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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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persevere And altho both good and bad Men are within the limits of this Kingdom and consequently all Men do belong to it yet those chiefly and above the rest experience the most excellent Goodness and Bounty of our King who lead their life innocently and uprightly according to his Laws Not that this Kingdom came to him by any humane Birth-right or Inheritance tho he came of the stock of the noblest Kings But he was a King in this respect Because God bestow'd upon that Man whatsoever Power Excellency and Dignity the nature of Man was capable of To him therefore God deliver'd the government of the World and to him he subjected all things He has already begun his reign but in the day of Judgment he shall enjoy it fully and perfectly His only Son In these Words are yet higher Mysteries propos'd to the Belief and Contemplation of the Faithful concerning Jesus XIII Christ the Son of God and true God to wit that he is the Son of God and true God as the Father himself is who begat him from all Eternity We moreover do confess him to be the Second person of the Trinity and in all respects equal to the other two For there ought nothing to be no nor so much as phanci'd in the mind to be any thing unequal or unlike in the divine Persons since we acknowledg that they have only one Being one Will one Power This is plain from many Oracles of Holy Scripture but especially that Testimony of S. John does exceeding plainly shew it 1 Joh. 1.1 In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God But when we hear that Jesus is the Son of God we ought not to imagine any earthly or mortal thing of his Birth XIV The eternal Generation of Christ ineffable But we ought constantly to believ and with the greatest devotion and affection of mind to honour that Birth whereby the Father from all Eternity begat the Son which to comprehend by Reason or perfectly to understand we can by no means do it But as amaz'd at the wonderfulness of the Mystery we ought with the Prophet to say Who can declare his Generation This therefore we ought to believ Isay 53.8 That the Son is of the same Nature of the same Power and Wisdom with the Father as we confess more largely in the Nicene Creed For it says And in Jesus Christ his only begott'n Son begott'n of the Father before all Worlds God of God Light of Light very God of very God begott'n not made being of one substance with the Father by whom all things were made But of all those things which are made use of as Similitudes to shew the manner and way of his Eternal Generation XV. A similitude that seems to come neerest the matter which is taken from the Thought of our mind wherefore S. John calls the Son his Word 1 Joh. 1. For as our mind after a sort understanding it self phancies its own Image which Divines call Word so God so far as humane things may be compar'd with divine understanding himself begets his eternal Word altho it is better to contemplate what Faith proposes and with a sincere Heart to believ and confess that Jesus Christ is true God and true Man begotten indeed as God of the Father before all Ages and Generations but as Man born in time of his Mother the Virgin Mary And tho we acknowledg his Twofold Nativity XVI Christ one person the only Son of his Father yet we believ him to be but One Son For it is One Person only in whom the Divine and Humane Nature meet together And as to his Divine Generation he has no Brethren or fellow Heirs he being the only Son of his Father but we Men the Potters-Clay and the work of his Hands But if we consider his Humane Generations he not only calls many by the name of Brethren Rom. 8.17 he uses them as Brethren That they together with him may obtain the glory of his Fathers Inheritance who by Faith have accepted Christ as their Lord and do in truth shew forth their Faith which they profess in his name by works of Charity Wherefore he is call'd by the Apostle The first begott'n among many Brethren Our Lord. Many are the things which in Holy Scripture are spok'n concerning our Savior XVII Why divers Epithets given to Christ whereof some as appears plainly agree to him as he is God Others as he is Man For he has different Properties according to his different Natures We therefore truly say That Christ is Almighty Eternal Infinite and this he has from his Divine Nature Agen we say of him That he suffer'd was dead and rose again and these things no one doubts but that they are agreeable to the Nature of Men. But besides these there are some things agreeable to both Natures as in this place where we say our Lord. If therefore this name be suitable to both Natures we may well surely call him our Lord. For as he is eternal God XVIII Why Christ is called our Lord. as the Father so also is he equally Lord and Father of all things And as he is not One and the Father Another God but One and the self same God so also is not he One Lord and the Father Another Lord but both One Lord. But rightly also for many reasons as he is Man is he call'd our Lord. And first because he is our Redeemer and has deliver'd us from our sins has he rightly got this power both to be and to be call'd our Lord. For so the Apostle teaches He humbl'd himself and became obedient to death Phil. 2.7 even the death of the Cross for which reason God has highly exalted him and giv'n him a name which is above every name that at the name of Jesus every Knee should bow V. 10. of things in Heav'n and things in Earth and things under the Earth and that every Tongue shou'd confess that Jesus Christ is in the glory of God the Father And after his Resurrection he says of himself Matt. 28.18 All Power is giv'n to me in Heav'n and in Earth For this other Reason also he is call'd Lord because in this one Person the two Natures Divine and Humane are joyn'd together For by this wonderful conjunction he merited to be made our Lord and Lord of all things that were created altho he had not dy'd for us but especially of the Faithful who obey and serve him with the utmost intention of Mind What remains therefore but that the Curate for this Reason perswade his faithful people to consider That it is most just that above all men in the World we who have our very name of him and are call'd Christians and cannot be ignorant what great Benefits he has bestow'd on us and this especially that by his Grace We know all these things by Faith It is most just
I say that we devote and consecrate our selv's forever to our Lord and Redeemer no otherwise than as his meanest Servants And indeed when we were receiv'd into Baptism XX. In Baptism we are devoted to Christ we did before the Church Doors solemnly promise that we wou'd do so For we declar'd that we renounc'd the Devil and the World and gave up our selv's wholly to Christ Jesus But if to be enroll'd in the Christian Camp we devoted our selves with so Holy and Religious a Prosession what punishment shall we deserv if after our entrance into the Church and have known the Will and Law of God if after we have receiv'd the Grace of his Sacraments we shall lead our Lives after the Rules and Commandments of the World and the Devil as if when we were wash'd in Baptism we had giv'n up our Names to the World and the Devil and not to Christ our Lord and Redeemer But what Heart is there which so great a Propensity so great kindness and good Will of so great a Lord toward us cannot enflame with ardent Love to him who tho he has us in his power and dominion as Servants bought with his own Blood yet embraces us with such Love that he calls us not his Servants Joh. 15.14 14. but his Friends yea his Brethren This verily is a most just cause and I know not whether it be not the greatest why we ought always to own and reverence and worship him as our Lord. ARTICLE III. WHo was Conceiv'd by the Holy Ghost born of the Virgin Mary That God bestow'd a fingular Blefling upon Mankind I. How great Gods Bounty towards us when he restor'd us to liberty from the slavery of the most cruel Tyrant the Faithful may perceiv by those things which have been already spoken in the former Article but then if we lay before our Eyes the counsel and way by which chiefly he wou'd accomplish this Verily there is nothing can possibly shine more glorious and magnificent than the Bounty and goodness of God towards us The greatness of this Mystery therefore II. The sense of this Article which the Holy Scripture proposes to us to consider as the chief point of our Salvation the Curat may begin to shew in the explaining this Third Article the meaning whereof he may teach to be this That we believ and confess that this very Jesus Christ our ohly Lord Matt. 1.23 Joh. 1.36 the Son of God when for our sakes he took upon himself Humane Flesh in the Womb of the Virgin was not as other Men conceiv'd of the Seed of Man but beyond all order of Nature was conceiv'd by the power of the Holy Ghost so that the same person remaining God which he was from all Eternity became Man which before he was not That these Words are so to be understood does plainly appear by confession of the Holy Council of Constantinople for thus it says Who for us Men and for our Salvation came down from Heav'n and was Incarnate by the Holy Ghost of the Virgin Mary and was made man And this S. John the Evangelist has also explain'd as being he who drew the Knowledg of this most profound Mystery out of the Bosome of our very Lord and Saviour himself For when he had declar'd the Nature of the Divine Word in these Words In the beginning was the Word Joh. 1.1 and the Word was with God and the Word was God At last he concludes and the Word was made Flesh and dwelt among us For the Word which was a Person of the Divine Nature did so take upon him the Humane Nature that the Hypostasis or Person both of the Divine and Human Nature was but one and the same whereby it came to pass that so admirable a Conjunction preserv'd the Actions and Properties of both Natures and as that great and holy Pope Leo has it Serm. 1. de Nat. That neither did the Glory of the Superior or Divine destroy the Inferior or Humane nor the assuming the Inferior diminish or lessen the Superior But because the Explication of Words ought not to be omitted It is requisite that the Curat teach IV. What works of God are attributed to the whole Trinity That when we say That the Son of God was conceiv'd by the Power of the Holy Ghost this one Person of the Divine Trinity did not make the Mystery of the Incarnation For tho the Son only took the Humane Nature upon him yet all the Persons of the Holy Trinity the Father Son and Holy Ghost were Authors of this Mystery for we must hold this Rule in our Christian Faith That all those things which God does extrà se without himself in the Creatures are common to all the Three Persons nor does one act more than another or one without another But that one One person proceeds from another V. And what to the several Persons this cannot be common to all for the Son is begotten of the Father alone the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and the Son But whatsoever extra illas without them comes from or is done by them the whole three Persons without any difference do it and of this kind we are to believ the Incarnation of the Son of God to be Now tho these things are thus VI. Why Christ is said to be conceiv'd by the Holy Ghost yet the Holy Scripture is us'd to attribute to any one of the Three Persons those things which are common to all the Three Persons for example It ascribes the Power of all things to the Father Wisdom to the Son Love to the Holy Ghost And because the Mystery of the Incarnation of God does manifest the special and infinite Good Will of God toward us for this Reason therefore is this work attributed to the Holy Ghost In this Mystery we are to observ VII The Mystery of Christs Conception declar'd That there are many things done beyond the Order of Nature and some again by the Power of Nature For in that we believ the Body of Christ to be made of the most pure Blood of his Virgin-Mother we therein acknowledg his Human Nature it being common to the Bodies of all Men to be form'd of the Blood of the Mother But that which surpasses both the Order of Nature and the reach of Human Understanding is this That as soon as the Blessed Virgin consenting to the Words of the Angel Luc. 1.38 had said Behold the Hand-maid of the Lord be it unto me according to thy Word immediately the most holy Body of Chrift was form'd and a Reasonable or Human Soul joyn'd with it and so in that very moment of time he became perfect God and perfect Man Now that this was the strange and wonderful work of the Holy Ghost there is no one can doubt since by the Order of Nature no Body can be inform'd by or receiv a Humane Soul but at the limited term of time
has therefore a proper name and is call'd Son because his eternal Birth of the Father is properly call'd Generation as has bin explain'd in the former Article As therefore that Birth is signify'd by the name os Generation So that Person which flows we properly call Son and him from whom he flows we properly call Father Now whereas there is no proper name giv'n to the production of the Third Person but is call'd Spiration and Procession it follows That the Person also which is produc'd want his own proper name Now his Emanation has no proper name because we are forc'd to borrow from creat'd things those Names which are giv'n to God Wherein because we know no other way of communicating of Nature and Being but by vertue of Generation for this cause it is that we cannot express by any proper word the way whereby God communicates his whole self by vertue of his Love Wherefore the Third Person is call'd by the common name of Holy Spirit which verily we understand very well to suit with him from hence because he pours spiritual Life into us and without the inspiration of his most Holy Deity we can do nothing worthy of eternal Life And now the signification of the Name being explain'd IV. The Holy Ghost prov'd God equal with the Father and Son the people are first of all to be taught That the Holy Ghost is equally God with the Father and the Son that he is equal with him equally Almighty Eternal and of infinite Perfection the supreme Good and most Wise and of the and same Nature with the Father and the Son Which also the propriety of the word In sufficiently shews First when we say I believe in the Holy Ghost which is fitted to express the force of our Faith in the several persons of the Trinity And this also is confirm'd by plain Testimonies of Holy Scripture Secondly for when S. Peter in the Acts of the Apostles had said Act. 5. Ananias why has Satan tempted thy Heart to lye to the Holy Ghost he presently says Thou hast not ly'd to Men but to God Whom before he call'd Holy Ghost the same he presently after calls God And the Apostle to the Corinthians interprets him to be the Holy Ghost Thirdly 1 Cor. 12.6 whom he had call'd God There are says he divisions of operations but the same God which works all in all and then he subjoyns But all these things works that One and the selfsame Spirit dividing to every one severally as he will Besides in the Acts of the Apostles Four●hly that which the Prophets attribute to God only he ascribes to the Holy Ghost For Esayah had said Isay 6.8 I heard the voice of the Lord saying Whom shall I send and he said to me Go thou and say to this people Harden the heart of this people and make heavy their ears and close up their eyes lest haply they see with their eyes and bear with their ears Which words when the Apostle had cited Act. 28.25 Well says he did the Holy Ghost speak by Esayas the Prophet And then Fifthly when the Scripture joyns the Person of the Holy Ghost with the Father and the Son that when he commands That the name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost should be mention'd in Baptism there is no room left us to doubt of the Truth of this Mystery For if the Father be God and the Son God we must be forc'd to confess that the Holy Ghost who is joyn'd with them in the same Degree of Honour is God also And this may be added Sixthly That he who is baptiz'd in the name of any created thing can reap no fruit thereby Were ye 1 Cor. 13. says he baptiz'd in the name of Paul to shew that this cou'd profit them nothing to the attaining Salvation When therefore we are baptiz'd in the name of the Holy Ghost we must needs confess that he is God And we may observe this order of the Three Persons in S. John's Epistle also Seventhly whereby is prov'd the Divinity of the Holy Ghost 1 Joh. 5.7 There are Three which bear record in Heav'n the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these Three are One. And also in that famous Elogy or Hymn or Praise of the Holy Trinity wherewith the Divine Lands and Psalms are concluded Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost Lastly Eighthly And which most of all belongs to the confirmation of this Truth whatsoever we believe to be proper to God the same the Holy Scriptures testifie to agree to the Holy Ghost And therefore they attribute to him the honour of Temples 1 Cor. 6.19 2 Thess 2.13 Joh. 6.63 2 Cor. 3.6 2 Cor. 2.10 As when the Apostle says Know ye not that your Members are the Temple of the Holy Ghost so also Sanctification and Vivification or quick'ning and to search into the Depths of God And to speak by the Prophets and to be every where All which things are to be attributed only to the Divine Deity And this moreover is carefully to be explain'd V. The Holy Ghost a distinct person from the Father and the Son That the Holy Ghost is God so as that we must confess him to be the Third Person in the Divine Nature distinct from the Father and the Son and produc'd by their Will For to omit other Testimonies of Scripture the Form of Baptism which our Savior has taught most plainly shews Matt. 28.19 That the Holy Ghost is the Third Person which in the Divine Nature stands of it self and is distinct from the rest Which also the words of the Apostle declare when he says 1 Cor. 13.15 The Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the Love of God and the Communication of the Holy Ghost be with you all Amen The same thing but much more plainly do those things evidence which the Fathers in the first council of Constantinople have added in this place to confute the impious madness of Macedonius And in the Holy Ghost the Lord and giver of Life who proceeds from the Father and the Son who with the Father and the Son together is worshipp'd and glorified Who spake by the Prophets That therefore they confess the Holy Ghost to be Lord they declare in this how much he excels the Angels which yet are most noble Spirits created of God For S. Paul witnesses That they all are ministring Spirits Heb. 1.14 sent forth to minister for them who receive the Inheritance of Salvation And they call him the Giver of Life VI. Why the Holy Ghost call'd the Giver of life because the Soul being joyn'd with God does more truly live than the Body when it is nourish'd and sustain'd by conjunction with the Soul And because the Holy Scriptures attribute to the Holy Ghost this Conjunction of the Soul with God it appears plainly that he is most
that there is a Symbol of this Mistery And of Prophesies none can doubt but those Waters to which the Prophet Esay so freely invites all that thirst IX The Matter of Baptism foretold by the Prophets Isa 55.1 Ez●k 47.20 Zac. 13.1 and which Ezekiel in Spirit saw come forth out of the Temple and that Fountain which was open'd for the house of David and inhabitants of Jerusalem for the washing away of sin and of uncleanness which Zachary propheci'd of have relation to this saving Water of Baptism Now S. Hierom writing to Oceanus X. Why Water the Matter of Baptism D. Hieron Ep. 85. shews by many reasons how suitable it was to the nature of Baptism that Water should be made choice of to be the proper Matter thereof But as to this Point the Pastors may teach first of all that this Sacrament is very necessary to all without exception to the attaining Life Everlasting and therefore that the Matter of Water The Reasons The First The Second which can easily be bad any where and is no where wanting was most proper And then Water very excellently signifies the Effect of Baptism for as Water washes away spots and dirt so also it very well demonstrates the power and efficacy of Baptism The third by which the spots of sin are done away To which may be added That as Water is very fit to refresh the Body so by Baptism the Heat of our Lusts in a great measure is abated Of the Matter of Baptism see Conc. Florent Trid. Sess 7. can 2. de consecrat dist 4. Item D Thom. 3. p. q. 56. art 5. But this is to be noted XI Why Chrism to be us'd in Baptism Amb. l. 1. de Sacr. c. 2 Innocent l. 1. decretal tit 1 c. 3. That tho Simple Water that has no mixture in it be the proper Matter for this Sacrament to wit whensoever there happens a necessity of administring Baptism yet by Tradition from the Apostles it has always bin observ'd in the Catholic Church That Baptism is conferr'd with solemn Ceremonies and Holy Chrism added whereby it is manifest that the Effect of Baptism is the better declar'd And the people are to be taught that tho it may sometimes be doubt'd whether This or That be true Water such as the Perfection of the Sacrament requires yet this must be held as a certainty That the Sacrament of Baptism can never be made of any other Matter than of the liquor of Natural Water upon any account whatsoever Now after that One of the two Parts of which Baptism consists XII The Form of Baptism why diligently and frequently to be explain'd that is the Matter of it has bin expounded The Pastors shall take the same diligence and care to explain the Form of it which is the other part of this Sacrament and is very necessary But in the explanation of this Sacrament they must labor with so much the more care and diligence because the understanding of so Holy a Mystery does of it self not only exceedingly delight the Faithful which delight commonly arises from the understanding of all other Divine Matters but it is much to be sought after because of the daily use and necessity of it For seeing that it often happens as in its proper place will be said more fully that Baptism must be ministred by other people and very often times by Women For this Reason those things that belong to the Substance of this Sacrament ought to be known and well understood promiscuously of all the Faithful And therefore in plain and familiar words which all may easily understand the Pastors shall teach that this is the perfect and absolute Form of Baptism I baptize thee in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost For so our Lord and Savior appointed XIII The Form of Baptism instituted and explain'd when according to S. Matthew he commanded the Apostles Mat. 28.19 Go ye and teach all Nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost By that word Baptizing the Catholic Church which is taught of God rightly understood that in the Form of this Sacrament the Action of the Minister is to be express'd which is done indeed when it is said I baptize thee And because besides the Ministers it is necessary to signifie both the person of him who is baptiz'd and the principal Cause which makes Baptism therefore the Pronoun Thee and the Distinct Names of the Divine Persons are added that so the absolute Form of the Sacrament might be concluded in the words even now mention'd Joh. 1.33 I baptize thee in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost For it is not the person of the Son only of whom S. John writes This is he that baptizes But all the Persons of the Holy Trinity work together at the Sacrament of Baptism But that it is said in the Name and not in the Names This plainly shews That there is but One Nature and Divinity in the Trinity For in this place the Name is not referr'd to the Persons but signifies that Divine Substance Vertue and Power which is One and the same in all the Three Persons See Aug. cont Donatist lib. 6. c. 25. D. Thom. 3. p. q. 66. Art 5. Now in this Form XIV The more Essential parts of the Form of Baptism which we have shew'd to be full and perfect it is to be observ'd that there are some things exceeding necessary which if they shou'd be omitted there can be no Sacrament and there are other things not so necessary but that if they should be omitted the Sacrament is made notwithstanding of which kind is the word Ego l. the vertue whereof is contain'd in the word Baptizo I Baptize Yea and in the Greek Churches changing the order of words they us'd to omit it because they thought it not fit to make any mention at all of the Minister Hence it is that they us'd this Form in Baptism Let this Servant of Christ be baptiz'd in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost And yet it appears by the Sentence and Decree of the Council of Florence That this Sacrament was perfectly administred by them Since by those words is declar'd what belongs to the truth of Baptism to wit Washing or Cleansing which at that time is verily perform'd But if we may say that once there was a time XV. Why antiently the Apostles baptiz'd in Christ's name Act. 2.38 Act. 8.20 when the Apostles baptiz'd only in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ We ought to be assur'd that they did this also by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost that in the Infancy of the Church their preaching in the Name of Jesus Christ might be the more remarkable and that his Divine and immense Power might be the more celebrat'd And then if
him to attain to by any human understanding it was necessary that he receive the knowledg thereof from God Now this knowledg is nothing else but Faith by vertue whereof it comes to pass that we assuredly hold that for truth which the authority of our most holy mother the Church approves as deliver'd by God For the faithful can by no means doubt of those things whereof God who is the very truth it self is the author Whence we perceive how great a difference there is betwixt this Faith which we have towards God and that which we bear towards the writers of human stories Now tho Faith extends very far and disters both in greatness and dignity for thus we read in holy Scripture Matt. 14.31 Luc. 17.5 Gal. 5.6 Jam. 2 14. Wherefore didst thou doubt O thou of little Faith and Great is thy Faith And Increase our Faith So Faith without works is dead And Faith which works by charity Yet in kind it is the same thing And the same definition or description and reason does agree to the different Degrees of Faith But how fruitful and advantagious it is to us will be said in the explication of the Articles of Faith Those things therefore which Christians ought chiefly to hold are the same which the Captains and Doctors of Faith the holy Apostles who were inspir'd by the holy Ghost have distinguish'd in the twelve articles of the Creed For when they receiv'd commandment from the Lord to go his Ambassadors into all the World XXVIII Why the creed was composed Mar. 16.15 and to preach the Gospel to every creature they thought fit to compose a form of Christian Faith to the end that all might think and speak the same thing and that there might be no schism or division amongst them 1 Cor. 1.10 whom they call'd to the unity of the Faith But that they might be made perfect in the same mind and in the same judgment This profession of Christian Faith and hope compos'd by themselves the Apostles call'd a Symbol either because it was made up of the various sentences which they severally cast into the common stock or because they wou'd use it as a certain kind of note or character whereby they might easily discover those false brethren who having deserted and withdrawn themselves corrupted the Gospel from those who had bound themselves by oath to fight under Christs Banner THE CATECHISM FOR THE CURATES BY THE DECREE OF THE Council of TRENT PART I. Of the twelve Articles of the Creed I Believ in God There are in Christian Religion many things propos'd to the faithful I. What the Creed contains whereof there must be had either severally or universally an assur'd and firm Faith But then This first of all and necessarily all are bound to believe which as the very foundation of truth God himself has taught us to wit concerning the Unity of the divine Essence and Distinction of the three Persons and their actions and for what special reason they are attributed to them The Curate is to teach that the doctrin of this mystery is briefly comprehended in the Apostles Creed For as our fore-fathers II. The division of the Creed who were both piously and learnedly skill'd in this point have observ'd it seems to be divided into Three principal parts so as in one The First person of the divine nature and wonderful work of the creation is describ'd In the other the Second person and the mystery of man's redemption In the third part is concluded the doctrin of the Third person the head and fountain of our holiness all in various and fit sentences Now those sentences by a kind of similitude often us'd by our fore-fathers we call Articles For as the members of our body are distinguisht by joynts So also in this confession of Faith whatsoever is to be believ'd by us separately and distinctly from another thing we rightly and fitly call an Article ARTICLE I. I Believ in God the Father Almighty I. What this article contains maker of Heav'n and Earth The meaning of these words is this I certainly believ and without any doubting do profess God the Father to wit the first person in the Trinity who by his Almighty power created out of nothing the very Heav'ns and the Earth and all things contain'd in them and having created them he defends and governs them all Nor do I only in heart believ or by my mouth profess but with my utmost endeavour and strongest affection I reach towards him as my supreme and most compleat good This then is a short account of the first Article But because in almost every one of these words there lies hid mighty mysteries the Curate ought to weigh them more diligently that as far as God shall permit the faithful may be brought with fear and trembling to the contemplation of the glory of his Majesty The word Believ does not therefore in this place signifie II. What it is to believ to think to suppose to be of opinion but as the holy Scriptures teach it signifies a most firm and sure assent whereby the mind does firmly and constantly adhere to God in the revelation of his mysteries Wherefore he does rightly believ in the sense here meant who is fully and certainly perswaded of a thing without any doubt or wavering Nor ought any one to think that the knowledg of Faith is less certain III. The assurance of faith because those things which Faith offers to us to be believ'd are not presently beheld For the divine light by which only we perceiv those things although it makes them not so very clear yet it suffers us not to doubt of them For God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness 2 Cor. 4.6 Ibid. 3. he has shin'd in our hearts that the Gospel might not be hid to us as it is to them that perish And now from what has bin already said IV. Faith excludes curiosity it follows That he that has this heav'nly knowledg of Faith is freed from all curious enquiry For when God commanded us to Believ he did not require of us to search narrowly into his divine judgments or to pry into the reason or cause of them but commands us firmly and immutably to Believ And this Belief makes the mind contented in the knowledg of his eternal truth And indeed since the Apostle witnesses That God is true but every man a lyar and since none but an arrogant or impudent fellow will refuse to give credit to a grave and wise person when he affirms any thing for truth but presses him further to prove what he said by reason and witnesses What rashness and folly must it needs be for one that hears the very word of God himself to demand reasons for the heav'nly doctrin of salvation Faith therefore must be held free not only from all doubtfulness but even from the very desire of more certain evidence or
demonstration The Curate is further to teach V. The outward profession of faith necessary That he who says I Believ besides that he declares the inward assent of his mind which is an interior act of Faith ought also openly to confess and declare that which he imbraces and holds inwardly in his heart by a free and open profession of his Faith and this with the greatest cheerfulness and alacrity For the faithful ought to have the same Spirit which the Prophet had when he said Psal 115.1 I believ'd and therefore did I speak And to imitate the Apostles who answer'd boldly even before the princes of the people We cannot but speak those things which we have seen and heard Acts 4.20 and be mov'd with the excellent saying of S. Paul Rom. 1.11 I am not asham'd of the Gospel for it is the power of God to salvation to every one that believes And again Rom. 10.11 that the truth of this sentence might sufficiently be confirm'd With the heart man believes to righteousness but with the mouth confession is made to salvation In God Hence they VI. How far faith excels the wisdom of the world to whom it is given may learn what the worth and excellency of Christian wisdom is and thereby how much we are beholden to the goodness of God and may climb up as by the steps or degrees of Faith to the knowledg of the most excellent and most desirable thing in the world For herein does the Christian philosophy manifestly differ from the wisdom of the world That the wisdom of the world guided by the light of nature only from the effects of these things which are perceiv'd by the senses making very slow progress and that not without mighty toyl and difficulty at length hardly reaches to the contemplation of the invisible things of God and to acknowledg and perceiv the first cause and author of all things But on the contrary the Christian philosophy does so sharp'n the edge and illuminate the understanding of the mind of man that without difficulty it can mount up to Heav'n and being illustrated with the divine brightness can truly behold first of all the very eternal fountain of light and then those things which are below him So that with the greatest sweetness of mind we can experimentally feel 1 Pet. 2.9 and with unutterable joy we can exult that we are called out of darkness into unspeakable light as the prince of the Apostles has it Rightly therefore in the first place do the faithful profess to believ in God Ibid. 18. Jer. 22.19 whose Majesty we with the Prophet Jeremy declare to be incomprehensible For as the Apostle says He dwells in light inaccessible which no man ever saw and which no man is able to behold For so he said to Moses No man can see my face and live For there is need for that mind that will soar up to God than whom nothing is higher to be altogether abstracted and withdrawn from sense And this by nature in this life we cannot attain to Now tho the case be really thus VII How God manifests himself Act. 14.16 yet as the Apostle says God has not left himself without a testimony of his goodness giving rain from Heav'n and fruitful seasons filling mens hearts with food and gladness which was the reason why the Philosophers did not think meanly of God not attributing by any means any thing corporeal any thing gross or mingl'd to him to whom also they ascrib'd the perfect strength and fulness of all good so that from him as from an eternal never-failing fountain of goodness and bounty does flow all that good that all created beings and perfect natures do enjoy Whom they call'd wise author of truth loving just bountiful and by other names signifying the supream and most absolute perfection Whose infinite power and immense influence they confess'd fills every place and extends it self to all things But this is far better and more clearly understood from the holy Scriptures as in that place where it is said Joh. 4.24 Matt. 5.48 Heb. 4.13 Rom. 11.23 Rom. 3.4 Joh. 14.6 Ps 47.11 Ps 144.16 God is a spirit and Be ye perfect even as your heavenly Father is perfect And All things are naked and open before his eyes and that O the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! And God is true And I am the way the truth and the life And again Thy right hand is full of righteousness And Thou openest thy hand and fillest with thy blessing every living creature Lastly Whither shall I go from thy presence And If I ascend up into Heaven thou art there if I go down into Hell thou art there also if I take wings in the morning and dwell in the utmost parts of the sea c. And Do not I fill Heaven and Earth says the Lord These are great and excellent things which even the Philosophers by searching into nature and the effects of things have consequently discover'd concerning the nature of God and agreeable to the authority of holy Scripture And tho even hence we may learn how necessary this doctrine which came down from Heav'n is VIII Faith is more easie and yet more excellent than knowledge if we observ that Faith is very excellent not only in this That those things which only wise men and that by long study and much labor can attain to do lye open and plain and become easie and familiar even to the unlearned as was said before but that that knowledge of things which is got by Faith is much more certain and much more frees the mind from error than any humane knowledge can possibly do But how much more excellent then is the knowledge of God himself to be thought to the attaining whereof not the contemplation of nature but the light of Faith opens the way properly to believers But this is contein'd in the articles of Faith which teach us the unity of the divine essence and the distinction of the three persons as also that God is man's ultimate end from whom we are to expect the possession of heav'nly and everlasting happiness For so S. Paul teaches us That God is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him How great these things are and whether they are goods of this kind to which mere humane wisdom can reach the Prophet Isaiah before the Apostle Isa 6.4 shews in these words From the very beginning they have never heard nor has any one told them neither without thee ô God has any eye seen what things thou hast prepar'd for them that wait for thee From what has bin already said IX There is only one God we must confess That there is but one God not more Gods For seeing we ascribe the supreme good and perfection to God it is not possible that what is most absolute and supreme can be in more than one But if any thing be wanting
to make a supremacy to any one he is thereby plainly confess'd to be imperfect Wherefore such want is inconsistent with the nature of God This is prov'd by many places of holy Scripture for it is written Hear ô Israel The Lord our God is one God Deut. 6.4 Exod. 20.3 ●● 41.9.44 6 Eph. 4.5 Besides God's commandment is Thou shalt have none other gods before me or in my sight And by the Prophet he often admonishes I am the first and the last and besides me there is no God The Apostle also plainly witnesses There is one Lord one Faith and one Baptism Nor need we therefore wonder because sometimes even the holy Scripture it self seems to ascribe the name of God to Creatures For that it so calls Prophets and Judges Gods this is not done after the same manner which the Gentiles us'd which foolishly and wickedly phanci'd that there were more Gods than one But by a certain custom or form of speaking it wou'd signifie some excellent vertue or office which by the Grace of God was bestow'd upon them Christian Faith therefore believs and confesses That God in his nature substance and essence is but one As for the confirmation of the truth it is declar'd in the Creed of the Council of Nice But rising yet higher it so understands One as it worships Unity in Trinity and Trinity in Unity Of which mystery we are now to begin to speak for it follows in the Creed Father But because the word Father is attributed to God X. How the name Father is proper to God not for one reason only it must therefore first be declar'd what is the most proper signification of this place Some even of those whose blindness Faith never illuminated did yet think God to be an eternal substance from which all things had their beginning and by whose providence they are govern'd and kept in their proper state and order By a similitude therefore taken from humane affairs they call'd him Father as they do him from whom is sprung a Family and by whose counsel and command it is rul'd So for this it was that they call'd God a Father whom they acknowledg'd the Maker and Governour of all things The same name also have the holy Scriptures used when speaking of God they wou'd shew that the creation power and admirable providence over all is to be ascrib'd to him For thus we read Deut. 32.6 Is not he thy Father who bears thee who made and created thee And elsewhere Have we not all one Father Has not one God created us But much more commonly XI God the Father of Christ in a special manner Rom. 8.15 1 Joh. 3.1 Rom. 8.17 Heb. 1.21 and by a kind of peculiar name especially in the books of the new Testament God is called the Father of Christians who have not receiv'd the spirit of bondage to fear but the spirit of adoption to be the sons of God by whom they cry Abba Father For such love has the Father bestow'd upon us that we shou'd be call'd the sons of God and be so But if we be sons then heirs heirs indeed of God and joynt-heirs with Christ who is the first begotten among many brethren and is not asham'd to call us brethren Whether therefore you regard the common reason of creation and providence or that special one of adoption rightly do the faithful profess that they believ God to be a Father But besides those notions we have already explain'd the Curates shou'd teach that at the hearing the name Father the mind is to mount up to higher mysteries For that which is hid and shut up in that inaccessible light where God dwells and which humane reason and understanding cou'd never attain to nor so much as suspect That the divine oracles under this name Father begin to unfold to us For this name shews us XII The name Father shews a plurality of persons That in the being of God not one Person only but a distinction of Persons is to be believ'd For there are three Persons in one God-head The Person of the Father who is begotten of none Of the Son who was begotten of the Father before all worlds Of the Holy Ghost who from all eternity also proceeds from the Father and the Son But the Father in this substance of the Godhead is the first Person who together with his only begotten Son and holy Spirit is one God and one Lord not in the singularity of one person but in the Trinity of one substance But now these three Persons are to be understood as distinct only in their proprieties for it would be a great wickedness but to imagine that there is any thing unlike or unequal in them For the Father is not begotten The Son is begotten of the Father The holy Ghost proceeds from them both And thus we confess that the three Persons have the same being and the same substance So that in the confession of the true and eternal Godhead we do holily and religiously worship both a propriety in the Persons an unity in the essence and equality in the Trinity For when we say that the Person of the Father is First XIII How the First person is a Father it it not so to be understood as if we thought any thing to be first or last greater or less in the Trinity Far be it from all the faithful to think so impiously since Christian Religion teaches that the same Eternity the same Majesty and Glory is alike in all the three Persons But we truly and confidently affirm That the Father forasmuch as he is the beginning without beginning is the first Person which as it is very distinct by the propriety of Father so is it suitable to this one Person chiefly for this reason Because he begat the Son from all eternity For it is plainly signifi'd to us That he always was both God and Father together whensoever in this Confession we pronounce these names together of God and Father But because we cannot be either more dangerously busi'd XIV That we should not too nicely search into the Trinity or more miserably wander in the search or notion of any thing than of this point which is of all others the most profound and difficult the Curats ought to teach That the terms by which this mystery is signifi'd and which are proper both to the Essence and Persons are religiously to be retain'd and let the Faithful understand that there is both Unity in the Essence and distinction in the Persons But that they ought not more narrowly to pry into these things Prov. 25.27 always bearing in mind that saying He that is a searcher of Majesty shall be oppress'd with the glory of it For this which our Faith assures us of ought to satisfie us that thus we are taught of God whose Oracles not to give credit to wou'd be the highest folly and misery in the world Go says he and teach all
But this also is very wonderful VIII Christ not Man before God That so soon as ever the Soul of Christ was joyned with his Body his very God-head or Divinity was also knit together with his Soul and Body Wherefore his Body was at once both form'd and quickn'd and his Divinity joyn'd to his Soul and Body Whence it came to pass IX The Virgin truly Mother of God and Man That in the same moment of time he became perfect God and perfect Man and the most Holy Virgin truly and properly call'd Mother of God and of Man in the same moment wherein she conceiv'd God and Man This was signifi'd by the Angel when he said Luc. 1.31 Behold thou shalt conceiv in thy Womb and shalt bring forth a Son and shalt call his name Jesus he shall be great and shall be call'd the Son of the most High By the event it was well prov'd what Isaiah foretold Isa 7.14 Behold a Virgin shall conceiv and bring forth a Son That Elizabeth also perceiv'd this to be the Conception of the Son of God she being fill'd with the Holy Ghost declares in these Words Whence comes this thing to me Luc. 1.43 That the Mother of my Lord comes to me Now as the Body of Christ was form'd of the purest Blood of the purest Virgin X. Christ as soon as conceiv'd had all Grace without the help of Man as was said before but by the only Power of the Holy Ghost so also as soon as he was conceiv'd his Soul receiv'd an overflowing plenty and all abundance of the Chrism or anointing of the Holy Spirit For God gave not his Spirit to him by measure Job 3.34 as to other Men adorn'd with Grace and Holiness as S. John testifies but be pouer'd plentifully into his Soul all Grace Joh. 1.16 That of his fulness we might all receiv Nor may we call him The Adopted Son of God Note tho he had the Spirit wereby holy Men obtain the Adoption of the Sons of God for he being the Son of God by Nature we may not think that the Grace or name of Adoption can by any means be proper or suitable to him These are the things which seem proper to be explain'd XI How the fruits of the belief of this Article to be got concerning the wonderful Mystery of Christs Conception from whence that some wholsome Fruit and Advantage might redound to us the Faithful ought to fix these things in their Memories and frequently to consider in their Hearts That it is God who took Human flesh upon himself Yet such a way did he become Man that we cannot comprehend in our Minds nor express with Words Lastly that for this end he wou'd become Man That we might be born again and become the Children of God This when they have well consider'd and all the Mysteries contein'd in this Article let them with humble and faithful Minds believ and adore them not seeking to search or pry narrowly into them because they can scarce ever do it without great danger Born of the Virgin Mary This is the other Part of this Article XII Christ born of a Virgin in explaining whereof the Curat shou'd be very diligent because the Faithful are bound to believ not only That Christ our Lord was conceiv'd by the power of the Holy Ghost but that he was born and brought forth into the World by the Virgin Mary With how much sweetness joy and satisfaction of Mind the Belief of this mystery is to be entertain'd and meditated upon the Angel declares who first brought this joyful news to the world Luc. 2.10 Behold I bring you glad tidings of great joy which shall be to all People And from that Song of the Heav'nly Host Luc. 2.14 Glory to God in the highest and in Earth peace to men of good will What the Angels sung is easie to understand Herein that most ample Promise of God to Abraham began to be fulfill'd to whom it was said Gen. 22.18 that in his seed all the Nations of the Earth shou'd be blessed For That Mary whom we declare and worship as the true Mother of God because she brought forth that person which was both God and Man together Mat. 1.39 had her Off-spring from David the King but as that conception does quite surpass the order and course of nature so in that birth we may not contemplate any thing but what is Divine And besides XIII How the Virgin brought forth Christ Joh. 20.19 than which nothing more wonderful can be either said or thought he was born of his Mother without any damage to or less'ning of his Mothers Virginity And as afterwards he went out of his Toom tho it were shut and seal'd and went in to his Disciples the doors being shut or to take a similitude from things we daily see come to pass by nature as the rays of the Sun penetrate the concrete hard substance of Glass and yet neither break nor hurt it in the least after a like but a higher sort I say Jesus Christ was brought forth out of his Mothers womb without any hurt to his Mothers Virginity for we celebrate her unstain'd and perpetual Virginity with the truest praises and commendations And this was wrought by the power of Holy Ghost who was present with the Mother in such a manner at the conception of the Son and birth of her Son that he gave her both Fruitfulness and perfect Virginity The Apostle uses sometimes to call Christ Jesus the new Adam XIV Christ compar'd to Adam Mary to Eve 1 Cor. 15.21 22. and to compare him with the first Adam for as in the first Adam all dye so in the second Adam all are call'd again to life And as Adam as to the natural state is the Father of all mankind so Christ is the Author of Grace and Glory After the same manner we may so compare the Virgin Mother with Eve that the second Eve which is Mary may answer to the first Eve as we have already shew'd that the second Adam which is Christ answers to the first Adam For Eve because she believ'd the Serpent brought death and a curse upon mankind and when Mary believ'd the Angel it came to pass by God's goodness that life and a blessing came down upon men Throw Eve we were born the children of wrath Eph. 2.3 5. but of Mary we have receiv'd Jesus Christ by whom we are born again the children of Grace It was said to Eve Gen. 3.16 in sorrow shalt thou bring forth Children Mary is freed from this Law as being she who having kept her Virgin Modesty safe and entire brought forth Jesus the Son of God without any feeling or sence of pain as before was said When therefore the mysteries of this wonderful Conception and Nativity are so many and so great XV. Figures of Christ's conception and nativity it pleas'd the divine Providence
to signifie them before hand by many Signs Oracles and Prophecies The Holy Fathers therefore understood many of the things we read in the Holy Scriptures to belong to this matter but especially where we read of that Gate of the Sanctuary which Ezekiel saw shut also the Stone cut out of the mountain without hands as we read in Daniel which became a great Mountain and fill'd the whole Earth And Aarons Rod which only of all the Rods of the Princes of Israel budded Num. 17.8 Exod 3.4 and the Bush which Moses saw burn Luc. 2. and was not consumed The Holy Evangelist has largely describ'd the history of Christs Birth Of which therefore there is no need that we speak more since 't is easie for the Curate to read more there Great pains ought to be taken XVI In explaining this mystery what the people ought to be perswaded to Rom. 15.4 Job 26.11 that those mysteries which were written for our learning might be fixed and rooted in the minds of the Faithful And first of all in commemoration of so great a benefit that they be thankful to God the Author thereof and next that they always lay before their eyes for their example to imitate this so great and singular pattern of Humility For what can be more useful or profitable to check the pride and haughtiness of our hearts than often to think that God does so humble himself that he communicates his glory with men and takes on himself their weakness and frailty that God becomes Man and gives that supreme and infinite Majesty to Man at whose Nod the very Pillars of Heav'n as the Scripture says tremble and quake for fear and that he shou'd be born in earth whom the very Angels adore in Heav'n What therefore since God does these things for our sake what I say ought we to do in obedience to him How willingly and chearfully ought we to love embrace and perform all Offices of Humility The Faithful see how wholsom a Doctrine the Birth of Christ teaches us even before he began to utter his voice He is born needy he is born a Stranger in an Inn He is born in a vile Manger He is born in the depth of Winter Luc. 2.6 9. for thus writes St. Luke It came to pass that while they were there the days were accomplish'd that she should bring forth and she brought forth her first born Son and wrapp'd him in swadling cloaths and laid him in a manger because there was no room for him in the Inn. Cou'd the Evangelist include all the whole Glory and Majesty of Heav'n and Earth in more bumble expressions Nor does he write that there was no room in the Inn Ps 49.12 but none for him who said The whole earth is mine and the fulness thereof Which also another Evangelist testifies saying He came to his own and his own receiv'd him not These things when the Faithful remember XVII How great grace and glory redounds to us by the Incarnation let them also remember that God was contented to undergo the lowliness and frailty of our flesh that he might raise mankind up to the highest degree of Dignity for this one thing sufficiently discovers that excellent dignity and worth which he has by the divine bounty obtain'd that He vouchsaft to become Man who also was true and perfect God so that now we may boast that the Son of God is our bone and our flesh which those Blessed Spirits cannot do for as the Apostle says He in no case took upon him the nature of Angels but he took upon him the seed of Abraham But then we ought to take heed XVIII A singular admonition that all this happ'n not to our extream hurt that as at Bethlehem where he was born they wou'd allow him no room so also since he is now born in our flesh he find no room in our hearts where he may be spiritually born For this it is he being most earnestly desirous of our salvation that he earnestly calls for For as by the power of the Holy Ghost he was beyond the Order of Nature made Man Joh. 1.13 Rom. 64 5. and 7.6 and giv'n to us was Holy yea Holiness it self so it behov's us to be born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh but of God and then as new creatures to walk in newness of Spirit and to keep that holiness and integrity of mind which much becomes men regenerated by the Spirit of God For by this means we shall express in our selvs a certain kind of image or resemblance of the holy conception and Nativity of this Son of God 2 Cor. 2.7 which we believ with a faithful heart and believing wisdom of God which was hidd'n in a Mystery we embrace and adore it ARTICLE IV. SUffered under Pontius Pilate was crucified dead and buried How necessary the knowledge of this Article is and what diligent care the Curat ought to take that the faithful be often put in remembrance of our Lord's Passion the Apostle teaches who professes that he determin'd to know nothing else but Jesus Christ and him crucified Upon this account therefore all care and diligence ought to be us'd that the faithful being stirr'd up with the commemoration of so great a benefit may turn themselv's wholly to the Love of God and the embracing of his goodness Faith therefore in the former part of this Article for of the other shall be spok'n afterwards offers this to our Belief that when Pontius Pilate II. What is propos'd to be believ'd in this Article by command of Tyberius Caesar govern'd the Province of Judea Christ our Lord was fastn'd to a Cross for he was Taken Mock'd Suffer'd many kinds of Injuries and Torments and at last Crucifi'd Nor are we to think that as to his Inward Part his Soul was free from those torments for since he truly took the Humane Nature upon him we must needs confess that in his Soul he felt the most tormenting Grief Mat. 26.38 Mar. 14.34 wherefore he said my soul is exceeding sorrowful even to death For tho his Humane Nature was join'd to his Divine Person yet by reason of that very conjunction he no less felt the bitterness of his passion than if that conjunction had not been made since in that one person of Christ Jesus the proprieties of both natures the Divine and Humane were still preserv'd and therefore that which was passible and mortal still remain'd passible and mortal and again that which was impassible and immortal such as we understand the Divine Nature to be still restain'd its own propriety And where in this place seems fit to be diligently observ'd III. Why the Time of his Passion was thus noted the Curat shall teach that Jesus Christ suffer'd at that time when Pontius Pilate govern'd the Province of Judea and that this was done for this reason that the knowledge of so great and so necessary
Bones and Sinews but also that whole Christ is contain'd in this Sacrament For they ought to teach That Christ is the name of God-Man to wit of one Person wherein the Divine and Human Nature are joyn'd together how it conteins both Substances and whatsoever are the consequences of each Substance the Divinity and the whole Human Nature which consists of all the parts of a Body and of Blood also all which we must believe to be in the Sacrament For since in Heaven the whole Humanity is joyn'd to the Divinity in one person and Hypostasis it would be wicked but to imagine that the Body which is in the Sacrament is disjoyn'd from the same Divinity Vide de Consecr dist 2. multis in locis Item Ambr. de iis qui myst init c. 9. D. Thom. 3. p. q. 76. a. 1. Where it will be necessary notwithstanding XXXII Whatsoever things are Christ's are not all contain'd in the Eucharist after the same manner that the Pastors observe that all things are not contein'd in this Sacrament after the same way or with the same vertue For there are some things which we say are in the Sacrament by the vertue and Efficacy of Consecration For seeing those Words effect what they signifie Sacred Writers have bin us'd to say That that Thing is in the Sacrament by vertue of the Sacrament which is express'd in the Form of Words So if it should happen that any thing should be wholly disjoyn'd from the other things That only is in the Sacrament which the Form signifies but the rest they have taught not to be so But there are some things contain'd in the Sacrament because they are joyn'd with the things which are express'd in the Form For seeing that the Form which is us'd at consecrating the Bread signifies the Lords Body when it is said This is my Body the very Body of Christ our Lord is in the Eucharist by vertue of the Sacrament But because his Body Blood Soul and Divinity are joyn'd together XXXIII What things are in the Eucharist by concomitancy all these will be also in the Sacrament not indeed by vertue of the Consecration but as those things which are joyn'd with his Body And these things are said to be in the Sacrament by concomitancy For which reason it is plain that whole Christ is in the Sacrament For if any two things are indeed knit together where the One is the other must needs be there also It follows therefore that whole Christ is so far contein'd as well in the species of the Bread as of the Wine that as not only the Body but also the Blood and whole Christ is truly in the species of the Bread So on the contrary not only the Blood but the Body also and whole Christ is truly in the species of Wine Now tho all the Faithful ought to be fully and assuredly perswaded of these things XXXIV Why the Bread and Wine separately consecrated Yet it was very fitly order'd That two Consecrations should be severally made First That the Passion of our Lord in which the Blood was divided from his Body might more lively be represented for which cause in the Consecration we make a memorial that Christs Blood was pour'd out And then it was most fit that because we are to use the Sacrament for the Nourishment of our Souls it should be appointed as Meat and Drink of which two it is evident that the perfect nourishment of the Body does consist Nor ought this to be pass'd over XXXV Whole Christ in every particle that whole Christ is contain'd not only in either species but in every particle of each species For thus S. Austin writes All severally receive Christ our Lord and he is whole in the several parts nor is he made the less by being distributed severally to many But he gives himself whole to all But this may easily be gather'd from the Evangelists also Citatur Aug. de Consecr dist 2. c. singulis For we are not to believe XXXVI Many particles of Bread not consecrated separately that the several Loaves of Bread were consecrated by our Lord with the proper Form of words but that all the Bread then us'd at the Sacred Mysteries and enough to be distributed among the Apostles was consecrated together with the same Form ' The same thing which appears to have bin done by the Chalice For he said Luc. 22.17 Take and divide it among you What has hitherto bin explain'd is intended that the Pastors may shew that the true Body and Blood of Christ is contain'd in the Sacrament of the Eucharist Now as to the Second thing propos'd XXXVII After the Consecration that the substance of the Bread and Wine remain not prov'd First by Reason they shall teach also that the Substance of Bread and Wine remains not in the Sacrament after Consecration Now tho this deservedly requires a very great admiration yet it is necessarily joyn'd with that which before was shew'd For if after Consecration there be the true Body of Christ under the species of Bread and Wine it is altogether necessary that seeing it was not there before this be done either by change of place by Creation or by Conversion of another thing into it But it is manifest that it cannot be that the Body of Christ in the Sacrament be that which came out of one place into another For so it would come to pass that he must be absent from Heaven because nothing is mov'd unless it leave the place from which it mov'd But it is less credible that the Body of Christ is created and this we cannot so much as conceive It remains therefore that in the Sacrament there is the Body of our Lord and that the Bread is chang'd into it Wherefore it must needs be that no substance of Bread remains Being led by this Reason Secondly by the decrees of Councils our Ancestors and Forefathers in the great Council of Lateran and that of Florence by evident Decrees confirm'd the truth of this Article But in the Council of Trent it was more fully defin'd thus If any one shall say that in the Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist there remains the Substance of Bread and Wine together with the Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ let him be Anathema Lat. Con. c. 1. Flor. in Ep. Eugenii IV. data ad Arm. à Concilio approbata Trid. Sess 13. Can. 4. And it was easie to gather these things from testimonies of Scripture Thirdly by the Authority of Scripture First that in the Institution of this Sacrament the Lord himself said This is my Body For this is the force of the word This to shew all the Substance of the thing present but if the Substance of the Bread remain'd it would seem by no means to be truly said Matt. 26.26 Mar. 14.2 Luc. 22.28 1 Cor. 11.24 Joh. 6.61 This is my Body And then Christ our Lord
verily would be vain if Venial could be forgiven without Penance Aug. lib. 50. Hom. ●0 item Epist 168. Ench. cap. 71. But because it is not enough to speak of those things which in a manner proceed into Act XXVI What the Three intire Parts of Penance are the Pastors shall take care to teach those things severally by which the Reason and Nature of true and saving Penance may be perceiv'd by the Faithful For it is proper to This Sacrament only that besides the Matter and Form which are common to all the Sacraments it has also those Parts as we said before which do as it were make Penance whole and intire to wit Contrition Confession and Satisfaction Of which S. Chrysostom speaks in these words Hom 2. quae est de Poenit. Penance forces the sinner to endure all things willingly for in his Heart there is Contrition in his Mouth is Confession and in his Actions a perfect Humility and fruitful Satisfaction Vide Concil Trid. 14. de Poenit. c. 3. can 4. Item Concil Floren. in doctrin de Sacram. But these Parts are said to be of that kind of Parts XXVII The Quality of the Parts of Penance explain'd which are necessary to make up some Whole Because as the Body of Man consists of many members as Hands Feet Eyes and other such like Parts whereof if any be wanting he deservedly seems to be imperfect but perfect if no Part be wanting After the same manner also Penance is made up of these Three things so that altho as to the Nature thereof Contrition and Confession be sufficient to justifie a Man yet unless the Third Part also which is satisfaction be added it must needs be that something be wanting to make it perfect Wherefore these Parts are so knit together XXVIII The conne●ion of the Parts of Penance that Contrition has included in it the Counsel and Purpose of Confessing and Satisfying Contrition and the Will of making Satisfaction goes before Confession But they both go before Satisfaction But of these Three Parts we may give this Reason XXIX Why Penance consists of these three Parts that in Mind in Word and in Deed we commit sin against God Wherefore it was fit that subjecting our selves to the Keys of the Church by those very things wherein the most holy name of God was violated by us we should endeavor also to appease his Anger and to procure of him the Pardon of our sins But the same thing may be confirm'd by another Reason also For Penance is as it were a Compensation or Recompence for Offences proceeding from the Will of him that offended and appointed by the Will of God against whom the sin was committed Wherefore the Will of making recompense is also requir'd about which chiefly Contrition is conversant And it is necessary that the Penitent subject himself to the judgment of the Priest who b●ars the Person of God That according to the Greatness of the sin he may appoint him his Punishment From whence both the Reason and the Necessity of Satisfaction is perceiv'd Now because the Faithful must be taught the Vertue and Nature of these Parts XXX Contrition defin'd and explain'd we must begin first with Contrition and diligently explain That for neither at no Instant of Time when we remember our past sins or whensoever we offend ought the Soul to be free from Contrition Now the Fathers of the Council of Trent define it thus Ead. Sess 14. Contrition is the Grief of the Soul and a Detestation of sin committed with a Purpose to sin no more for the time to come And a little after concerning the Motion of Contrition it is subjoyn'd And so at last it prepares us for Remission of sins if it be joyn'd with a Confidence of the Mercy of God and an earnest desire of performing the rest of those things which are requir'd to the due performing of this Sacrament By this Definition therefore the Faithful understand XXXI Wherein the Power and Efficacy of Contrition is plac'd that the Force of Contrition is not plac'd in this only That a Man cease to sin or that he purposes to lead a New Life or has already begun it but he is first of all to hate and to expiate his former ill-spent Life This thing do those bitter cries of the Holy Fathers which we read scatter'd about in Holy Scripture abundantly confirm Ps 6.7 I have labour'd says David in my mourning I will every night wash by Bed And The Lord has heard the voice of my Weeping Ezek. 38.15 And Another I will recount to thee all my years in the Bitterness of my Soul Which without doubt and many other such like expressions some vehement hatred of a fore-past-life and detestation of sin utter'd But whereas Contrition has bin defin'd a Grief XXXII Contrition is a Grief of the Soul not of the Body Hom. ●0 the Faithful are to be warn'd not to suppose that that Grief belongs to the Bodily Senses For Contrition is an Act of the Will And S. Austin testifies That Grief is not Penance but the Companion of Penance But the Fathers signifi'd the Detestation and Hatred of Sin by this word Grief Both because the Sacred Scriptures so use it for David said Psal 12.2 How long shall I put Counsel in my Soul and Grief in my Heart daily And also because from that Contrition arises Grief in the lower part of the Soul which has the Force of desiring So that Contrition was not improperly defin'd in Grief because it causes Grief Note and Penitents to declare that Grief have bin us'd to change their Garments also Of this our Lord spake in S. Matthew Mat● 11.21 Woe to thee Chorazin Wo to thee Bethsaida because if the mighty works had bin done in Tyre and Sydon which have bin done in you they had done Penance long ago in Sackcloth and Ashes Rightly therefore is this name Contrition giv'n to the Detestation of sin XXXIII How properly this Part of Penance is call'd Contrition of which we speak to signifie the Force of Grief taken from a Similitude drawn from corporeal things which are broken by little and little by a Stone or some harder Matter that by that Name it might be declar'd that our Hearts which by Pride are harden'd by vertue of Penance might be beaten and made soft Wherefore no other Grief Note whether at the Death of Parents or Children or for any other Calamity is call'd by this Name But this Name is proper to that kind of Grief wherewith we are affected at the loss of Gods Grace and Innocence Now the same thing is us'd to be call'd by other Names XXXIV Contrition call'd by other Names for it is call'd Contrition of Heart because the Sacred Scriptures do frequently use the Word Heart for the Will For as from the Heart the Bodily Motion has its beginning so the Will governs and rules all
thee with the sign of the Cross or is pronounc'd as it were by commanding as when in administring the Sacrament of Orders it is said Receive thou Power But this One Form of Extream Unction is perform'd in a kind of Prayer but this is very properly and rightly done for seeing this Sacrament is therefore us'd that besides the spiritual Grace that it gives it also restores Health to the Sick yet because it does not always follow that the Sick are made whole of their Disease for this cause the Form is made in a Prayer that we may beg that of Gods Bounty which the Power or Vertue of the Sacrament is not us'd to effect in a constant and perpetual course Now there are proper Rites us'd in the administration of this Sacrament also But the greatest part of them contains Prayers XV. Why so many Prayers us'd in administring this Sacrament which the Priest uses to obtain Health for the sick Person For there is no Sacrament which is made with more Prayers and indeed rightly because at that time especially the Faithful are to be assisted with Pious Devotions Wherefore also all the rest who then happen to be present and specially the Curat ought from their heart to beseech God for the sick Person and with all their study and affection to commit his Life and Health to Gods Mercy Now seeing it has bin shew'd that Extream Unction is truly and properly to be reckon'd in the number of the Sacraments XVI The Sacrament of Extream Unction instituted by Christ This also follows that the Institution thereof came from Christ our Lord which afterwards was propos'd and publish'd to the Faithful by the Apostle S. James Altho the same our Savior seem'd to have given the First Draught of this Unction when he sent his Disciples by two and two before his Face for it is thus written of them by the Evangelist Mar. 6.13 They went and preach'd that Men should do Penance and they cast out many Devils and Anointed many that were sick with Oyl and heal'd them Which Unction must indeed be believ'd to have bin not invented by the Apostles Note but commanded of the Lord Not endu'd with any Natural Vertue but was instituted to be Mystic rather to heal their Soul than to cure their Body Which things S. Dennys S. Ambrose S. Chrysostom and S. Gregory the Great assert that it is by no means to be doubted but that with great Religion we ought to receive This as One of the Seven Sacraments of the Catholic Church So the Faithful are to be taught XVII To Whom this Scarament is to be administer'd altho this Sacrament belongs to all yet there are some sorts of Men to be excepted to whom it is not to be administer'd And first they are excepted who are of a sound and healthy Body For that Extream Unction is not to be given to them the Apostle teaches when he says Ja. 5.14 Is any one Sick among you And Reason shews For for this cause was it instituted not only to be a Remedy to the Soul but to the Body also Seeing therefore that they only who are Sick want cure therefore ought this Sacrament to be given to them who seem to be so dangerously Sick that it may be fear'd that the last day of their life is at hand In which case notwithstanding they grievously sin XVIII The Sick are to be anointed before they lose their Senses who use to observe that time for the anointing of the Sick when all Hope of Health is gone and the Person begins to grow dead and senseless for it is manifest that to the more profitable receiving of the Sacrament it is very available that the sick be anointed with the Sacred Oyl when his Mind is yet whole in him and his Reason strong and when he can make use of his Faith and a Religious Will or Disposition of Soul Wherefore the Curats are to observe that at such time chiefly they apply that Heavenly Medicin which by its own vertue is always very wholsome but they will understand that it will be more profitable when joyn'd with the pious Devotion of them that are to be heal'd The Sacrament of Unction therefore may not be given to any one that is not grievously sick XIX To whom this Sacrament is not to be administer'd altho he go about any thing that may be dangerous to his Life either because he is a going some dangerous Sea-Voyage or because he is entring into Battle where certain Death hangs over him or even being condemn'd to Death he is carry'd away to suffer it Furthermore all those that want the use of Reason are not fit to take this Sacrament And Children that do not sin the Relics whereof there is no need to heal by the Remedy of this Sacrament Also Mad-men and Phrenetic unless they sometimes have the Use of Reason and at that time especially give some signification of a pious Soul and desire to be anointed with the Sacred Oyl For he who from his Birth never had the Use of Reason and Right-Mind is not to be anointed but not so if the sick person when being in his Right-mind he would be made Partaker of this Sacrament afterwards fell into Madness and Raving Now all the Parts of the Body are not to be anointed XX. What parts of the Body to be anointed but those only which Nature gave to Man to be as it were the Instruments of Sense The Eyes for Sight The Ears for Hearing The Nostrils for Smell The Mouth for Taste or Speech The Hand for Feeling which tho it be equally spread abroad through the whole Body yet it is most vigorous or lively in that Part Now this Rite of Anointing XXI Why these Parts are to be anointed the Universal Church retains and it very well agrees also to the Nature of this Sacrament for it is as a Medicin And because in the Diseases of the Body altho the whole Body be ill affected yet the Cure is apply'd to that Part only from whence as from the Fountain and Original the Disease flows Therefore not the whole Body but those Members are anointed in which chiefly the strength of Sense is most eminent as also the Reins being the seat as it were of Pleasure and Lust and the Feet which move and carry us from place to place And here it must be observ'd XXII This Sacrament may be iterated and when That in one and the same Sickness when the sick Man is in the same danger of Life he is to be anointed once only But if after this Unction receiv'd the Sick Person recover so often as he shall afterwards fall into the same danger of Life so often may the help of this Sacrament be giv'n him Whence it plainly appears That this Sacrament belongs to the number of those that may be iterated But because all diligence ought to be us'd XXIII With what Preparation
Whereby it seemed to be declar'd that they ought to be obedient and subject to their Husbands Of these Names See Aug. lib. 19. cont Faust c. 26. Ambr. l. 1. de Abraham c. 9. in fine item vide 30. q. 5. c. feminae 33. q. 5. c. Mulier Isidor lib. 2. de Eccles Officiis c. 19. And thus it is defin'd according to the common sense of Divines V. The Definition of Matrimony given to be explain'd Matrimony is a Conjugal Conjunction of a Man and a Woman between two lawful persons holding an individual nearness of life The parts of which Definition that they may the better be understood it must be taught that altho all these things are in perfect Matrimony to wit Inward Consent Outward Agreement or Pact express'd by Words Obligation and Bond which is made by vertue of the Pact and the Copulation of Husband and Wife whereby the Matrimony is consummate yet nothing of these has properly the Nature and Vertue of Matrimony unless that Obligation and Knot which is signifi'd by the word Conjunction The word Conjugal is added because other kinds of Compacts whereby Men and Women are oblig'd mutually to help each other Conjugal either for Mony or for any other respect are far from the Nature of Matrimony Then follows Between lawful persons Between lawful persons because they who by the Laws are wholly excluded from the Conjunction of Marriage cannot enter into Matrimony Nor if they should marry is their Marriage valid for Example those who are join'd in kindred within the fourth degree and a Youth before the fourteenth year of his Age or a Girl before her twelfth which is the Age establish'd by Law such persons are not fit to enter into the just Covenants of Matrimony But that which is put in the last place Keeping an individual nearness of life declares the Nature of an indissoluble Bond Indissoluble wherewith the Husband and Wife are ty'd together From these things therefore it is plain VI. Wherein especially the vertue of Matrimony is plac'd that the Nature and Reason of Matrimony consists in that Bond. For that which other Definitions of the most learn'd Men seem herein to attribute to the Consent As when they say That Wedlock is a Consent of a Man and of a Woman In Epist Eugen 4 ●d Arm●n This is so to be understood that that Consent is the working cause of Matrimony which thing the Fathers in the Council of Florence have taught for Obligation and Tye cannot be without Consent and Compact But it is very necessary VII The Consent of the p esent time to be express'd by words that the Consent be express'd in words which signifie the present Time For neither is Matrimony a simple Donation but a mutual Compact And therefore it is that the Consent of One only is not to join Matrimony but there must be a mutual Consent of Two betwixt themselves And for the declaring of this mutual Consent of mind it is evident that there is need of Words For if Matrimony could consist in the inward Consent only without any outward signification VIII The Inward Consent not enough for Matrimony then this also would seem to follow that when Two who were sever'd far asunder and in different places would consent to marry before the One had declar'd his Will to the other either by Letters or Messengers they would be join'd together in a true and lasting Matrimony which notwithstanding is very far both from Reason and from the Practice and Decrees of Holy Church It is rightly said therefore IX Consent of present in words of future time no sufficien● that the Consent must be express'd in words which have the signification of the present time for those words which shew a future time do not conjoin Matrimony but promise only and then it is evident that those things which are future are not yet but those things which are not must be thought to have little or nothing of firmness or stability in them Wherefore as yet no one has a Right of the Marriage Bed with that Woman which he promises that he will marry nor is it presently fulfill'd what he promises he will do altho he ought to perform his promise which if he perform not he is convicted as guilty of breach of Faith But he that is join'd to another in the Covenant of Matrimony altho afterwards he repent yet what is done he cannot alter or make void or ineffectual Since therefore the Obligation of Wedlock is not a bare Promise but such a kind of abal●enation or transferring over a Right whereby a man delivers indeed the power of his Body to the Woman and the Woman the power of her's to the Man therefore it is necessary that Matrimony be contracted with words which signifie the present time The Vertue and Force of which words remain even after they are pronounc'd and hold the Man and the Woman bound together with an indissoluble Bond. But yet instead of Words a Nod with the Head X. A Nod or other signs may suffice instead of Words or other signs which plainly shew the inward Consent may be sufficient for Matrimony yea even silence it self when a Maid by reason of Modesty answers not but her Parents speak for her From these things therefore the Curats shall teach the Faithful that the Nature and Force of Matrimony lies in the Bond and Obligation And besides the Consent express'd in that manner as has now bin said that Matrimony might be true the Bed is not necessary Gen 2. For it is plainly manifest that our first Parents before they had sinn'd all which time there had bin no carnal copulation betwixt them as the Fathers testifie were join'd together in true Matrimony Wherefore the Holy Fathers say that Matrimony stands not in the Marriage-Bed but in the Consent which we find repeated also by S. Ambrose in his Book concerning Virgins De Inst Virgin c. 6. Now these things being explain'd XI Matrimony Two ●●d Natural and Sacramental it must be taught That Matrimony has a double respect for Conjunction is to be consider'd either as it is Natural for Wedlock was not invented by Man but by Nature or as it is a Sacrament the Force whereof excels the Condition of Natural Things and because Grace perfects Nature 1 Cor. 15.46 for neither that which is spiritual is first but that which is Animal and afterwards that which is Spiritual so that the Order of the Matter requires that we first treat of Matrimony as it is Natural and afterwards explain those things which agree to it as a Sacrament First XII Natural Matrimony instituted of God therefore the Faithful are to be taught that Matrimony was instituted of God For it is written in Genesis God created them Male and Female and bless d them and said Increase and multiply Gen. 2. And It is not good that Man be alone let us make
their Wives even as their own Bodies He that loves his Wife loves himself for no one ever hated his own flesh but nourishes and cherishes it even as Christ does the Church because we are Members of his Body of his Flesh and of his Bones For this cause a Man shall leave his Father and his Mother and shall cleave to his Wife and they Two shall be One flesh This is a great Sacrament but I speak in Christ and in the Church For in that he says This is a great Sacrament no one ought to doubt that it is to be referr'd to Matrimony to wit because the Conjunction of the Man and of the VVoman whereof God is the Author is a Sacrament i. e. a Sacred Sign of the most Holy Bond wherewith Christ our Lord is join'd with his Church And that this is the proper and true sense of these words the antient Holy Fathers Tertul lib. de Monog Aug. de fide oper c. 7. lib. de Nup. concup c. 10. 12. Ambr. in Epist ad Eph. Ephes 3.25 who have interpreted this place have shew'd and the Holy Synod of Trent has explain'd the same thing It is evident therefore that the Husband is compar'd by the Apostle to Christ and the VVife to the Church That the Man is the Head of the Woman as Christ is of the Church and for that reason it is that the Husband ought to love his Wife and the Wife ought again to love and reverence her Husband for Christ lov'd his Church and gave himself for her And again as the same Apostle teaches the Church is subject to Christ But that in this Sacrament also Grace is signifi'd and given XX. The Sacrament of Matrimony give● Grace in which thing especially the Nature of a Sacrament consists these words of the Synod declare But the Grace which perfects that Natural Love and confirms that indissoluble Unity Sess 14. Christ himself the Author and Finisher of the Venerable Sacraments has merited for us by his Passion VVherefore it must be taught XXI The Effects of the Grace of this Sacrament Heb. 13.4 that by the Grace of this Sacrament it is brought to pass that the Husband and VVife being join'd together with the Bond of Mutual Love acquiesce together and rest in each others good will and seek no strange and unlawful Loves and Copulations but in all respects their Marriage is honorable and the Bed undefiled But how far the Sacrament of Matrimony excels all other Matrimonies XXII How much the Sacrament of Matrimony excels all other Matrimony we may know from hence because tho' the Gentiles themselves thought there was something in Matrimony that is Divine and for that reason judg'd that wandring Copulations were strange to the Law of Nature and also that Whoredom Adultery and other kinds of Lusts were to be punish'd yet their Marriages had no Vertue at all of a Sacrament But among the Jews the Laws of Matrimony were much more religiously observ'd XXIII The Matrimony of the Jews tho it were Holy yet it was no Sacrament Gen. 2 nor is it to be doubted but that their Marriages were indu'd with a greater Sanctity For seeing they receiv'd that Promise That all Nations should be bless'd in the seed of Abraham it justly seem'd to be an Office of great Piety among them to beget Children and to propagate the Off-spring of a chosen people of which Christ our Lord and Saviour as to his human Nature was to have his Birth but even those Marriages also wanted the true reason of a Sacrament To this may be added XXIV Matrimony before and under the Law was imperfect Deut. 24.1 Mat. 19.7 that whether we consider the Law of Nature after the corruption of it or the Law of Moses we may easily observe that Matrimony had fallen very much from the Excellency and Gracefulness of its first Original For while the Law of Nature was in force we find that there were many of the antient Fathers who had several Wives together and if occasion were giving them a Bill of Divorce discharged them Both which being taken away by the Evangelical Law Marriage has bin restor'd to its former state For XXV Plurality of Wives contrary to Matrimony that Polygamy or divers VVives was contrary to the Nature of Matrimony altho some of the antient Fathers are not to be accus'd because it was not without Gods indulgence that they married divers VVives Christ our Lord shews in these words Mat. 19.5 For this cause shall a man let go Father and Mother and shall cleave to his Wife and they Two shall be in One Flesh And then he adds Therefore now they are not Two but One Flesh By which words he has made it evident XXVI Matrimony is a Conjunction of Two only that Matrimony was so instituted of God that it should be defin'd in a Conjunction of Two only and no more VVhich elsewhere he has taught very plainly for he says Whosoever shall put away his Wife and marries another commits Adultery upon her and if the Wife put away her Husband and he married to another she committs Adultery For if it were lawful for a Man to marry many VVives there would seem no reason he should rather be said to be guilty of Adultery because he married another Wife besides that he had at home than because the former being put away he was join'd with another And for this cause we understand it to be Note that if any Unbeliever according to the manner and custom of his own Country had married many Wives when he was converted to the true Religion the Church commands him to leave the rest and to account the first only as his true and lawful VVife But it is easily prov'd by the same Testimony of Christ our Lord XXVII The Bond of Matrimony dissolv'd by no Divorce that the Bond of Matrimony can be dissolv'd by no Divorce For if after a Bill of Divorce a VVoman were freed from the Law of her Husband it might be lawful for her without any crime of Adultery to marry another Husband Mat. 19.8 But the Lord plainly denounces Every one that puts away his Wife and marries another commits adultery VVherefore it is plain XXVIII Death only dissolves Matrimony 1 Cor. 6.39 that the Bond of VVedlock is broken by nothing else but Death which the Apostle also confirms when he says A woman is bound to the Law for so long-time as her Husband lives but if her Husband die she is freed from that Law she may be marry'd to whom she pleases only in the Lord. And again to those who are join'd together in Matrimony I command yet no● I but the Lord that the Wife depart not from her Husband But if she depart let her abide unmarry'd or be reconcil'd to her Husband The Apostle has left this Choice to that VVoman who for a just cause has left her Husband either that she
to three Heads 176 The Ceremonies and Rights of Confirmation 192 The Ceremonies us'd at the Sacrament of Penance 261 The Ceremonies us'd in the Sacrament of Extream Unction 286 A Character the Effect of three Sacraments 143 What a Character performs 144 Christ's Spiritual Kingdom 34 Christ from his different Natures took different Properties 36 Why Christ call'd our Lord. ibid. Christ not call'd the Son of God by Adoption but by Nature 41 Christ came of David according to the Flesh 42 Why Christ call'd the last Adam ibid. Christs Humility an Example fitted for the beating down our pride 44 Christs Birth teaches us a saving Lesson ibid. Christ's Blood washes away our Sins 105 Christ the Author of all the Sacraments 139 Christ is our Brother 480 Christ's Resurrection destroys not his Brotherhood with Men. ibid. How Christ reigns in us 493 For Christ's sake we must be willing to be counted Fools 504 We must imitate Christ in submitting our Will to Gods Will. ibid. Christ our Lord is Bread 517 The Mystery of Christ's Passion evidently shews Gods Power and Goodness 519 Under the Protection of Christ's Passion we get Pardon of our Sins 525 Christians have all the same Spiritual Original 481 The Knowlege of a Christian comprehended under one Head 5 8 Wherein the Labor of a Christian Teacher ought to be imploy'd 5 Wherein Christian Wisdom differs from that of the World 16 How much a Christian is bound to Christ 37 By the Name Church what is properly to be understood 86 The Difference between Church and Synagogue Pag. 87 The Church call'd by many Names 88. Why the Church call'd Militant and Triumphant 89 The Figures and Similitudes of the Church 90 Who are shut out of the Church ibid. The Properties and Prerogatives of the Catholic Church 91 c. The visible Head of the Church 92 The Unity of the Church 93 The Church call'd Holy 94 The Church is Catholic 95 A certain Rule to know the the true Church from falfe ones 96 The Church is Apostolic ibid. The Church cannot err ibid. Without the Church there is no true Worship 97 God is the Author of the Church 98 We understand by Faith that the Church has the Keyes of the Kingdom of Heaven ibid. Why we say believe the Church and not in the Church ibid. The Name of Clerk whence deriv'd 300 VVhence the Clerk's Crown had its beginning and what it signifies ibid. The first Commandment of the Decalogue 338 The Reason of the Order of the Commandments 342 A double Precept contain'd in the first Commandment 342 The first and greatest of all the Commandments 343 VVho break the first Commandment ibid. In the first Commandment is not forbidden the Art of Graving Painting or Limning 348 VVhy the first Commandment separate from the second 356 VVhat is forbidden and commanded in the second Commandment 357 The use of that Command about loving our Parents is very extensive 382 The Ten Commandments grav'd in Two Tables and why ibid. VVhy the Command of loving our Parents expresses our Mother 386 VVhy the two last Commandments are joyn'd together 439 A two fold necessity of the two last Commandments ibid. Communion one of the names of the Eucharist 195 Before Communion what Preparation ought to be and how necessary it is 225 One Preparation to the Communion is to have Peace with all 226 Another is to love God 227 All ought to Communicate at least at Easter ibid. VVhy the Church approv'd the practise of Communicating in one Kind only Pag. 231 What things are common to three Divine Persons and what are not common 39 Concupiscence remains in the Regenerate but has not truly the Nature of Sin 167 Evil Concupiscence the Root of all Evil. 438 Concupiscence of other Mens Goods and Wife how it differs 439 What Concupiscence is 441 The Power of Concupiscence not always to be accounted vicious ibid. The Power of Concupiscence implanted in us by Nature yet by God's Appointment ibid. The Concupiscence of our First Parents corrupted by Sin ibid. The Power of Concupiscence if moderated is profitable ibid. Why S. Paul call'd Concupiscence Sin 442 What is meant by Thou shalt not covet 443 Another's Wife not to be coveted 445 Not to covet another's Wife what it signifies ibid. How dangerous it is to covet another's Wife ibid. Who are most guilty of Concupiscence 448 The Antidotes of evil Concupiscence 447 How Concupiscence is known to be a Sin 44● Covetous Men reprehended Pag. 443 Whence Confidence in God begins 467 Confidence in God is increas'd by calling him in Prayer Our Father ibid. How we come to have Confidence in Prayer ibid. The Creed divided into Four Parts 14 Confession of Sins and the Necessity of it 262 why instituted ibid. its Profitableness 258 its Vertue and Nature ibid. its Definition ibid. its Rites and Ceremonies 259 it is call'd an Accusation and why 261 The Ecclesiastical Judgment made in Confession is far unlike to the Civil Judgment ibid. Confession instituted by Christ of his Goodness and Mercy 258 A Figure of Confession ibid. Whom the Law of Confession obliges 263 At what Age a Child is requir'd to confess ibid. When Confession is to be iterated 26● Who the due and lawful Minister of Confession 267 In Confession Sins are not to be excus'd 270 The Fault of them that dare not for shame confess their Sins ibid. Diligent search is to be made in our Conscience for Sin Pag. 271 When a Confessor ought to send back a Penitent ibid. The Sacrament of Confirmation 181 The Name of Confirmation ib. Confirmation is truly a Sacrament 182 The Sacrament of Confirmation very different from that of Baptism 183 The Original of the Sacrament of Confirmation 184 Christ the Author of the Sacrament of Confirmation ib. The Sacrament of Confirmation why call'd Chrism ibid. The Matter of Chrism ibid. Chrism made by Consecration of a Bishop ibid. Why Chrism made of Oyl and Balsom 185 When and with what Ceremonies Chrism is made 185 186 The Form of the Sacrament of Confirmation ibid. In Confirmation Three things to be observ'd ibid. The proper Ministers of the Sacrament of Confirmation 187 Why a Godfather requir'd at Confirmation 188 The Assinity contracted with Godfathers at Confirmation ibid. What Age they ought to be that are to be confirm'd 189 The Sacrament of Confirmation belongs equally to all the Faithful Pag. 189 The Adult receiving Confirmation ought to grieve for their Sins 190 The Sacrament of Confirmation gives new Grace ibid. Whence the Word Confirmation deriv'd 191 The Effects of Confirmation 190 c. Confirmation cannot be iterated 192 The Rites and Ceremonies of the Sacrament of Confirmation ibid. When chiefly the Sacrament of Confirmation is administred 193 What Contrition is 250 Contrition is not only a new Life but the hatred of a Life misled and the Expiation we ought to make ibid. The Vertue and Efficacy of Contrition ibid. The Grief of Contrition how vehement it ought to be 252
be call'd an Heretic 86 The Command of Honoring Parents 381 What Honor is Pag. 385 Parents of all kinds are to be honor'd ibid. The Duties of Honor which we owe to Parents 386 The Honor due to Parents after their Death 388 What Advantages they reap that honor their Parents 390 Who honor not their Parents may fear an untimely Death 391 392 Hope of obtaining is of great use to obtaining 467 How we ought to devote our selves to God in hope of the Reward of Heaven 506 Our Hope should be wholly plac'd in God's Love ibid. We ought to hope to obtain Pardon of Sin 520 How to get Hope even in Temptations 535 536 We are to hope in God's Protection when we are tempted ibid. Why a Husband ought to love his Wife 327 The Duty of a Husband to his Wife ibid. c. Hypocrites pray not from their Heart 470 The Hypocrites Practice in Praying to be avoided ibid. I JEsus the Son of God alone was able to reconcile us to God 29 How great profit they have that believe Jesus Christ to be the Son of God Pa. 29 What the Name Jesus signifies 31 How the Name Jesus contains all his other Names 3● Jesus Christ Supreme King Priest and Prophet 33 Jesus the Son of God true God 34 Jews see Hebrews To have the Images of Christ and of the Saints in the Church is not only lawful but very profitable for the Faithful 351 When any one before the Images of the Saints prays the Lord's Prayer what he ought to think 464 465 The Incarnation of the Word of how great value it is to us 38 One Person alone wrought not all the Mysteries of the Incarnation 39 No Confusion of the Natures made by the Incarnation 40 Why in a peculiar manner the Work of the Incarnation attributed to the Holy Ghost 39 In the Mystery of the Incarnation some things done beyond and some things by the Order of Nature 40 The Wonders that hapned in the Incarnation of the Word ibid. All Inconveniences to be born patiently 540 Infants see Baptism An Infidel being converted to the Faith is to keep his first Wife Pag. 323 Man's Ingratitude towards God 538 Inhumanity to be avoided by him that desires that God should hear him 466 Christians by all means to be perswaded to forget Injuries 528 How to perswade Men to forget Injuries ibid. Injuries to be forgiven of him that would be forgiven of God 531 God requires of us to forget Injuries ibid. What Advantages they get that forgive Injuries 402 The Inconveniencies they fall into that will not forgive Injuries 403 Remedies to lay aside Injuries 404 Forgetting of Injuries the best Alms. 402 Who are desirous to forget Injuries ought to use in the Lord's Prayer that Petition Forgive us c. and why 528 Why Christ will be the Judge of all 72 Of the Last Judgment ibid. Christ's Judgment of us twofold 73 The Necessity of a General Judgment 73 74 Judges that take Bribes are Robbers 418 Judgment in Civil Courts to be administer'd according to Justice and the Laws 428 429 The Power of Jurisdiction how prov'd Pag. 267 Original Justice given of God to Man beyond the Power of Nature 27 He cannot be justified that is not ready to obey all God's Commands 337 The Justification of a Sinner is a Work of God's Infinit Power 104 It is given by the Sacraments as by Instruments 134 K THe Dignity and large Power of the Keys 104 All have not the Power of the Keys ibid. Kings are to be obey'd 390 The Kingdom of Heaven 489 The Kingdom of Heaven to be pray'd for before all things else 490 The praying for the Kingdom of Heaven contains a great heap of excellent Gifts ibid. The Kingdom of Christ is not of this World 493 What the Kingdom of God is ibid. The Kingdom of God is within us ibid. VVhy the Kingdom of Christ call'd Justice ibid. The Kingdom of Grace put before the Kingdom of Glory 494 The Kingdom of Christ which is the Church 495 The Propagation of the Kingdom of the Church ibid. How the Kingdom of God comes upon Sinners P. 495 How the Kingdom of Christ is sought ibid. The Excellency of the Kingdom of Heaven 496 God affords us Assistances to obtain the Kingdom of Heaven 497 Those that would enter into the Kingdom of Heaven ought to beg of God that his Will be done 498 L THe Last Things to be often remembred 78 The Law of Nature the same with the Written Law 334 What the Law of Nature is ibid. They break the Law of Nature that spare not their Enemies 527 The Law of the Decalogue is no new Law but the Law of Nature illustrated 334 With how great Majesty the Law was given 335 The Laws of Nature not hard 336 The Law is to be obey'd ibid. The Benefit of observing the Law 337 To know God to be our Lord makes us more ready to keep his Law 341 Every Law induces Men to obey it either for love of Reward or fear of Punishment 352 The way and manner of keeping the Law God's Law is to be kept in the inward Sense of the Soul Pag. 440 The difference between Divine and Human Laws ibid. God's Law is as a Looking-glass wherein we may see the Deformities of our Nature ibid. Life eternal what it signifies 117 c. Man's Life on Earth a Temptation 539 Our Life and Salvation depend upon God 515 All kind of Lying is to be avoided c. See the Eighth Commandment M THe Honor due to Civil Magistrats 389 When Magistrats are to be obey'd and when not 390 Man form'd after God's Image and Likeness 27 Man last created made immortal by Divine Gift not by Natural Vertue ibid. The first Fall of Man 29 How much a Christian Man is oblig'd to Christ 37 Men ought to be studious of God's Honor. 354 How Man is oblig'd to God 478 Mans Misery 491 Mans Misery by reason of Adam's Sin 499 Men compar d to Sick Folks and to those that have lost their Taste 499 500 Men compar'd to Children Pag. 500 Man tho justified cannot so tame the Lusts of the Flesh as never more to stir in him 501 Voluptuous Men Strangers to Divine Pleasure 503 Mans Instability 491 Mans Weakness 510 With what kind of Curse Man was condemn'd after Adam's Sin ibid. Mans Folly and Weakness 533 Virgin Mary see the Third Article of the Cred. 32 463 The Sacrifice of Mass the same with that on the Cross 236 Mass a Propitiatory Sacrifice and not only Commemorative ibid. Mass offer'd for and profits the Dead 237 The Rites of Mass not superfluous ibid. The Matter or the Sacrament of the Eucharist see Eucharist The Matter of the Sacrament of Penance see Penance Matter of the Sacrament of Extream-Unction see Extream-Vnction Matrimony whence so call'd 314 The Sacrament of Matrimony call'd by divers Names ibid. The Definition of Matrimony and the Declaration thereof 315 They cannot enter into Matrimony