force of these words to be explain'd Luc. 4. to exhort the Faithful devoutly and holily to worship and reverence the infinite Power of God in whose hands are all things and to loath that wicked Pride of Satan All things are delivered to me and I give them to whom I will there is none that sees not for at the pleasure of God alone all things that are given are preserv'd and increas'd But what need is there XXIX The Rich beg their daily Bread may some one say for Rich Men to pray for their daily Bread seeing they abound with all things They have this Necessity for praying in this manner not that those things may be given them of which by Gods Bounty they have enough but that they lose not those things which they have in abundance Wherefore as the Apostle writes 1 Tim. 6.27 Let them hence learn not to be overwise nor to trust in uncertain riches but in the living God who gives to all men all things liberally to enjoy Note Now S. Chrysostom gives this Reason for this necessary Petition Hom. 14. oper imperfect in Matth. not only that he would supply us with Food but that when the Hand of the Lord does relieve us with giving to our daily Bread a wholsom and therefore a healthful Vertue he would cause our Food to nourish our Body and our Body to be serviceable to our Soul But what is the Reason why we say XXX Why we pray here in the plural Number Give us in the the Plural Number and not Give me Because it is the Property of Christian Charity not that every one be careful for himself only but that he take pains for his Neighbor also and in taking care for his own Advantage that he remember others also Add hereto Another Reason that the Gifts which God gives to any one he gives not to the End that he alone should possess them but that he should communicate to others what things he has above Necessity For says S. Basil Hom. 6. varior arg S. Ambrose Serm. 81. It is the Bread of the Needy which thou detain'st it is the Cloaths of the Naked which thou loock'st up it is the Redemption the Freedom the Mony of the Miserable which thou hidest in the Earth This Day This Word admonishes us of our common Infirmity XXXI What this word to Day signifies For who is there that if by his only Labor he be past Hope to be able to provide the necessary Expences of Life for a long while does not trust at least that he shall provide Food for one Day But neither does God allow us the Power of this Confidence since