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

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that the Church should for some particular mens abuse forbid a practice so religious commanded by our Saviour S. Matth. 25. 13. commended to us by his practice at Gethsemaine S. Matth. 26. 38. S. Luke 6. 12. earnestly urged by the Fathers of the Primitive times I therefore rather think that whereas it was the ancient custome to fast the day and watch the night before the Holy-day as s. Bernard tells us Ser. de Vigil S. Andrei in time as charity and devotion grew cold through sloth and restiness this more troublesome part of devotion the nightly watches were laid aside and the Fast only retained and that but slenderly observed But it were to be wished that as the Fast might be retained and more strictly observed so the holy Vigils might be in part at least revived For the night was not made only for sleep Tradesmen Mariners Merchants will tell you so much they spend a good part of the night in watching for gain will not you do as much for your soul Besides the darkness and silence of the night are helps to compunction and holy sorrow helps to meditation and contemplation the soul is the more free from outward distraction The sight of men lying a-sleep in their beds like dead men in the grave suggests a meditation of Doomsday Let me therefore perswade men and women Bend your knees sigh watch and pray in the night Blessed is he whom our Lord when he cometh shall find so doing and because we know not what hour he will come watch therefore See Chrys. Hom. 26. in Act. This for the first why some Holy-dayes have Fasts before them Now why this Feast of CIRCUMCISION and some other have no Fasts the reason is double First because sometimes the signification of the Vigil or Fast mentioned above ceases and the signification or mystery failing the Vigil or Fast is omitted For example S. Michael upon this account hath no Fast because the Angels did not by sufferings and mortifications enter into their joy but were created in the joy they have But then secondly though this signification and Mystery of vigils and Fasts holds good in S. Mark S. Philip and S. Iacob and some other yet they have no Fasts for another reason because they fall either betwixt Easter and Whitsunday or betwixt Christmas and Epiphany which holy Church held for such high times of joy and Festivity that they would not have one day among them sullied by pensive sorrow and fasting Con. Turon 2. c. 13. Epiph. in brevi expos Fidei If the Fast for a Holy-day fall upon a Holy-day that is if the day before the Holy-day upon which the Fast regularly is to be kept be it self also a Holy-day then the Fast must be kept the day before that Decretal l. 3. Tit. 46. EPIPHANY THis Greek Word signifies Manifestation and hath been of old used for Christmass-day when Christ was manifested in the flesh and for this day wherein the Star did appear to manifest CHRIST to the Wise men as appears by Chrys. and Epiphan Upon this identity of the word some unskilful ones were missed to think that anciently the Feasts of Christmas and Epiphany were one and the same but plain it is by Chrys. Epiphan Nazianzen in their Sermons upon this day that these two Feasts were observed as we do upon several days Nazianzen calls this day on which Christ was baptized The holy lights of Epiphany which to day we celebrate says he having already celebrated the holy Feast of Christmas S. Chrysostome says the day of Christs birth is not so usually and properly called Epiphany as the day of his Baptism This Feast is called in Latin Epiphaniae Epiphanies in the plural because upon this day we celebrate three glorious apparitions or manifestations all which happened upon the same day though not of the same year Chrys. Serm. 159. The first manifestation was of the Star mentioned in the Gospel the Gentiles guide to Christ. The Second Epiphany or manifestation was that of the glorious Trinity at the baptism of Christ mentioned in the second Lesson at morning prayer S. Luke 3. 22. The third was of Christ's glory or Divinity by the miracle of turning water into wine mentioned in the second Lesson at Evening prayer S. Iohn 2. The Collect is plain The Epistle and Gospel mention Christs manifestation to the Gentiles for this was the day of the Dedication of the Gentiles Faith Chrys. in diem For the antiquity of this day we have already seen Nazianzen Chrysost. and Epiphan to which I shall adde only S. August de temp Ser. 32. The solemnit of this day known throughout all the world what joy doth it bring us But the Donatists says he will not keep it both because they are Schismaticks and love not unity and also because they hate the Eastern Church where the Star appeared 1. Sunday after Epiphany From Christmas to Epiphany holy Churches design is to set forth Christs Humanity to make Christ manifest in the flesh which the offices do as we have seen but from Epiphany to Septuagesima especially in the four next Sundays after Epiphany she endeavours to manifest his glory and Divinity by recounting some of his first miracles and manifestations of his Deity so that each Sunday is in this respect a kind of Epiphany The Gospel of this day mentions Christs manifestation to the Doctors of the Jews astonishing all his hearers with his miraculous answers The Epistle exhorts us to make a spiritual use of the wisemens mysterious offerings especially of Myrrhe which signifies very rightly the mortifying of the flesh and the offering of our bodies as an holy Sacrifice to God by Christ. The Collect prayes for grace to enable us thereunto 2. Sunday after Epiphany The Gospel mentions Christs turning water into wine by which he manifested both his glory by the miracle and his goodness in ministring to the necessities of others to which virtue the Epistle exhorts us that whatsoever gifts we have we should use them as Christ did to the good and benefit of others The Collect as divers others recommends to God the supplications of the people c. See more of the Collects in general Pag. 81. and for the Day 86. 3. Sunday after Epiphany The Gospel is concerning our Lords healing of the Leper that believed in him The Epistle at first sight seems not to agree to the Gospel but yet if rightly applyed it suits well with it in the mystical sense For the healing of the Leper signifies that Christ will heal us from the Leprosie of sin if we believe in him and come to him for cure as the Leper did The Epistle labours to prevent the mo●● over-spreading leprous sins of pride against which the first verse is directed● Be not wise in your own conceits and wrath and revenge in the following words rendring to no man evil for evil Or rather the Epistle doth remove the two great impediments of Christs cure of our sinf●●● leprosie
turning of our bodies towards a more honourable place may mind us of the great honour and majesty of the person we speak to And this reason S. Augustine gives of the Churches ancient custom of turning to the East in their publick prayers because the East is the most honourable part of the World being the Region of Light whence the glorious Sun arises Aug. l. 2. de Ser. Dom. in Monte c. 5. That this was the constant practice of the Church to turn toward the East in her publick prayers may sufficiently appear by S. Augustin in the place last cited where he sayes Cum ad orationes stamus ad Orientem Convertimur When we stand at our prayers we turn towards the East And by Epiphan l. 1. haer 19. c. 19. who there detests the madness of the Impostor Elzaeus because that amongst other things he forbad praying toward the East And the Church of England who professes to conform to the ancient practices as far as conveniently she can as may be seen in many passages of her Canons and other places did observe the same custom in her prayers as appears by the placing of the Desk for the Prayer-book above mentioned looking that way and as may be collected from this Rubrick which directs the Priest in the reading of the Lessons to turn to the people which supposes him at prayer and the Psalms to look quite another way namely as in reason may be concluded that way which the Catholick Church uses to do for divers reasons and amongst other for that which S. Augustine hath given because That was the most worthy part of the World and therefore most fit to be lookt to when we come to worship God in the Beauty of Holiness Again another reason may be given of turning from the people towards the upper end of the Chancel in our Prayers because it is fit in our prayers to look towards that part of the Church or Chancel which is the highest and chief and where God affords his most gracious and mysterious presence and that is the holy Table and Altar which anciently was placed towards the upper or East end of the Cha●cel This is the highest part of the Chancel set apart to the highest of Religious Services the consecration and distribution of the holy Eucharist here is exhibited the most gracious and mysterious presence of God that in this life we are capable of the presence of his most holy Body and Blood And therefore the Altar was usually call'd the Tabernacle of Gods Glory His Chair of State the Throne of God the Type of Heaven Heaven it self As therefore the Jews in their Prayers lookt towards the principal part of the Temple the Mercy-Seat Psal. 28. 2. So the Christians in their prayers turned towards the principal part of the Church the Altar of which the Mercy-Seat is but a type And as our Lord hath taught us in his Prayer to look up towards Heaven when we pray saying Our Father which art in Heaven not as if God were there confin'd for he is every where in Earth as well as in Heaven but because Heaven is his Throne whereas Earth is but his Foot-stool so holy Church by her practice teaches us in our publick and solemn prayers to turn and look not towards the inferior and lower parts of the Footstool but towards that part of the Church which most nearly resembles Heaven the holy Table or Altar Correspondent to this practice was the manner of the Jews of old for at the reading of the Law and other Scriptures he that did Minister turned his face to the people but he who read the prayers turned his back to the people and his face to the Ark. Mr. THORNDYKE of Relig. Assem pag. 231. For the choice of these Lessons and their Order holy Church observes a several course For the Ordinary Morning and Evening prayers she observes only this to begin at the beginning of the year with Genesis for the first Lesson and S. Matthew for the Second in the Morning and Genesis again for the First and S. Paul to the Romans for the Second Lesson at Even and so continues on till the Books be read over but yet leaving out some Chapters either such as have been read already upon which account she omits the Chronicles being for the most part the same with the book of Kings which hath been read already and some particular Chapters in some other Books having been the same for the most part read either in the same book or some other or else such as are full of Genealogies or some other matter which holy Church counts less profitable for ordinary hearers Only in this she alters the order of the books not reading the prophet Esay till all the rest of the books be done Because the Prophet Esay being the most Evangelical Prophet most plainly prophesying of Christ is reserved to be read a little before ADVENT For Sundayes somewhat another course is observed for then Genesis is begun to be read upon Septuagesima Sunday because then begins the holy time of penance and mortification to which Genesis is thought to suit best because that treats of our misery by the fall of Adam and of Gods severe judgment upon the world for sin Then we read forward the books as they lye in order yet not all the books but only some choice Lessons out of them And if any Sunday be as they call it a priviledged day that is if it hath the history of it expressed in Scripture such as Easter Whit sunday c. then there are peculiar and proper Lessons appointed for it For Saints dayes we observe another order for upon them except such of them as are especially recorded in Scripture and have proper Lessons the Church appoints Chapters out of the moral books such as Proverbs Ecclesiastes Ecclesiasticus and Wisdom for first Lessons being excellent instructions of life and conversation and so fit to be read upon the daies of holy Saints whose exemplary lives and deaths are the cause of the Churches Solemn Commemoration of them and Commendation of them to us And though some of these books be not in the strictest sense Canonical yet I see no reason but that they may be read publickly in the Church with profit and more safety than Sermons can be ordinarily preacht there For certainly Sermons are but humane Compositions and many of them not so wholsome matter as these which have been viewed and allowed by the judgment of the Church for many ages past to be Ecclesiastical and good nearest to divine of any writings If it be thought dangerous to read them after the same manner and order that Canonical Scripture is read lest perhaps by this means they should grow into the same credit with Canonical It is answered that many Churches have thought it no great hurt if they should but our Church hath sufficiently secured us against that danger whatsoever it be by setting different marks upon them
to cleanse our hearts by his holy inspiration Then follow the COMMANDMENTS with a Kyrie or Lord have mercy upon us after every one of them Which though I cannot say it was ancient yet surely cannot be denied to be very useful and pious And if there be any that think this might be spared as being fitter for poor Publicans than Saints let them turn to the Parable of the Publican and Pharisee going up to the Temple to pray S. Luke 18. and there they shall receive an answer Then follows the COLLECT for the day with another for the King which the Priest is to say standing c. Of this posture enough hath been said in the Morning Service Though there hath been a Prayer for the King in the Morning Service and another in the Litany Yet the Church here appoints one again that she may strictly observe S. Pauls rule 1 Tim. 2. who directs that in all our publick prayers for all Men an especial prayer should be made for the King Now the Morning Service Litany and this Communion-Service are three distinct Services and therefore have each of them such an especial prayer That they are three distinct Services will appear For they are to be performed at distinct places and times The Morning Service is to be said at the beginning of the day as appears in the third Collect for Grace 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sayes S. Chrys. which is translated S. Matth. 27. 2. in the Morning and S. Iohn 18. 28. Early In S. Mark 13. 35. it is translated The dawning of the day The place for it is the accustomed place in the Chancel or Church saies the Rubr. before Morning prayer or where the Ordinary shall appoint it The Litany is also a distinct Service for it is no part of the Morning Service as you may see Rubr. after Athanas. Creed Here ends the Morn and Even Service Then follows the Litany Nor is it any part of the Com. Service for that begins with Our Father and the Collect Almigh●y God c. and is to be said after the Litany The time and place for this is not appointed in the Rubr. but it is supposed to be known by practice For in the Commination the 51. Psal. is appointed to be said where they are accustomed to say the Litany and that was in the Church Eliz Inj. 18. before the Chancel door Bishop Andrews notes upon the Liturgy It being a penitential Office is there appointed in imitation of Gods command to the Priests in their penitential Service Ioel 2 17. Let the Priests weep between the Porch and the Altar The time of this is a little before the time of the Com. Service Inj. 18. Eliz. The Communion-Service is to be some good distance after the Morn Service Rubr. 1. before the Communion-Service So many as intend to be partakers of the holy Communion shall signifie their names to the Curate over night or before Morning prayer or immediately after which does necessarily require a good space of time to do it in The usual hour for the solemnity of this Service was anciently and so should be Nine of the clock Morning C. Aurel. 3. c. 11. This is the Canonical hour De Consecr dist 1. c. Et Hos. Thence probably call'd the holy hour Decret dist 44. c. sin In case of necessity it might be said earlier or later Durant de Rit●bus but this was the usual and Canonical hour for it One reason which is given for it is because at this hour began our Saviours Passion S. Mark 15. 25. the Jewes then crying out Crucifie c. At this hour therefore is the Com. Service part of which is a commemoration of Christs Passion performed Another reason given is because this hour the Holy Ghost descended upon the Apostles Acts 2. 15. Lastly because it is the most convenient hour for all to meet and dispatch this with other offices before Noon For 'till the Service was ended Men were perswaded to be fasting and therefore it was thought fit to end all the Service before Noon that people might be free to eat Durant l. 2. c. 7. Why this Service is called the Second see pag. 207 208. The place for this Service is the Altar or Communion Table Rubr. before the Com. And so it was always in Primitive times which is a thing so plain as it needs no proof After this the Priest reads the Epistle and Gospel for the day Concerning the antiquity of which and the reason of their choice hath been said already nothing here remains to be shewn but the antiquity and piety of those Rites which were used both by us and the ancient Church about the reading of the Gospel As First when the GOSPEL is named the Clergy and the people present say or sing Glory be to thee O Lord. So it is in S. Chrys. Liturg. Glorifying God that hath sent to them also the word of salvation As it is in the Acts of the Apost 11. 18. When they heard these things they glorified God saying Then hath God also to the Gentiles granted repentance unto life 2. While the Gospel is reading all that are present stand Grat. de Conser dist 1. c. 68. And Zozomen in his Hist. l. 7. c. 19. tells us it was a new fashion in Alexandria that the Bishop did not rise up when the Gospel was read Quod apud alios usquam fieri neque comperi neque audivi Which says he I never observed nor heard amongst any others whatsoever The reason was this Anciently whensoever the holy Lessons were read the people stood to express their reverence to the holy word Aug. ●l hom 50. hom 26. Nehem. 8. 5. But because this was counted too great a burden it was thought fit to shew our reverence especially at the reading of the Gospel which historically declares somewhat which our Saviour spake did or suffered in his own person By this gesture shewing a reverend regard to the Son of God above other messengers although speaking as from God And against Arrians Iews Infidels who derogate from the honour of our LORD such ceremonies are most profitable As judicious Mr. Hooker notes 3. After the Gospel is ended the use was to praise God saying Thanks be to God for this Gospel So was it of old ordained Tolet. Conc. 4. c. 11. that the Lauds or Praises should be said not after the Epistle but immediately after the Gospel for the glory of Christ which is preached in the Gospel In some places the fashion was then to kiss the book And surely this book by reason of the rich contents of it deserve● a better regard than too often it findes It should in this respect be used so as others may see we prefer it before all other books Next is the NICENE CREED so called because it was for the most part framed at the great Council of Nice But because the great Council of Constantinople added the latter part and brought it to the frame which we now use
5. 14. Is any sick let him send for the Elders or Priests of the Church to pray over him and the prayer of faith shall save the sick But if he fails of that bodily cure by these means yet he may be sure to obtain remission of sins by their means If he hath committed sins they shall be forgiven him ver 15. by the benefit of absolution so the words import For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sins being a feminine plural seems not to agree with the verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it shall be forgiven of the singular number and therefore this word more properly seems to be rendred impersonally thus If he hath committed sins pardon or absolution shall be given him and so by this means the sick person shall be sure if not to save his body yet at least to save his soul. There was an ancient Canon which that it might be truly practised and observed it must be the wish of all good men It is Can. 7. Con. Aurelian 5. ut qui pro quibuscunque culpis in carceribus deputantur ab Archidiacono seu à Praeposito Eccles. diebus singulis Dominicis requirantur at necessitas vinctorum secundum praeceptum divinum misericorditer sublevetur That all prisoners for what crime soever shall be call'd for and visited by the Archdeacon or Bishop of the Church every Lords day that the necessities bodily and ghostly of the prisoners according to Gods command may be mercifully relieved The neglect of which duty how dangerous it is we may read S. Mat. 25 43. Go ye cursed for I was sick and in prison and ye visited me not The Rubrick at the Communion of the sick directs the Priest to deliver the Communion to the sick but does not there set down how much of the Communion-Service shall be used at the delivering of the Communion to the sick and therefore seems to me to refer us to former directions in times past Now the direction formerly was this If the same day that the sick is to receive the Communinn there be a celebration of the holy Communion in the Church then shall the Priest reserve at the open Communion so much of the Sacrament of the body and blood as shall serve the sick person and so many as shall communicate with him And as soon as he may conveniently after the open Communion ended in the Church shall go and minister the same first to them that are appointed to communicate with the sick if there be any and last of all to the sick But before the Curate distribute the holy Communion the appointed general Confession in the Communion-Service must be made in the name of the Communicants the Curate adding the Absolution with the comfortable sentences of Scripture following in the open Communion immediately and so proceeding in the Communion-Service to the end of the Consecration and Distribution and after the Communion ended the Collect is to be used which begins Almighty and everliving God we most heartily thank thee c. But if the day wherein the sick person is to receive the Communion be not appointed for the open Communion in the Chruch then upon convenient warning given the Curate shall come and visit the sick person afore noon And cutting off the form of the visitation at the Psalm In thee O Lord shall go straight to the Communion Rubr. 3. Com. of sick that is after he hath said the Collect Epist. and Gosp. there directed he shall go to the Communion-Service K. Edw. 6th 1. BVRIAL THe Priest méeting the Corps at the Church stile shall go before it to the grave saying or singing I am the resurrection and the life This in triumph over death O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory thou mayest a while hold the corps but he that is the resurrection and the life will make the dead man live again Therefore thanks be to God who gives this victory through Iesus Christ our Lord. Much after this sort did the Ancients Hieron ep 30. ad Ocean de Fabiola Chrys. Hom. 4. in Hebr. Quid fibi volunt istae lampades tam splendidae nonne sicut athletas mortuos comitamur quid etiam aymni nonne ut Deum glorificemus quod jam coronavit discedentem quod à laboribus liberavit quod liberatum à timore apud se habeat What mean the bright burning torches do we not follow the dead like Champions what mean the Hymns do we not thereby glorifie God for that he hath crowned our departed brother that he hath freed him from labours that he hath him with himself freed from fear All these are expressions of joy whereby we do in a holy valour laugh at death saith Chrys. there And this is Christian-like whereas if we be sad and dejected as men without hope mortem Christi qua mors superata est Calumniamur we disgrace the death of Christ that hath conquered death and Heathens and Atheists will deride us saying how can these contemn death that cannot patiently behold a dead friend talk what you will of the Resurrection when you are out of passion it is no great matter nor perswades much but shew me a man in passion of grief for the loss of his friend playing the Philosopher and triumphantly singing to God for his happy deliverance and I will believe the Resurrection Of so good use are such triumphant hymns at this time and of this sort are the three first When they come to the Grave while the corps is made ready to be laid into the grave the Priest shall say or sing Man that is born of a Woman c. closing with a most devout prayer for grace and assistence in our last hour a prayer very suitable to such a time and such a spectacle before us Then they commit the body to the earth not as a lost and perished carkass but as having in it a seed of eternity in sure and certain hope of the resurrection to eternal life This is to bury it Christianly the hope of the resurrection being the proper hope of Christians Such was the Christians burial of old that it was accounted both an evident argument and presage of the resurrection and an honour done to that body which the Holy Ghost had once made his Temple for the Offices of piety Aug. de Civit. l. 1. c. 13. After follows another Triumphant Hymn Then a Lesson out of S. PAVL to the same purpose Then a Thanksgiving for that our brothers safe delivery out of misery Lastly a Prayer for his and our consummation in Glory and joyful Absolution at the last day By all which prayers praises and holy Lessons and decent solemnities we do glorifie God honour the dead and comfort the living Take away these prayers praises and holy lessons which were ordained to shew at Burials the peculiar hope of the Church of the Resurrection of the dead and in the manner of the dumb funerals what one thing is there whereby the world may
Salutations The Lord be with you Of the use of them p. 56. And with thy Spirit ib. Excellent Incentives to Charity 57. Let us pray Often used and why p. 58 59. Lord have mercy c. A short Litany Frequently used in Ancient Liturgies p. 59. Seasonable at all parts of the Service 60. Set before the Lords Prayer why p. 61. M. Of Marriage Three ends of it p. 273. The Contract of marriage called by S. Aug. Votorum Solennitas ib. The Bride given by Father or Friend why p. 274 c. The Ring a pledge of fidelity 275. Why upon the fourth finger of the left Hand ib. With my body I thee worship the meaning of it p. 275 c. The 128 Psalm tbe Epithalamium used by the Iews at Nuptials 278. Devout Prayer and the H. Communion very useful and highly Christian at Marriages 278 c. The Iews religious Solemnities at Marriages ib. The Primitive Christians used the like solemnities at Marriages which we do 279. which the Church received from the Apostles ibid. Maunday Thursday Dies Mandati why so called p. 135. Practice of the Church upon that day and form of reconciling Penitents p. 136. Missa Catechumenorum p. 209. morning-Morning-Prayer Litany and Communion-Service Three distinct Services p. 210 c. The several places and times of the performance of them ib. Nine in the Morning the usual hour for the Communion-Service and why 212. Morning and Even Prayer to be said daily p. 2. 4. Publick Prayers of the Church call'd the Apostles Prayers why p. 4. O. Ornaments to be used in time of Divine Service and why p. 335. Offerings Oblations an high part of Gods Service p. 224. A duty of the Gospel proved 225 226 c. When most necessary 226 127. Offerings at the Churching of women p. 313. The Octave of Christmas p. 110. The Octave or Utas of High Feasts observed by our Forefathers p. 154. Vpon which some part of the service of the Feast repeated Why Eight days allowed to High● Feasts 231. How the Prefaces for those Eight daies can be properly used on each of them p. 232. See Prefaces P. Priests are the Lords Remembrabrancers p. 9 10. Priests bound to say daily Morning and Evening prayer p. 2. The Reason of the Priests sometimes Kneeling and sometimes standing p. 65. The Priest giving the Blessing came down from the Altar and why p. 244 245. Priest what the word signifies It may be applyed to the Ministers of the Gospel Reasons why 337 c. Priests not a Iewish name why p. 341. Ministers of the Gospel call'd Priests by the P. Esay ibid. Prefaces proper for some great days p. 229. An argument that the Church intends the Prorogation and continuance of those Feasts ib. How this Prorogation to be understood p. 229 230. Praying with the Spirit A man may safely use Davids Forms as being composed by the Spirit p. 30 31. Donum Precum peculiar to the Apostles times p. 80. The Psalms read over every Moneth and why p. 27 28 c. Fit for every Temper and Time p. 30. Sung or said by Course by Priest and People and why p. 31 32. Standing why p. 32. Of the Translation of the Psalms in our English Liturgy p. 344. Objections against some passages in the Translation of the Psalms 344 c. R. The Rogation daies service and Procession formerly appointed p. 160. Rogation week why so called p. 160. Litanies and Fasting then ib. The Fast then is voluntary ib. No Fast betwixt Easter and Whitsuntide ibid. Passion Sunday why so called p. 133. Palm Sunday why so called ibid. Low Sunday why so called p. 154. Rogation Sunday p. 160. S. Septuagesima Sunday so called à consequentia numerandi p. 120. Septuagesima Sexagesima Quinquagesima Preparatives to Lent Regulars fasted those weeks p. 120 121. Secretae what they are the reason of them 86. The Sermon when p. 218. Vsually an Exposition of part of the Epistle or Gospel c. of the day ib. not above an hour long p. 220. Preachers in their Expositions appointed to observe the Catholick Interpretation of the old Doctors vid. p. 218 219. Golden Canons about Preachers p. 220. No Prayer before the Sermon but the Lords Prayer ibid. The Divine Service may be said privately and the reason why p. 333. T. Trinity Sunday the Octave of Pentecost or Dominica vacans p. 179. how ancient ibid. Proper Lessons p. 180. Of the Sundays after Trinity till Advent p. 182. The last Sunday after Trinity a Preparative to Advent hath therefore an Epistle purposely chosen out of the P. Jer. prophesying of Christs Advent p. 188 c. V. Visitation of the sick p. 281. The Orders of the Church about and at it ib. c. Examination of the Faith of the sick person p. 282. and of his Life and Conversation p. 283. No true Repentance without Restitution ibid. The sick person to be admonished to settle his estate p. 284. and to be liberal to the poor p. 285. Sick persons to send for the Priest p. 298. and to what purpose ib. Prisoners antiently Visited by the Arch-Deacon or Bishop p. 301. Verses or Versicles and Responds The Reason of placing the Verses after the Confession c. and before the Psalms 24 25. Versicles and Answers by Priest and People a holy emulation p. 62. Answers of the People the Benefit of them p. 63. Versicles and Resp. p. 311. Some of the Answers are not entire sentences but parts or ends of the foregoing Verses and the Reason why 312. The word Viaticum applied to more things beside the Eucharist p. 287. Only the Eucharist is Ultimum Viaticum ibid. Of Vigils turn'd into Fasts why p. 112. The Venite is an Invitatory Psalm p. 26. The Vestry why so called p. 329. W. Whitsunday p. 170. Appointed of old for solemn Baptism 172. Why called Pentecost ibid. and Whitsunday p. 173. and why p. 174. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Easter p. 175. Whitsunday hath Proper Lessons and Psalms ibid. Of the Antiquity of it p. 178. FINIS To your Liturgical Demands I make as good Return to you as I am able on this wise In the Preface c. 1. COMMEMORATIONS were the recital of the Names of famous Martyrs and Confessors Patriarchs Bishops Kings Great Orthodox Writers Munificent Benefactors which recitation at the Altar took up much time and those Names were anciently wont to be read out of DIPTYCHS or Folded Tables and tedious quarrels have been anciently about dispunging some Names out of the DIPTYCHS which have run into schisms 2. SYNODALS were Synodical Constitutions such as are in Linwood wont to be read on Sundayes in time of Service to the great waste of time and you may remember that our Canons of Anno 1604. are appointed to be read at least once a year in all Churches 3. The PYE I should suppose did come from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Table of Order how things should be digested
A RATIONALE upon the BOOK OF Common-Prayer of the CHURCH of ENGLAND By Anth. Sparrow D. D. Now Lord Bishop of Exon. WITH The Form of Consecration of a Church or Chappel and of the place of Christian Burial By Lancelot Andrews Late Lord Bishop of Winchester LONDON Printed for Robert Pawlet at the Sign of the Bible in Chancery-Lane near Fleet-street 1672. The Litany to be said in the midst of the Church in allusion to the Prophet Ioel c. 2. 17. Let the Priest the Ministers of the LORD weep between the Porch and the Altar and let them say spare thy people O Lord c. Bishop ANDREWS Notes upon the Liturgy A RATIONALE upon the BOOK or Common-Prayer of the CHVRCH of ENGLAND By Anth Sparrow Now Lord B p. of Exon Printed for R Pawlet at y e Bible in Chancery Lane With Entertainments for the Great FESTIVALLS being 〈…〉 of the Proper PSALMS and Lessons for those DAYES The Compilers of The Common-Prayer-Book of the Church of England were Doctor CRANMER Arch-Bishop of Cant. GOODRICK Bishop of Ely SKIP Bishop of Heref●rd THIRLBY Bishop of Westminst DAY Bishop of Chichester HOLBECK Bishop of Lincoln RIDLEY Bishop of Rochester MAY Dean of S. Pauls TAYLOR Dean of Lincoln HEYNES Dean of Exeter REDMAN Dean of Westminster COX K. EDWARDS Alm●ner M. ROBINSON Arch-Deacon of Leicester Mense Maio 1549. Anno regni Edwardi Sexti tertio Hardly can the pride of those men that study Novelties allow former times any share or degree of Wisdom or Godliness K. CHARLES Meditat. 16. upon the Ordinance against the Book of Common-Prayer THE PREFACE THE present Age pretends so great Love to Reason that this RATIONALE may even for its Name hope for acceptation which it will the sooner have if the Reader know that the Author vents it not for a full and just much less a publick and authentick Piece but as his own private Essay wholly submitted to the censure of our Holy Mother The Church and the Reverend Fathers of the same and composed on purpose to keep some from moving that way which it is feared some will say it leads to The Authors design was not by Rhetorick first to Court the Affections and then by their help to carry the understanding But quite contrary by Reason to work upon the Judgment and leave that to deal with the affections The Poor Liturgy suffers from two extreams one sort says it is old superstitious Roman Dotage The other it is Schismatically New This Book endeavours to shew particularly what Bishop JEWEL Apol. p. 117. says in general 1. That it is agreeable to PRIMITIVE USAGE and so not Novel 2. THAT IT IS A REASONABLE SERVICE and so not Superstitious As for those that love it and suffer for the love of it this will shew them Reasons why they should suffer on and love it still more● and more To end if the Reader will cast his Eye upon the sad Confusions in point of prayer wherein are such contradictions made as God Almighty cannot grant and lay them as Rubbish under these Fundamental Considerations First How many Set Forms of Petition Blessing and Praise be recorded in the Old and New●Testament used both in the Church Militant and Triumphant Secondly How much of the Liturgy is very Scripture Thirdly How admirable a Thing Unity Unity in Time Form c. is Fourthly How many Millions of poor souls are in the world ignorant infirm by nature age accidents as blindness deafness loss of speech c. which respectively may receive help by Set Forms but cannot so well or not at all by extemporary voluntary effusions and then upon all these will build what he reads in this Book he will if not be convinced to joyn in Communion with yet perhaps be so sweetned as more readily to pardon those who still abiding in their former judgments and being more confirmed hereby do use THE ANCIENT FORM. ECCLESIAE LITURGIAE Anglicanae VINDICES c. A Short RATIONALE upon the Book of Common-Prayer THe COMMON-PRAYER-BOOK contains in it many holy Offices of the Church As Prayers Confession of Faith holy Hymns Divine Lessons Priestly Absolutions and Benedictions all which are Set and Prescribed not left to private mens fancies to make or alter so was it of old ordained CON. CARTHAG Can. 106. It is ordained that the Prayers Prefaces Impositions of hands which are confirmed by the Synod be observed and used by all men These and no other So is our English Can. 13. The COUNCIL of MILEVIS gives the reason of this Constitution Can. 12 Lest through ignorance or carelesness any thing contrary to the Faith should be vented or uttered before God or offered up to him in the Church And as these Offices are set and prescribed so are they moreover appointed to be one and the same throughout the whole National Church So was it of old ordained CON. TOLETAN 11. c. 3. That all Governours of Churches and their people should observe one and the same rite and order of service which they knew to be appointed in the Metropolitan See The same is ordered CON. BRACCAR 1. Can. 19. and Tolet. 4. c. 2. It is appointed that one and the same order of praying and singing be observed by us all and that there should not be variety of usages by them that are bound to the same Faith and live in the same Dominion This for Conformities sake that according to divine Canon Rom. 15. 6. We may with one mind and one mouth glorifie God Of Daily saying of MORNING and EVENING PRAYER ALL Priests shall be bound to say Daily the Morning and Evening Prayer The end of the Preface before the Service Rubr. 2. So was it of old ordered in the Church of Christ Saint CHRYS 6. hom in 2. cap. 1. ep ad Tim. and Clem. Const. l. 2. c. 39. And this is agreeable to Gods own Law Exo. 29. 38. Thou shalt offer upon the Altar Two Lambs of the first year day by day continually the one Lamb in the Morning the other at Evening Besides the daily private devotions of every pious Soul and the more solemn Sacrifices upon the three great Feasts of the year Almighty God requires a daily publick worship a continual burnt offering every day Morning and Evening teaching us by this saith Saint CHRYS That God must be worshipped daily when the day begins and when it ends and every day must be a kind of holy day Thus it was commanded under the Law and certainly we Christians are as much at least obliged to God as the Jews were our grace is greater our promises clearer and therefore our righteousness should every way exceed theirs our Homage to Almighty God should be paid as frequently at least Morning and Evening to be sure God expects from us as well as from the Jews a publick worship a sweet savour or savour of rest as it is in the Hebrew Num. 28. 6. without which God Almighty will not rest satisfied This publick Service
cause even for all that do not renounce Communion with it and the Church for it is the Common service of them all Commanded to be offered up in the names of them all and agreed to by all of them to be offered up for them all and therefore is accepted for all them though presented to God by the Priest alone as the Lamb offered up to God by the Priest Ex. 29. was the sacrifice of the whole Congregation of the children of Israel a sweet smelling savour a savour of rest to pacifie God Almighty daily and to continue his favour to them and make him dwell with them Exod. 29. 42 45. Good reason therefore it is that this sweet smelling savour should be daily offered up to God Morning and Evening whereby God may be pacified and invited to dwell amongst his people And whatsoever the world think thus to be the Lords Remembrancers putting him in mind of the peoples wants Esay 62. Being as it were the Angels of the Lord interceding for the people and carrying up the daily prayers of the Church in their behalf is one of the most useful and principal parts of the Priests office So S. Paul tells us who in the 1 Ep. Tim. chap. 2. Exhorts Bishop Timothy that he should take care First of all that this holy service be offered up to God I exhort first of all that prayers and supplications intercessions and giving of thanks be made for all men For KINGS c. What is the meaning of this first of all I will that this holy service be offered up daily and the faithful know how we observe this rule of S. paul offering up daily this holy sacrifice Morning and Evening S. Chrys. upon the place S. Paul in the first Chapter of this Epistle at the 18. verse had charged his son Timothy to war a good warfare to hold faith and a good conscience and presently adds I exhort therefore that first of all prayers c. be made as if he had said you cannot possibly hold faith and a good conscience in your Pastoral office unless First of all you be careful to make and offer up prayers c. For this is the first thing to be done and most highly to be regarded by you Preaching is a very useful part of the Priests office and S. Paul exhorts Timothy to preach the word be instant in season out of season And the more because He was a Bishop and to plant and water many Churches in the Infancy of Christianity among many Seducers and Temptations But yet First of all he exhorts that this daily office of presenting prayers to the throne of grace in the behalf of the Church be carefully lookt to This charge of S. Paul to Tim. holy Church here laies upon all those that are admitted into that holy office of the Ministery that they should offer up to God this holy sacrifice of prayers praises and thanksgivings this savour of rest daily Morning and Evening And would all those whom it concerns look well to this part of their office I should not doubt but that God would be as gracious and bountiful to us in the performance of this service as he promised to be to the Jews in the offering of the Lamb Morning and Evening Exod. 29. 43 44. He would meet us and speak with us that is graciously answer our petitions he would dwell with us and be our God and we should know by comfortable experiments of his great and many blessings that he is the Lord our God Of the Mattins or MORNING SERVICE THe Mattins and Evensong begin with one sentence of holy Scripture after which follows the Exhortation declaring to the peoyle the end of their publick meeting● Namely To confess their sins to render thanks to God to set forth his praise to hear his holy Word and to ask those things that be necessary both for body and soul. All this is to prepare their hearts which it does most excellently to the performance of these holy duties with devotion according to the counsel of Ecclus. 18. 23. Before thou prayest prepare thine heart and be not as one that tempteth God To which agrees that of Ecclesiastes 5. 1. Be not hasty to utter anything before God but consider that he is in Heaven and thou upon earth Of CONFESSION The Priest and the People being thus prepared make their CONFESSION which is to be done with an humble voice as it is in the Exhortation Our Churches direction in this particular is grave and conform to ancient rules The sixth Counc of CONSTAN Can. 75. forbids all disorderly and rude vociferation in the execution of Holy Services and S. Cyprian de Orat. Dominica advises thus Let our speech and voice in prayer be with Discipline still and modest Let us consider that we stand in the presence of God who is to be pleas'd both with the habit and posture of our body and manner of our speech for as it is a part of impudence to be loud and clamorous so in the contrary it becomes modesty to pray with an humble voice We begin our Service with Confession of sins and so was the use in Saint Basils time Ep. 63. And that very orderly For before we beg any thing else or offer up any praise or Lauds to God it is fit we should confess and beg pardon of our sins which hinder Gods acceptation of our Services Psal. 66. 16. If I regard iniquity with mine heart the Lord will not hear me This Confession is to be said by the whole Congregation Sayes the Rubr. And good reason For could there be any thing devised better than that we all at first access unto God by prayer should acknowledge meekly our sins and that not only in heart but with tongue all that are present being made ear-witnesses even of every mans distinct and deliberate Assent to each particular branch of a Common Indictment drawn against our selves How were it possible that the Church should any way else with such ease and certainty provide that none of her children may dissemble that wretchedness the Penitent Confession whereof is so necessary a preamble especially to Common-Prayer Hooker The ABSOLUTION Next follows the ABSOLUTION to be pronounced by the Priest alone standing For though the Rubrick here does not appoint this posture yet it is to be supposed in reason that he is to do it here as he is to do it in other places of the Service And in the Rubrick after the general Confession at the Communion the Bishop or Priest is ordered to pronounce the Absolution standing Besides reason teaches That Acts of Authority are not to be done kneeling but standing rather And this Absolution is an Act of Authority by virtue of a Power and Commandment of God to his Ministers as it is in the Preface of this Absolution And as we read S. Iohn 20. Whosoever sins ye remit they are remitted And if our Confession be serious and hearty this Absolution is
the Father c. which is the Christians both Hymn and shorter Creed For what is the summ of the Christians faith but the mystery of the holy Trinity God the Father Son and Holy Ghost which neither Jew nor Pagan but only the Christian believes and in this Doxology professes against all Hereticks old and new and as it is a short Creed so it is also a most excel-Hymn for the glory of God is the end of our Creation and should be the aim of all our services whatsoever we do should be done to the glory of that God the Father Son and Holy Ghost and this is all that we can either either by word or deed give to God namely GLORY Therefore this Hymn fitly serves to close any of our Religious services our Praises Prayers Thanksgivings Confessions of Sins or Faith Since all these we do to Glorifie God it cannot be unfitting to close with Glory be to God the Father Son and Holy Ghost It cannot easily be expressed how useful this Divine Hymn is upon all occasions If God Almighty send us prosperity what can we better return him than Glory If he sends Adversity it still befits us to say Glory be to c. Whether we receive good or whether we receive evil at the hands of God we cannot say a better Grace than Glory be the Father c. In a word we cannot better begin the day when we awake nor conclude the day when we go to sleep than by Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost Then the Hallelujah or Praise ye the Lord of which S. Augustine sayes There is nothing that more soundly delights than the praise of God and a continual Hallelujah The VENITE O come let us sing unto the Lord. THis is an Invitatory Psalm For herein we do mutually invite and call upon one another being come before His presence to sing to the Lord to set forth His praises to hear His voice as with joy and chearfulness so with that reverence that becomes His infinite Majesty worshipping falling down and kneeling before Him using all humble behaviour in each part of His service and worship prescribed to us by His Church And needful it is that the Church should call upon us for this duty for most of us forget the Psalmists counsel Psal. 69. 7. To ascribe unto the Lord the honour due unto his Name into his Courts we come before the presence of the Lord of the whole Earth and forget to worship him in the beauty of holiness The PSALMS THe PSALMS follow which the Church appoints to be read over every Month oftner than any other part of holy Scripture So was it of old ordained saith S. Chrys. Hom. 6. de poenit All Christians exercise themselves in Davids Psalms oftner than in any other part of the Old or New Testament Moses the great Lawgiver that saw God face to face and wrote a Book of the Creation of the World is scarc● read over once a year The holy Gospels where the Miracles of Christ are preached where God converses with Man where Death is destroyed the Devils cast out the Lepers cleansed the blind restored to sight where the Thief is placed in Paradise and the Harlot made purer than the Stars where the waters of Iordan to the sanctification of Souls where is the food of immortality the holy Eucharist and the words of life holy precepts and precious promises those we read over once or twice a Week What shall I say o● blessed Paul Christs Oratour the Fisher of World who by his 14. Epistles those spiritual Nets hath caught Men to salvation who was wrapt into the third Heaven and heard and saw such Mysteries as are not to be uttered him we read twice in the week We get not his Epistles by heart but only attend to them while they are reading But for holy Davids Psalms the grace of the holy Spirit hath so ordered it that they should be said or sung night and day In the Churches Vigils the first the midst and the last are Davids Psalms in the Morning Davids Psalms are sought for and the first the midst and the last is David And Funeral Solemnities the first the midst and the last is David In private houses where the Virgins spin the first the midst and the last is David Many that know not a letter can say Davids Psalms by heart In the Monasteries the quires of Heavenly Hosts the first the midst and the last is David In the Deserts where Men that have crucified the world to themselvs converse with God the first the midst and the last is David In the Night when Men are asleep David awakes them up to sing and gathering the Servants of God into Angelical troops turns Earth into Heaven and makes Angels of Men singing Davids Psalms The holy Gospels and Epistles contain indeed the words of eternal life words by which we must be saved and therefore should be sweeter to us than Honey or the Honey-comb more precious than Gold yea than much fine Gold but they are not of so continual use as Davids Psalms which are digested forms of Prayers Thanksgivings Praises Confessions and Adorations fit for every temper and every time Here the penitent hath a form of confession he that hath received a benefit hath a Thanksgiving he that is in any kind of need bodily or ghostly hath a prayer all have Lauds and all may adore the several excellencies of Almighty God in Davids forms and these a Man may safely use being compos'd by the Spirit of God which cannot erre whereas other Books of Prayers and Devotions are for the most part compos'd by private men subject to error and mistake whose fancies sometimes wild ones are commended to us for matter of devotion and we may be taught to blaspheme while we intend to adore or at least to abuse our devotion when we approach to the throne of grace and offer up an unclean Beast instead of an holy Sacrifice May we not think that this amongst others hath been a cause of the decay of right and true devotion in these latter dayes namely the neglect of this excellent Book and preferring Mens fancies before it I deny not but that Collects and other parts of Devotion which the consentient Testimony and constant practice of the Church have commended to us may and especially the most divine Prayer of our LORD ought to be used by us in our private devotion but I would not have Davids Psalms disused but used frequently and made as they were by Athanasius and S. Ierome a great if not the greatest part of our private devotions which we may offer up to God as with more safety so with more confidence of acceptation being the inspiration of that holy Spirit of God who when we know not what to say helps our infirmities both with words and affections Rom. 8. 26. If any man thinks these Psalms too hard for him to understand and apply
Morning and Evening The Creed follows soon after the Lessons and very seasonably for in the Creed we confess that Faith that the Holy Lessons ●each The Creed is to be said not by the Priest alone but by the Priest and people together Rubr. before the Creed For since Confession of Faith in publick before God Angels and men is so acceptable a service to God as is shewn Fit it is that every man as well as the Priest should bear his part in it since every man may do it for himself as well nay better than the Priest can do it for him for as every man knows best what himself believes so it is fittest to confess it for himself and evidence to the Church his found Belief by expresly repeating of that Creed and every particular thereof which is and alwayes hath been accounted the Mark and Character whereby to distinguish a True Believer from an Heretick or Infidel We are required to say the Creed standing by this Gesture signifying our Readiness to Profess and our Resolution to adhere and stand to this holy Faith Of Athanasius's CREED Besides the Apostles Creed holy Church acknowledges two other or rather two explications of the same Creed the Nicene and Athanasius his Creed of the Nicene Creed shall be said somewhat in the proper place the Communion-Service where it is used Athanasius his Creed is here to be accounted for because it is said sometimes in this place in stead of the Apostles Creed It was composed by Athanasius and sent to Pope Iulius for to clear himself and acquit his Faith from the slanders of his Arian Enemies who reported him erroneous in the Faith It hath been received with great Veneration as a treasure of an inestimable price both by the Greek and Latin Churches Nazianz de laud. Athan. orat 21. and therefore both for that authority and for the testification of our Continuance in the same Faith to this day the Church rather uses this and the Nicene explanations than any other Gloss or Paraphrase devised by our selves which though it were to the same effect notwithstanding could not be of the same credit nor authority This Creed is appointed to be said upon the dayes named in the Rubrick for these Reasons partly because those daies many of them are most proper for this Confession of the Faith which of all others is the most express concerning the Trinity because the matter of them much concerns the manifestation of the Trinity as Christmas Epiph. Trinity Sunday and S. Iohn Baptists day at the highest of whose Acts the Baptizing of our Lord was made a kind of Sensible manifestation of the Trinity partly that so it might be said once a moneth at least and therefore on S. Iames and S. Barthol daies and withal at convenient distance from each time and therefore on S. Matt. Matthias Sim. and Iude and S. Andrew's The Lord be with you This Divine Salutation taken out of Holy Scripture Ruth 2. was frequently used in Ancient Liturgies before Prayers before the Gospel before the Sermon and at other times and that by the direction of the holy Apostles saies the Council of Braccara It seems as an I●troit or entrance upon another sort of Divine Service and a good Introduction it is serving as an holy excitation to Attention and Devotion by minding the people what they are about namely such holy Services as without Gods assistance and special grace cannot be performed and therefore when they are about these Services the Priest minds them of it by saying The Lord be with you And again it is a most excellent and seasonable Prayer for them in effect thus much The Lord be with you to lift up your Hearts and raise your Devotions to his Service The Lord be with you to accept your Services The Lord be with you to reward you hereafter with eternal li●e The people Answer And with thy Spirit Which form is taken out of 2 Tim. 4. 22. and is as much as this Thou art about to Offer up Prayers and spiritual Sacrifices for us therefore we pray likewise for thee that He without whom nothing is good and acceptable may be with thy spirit while thou art exercised in these Spiritual Services which must be performed with the Spirit according to S. Paul 1 Cor. 14. 15. Thus the Priest prayes and wishes well to the people and they pray and wish well to the Priest And such mutual Salutations and Prayers as this and those that follow where Priest and people interchangeably pray each for other are excellent expressions of the Communion of Saints Both acknowledging thus that they are all one body and each one members one of another mutually caring for one anothers good and mutually praying for one another which must needs be if well considered and duly performed excellent Incentives and provocations to Charity and love one of another and as S. Chrys. observes hom 3. in Col. if these solemn mutual Salutations were religiously performed it were almost impossible that Priest and people should be at Enmity For can the People hate the Priest that blesses them that prayes for them The Lord be with you or Peace be with you which was anciently the Bishops Salutation in stead of the Lord be with you Or can the Priest forget to love the People that daily prayes for him And with thy Spirit Let us pray These words are often used in ancient Liturgies as w●ll as in ours and are an Excitation to prayer to call back our wandring and recollect our scattered thoughts and to awaken our Devotion bidding us mind what we are about namely now when we are about to pray to pray indeed that is heartily and earnestly The Deacon in ancient Services was wont to call upon the people often 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let us pray vehemently nay 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 still more vehemently and the same vehemency and earnest devotion which the manner of these old Liturgies breathed does our Church in her Liturgy call for in these words Let us pray that is with all the earnestness and vehemency that we may that our prayers may be such as S. Iames speaks of active lively spirited prayers for these are they that avail much with God And there is none of us but must think it needful thus to be call'd upon and awakened for thoughts will be wandring and devotions will abate and scarce hold out to the prayers end though it be a short one that well said the old Hermit whom Melanc mentions in his discourse de Crat. There is nothing harder than to pray These words Let us pray as they are an Incitation to prayer in general so they may seem to be sometimes an Invitation to another Form of petitioning as in the Litany and other places it being as much as to say Let us collect our alternate supplications by Versicles and Answers into Collects or Prayers In the Latin Liturgies their Rubricks especially Preces and Orationes seem to be
thus distinguished that Preces or Supplications were those alternate Petitions where the people answered by responsive Versicles Oratio or prayer was that which was said by the Priest alone the people only answering Amen Lord have mercy upon us Christ have mercy c. Lord have mercy c. This short Litany as it was called by some Ancients this most humble and piercing Supplication to the Blessed Trinity Father Son and Holy Ghost was frequently used in ancient Liturgies as it is to be seen in them and also in the COUNCIL of VAS c. 5. Anno Dom. 440 or thereabouts Because saith that Council the sweet and wholsom Custom of saying Kyrie Eleeson or Lord have mercy upon us with great affection and compunction hath been received into the whole Eastern and most of the Western Church Therefore be it enacted that the same be used in our Churches at Mattins Evensong and Communion-Service It was anciently called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the earnest or vehement supplication because as it is a most pathetick Petition of mercy to every Person of the Blessed Trinity so it was uttered by those primitive good men with much earnestness and intention of Spirit being sensible of their danger of sinking into endless perdition without the mercy of the Blessed Trinity and therefore with no less earnestness than S. Peter cryed Master Save when he was sinking ●into the sea did they cry out Lord have mercy God the Father have mercy God the Son have mercy God the holy Ghost have mercy have mercy upon us in pardoning our sins which make us worthy to be cast out of thy favour but unworthy to serve thee Have mercy in helping our weakness and inability of our selves to serve thee Many are our Dangers many are our wants many wayes we stand in need of mercy therefore Lord have mercy c. This excellent Comprehensive ●itany is seasonable at all times and all parts of the Service after our Singing of Hymns and Psalms after our Hearing and Confession of Faith such is our unworthiness such our weakness that it cannot be thought amiss to beg Gods Mercy after we have pray'd such is our dulness and coldness in our prayers that we had need pray Lord have mercy upon us It may be observed that this earnest and humble supplication was usually in old Services and so is in ours set immediately before the Lords Prayer as a preparation to it and very fitly For as we cannot devise a more suitable preparation to prayer than this humble Petition of Mercy and acknowledgement of our own misery so is there no Prayer whereto greater preparation is required than that Divine Prayer sanctified by the sacred Lips of our Lord wherein we say Our Father c. Clem. in Const. l. 7. c. 25. advises when we say this prayer to be careful to prepare our selves so that we may in some manner be worthy of this divine Adoption to be the Sons of God lest if we unworthily call him Father He upbraid us as he did the Jews Mal. 1. If I be your Father where is mine Honour The Sanctity of the Son is the Honour of the Father Indeed it is so great an Honour to call God our Father 1 Ioh. 3. that we had need with all humility beg pardon of his Majesty before we venture upon so high a title Therefore our Mother the Church hath been careful to prepare us for this divine Prayer sometimes by a confession of our sins and Absol as at Morning and Evening Service but most commonly by this short Litany First teaching us to bewail our unworthiness and pray for mercy and then with an humble boldness to look up to Heaven and call God our Father and beg further Blessings of Him VERSICLES and Answers AFter the Lords Prayer follow short Versicles and Answers taken out of Holy Scripture Psal. 85. 7. Psalm 20. 10. Psal. 132. 9. Psal. 28. 10. 2. Kings 20. 19. Psalm 51. 10 11. The Priest beginning and the people Answering contending in an holy Emulation who shall be most devout in these short but pithy Ejaculations or Darts cast up to Heaven Such short Ejaculations were much used by the devout Brethren which S. Augustine commends as the most piercing kind of prayer Ep. 121. Such as these were that of the ●eper S. Matth. 8. 1. Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me clean and that of the Disciples S. Matth. 8. 24. Master save us we perish Short but powerful as you may see by our Saviours gracious acceptance of them And here I must further commend the Order of ANSWERS of the PEOPLE in all places of the Service where it stands It refresheth their attention it teaches them their part at publick prayers not to stand by and censure how well the Priest playes the mouth of the Congregation Lastly it unites the affections of them altogether and helps to keep them in a league of perpetual amity For if the Prophet David did think that the very meeting of men together in the house of God should make the bond of their love indissoluble Psalm 55. 15. How much more may we judge it reasonable to hope that the like effects may grow in each of the people toward other in them all towards the Priest and in the Priest towards them between whom there daily and interchangeably pass in the hearing of God himself and in the presence of his holy Angels so many heavenly Acclamations Exultations Provocations Petitions Songs of comfort Psalms of praise and thanksgiving in all which particulars as when the Priest makes their suits and they with one voice say Amen Or when he joyfully begins and they with like alacrity follow deviding betwixt them the Sentences wherewith they strive which shall most shew his own and stir up others zeal to the glory of God as in the Psalms and Hymns Or when they mutually pray for each other the Priest for the people and the people for him as in the Versicles immediately before the morning Collects Or when the Priest propos●s to God the peoples necessities and they their own requests for relief in every of them as in the Litany Or when he proclaims the La●r o● God to them as in the Ten Commandments they adjoyning an humble acknowledgement of their common imbecillity to the several branches thereof together with the lowly requests for Grace to perform the things commanded as in the Kyries or Lord have mercy upon us c. at the end of each Commandment All these Interlocutory Forms of Speech what are they but most effectual partly testifications partly inflammations of all piety The Priest when he● begins these short prayers is directed by the Rubrick to STAND It is noted that the Priest in the holy offices is sometimes appointed to kneel sometimes to stand The Reason of this we shall here once for all enquire The Priest or Minister being a man o● like infirmities with the rest of the Congregation a sinner and so standing in need
number of several prayers or Collects to be said together the example of our Lord in prescribing a short form the judgement and practice of the Ancient Christians in their Liturgies and S. Chrysostome among others commends highly short and frequent Prayers with little distances between Hom. 2. of Hanna so doth Cassian also and from the judgment of others that were much exercised therein 2 Lib. cap. 10. de Institut Coenob And lastly as they are most convenient for keeping away coldness distraction and illusions from our devotion for what we elsewhere say in praise of short Ejaculations is true also concerning Collects and that not only in respect of the Minister but the people also whose minds and affections become hereby more erect close and earnest by the oftner breathing out their hearty concurrence and saying all of them Amen together at the end of each Collect. Fourthly the Matter of them is most Excellent and remarkable It consists usually of two parts An humble acknowledgement of the Adorable Perfection and Goodness of God and a congruous petition for some benefit from him The first is seen not only in the Collects for Special Festivals or benefits but in those also that are more general for even in such what find we in the beginning of them but some or other of these and the like acknowledgements That God is Almighty everlasting Full of Goodness and Pity the Strength Refuge and Protector of all that trust in him without whom nothing is strong● nothing is Holy no continuing in safety or Being that such is our weakness and frailty that we have no power of our selves to help our selves to do any good to stand upright cannot but fall That we put no trust in any thing that we do but lean only upon the help of his heavenly Grace That he is the Author and giver of all good things from whom it comes that we have an hearty desire to pray or do him any true or laudable Service That he is alwayes more ready to hear than we to pray and to give more than we desire or deserve having prepared for them that love him such good things as pass mans understanding These and the like expressions can be no other than the breathings of the Primitive Christians who with all self-denial made the grace of God their Hope Refuge Protection Petition and Profession against all proud Hereticks and Enemies of it And the Petitions which follow these humble and pious acknowledgements and praises are very proper holy and good which will better appear if we consider the matter of each Collect apart The first in order among the Collects is that for the day Now as on every day or season there is something more particularly commended to our meditations by the Church so the first Collect reflects chiefly upon that though sometimes more generally upon the whole matter of the Epistle and Gospel desiring inspiration strength and protection from God Almighty in the practice and pursuance of what is set before us But concerning the matter of the Collects for the day is spoken afterward in the particular account that is given of each Epistle Gospel and Collect. The second Collect is for Peace according to S. Pauls direction 1 Tim. 2. and Orbem Pacatum that the World might be quiet was ever a clause in the Prayers of the Primitive Church and good reason For Peace was our Lords Legacy My peace I leave with you his New-years gift Pax in terris Xenium Christi He prayed for peace paid for peace wept for it bled for it Peace should therefore be dear to us all kind of peace outward peace and all for if there be not a quiet and peaceable life there will hardly be godliness and honesty 1 Tim. 2. This Collect then is fit to be said daily being a prayer for peace and so is that which follows The third for Grace to live well for if there be not peace with God by an holy life there will never be peace in the World No man can so much as think a good thought much less lead a godly life without the grace of God therefore that is also prayed for together with Gods protection for the day or night following Then the Prayers according to S. Paul 1 Tim. 2. Who exhorts that Prayers and Supplications be made for all men In particular for Kings and the Reason he there gives sufficiently shews the necessity of Praying particularly and especially for them namely that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty which can hardly be done if they do not help towards it For as the Son of Syrach sayes Chap. 10. 2. As the Iudge of the people is himself even so are his officers and what manner of man the Ruler of the City is such are all they that dwell therein A good Iosiah Hezekiah or David promote religion and honesty and the right worship of God among the people but a Ieroboam by setting up Calves in Dan and Bethel makes all the people sin After this follows a prayer for the Church excellently described by Bishops Curats and the people committed to their Charge By Curates here are not meant Stipendaries as now it is used to signifie But all those whether Parsons or Vicars to whom the Bishop who is the chief Pastor under Christ hath committed the cure of souls of some part of his flock and so are the Bishops Curates The Bishop with these Curates a flock or Congregation committed to their charge make up a Church For according to our Saviours definition a Church is a Shepherd and his Sheep that will hear his voice to which S. Cyprians description agrees Ep. 69. Illi sunt Ecclesia plebs Sacerdoti adunata pastori suo grex adhaerens The Church is a Congregation of Believers united to their Bishop and a Flock adhering to their Shepherd whence you ought to know sayes he that the Church is in the Bishop and the Bishop in the Church and they that are not with the Bishop are not in the Church Now because the Bishops are the guides and governors of the Church so that all acts of the Church are ordered and directed by th●m as the same Cyprian saies therefore the Custome of the Church alwayes was and not without reason to pray particularly by name for their Bishop as they did for the King To make this Church to gather it from among Infidels and Heathens and to preserve it from all h●r subtil and potent enemies by the healthful Spirit of his Grace is an act of as great power and a greater miracle of Love than to create the world Although thou beest wonderful O Lord in all thy works yet thou art believed to be most wonderful in thy works of pi●ty and mercy Saies S. Augustine and therefore the Preface is suitable Almighty God which only workest great marvails send down upon thy Church Bishops Curats and the Congregatious committed to their charge the healthful
spirit of thy grace The BLESSING We end our Service with a BLESSING which is to be pronounced by the Bishop if he be present See the Rubrick before the Blessing in the Communion-Service Then the Priest or Bishop if present shall let them depart with this Blessing This is order'd for the honour of the Bishops authority Heb. 7. 7. Without contradiction the less is blessed of the greater Therefore blessing being an act of Authority the Bishop ought not to be blest by the Priest but the Priest by the Bishop This blessing of the Bishop or Priest was so highly esteem'd in the Primitive times that none durst go out of the Church till they had received it according to the Councils of Agatha Can. 31. in the year 472. and Orleans the third Can. 22. And when they received it they did it kneeling or bowing down their heads And the Deacon to prepare them to it was wont to call out immediately before the time of the Blessing in such words as these Bow down your selves to the Blessing Chrys. Liturg. The Iews received it after the same manner Eccles. c. 50. v. 23. When the Service was finished the high Priest went down and lifted up his hands over the Congregation to give the blessing of the Lord with his lips and they bowed down themselvs to worship the Lord that they might receive the Blessing from the Lord the most high And doubtless did we consider the efficacy and vertue of this blessing of Priest or Bishop we could do no less than they did For it is God from heaven that blesses us by the mouth of his Minister We have his word for it Numb 6. 22. And the Lord spoke to Moses saying Speak to Aaron and his sons saying On this wise shall ye bless the children of Israel The Lord bless thee c. And they shall put my name upon the children of Israel And I will bless them And the same promise of Gods assistance and ratifying the Priests Blessing we have in the Gospel S. Matth. 10. 13. S. Luke 10. 5. where our Saviour charges his Apostles and Disciples that into whatsoever house they enter they should say not pray say with authority Peace be to this house and not if your prayers be servent or if they in the house joyn in prayer with you but if the Son of peace be there that is if he that dwells in the house hinders not nor resists your blessing if he be a person capable of so much good as your blessing for this is signified by this Hebrew phrase Son of peace your peace shall rest upon him but if he be not such a son of peace your blessing shall return to you again which it could not be said to do unless vertue together with the blessing had gone out from them The EVENING SERVICE differs little or nothing from the Morning and therefore what hath been said concerning the Morning office may be applyed to that The LITANY LItany signifies an humble an earnest Supplication These Forms of prayers call'd Litanies wherein the people are more exercised than in any other part of the Service by continual joyning in every passage of it are thought by some to have been brought into the Church about four hundred years after Christ in times of great calamity for the appeasing of Gods wrath True it is that they are very seasonable prayers in such times and therefore were by Gregory and others used in their Processions for the averting of Gods wrath in publick calamities but it is as true that they were long before that time even in the first Services that we find in the Church used at the Communion-Service and other Offices as Ordination of Priests and the like witness Clem. Const. l. 8. c. 5 6 10. where we find the Deacon ministring to the people and directing them from point to point what to pray for as it is in our Litany and the people are appointed to answer to every Petition Domine miserere Lord have mercy And in all Liturgies extant as Mr. Thorndyke hath well observed in his Book of Religious Assemblies the same Allocutions or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which are indeed Litanies may be seen And S. Aug. Ep. 119. c. 18 tells us of the Common-prayers which were indited or denounced by the voice of the Deacon All which make it probable that the practice of Litanies is derived from the Apostles and the custom of their time And S. C●rys in Rom. c. 8. seems to assert the same For upon that verse We know not what we should pray for as we ought but the Spirit helps our infirmities he saies thus In those daies amongst other miraculous gifts of the Spirit this was one Donum pr●●um the gift of making prayers for the Church to help the ignorance of the people that knew not what to pray for as they ought he that had this gift stood up and prayed for the whole Congregation and taught them what to pray for whose Office now the Deacon performs viz. by directing them from point to point what to pray for To every of which Petitions sayes Clem. above cited the people were to answer Domine Miserere This continual joyning of the people in every passage of it tends much both to the improving and evidencing that fervour and intention which is most necessary in prayers Hence was it that these Forms of prayers where the peoples devotion is so often excited● quickned and exercised by continual Suffrages such as Good Lord deliver us We beseech thee to hear us good Lord were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 earnest or intense Petitions In which if they were relished aright the earnest and vehement devotion of Primitive times still breaths and in these prayers if ever we pray with the Spirit Concerning the Litany of our Church we may boldly say and easily maintain it that there is not extant any where 1. A more particular excellent enumeration of all the Christians either private or common wants Nor 2. A more innocent blameless form against which there lies no just exception Nor 3. A more Artificial Composure for the raising of our devotion and keeping it up throughout than this part of our Liturgy In the beginning it directs our prayers to the right object the Glorious TRINITY For necessary it is that we should know whom we worship Then it proceeds to Deprecations or prayers against evil lastly to Petitions for good In the Deprecations as right method requires we first pray against sin then against punishment because sin is the greatest evil From all which we pray to be delivered by the holy actions and passions of CHRIST the only merits of all our good The like good order is observed in our Petitions for good First we pray for the Church Catholick the common mother of all Christians then for our own Church to which next the Church Catholick we owe the greatest observance and duty And therein in the first place for the principal
Wednesday and murdered on Friday Epiphan adv Aerium And though our Church in imitation of the Western hath chang'd the Wednesday-Fast to Saturday yet in memory of the Eastern custom the still appoints the Litany to be used upon Wednesday Friday was both in Greek Church and Latin a Litany or Humiliation-day and so is kept in ours And whosoever loves to feast on that day rather than another in that holds not communion with the ancicient Catholick Church but with the Turks who in contumely of Christ crucified Feast that day Chemnit in 3. praec Of HOLY-DAYES HOly in Scripture phrase is all one with separate or set a part to God and is opposed to common What God hath clean'd that call not thou common Acts 10. 15. Holy daies then are those which are taken out of common dayes and separated to Gods holy service and worship either by Gods own appointment or by holy Churches Dedication And these are either Fasting and Penitential daies for there is a holy Fast Ioel 2. as well as a holy Feast Nehem. 8. 10. such as are Ash-wednesday Good-Friday and the whole week before Easter commonly called the Holy-week which daies holy Church hath dedicated to Gods solemn worship in religious fastings and prayers Or else holy Festivals which are set apart to the solemn and religious commemoration of some eminent mercies and blessings of God And amongst those Holy-daies some are higher daies than other in regard of the greatness of the blessing commemorated and of the solemnity of the Service appointed to them So we read Lev. 23. 24. c. The Feast of Tabernacles was to continue seven daies but the first and the eighth were the highest dayes because then were the most solemn Assemblies This sanctification or setting apart of Festival-daies is a token of that thankfulness and a part of that publick honour which we owe to God for admirable benefits and these dayes or Feasts so set apart are of excellent use being as learned Hooker observes the 1. Splendor and outward dignity of our Religion 2. Forcible witnesses of ancient truth 3. Provocations to the exercise of all Piety 4. Shadows of our endless felicity in heaven 5. On earth everlasting records teaching by the eye in a manner whatsoever we believe And concerning particulars As the Iews had their Sabbath which did continually bring to the mind the former World finished by Creation so the Christian Church hath her Lords dayes or Sundays to keep us in perpetual remembrance of a far better World begun by him who came to restore all things to make Heaven and Earth new The rest of the holy Festivals which we celebrate have relation all to one Head CHRIST We begin therefore our Ecclesiastical year as to some accounts though not as to the order of our service with the glorious Annunciation of his Birth by Angelical message Hereunto are added his blessed Nativity it self the mystery of his legal Circumcision the Testification of his true Incarnation by the Purification of his blessed Mother the Virgin Mary his glorious Resurrection and Ascension into Heaven the admirable sending down of his Spirit upon his chosen Again for as much as we know that CHRIST hath not only been manifested great in himself but great in other his Saints also the dayes of whose departure out of this world are to the Church of Christ as the birth and coronation-dayes of Kings or Emperors therefore especial choice being made of the very flower of all occasions in this kind there are annual selected times to meditate of Christ glorified in them which had the honour to suffer for his sake before they had age and ability to know him namely the blessed Innocents glorified in them which knowing him as S. Stephen had the sight of that before death whereinto such acceptable death doth lead glorified in those Sages of the East that came from far to adore him and were conducted by strange light glorified in the second Elias of the World sent before him to prepare his way glorified in every of those Apostles whom it pleased him to use as founders of his kingdom here glorified in the Angels as in S. Michael glorified in all those happy souls that are already possest of bliss Besides these be four dayes annext to the Feasts of Easter and Whitsunday for the more honour and enlargement of those high solemnities These being the dayes which the Lord hath made glorious Let us rejoyce and be glad in them These dayes we keep not in a secret Calendar taking thereby our private occasions as we list our selves to think how much God hath done for all men but they are chosen out to serve as publick memorials of such mercies and are therefore cloathed with those outward robes of holiness whereby their difference from other dayes may be made sensible having by holy Church a solemn Service appointed to them Part of which Service are the Epistles and Gospels of which in the first place we shall discourse because these are peculiar and proper to each several Holy-day the rest of the Service for the most part being common to all Concerning these two things are designed 1. To shew the Antiquity of them 2. Their fitness for the day to which they belong or the reason of their choice Concerning the Antiquity of Epistles and Gospels it will be sufficient once for all to shew that the use of them in the Christian Church was ancient Concerning the antiquity of the dayes themselves to which the Epistles and Gospels appertain it will be sit to be more particular That the use of Epistles and Gospels peculiar to the several Holy-dayes was ancient appears first by ancient Liturgies Secondly by the testimony of the ancient Fathers Let S. AVGVSTINE testifie for the Latin-Church in his Preface to his Comment upon the Epistle of S. Iohn and in his X. Sermon De verb. Apost We heard first sayes he the Apostolical Lesson then we sung a Psalm after that the Gospel was read Now let S. CHRYS testifie for the Greek Rom. 19. in cap. 9. Act. The Minister stands up and with a loud voice calls Let us attend then the Lessons are begun which Lessons are the Epistles and Gospels as appears in his Liturgy which follow immediately after the Minister hath so call'd for attention The fitness of the Epistle and Gospel for the day it belongs to and the reason of the choice will plainly appear if we observe that these holy Festivals and Solemnities of the Church are as I have touch'd before of Two Sorts The more high dayes or the rest The First commemorate the signal Acts or Passages of our Lord in the Redemption of mankind his incarnation and Nativity Circumcision Manifestation to the Gentiles his Fasting Passion Resurrection and Ascension the sending of the Holy Ghost and thereupon a more full and express manifestation of the Sacred Trinity The Second sort is of Inferiour dayes that supply the Intervals of the greater such as are either
the remaining Sundayes wherein without any consideration of the sequence of time which could only be regarded in great Feasts the holy Doctrine Deeds and Miracles of our Lord are the chief matters o● our meditations or else the other Holy dayes of which already hath been spoken And for all these Holy Times we have Epistles and Gospels very proper and seasonable for not only on high and special dayes but even in those also that are more general and indifferent some respect is had to the season and the holy affections the Church then aims at as Mortification in Lent Joy Hope newness of Life c. after Easter the Fruits and Gifts of the Spirit and preparation for Christs Second coming in the time between Pentecost and Advent But these things I shall shew in the Discourse of the Holy dayes severally As for the Les●ons although they have another Order and very profitable being for each day of the week following usually the method of Chapters and taking in the Old Testament also the Communion dealing chiefly with the New as most fit for the nature of that Service yet in them also regard is had to the more solemn times by select and proper readings as hath been shew'd This being the Churches Rule and Method as she hath it from the Apostle that all things be done unto edifying that we may be better acquainted with God and with our selves with what hath been done for us and what is to be done by us And this Visible as well as Audible preaching of Christian Doctrine by these Solemnities and Readings in such an admirable Order is so apt to infuse by degrees all necessary Christian knowledge into us and the use of it to the ignorant is so great that it may well be feared as a Reverend person hath forewarned that When the Festivals and Solemnities for the Birth of Christ and his other famous passages of life and death and Resurrection and Ascensi●● and Mission of the Holy Ghost and the Lessons Gospels and Collects and Ser●●ons upon them be turned out of the Church together with the Creeds also 't will not be in the power of weekly Sermons on some head of Religion to keep up the knowledge of Christ in mens hearts c. And no doubt for this and other good Reasons which he gives us it was that the primitive Christians were so exact and religious in these Solemnities and Meditations on the occasions of them and therefore the Sermons o● the Fathers were generally on the Readings of the Day as hereafter is shewed And we have from another the like hand thus The Blessings of God whereof these Solemnities renew the Remembrance are of that esteem to the Church that we are not able to express too much thankfulness in taking that occasion of Solemnizing his Service And the greatest part of Christians are such as will receive much improvement in the principal Mysteries of our Faith by the Sensible instruction which the Observation of such Solemnities yieldeth The remembrance of the Birth the Sufferings the Resurrection of Christ the Coming of the Holy Ghost the Conversion of the Gentiles by sending the Apostles the way made before his coming by the Annunciation of the Angel and the coming of the Baptist as it is a powerful mean to train the more ignorant sort in the Vnderstanding of such great Mysteries so it is a just occasion for all sorts to make that a particular time of Serving God upon which we solemnize those great works of his See Dr. Hammonds View of the Directory pag. 38. Mr. Thorndyke of publick Assemblies pag. 256. and what we have above said concerning the excellent use of Festival dayes at pag. 105. The same Method shall be observed in this Discourse of Holy-dayes which the Service-Book uses not that in the Title-Page in the beginning of the book which perhaps reckons for Holy-dayes only those days in which we are solemnly to worship God and also to rest from usual labour but that in the Services appointed by the Book which adds over and above that old Catalogue of Holy-dayes S. Paul And S. Barnabas Ashwednesday and the Holy-Week All which must be reckoned for Holy-dayes in the Churches account because they have Holy-day service Epistles and Gospels and Second-service appointed to them though there be no Law that inflicts a penalty upon them that do their usual works upon those dayes they being only desired to be present at the Churches service at the Hours appointed Of ADVENT Sunday THe Principal Holy-days as Christmas Easter and Whitsunday have some days appointed to attend upon them some to go before some to come after as it were to wait upon them for their greater solemnity Before Christmas are appointed four Advent-Sundays so called because they are to prepare us for Christ his Advent or coming in the flesh These are to Christmas-day as S. Iohn Baptist to Christ forerunners to prepare for it and point it out First Sunday Adv. The Gospel S. Matth. 21. 1. seems at first more proper to Christs Passion than his Birth yet is it read now principally for those words in it Blessed is he that cometh in the Name of the Lord. That is Blessed is he for coming in the Flesh the cause of all our joy for which we can never say enough Hosanna in the Highest The Epistle labours to prepare us to behold with joy this rising Sun bidding us awake from sleep according to the Prophet Esay 60. 1. Arise and shine for thy light is come The Collect is taken out of both and relates to both the first part of it is clearly the words of the Epistle That we may cast away the works of darkness and put upon us the armour of light That which follows In the time of this mortal life in the which thy Son Iesus Christ came to visit us in effect is the same with that in the Epistle Let us put off the works of darkness c. because the night is spent the day is at hand and our salvation is near that is our Saviour Christ the light of the world is coming into the world to visit us in great humility according to the Prophet Zach. 9. 9. which the Gospel records Tell ye the daughter of Sion to her great joy that behold Her King comes unto her meek or in great humility sitting upon an Asse 2. Sunday Adv. The Gospel treats of Christs second coming to judgment an excellent meditation to prepare us for the welcome and joyful entertainment of Christs first coming A Saviour must needs be welcome to him that is afraid of damnation The Epistle mentions the first coming of our Lord for the Salvation even of the Gentiles that is of us for which all praise is by us to be given to him Praise the Lord all ye Gentiles and laud him all ye nations together The Collect is taken out of the Epistle and though it seems not to relate to the day yet is it an excellent prayer
memory of our Saviours joyful Resurrection Now if you take out of the six weeks of Lent Six Sundays there will remain but thirty six Fasting-days to which these four of this week being added make the just number of forty This was anciently call'd Caput● jejunii the Head of Lent and was a day of extraordinary humiliation Upon this day were Ashes sprinkled upon their heads to mind them of their mortality and also to mind them what they had deserved to be namely burnt to Ashes Hence was it call'd Dies cinerum ASH-WEDNESDAY and upon this day they were wont to cloath themselves in Sackcloth These rites are mentioned Esay 58. 5. as the usual rites of penitents This was common to all penitents But notorious sinners were this day put to open penance Which godly discipline saies our Church in her office of Commination it is much to be wished that it might be restored again Now that we may know what it is the Church wishes there it will not be amiss to set down in part the solemnity used upon those sinners at this time which was ordered thus Let all notorious sinners who have been already or are now to be enjoyned publick penance this day present themselves before the Church doors to the Bishop of the place cloathed in sackcloth barefooted with eyes cast down upon the ground professing thus by their habit and countenance their guilt There must be present the Deans or Arch-Presbyters and the publick penitentiaries whose office is to examine the lives of these penitents and according to the degree of their sin to apportion their penance according to the usual degrees of penance After this let them bring the penitents into the Church and with all the Clergy present let the Bishop sing the seven penitential Psalms prostrate upon the ground with tears for their Absolution Then the Bishop arising from prayer according to the Canons let him lay his hand upon them that is to ratifie their penance not to absolve them let him sprinkle ashes upon their head and cover them with sackcloth and with frequent sighs and sobs let him denounce to them that as Adam was cast out of Paradise so are they cast out of the Church for their sins After this let the Bishop command the Officers to drive them out of the Church-doors the Clergy following them with this Respond In the sweat of thy brows shalt thou eat thy bread that these poor sinners seeing holy Church afflicted thus and disquieted for their sins may be sensible of their penance Gratian dist 50. c. 64. I. Sunday in Lent The Epistle exhorts to patience in afflictions The Gospel reads to us Christs victory over temptations to keep us from despair of conquest that we should be of good cheer and heart since he our Captain hath overcome the world S. Iohn 16. v. last The Collect for the day is another of those Collects where in the Church directs her Petitions to Christ thereby manifesting her belief that he is the true Son of God for she prayes to none but God in praying to him therefore she professes to believe him to be God as it is in the close of the Collect and this in opposition to the Tempter Satan and all his Adherents who are still tempting Christ in his Members to misbelief in that Article Of EMBER-WEEK THe Week after Ash-wednesday is Imber or Ember-week of which Fast we will here treat in general There be Four Ember-weeks called in Latin Iejunia quatuor Temporum the Fasts of the four Seasons because they were kept in the four parts of the year Spring Summer Autumn Winter The first of these begins upon Wednesday next after Ash-wednesday The second upon Wednesday next after Whitsunday the third upon Wednesday next after Holy Cross. Sept. 14. The last upon Wednesday next after S. Lucie Dec. 13. The days of fasting and prayers in these weeks are Wednesday Friday Saturday Wednesday because then our Lord Christ was betrayed by Iudas Friday because then he was crucified Saturday because then we represent the Apostles sorrow for the loss of their Lord lying in the grave The causes of such religious fastings and prayers upon these weeks were formerly many as namely that Christians in these religious duties might let the World know that they were as devout as the Jews formerly had been whose custome it was to observe four solemn Fasts Zach. 8. 19. That they might dedicate to God as the first-fruits the beginnings of the several seasons of the year set apart to his religious worship and by this means obtain Gods-blessing upon them the remainders of those times But the principal cause was for preparation to the solemn Ordination of Ministers holy Church imitating the Apostles practice who when they were to set a-part men to the Ministery prayed and fasted before they laid on their hands Acts 13.3 And in after-times at these solemnities these Ember-Fasts special regard was had to the Ordination of Priests and Deacons In what manner and with how much care and Christianity these Fasts have been heretofore observed may be gathered from S. Leo in his Sermons upon them and from others And the second Councel of Millain decreed herein to good purpose Tit. 1. Dec. 22. That upon the Sundays before these Fasts the Priests should not only in their Parishes bid the solemn Fast but every one in his several Parish should piously and religiously say the Prayers and Litanies c. That Gods assistence being implored both the Bishop may be guided by the Holy Spirit in the choice of those whom he shall Ordain and also that they that are ordained may grow in Learning and holiness of life These four Fasts have been anciently observed both in the Church of England and in other Churches In the Laws of K. Canute Chap. 16. thus it is said Let every man observe the Fasts that are commanded with all earnest care whether it be the Ember-Fast or the Lent-Fast or any other Fast. And the like Decrees are found in other Councels of our Nation before his time See Sir Henry Spelmans Concil Britan. p. 256. 518. 546. Now for the reason of the name we find in Tho. Becon as he delivers it out of others that wrote before him By opinion of much people these daies have been called Ember-daies because that our Fathers would on these daies eat no bread but Cakes made under Embers so that by eating of that they reduced into their minds that they were but ashes and so should turn again and wist not how soon These Fasts are still appointed by the Church of England For though she hath not reckoned them amongst the Holy daies because there is no peculiar Office appointed for them as there is to all those that are reckoned in the Catalogue of Holy days yet by custome they have been always kept with Litanies Prayers and Fasting and are commanded to be kept still as formerly they were by that excellent Can. 31. Anno Dom. 1603.
Forasmuch as the Ancient Fathers of the Church led by example of the apostles who set men apart to the ministery of the Gospel by imposition of hands with prayer and fasting appointed prayers and fasts at the solemn ordering of Ministers and to that purpose allotted certain times in which only sacred orders might be given or conferred we following their holy and religious example do constitute and decree that Deacons and Ministers be Ordained or made but only upon the Sundays immediately following jejunia quatuor temporum commonly called Ember weeks appointed in ancient time for Prayer and Fasting purposely for this cause at their first institution and so continued at this day in the Church of England 2. Sunday The Epistle perswades to temperance and abstinence from all uncleanness The Gospel tells us how we may subdue that Devil namely by stedfast faith and servent and importunate prayer 3. Sunday The Epistle as the time calls for strictness of life The Gospel commends perseverance shewing the danger of relapsing For the end of that man is worse than the beginning 4. Sunday This is called Dominica Refectionis For the Gospel tells us of Christs miraculous feeding and satisfying the hungry souls that hunger after him and his doctrine and the Epistle tells us of a Ierusalem which is above which is free and a joyous place to which we as children are heirs Thus holy Church mixes joy and comfort without sorrow and afflictions 5. Sunday This is called PASSION-SUNDAY For now begins the commemoration of the Passion of our Lord and after a long funeral pomp and train the corps follows upon Good Friday The Epistle treats of the Passion The Gospel of our Lords being slandred by the bold malice of the Jews who call him Samaritan and tell him he hath a Devil which must needs be a thorn in his side and a part of his Passion 6. Sunday This is PALM-SUNDAY on which CHRIST came from Bethany to Ierusalem and was received with joy some strewing their garments others cutting down branches and strewing them in the way whose religion it is fit that we should imitate Bernard We should meet Christ by keeping innocency bear Olive by doing works of mercy carry Palms by conquering the Devil and our vices green leaves and flowers we carry if we be adorned with vertues and we strew our garments in the way when by mortification we put off the old man This week was called of old the GREAT-WEEK because it hath a larger Service than any other Week every day having a Second-service appointed It was called also the Holy-week because men gave over all worldly employments and betook themselves wholly to devotion this week The Courts were shut up and civil affairs laid aside and prisoners that were put in for small faults were freed Chrys. Hom. 30. in 10. cap Gen. Code l. 1. tit 4. 3. It was also called the week of Fasts Because fasting was then heightned and intended with watching and prayers for these six dayes were spent in lying upon the ground and afflicting the body in prayers watchings and fastings longer than ordinary And when they did eat their refreshing was only bread salt and water Epiphan adv Aerium It will not be amiss to set down Epiphanius somewhat more at large Aerius and his disciples had flouted at the Catholick Christians severities at this time Why say they do you keep Easter why do you keep such a strict fast before it it is Ienish thus to keep daies of fasting by a law it is an enslaving your selves to a yoke of bondage if I would determine to fast at all I would fast what day I pleased at mine own liberty Upon this principle it is saith that Father that Aerius and his followers affect to fast on Sunday and feast on Friday and to spend this week of Religion and Devotion in jollity and sport rising early to fill themselves with flesh and wine with which being full stuft they sport and scoff at the Catholick Christians folly in afflicting themselves with such severities But who says he are the more fools Aerius a silly fellow of yesterday still living with us or we who observe this severe discipline which our Fathers delivered us which they received from their Fathers and they from theirs and so from the Apostles The Epistles and Gospels of this week are concerning Christs Passion to the contemplation of which this week is dedicated Thursday THis day CHRIST washt his Disciples feet and gave them a commandment to do likewise Hence it is called Dies mandati Mandate or Maundy Thursday This day the penitents that were put out of the Church upon Ash-wednesday were received again into the Church partly because there was this day an holy Communion in memory of our Lords institution of the same this day and the Epistle is fitted to that purpose sit therefore it was that penitents should be reconciled this day upon which this Sacrament was instituted for the remission of sins to receive the holy Communion Partly because this day our Lord was apprehended and bound whose binding wrought our deliverance● and freedome The form of reconciling penitents was in short this The Bishop goes out to the doors of the Church where the penitentsly prostrate upon the earth and thrice in the Name of CHRIST he calls them Come Come Come ye children hearken to me I will teach you the fear of the Lord then after he hath prayed for them and admonished them he reconciles them and brings them into Church The peniterts thus received trim their heads and beards and laying off their penitential weeds they reclothe themselves in handsome apparel The Church doors were wont to be set all open this day to signifie that penitent sinners coming from North or South or any quarter of the World shall be received to mercy and the Churches favour GOOD-FRIDAY THis day holy Church keeps a most strict Fast It is called GOOD-FRIDAY For a good day it was for us even the cause of all our good and ground of all our joy And so in respect of the effect of it Christs Passion may be a Gospel for a Feast and so it is upon Palm-Sunday But if we consider that our sins were the cause of his Sufferings and that it was we that crown'd his head with thorns nail'd his hands and feet and gored his side with a Spear so his Passion considered in the cause of it is matter of the greatest sorrow and in this respect we keep it a Fast. The Gospel is taken out of S. Iohn rather than out of any other Evangelist because he was present at the Passion and stood by the Cross when others fled and therefore the Passion being represented as it were before our eyes this day his Testimony is read who saw it himself and from whose example we may learn not to be ashamed nor afraid of the Cross of Christ. This day holy Church prayes expresly for all Jews Turks and Infidels Enemies of the Cross
not due regard to the time of the Equinox it might happen that there might be two Easters in one year viz. one in the first Month and another in the last and none in the next year After our English Account Easter is found by finding out Shrove-Tuesday which is always the first Tuesday in the New Moon after Candlemas the Sunday six weeks after is Easter MVNDAY and TVESDAY in Easter-week THese two Holy days are added as Attendants upon Easter-day in honour of this high Feast and the more solemnity of it And we find S. Austin upon occasion mentioning them De civit Dei l. 22. c. 8. although both from him elsewhere and others we may gather that these two days were not all which at that time were added to the Feast For of old this Queen of Feasts as the Fathers call it was so highly esteemed that it was in a manner solemnized fifty days together even from Easter to Whitsuntide See Ambr. Ser. 61. Per hos quinquaginta dies nobis est jugis continuata Festivitas c. See also Euseb. de vit Constant. l. 4. c. 64. And Tertul. de Iejuniis And in his Book de Idol where he affirms that all the Heathen Festivals put together could not equal this one great and solemn Feast of the Christians From these and the like places some conclude and most probably That every day of that time the Christians met together in publick to sing with greatest joy Psalms and Allelujah to God Almighty and to take the Cup of Salvation the holy Communion praising the Name of the Lord. All which time they did not kneel at their prayers which was accounted a posture of mourners but Stand as upon Sundays they were wont in token of joy thus making every of those days equal in a manner to Sundays The reason of this so great and long Festivity at this time was principally because it was the Feast of Easter or of our blessed Lords Resurrection a principal Article of our faith for as S. Paul says 1 Cor. 15. If Christ be not risen we are yet in our sins and we Christians of all men m●st miserable Now that Christ is risen needs must there be in Christians hearts an overflowing of joy which in those times they expressed by such dayly publick exercises of Religion principally of receiving the holy communion the pledge of our resurrection as our Saviour says S. Iohn 6. He that eats my flesh shall live for ever that by this means the memory of the resurrection might be fixt deeply in their minds We must not think that the Christians then did keep all this Time holy so as to cease from labour for the poverty of many and the care and charity required in all would not permit that but only as to religious exercises and services As devotion abated the Feast was shortned yet long after Tertullian even till Gratians time and downward the whole week of Easter as also of Whitsuntide were reckoned among Holy-days Gratian. de Consec Dist. 3. And our Church though she enjoy●s only Munday and Tuesday of this week for Holy-days yet seems to me to commend the keeping holy of this whole week as also of the whole week after Christmas Ascension and Pentecost For she directs the proper Prefaces for Christmas Easter Ascen and Pentecost to be used every day the week after Which Prefaces are to be used only at the Communion as appears by the Rubricks so that by prescribing the Prefaces to be used upon every day of the week she doth withal prescribe the Communion every day likewise which is properly the keeping of a day Solemnly Holy and this weeks solemnity is principally as we have said for the expressing of our joy for our Lords Resurrection and the honour of the Feast which Christians were not willing to make shorter than the Jews Feast of unleavened Bread Among the Ancients there was another peculiar Reason for the keeping of the whole week of Easter Holy besides that of the Resurrection For they ministring Baptism except in case of necessity a● no other times but the Eves of Easter and Whitsunday did make it a part of their Festivity the week following to congratulate the access of a new Christian progeny the New Baptized coming each day to Church in white vestures with lights before them where Thanksgivings and Prayers were made for them with Instructions also to those that were of years of discretion for at that time there were many such that came in from Heathenism in the principles and ways of Christianity But afterwards when most of the baptized were Infants and so not capable of such solemnities this custome was altered and Baptism administred all times of the year as at the beginning of Christianity Tertul. de Bapt. S. Chrysost. Hom. 1. in Act. Apost 1. Sunday after Easter It was the custome of our fore-fathers to observe the Octave or Vtas of their high and principal Feasts and this is the Octave or eighth day after Easter Upon every Octave the use was to repeat some part of that Service which was perform'd upon the Feast it self and this is the reason that the Collect used upon Easter is renewed upon this day The Epistle exhorts the new baptized persons that are born of God to labour to overcome the World which at their baptism they vowed to do The Gospel shews how Christ conversed with his Disciples after his Resurrection instructing and confirming them in the faith of the Resurrection This Sunday is called Low-Sunday because it is Easter-day repeated the Octave of Easter but the Sunday before is high Easter and this is a lower Feast Low Easter in Latin Dominica in albis or rather Post Albas sc. depositas as some old Rituals call it because those that were baptized on Easter-eve wore seven days after white garments called Chrysoms signs of the purity which they received in Baptism which white clothes they this day put off 2. Sunday As the last Sunday instructed the young and new-born Christians how they should imitate Christ in a Resurrection from sin and death to life so this Sunday instructs the Shepherds of the flock how to imitate their great Shepherd And the Epipistle sets before us his great patience and goodness in the work of our redemption The Collect prayes for thankfulness and imitation of his holy life 3. Sunday after Easter Hitherto since Easter the Church hath been as it were overwhelmed in the joyful meditation of Christs Resurrection from the dead or chiefly about it and that hath been the subject of all the Collects since then Now in this Collect as somewhat also in one of the Readings aforegoing the Church reflects upon that other ancient Paschal Solemnity the general Baptism that was used at that time so that this Collect is for the new baptized or new Regenerates by Baptism desiring Almighty God who shews the light of his truth to them that be in error enlightning them by baptism which was therefore
called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 illumination and the baptized the Enlightened to grant them that be admitted into the fellowship of Christs religion namely by baptism that they may eschew those things that be contrary to their profession or vow in baptism c. Though this custome of general baptism at Easter be not in use now yet this Collect is still seasonable as a general anniversary Commemoration of the great blessings received from God by our baptism and our solemn vow and profession made to him therein The Ancients were wont to observe Pas●ha annotinum an anniversary commemo●ation of their baptism they that were baptized at Easter the year before came the year following the same day to the Church and solemnly with ob●ations and other religious offices commemorated the anniversary day of their new birth Though our Church does not in every particular observe the same custome yet she draws near to the ancient practice in this solemn though general Anniversary Commemoration of baptism this day minding us all this day of our baptism and our vow made therein and praying to God to enable us all to keep it And for this very reason does she appoint children to be baptized upon Sundays and other Holy-days when most people are present that they may be put in remembrance of their own profession made to God in baptism Preface before Baptism and happy were it for us if we would made good use of this care of the Church and be often remembring that solemn vow by which we have dedicated our selves to God to be an holy people the wilful breach of which vow is horrid Sacriledge In the Gospel our Saviour tells his Disciples that though they should weep and lament by reason of his death their sorrow should be turned into joy which no man should take from them namely after his Resurrection And such joy belongs to this time and to us in it if we be also his true Disciples and followers which how we may be the Epistle shews by minding us of what we promised and vowed when admitted into Christs School and gave up our names to him the abstaining from fleshly lusts and having honest conversation in all our Relations And this is the main drift of the whole Epistle the first of S. Peter out of which this is taken to perswade them that were born again and lately become Christians to walk suitably to such an holy profession and that chiefly in regard of the lively hope unto which they were begotten again by the Resurrection of Iesus Christ from the dead and so is most agreeable to the Churches meditations this day and season 4. Sunday after Easter This Collect is fit for this Paschal time from Easter to Pentecost a time of greatest joy the Church therefore prays that we may rightly observe the time be full of joy in a joyful time withal that our joy may be a true and real joy that our hearts may surely there be fixt where true joyes are to be found Such joyes as Christs Resurrection and the promised Comforter affords And one or both of these two grand occasions of Joy and Exultation to wit Christs Resurrection and the promise of a Comforter are the principal Subject of the Gospels from Easter to Whitsuntide but lest our joy should grow presumptious and luxuriant as joy is apt to exceed the Epistles for the same time admonish us of duties answerable as to believe in Christ to rise from the grave of sin to be patient loving meek charitable c. having our Lord for an example and the promise of his Spirit for our guide strength and comfort 5. Sunday after Easter The Gospel before promised a Comforter The Epistle and Gospel this day direct us what to do to obtain that promise Two conditions are required on our parts for the receiving of that promised Comforter First prayers or Rogations this the Gospel teaches Ask and ye shall receive that your joy may be full Secondly to love God and keep his Comandments S. Iohn 14. 15. This the Epistle exhorts to See that ye be doers of the Word c. The Collect prayes that we may feel the fruits and comforts of this holy Spirit in our hearts by good thoughts and abilities to perform them Of Rogation week This is called Rogation Sunday because upon the three following days Rogations and Litanies were used and Fasting for these two reasons 1. Because this time of the year the fruits of the earth are render and easily hurt therefore Litanies extraordinary are said to God to avert this judgement 2. Because our LORDS Ascension is the Thursday following therefore these three days before are to be spent in prayers and fasting Conc. Aurelian that so the flesh being tamed and the soul winged with fasting we may ascend with Christ. The Gospel is concerning Rogations teaching us how to ask of God so as we may obtain and withal foretels his approaching Ascension The Fast this week is voluntary for there is no Fast commanded betwixt Easter and Whitsunday as hath been observed before The Service formerly appointed in the Rogation days of Procession was the 103 and 104. Psal. with the Litany and Suffrages and the Homily of Thanksgiving Artic. Eliz. in the 7. year of her reign The 2. Psalms were to be said at convenient places in the common perambulation the people thus giving thanks to God in the beholding of Gods benefits the increase and abundance of his fruits upon the Earth At their return to the Church they were to say the rest of the Service mentioned Eliz. Injun 18 19. ASCENSION-Day THis day was Christs perfect triumph over the Devil Leading captivity captive Ephes. 4. 8. This day He opened the kingdom of Heaven to all believers as we say daily in the Te Deum See S. Iohn 3. 13. Acts 2. 24. Heb. 10. 23. His flesh opened that passage in that he deserved to enter there first For when he was taken up on high then he opened the Gates of Heaven Chrysost. upon that place of the Hebrews Therefore the Church appoints for this day the 24. Psalm Lift up your heads O ye gates and be ye lift up ye everlasting doors and the King of glory shall come in This day gives us hopes of Heaven in that our flesh in the first-fruits is th●ther ascended For if God had not intended some great good to our nature he would not have received the first-fruits up on high Christ taking the first-fruits of our nature this day carried it up to God and by those first-fruits hath made the whole stock to be sanctified And the Father highly esteemed the gift both for the worthiness of him that offered it up and for the purity of the offering so as to receive it with his own hands and to set it at his right hand To what Nature was it that God said Sit thou on my right hand To the same to which formerly he had said dust thou art and to dust thou
of Christ and his triumphant Ascension For God Almighty did so direct the mind of the Prophets that that which was spoken by them of other persons and actions is oft-times more exactly fulfilled in and by Christ. Osee 11. 1. Out of Egypt have I called my Son was there spoken of the deliverance of the people of Israel out of Egypt fulfilled in Christ S. Matth 2. 15. What David sayes of himself I will open my mouth in a payable was fulfilled by Christ S. Matth. 13. 35. The 72. Psalm was written for Solomon as the title shews but more exactly fulfilled of Christ. Davids complaint or his own n●sery Psal. 35. 19. verified in Christ. S. Iohn 15 25. Nay more which is worth our observation some things David spea●s of himself which do not agree to him but in a figure which agree to Christ in the letter as They parted my garments among them and cast lots upon my vesture Psalm 22. 17 18. Nay in the same Psalm and sometimes in the same verse some words will not agree to Christ as Psal. 69. 5. My faults are not hid from thee These cannot be spoken of Christ who knew no sin Some words again most properly belong to Christ as verse 22. They gave me gall to eat and when I was thirsty they gave me vinegar to drink Thus holy Church hath in the Lessons and Gospel preached to us the Ascension of Christ in the type and antitype In the Epistle she teaches us our duty not to stand gazing up to Heaven wondring at the strangeness of the sight but to take heed to demean our selves so as that we may with comfort behold him at his second coming his coming to judgment Act. 1. 11. Why stand ye gazing up into heaven there is other business to be done fit your selves for another coming for this same Iesus which was taken up from you into heaven shall so come even as ye have seen him go into heaven In the Collect we are taught to pray that we as far as may be may conform to our Lord in his Ascension that like as we believe him to have ascended into the Heavens so we may also in heart and mind thither ascend and with him continually dwell In the special Psal. and Hymn we adore and bless God for our Saviours glorious Ascension It is pleasant to behold the rare beauty of the Churches offices as on others so on this day how each part suits the other The Gospel to the Lessons the Epistle to the Gospel the Collect and Psalms and Hymns all fitted to the same and all to the day For the Antiquity of this day See S. Aug. Epist. 118. cited upon Easter day Epiphan● and Chrys. upon the day Sunday after Ascen This is called Expectationsweek for now the Apostles were earnestly expecting the fulfilling of that promise of our Lord. If I go away I will send the Comforter to you S. Iohn 16. 7. The Epistle exhorts to earnest prayer for the Comforter promised in the Gospel which the Church performs in the Collect. WHIT SVNDAY THis day the HOLY GHOST came down from heaven upon his Church as the Epistle tells according to the promise of the Gospel As in a long war it happens when the war is ended and peace concluded Pledges and Hostages are mutually sent both as tokens of and securities for the mutual agreement and peace so was it betwixt God and Man After our Lord Jesus had ended the long war betwixt God and Man and finished the reconciliation he sent up or rather he carried up himself our Hostage our flesh and nature ennobled by the union with his Divine Person as a royal pledge to his Father on the other side God sent this day his royal Hostage his holy Spirit a security for our future peace 1. S. Iohn 4. 12 13. Chrys. Hom. 1. in Pentecost Edit Savil. tom 5. The Devil had taken us captive our Lord Christ undertakes the quarrel his death was his battel but then he seem'd to be overcome but up he got again at his Resurrection that was his victory his Ascension was his triumph and as the ancient custome was for Conquerours to scatter gifts amongst the beholders especially on the last and great day of the triumph so does our Lord in this last day of the Feast the Conclusion of his triumph he doth as it were make the Conduits run with Wine he poured out his Spirit so upon all flesh that some mockers said they were full of new wine Acts 2. 12. He casts abroad his new wine new gifts and graces of the world giving to some the word of wisdome to others the gift of knowledge to others faith to others the gift of healing to others the working of miracles to others prophesie to others discerning of spirits to others divers kinds of tongue to others the interpretations of tongues all these worketh one and the same spirit the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 12. 4. whom the Lord Christ as he promised sent down this day with these gifts in honour of whom and his gifts we keep this day holy This time was also appointed of old for solemn baptism The reason was 1. Because this day the Apostles were baptized with the holy Ghost and fire Acts 2. 3. 2. Because this day three thousand were baptized by the Apostle Acts 2. 40. In memory of which the Church ever after held a solemn custome of baptizing at this Feast Gratian. de Consec Dis. 3. c. 13. This day is called Pentecost because it is fifty days betwixt the true Passeover and Whitsunday As there were fifty days from the Jews Passeover to the giving of the Law to Moses in Mount Sina which Law was written with the finger of God for from the 14. day of the first month the day of the Passeover to the third day of the third month the day of the Laws giving Exod. 19. are fifty days so from the true Passeover which was celebrated when Christ was offered up for us are fifty days to this time when the Holy Ghost came down upon the Church to write the new Law● of Charity in their hearts Upon this meditation S. Aug. breaks out thus Who would not prefer the joy and pleasure of these mysteries before all Empires of the world Do you not see that as the two Seraphins cry one to another holy holy holy Esay 6. 3. So the two Testaments Old and New faithfully agreeing convince the sacred truth of God S. Aug. Ep. 119. Note that we must not count the fifty days from the very day of the Passeover but from the Sunday following and so God directed the Jews Lev. 23. 15. speaking of their Pentecost or Feasts of Weeks And ye shall count from the morrow after the Sabbath from that day seven weeks shall be compleat It is also called Whitsunday from the glorious Light of Heaven which was then sent down upon the Earth from the Father of Lights so many tongues so many Lights which kindled such
the general meditation and affection of the season We may therefore observe that as all the Gospels for Sundaies since Easter day hitherto are taken out of the beloved Disciple S. Iohn who therein gives us many of the last and most tender and affectionate words of our dear Lord before his Passion and Ascension his promising of a Comforter bidding them not fear bequeath●ing his peace to them and the like so now the two first Epistles are taken and most fitly out of the same Apostle who therein minds us with much earnest affection of that spirit which our Lord promised for our Comforter and of the great effect and sign of it the love of one another If saith he we love one another God dwelleth in us and his love is perfect in us Hereby know we that we dwell in him and he in us because he hath given us of his Spirit And the Epistle for the second Sunday exhorteth us in like manner To love one another as he gave commandment and he that keepeth his Commandments dwelleth in him and he in him and hereby we know that he abideth in us even by the Spirit which he hath given us In the Epistle for the third Sunday we are put in mind by S. Peter of submission and being humble for God gives grace to such of sobriety watching faith and patience in affliction with an exhortation to cast our care upon God who cares for us and shall perfect se●tle strengthen and stablish us which is according to what Christ said That he would not leave us Comfortless The fourth Epistle is out of Rom. 8. and is a comfort against afflictions as not worthy of that glory which shall be shewed upon us provided we be such as they whom the Apostle there speaks of who had received the first-fruits of the Spirit The Epistle for the fifth being taken out of S. Peter exhorts us to Love Peace Innocence and such spiritual affections and if any trouble us not to be afraid but to sanctifie the Lord God in our hearts The rest of the Epistles for all the days following relate much to the same business as newness of life and all the fruits and gifts of Gods holy Spirit and as a particular insight will sufficiently manifest But being not the first that are used in this season they seem to have been chosen with more indifferency for they are taken out of S. Paul and keep the very order of his Epistles and the place they have in each Epistle For of them the first are out of the Epistle to the Romans and so in order the next out of the Epistles to the Corinthians first and second Galatians Ephesians Philippians and Colossians for so far the Order reacheth till the time of Advent Only two of the Sundaies the 18. and 25. do vary from this method in the choice of their Epistles and there is reason for both And first for the 25. or last Sunday the reason is manifest for it being lookt upon as a kind of preparative or fore-runner of Advent as Advent is to Christmas and in S. Ieromes Lectionarius it is comprized within the time of Advent an Epistle was chosen not as hapned according to the former method but such an one as prophesied of Christs Advent or Coming for that plainly appears in This out of Ieremy Behold the time cometh saith the Lord that I will raise up the righteous branch of David which King shall bear rule and he shall prosper with wisdom and shall set up Equity and Righteousness again in Earth The like Prophesie is implyed in the Gospel and applyed to Iesus in the words of the people when they had seen his miracle This is of a truth the same Prophet that should come into the world And therefore when there are either more or fewer Sundays than 25 between Trinity and Advent if we so dispose of the Services as always to make use of this for the last of them it will be agreeable to reason and exemplary practice and that from time of old for we find such a Rule in Micrologus an ancient Ritualist The other Sunday that follows not the method of the rest is the 18. after Trinity for its Epistle is taken out of the first to the Corinthians not out of that to the Ephesians as other are for the Sundayes that go next before and after This seems to be occasioned by a particular circumstance for which a fit Epistle was to be found out though it were not taken out of its place in the usual order and that was the Ordination of Ministers for the understanding of which and the ancient care about Ordinations it will not be amiss to be somewhat the larger We may therefore note that what was said of Collects pag. 70. is true also of this order of Epistles and Gospels that it comes down to us from Ancient Times as appears by S. Hieromes Lectionarius above mentioned and other old Liturgists and Expositors And by them we find that it was the Custome of old to have proper Services for Wednesdays Fridays and Saturdayes in each Ember-week and then followed as with us the conferring of Holy Orders But care being taken that the Ordination should be performed after continuance the same day in Prayer and fasting and yet be done upon the Lords day also and because by ancient Canon that day was not to be fasted they therefore took this course to perform it on Saturday it being one of the Ember Fasts and yet in the Evening of it for that time was accounted as belonging to the Lords day following or if they would continue so long fasting to do it early in the morning following See Le● Epist. 81. ad Diosc. In regard therefore that this was accounted a Sundays work and that there had been so much Exercise and Fasting on Saturday the Sunday following had no publick Office and was therefore called Dominica Vacat or Vacans a vacant Sunday But it was afterwards thought better not to let that day pass in that manner nor to continue so long and late on Saturday in such Abstinence and Exercise and therefore the Ordination came to be dispa●cht sooner on Saturday and the Sunday following had a Service said on it which at first for some time was borrowed of some other days but afterwards One was fixt being fitted to the day or season with some respect in the frame of it to the Ordination at that time For although there were peculiar Readings Rites and Prayers for the Ordination it self as there is also in our Church much resembling the ancient Form yet besides that in the general Service of the day some reflexion was made on the business of Ordination Only the Vacant Sunday for the Ember week in September had no constant peculiar ●ervice for being fixt to a certain time ●f● that Month it chanceth that the said Sunday sometimes is the 18. after Trinity sometimes the 17. or sooner as Easter falls out and accordingly takes
mistake of Durandus was occasioned by this that in some old Martyrologists this Feast of Philip and Iacob was called the Feast of S. Philip and Iacob and all the Apostles and in some the Feast of Philip and Iacob and All-saints The reason of which was not because the Apostles had no other Feasts appointed them but only this but because the Feast of Philip and Iacob is upon the Kalends of May and so falls within the Paschal Solemnity betwixt Easter and Whitsuntide All which time the Church of old was wont to commemorate not one Saint alone but altogether and therefore not Philip and Iacob alone but all the Apostles and Saints together with them The reason of which was saies Gemma de Antiq Mis. rit cap. 140. Because in our heavenly Country which that time signifies the joy of all is the joy of every one and the joy of every Saint the common joy of all Or because as Micrologus says De Eccl. Offic. c. 55. At the general Resurrection of which Easter solemnity is a type there is a common Festivity and joy of the Righteous The Philip this day commemorated was Philip the Apostle whom the Gospel mentions not Philip the Deacon Yet the Church gives us a Lesson Acts 8. concerning him and it was a thing not unusual in ancient Martyrologies to commemorate divers of the same name on the same day The Iames that is commemorated this day is not one of the sons of Zebedee whose day is kept in Iuly but Iames who was called the brother of our Lord the first Bishop of Ierusalem who wrote the Epistle called the Epistle of S. Iames part of which is this day read This day hath no Fast because it falls betwixt Easter and Whitsuntide See the Feast of Circumcision S. Iohn Baptist. WE celebrate the birth of S. Iohn Baptist and of our Saviour For these reasons The Births of both were full of joy and mystery Our Saviours we have already observed Now for S. Iohns it is plain there was more than ordinary joy at his birth S. Luke 1. 14. And full of mystery and wonder it was As a Virgin conceived our Lord so a barren woman brought forth S. Iohn S. Luke 1. 36. Again his birth was prophetical of our Lord whom he saluted out of his mothers womb Lastly his birth was made memorable by the prediction of the Angel Gabriel S. Luke 1. 19. There was formerly another Holy-day for the beheading of S. Iohn Baptist but our Church keeps only this Holy-day in memory of him wherein though she principally commemorates his mysterious Nativity as you may see in the Gospel yet she does not omit his Life and Death his Life and Office in the Morning Lessons are recorded His death is related in the Second Lesson Evening and the Collect prayes for grace to imitate his example patiently suffering for the Truths sake S. Michael HOly Church holds a Feast in memory of the holy Angels First because they minister to us on earth Heb. 1. 14. being sent forth to minister to them that shall be heirs of salvation Secondly because they fight against the Devil for us by their prayers and recommendation of us and our condition at the throne of grace as appears bp the Epistle and the Gospel at the end of it The Church in this Feast particularly commemorates S. Michael because he was Prince or tutelar Angel of the Church of the Jews Daniel 10. 13. 12. 1. and so of the Christian Church For the Church which was once in the Jews is now in the Christians All-Saints BEcause we cannot particularly commemorate every one of those Saints in whom Gods graces have been eminent for that would be too heavy a burthen and because in these particular Feasts which we do celebrate we may justly be thought to have omitted some of our duty through infirmity or negligence therefore holy Church appoints this day in commemoration of the Saints in general Other Holy-dayes not here spoken of are either mentioned in other places or need no other explication than what already hath been said in general of Holy dayes and their Readings The COMMVNION or Second-Service IN the Liturgy it is called The Communion and well it were that the piety of the people were such as to make it alwayes a Commwnion The Church as appears by her pathetical Exhortation before the Communion and the Rubrick after it labours to bring men oftner to communicate than she usually obtains Private and solitary Communions of the Priest alone she allows not and therefore when other cannot be had she appoints only so much of the Service as relates not of necessity to a present Communion and that to be said at the Holy Table and upon good reason the Church thereby keeping as it were her ground visibly minding us of what she desires and labours towards our more frequent access to that holy Table and in the mean while that part of the Service which she uses may perhaps more fitly be called the Second Service than the Communion And so it is often called though not in the Rubr of the Liturgy yet in divers Fast books and the like set out by Authority If any should think that it cannot properly be called the Second Service because the Morning Service and Litany go before it which we prove in the following discourse to be two distinct Services whereby this should seem to be the Third rather than the Second Service it is Answered that sometimes the Communion-Service is used upon such dayes as the Litany is not and then it may without question be called the Second Service nay even then when the Litany and all is used the Communion Service may be very fitly called the Second Service For though in strictness of speech the Litany is a service distinct as is shewn yet in our usual acception of the word Service namely for a compleat Service with all the several parts of it Psalms Readings Creeds Thanksgivings and Prayers so the Litany is not a Service nor so esteemed but called The Litany or Supplications and lookt upon sometimes when other Offices follow as a kind of Preparative though a distinct form to them as to The Communion Commination c. And therefore it was a custome in some Churches that a Bell was tolled while the Litany was saying to give notice to the people that the Communion Service was now coming on This Service consists of Four parts The first reaches to the Offertory called anciently Missa Catechumenorum the service of the Catechumens The second is the Offertory which reaches to the Consecration The third begins at the Consecration and ends at the Angelical Hymn Glory be to God an high The last is the Post-Commwnion or Thanksgiving which with us is nothing but that holy Hymn Part. 1. We begin the first part as the Church was wont to begin her Services with the LORDS PRAYER concerning which see the Morning Service After this follows an excellent prayer to God
And with thy Spirit Much after this manner was the Jews practice Neh. 8. 4. 6. Ezra the Scribe stood upon a Pulpit of wood c. and opened the book in the sight of all the people and when he opened it all the people stood up and Ezra blessed the Lord the great God and all the people answered Amen Amen and worshipped Verse 8 Then Ezra read in the Book and gave the sense and caused them to understand the reading So we see that both amongst Jews and Christians of old the Preacher before his Sermon used only a short Salutation or Blessing to which the people having answered the Sermon began And though the Church of England uses not the very same form yet in this she follows the ancient practice prescribing only the short prayer of our Lord and indeed what need any more For whatsoever we can desire is abundantly prayed for before in the Liturgy and needs not be prayed over again immediately And therefore there being no need of such a solemn prayer the Church hath appointed none but only the Lords Prayer and no other being appointed no other should be used by the Preacher For as hath been shewn Pag. 1. No prayers should be used publickly but those that are prescribed lest through ignorance or carelesness any thing contrary to the faith should be uttered before God How necessary such restraint of privatemens prayers in publick is and how good that reason is for such restraint a little experience of licentious times will abundantly shew The pulpit is no security from errors Men may as well speak blasphemy or vanity before the Sermon as in it Is it not reason then that the Church should take care what she can to prevent this danger by restraining that liberty which is so likely to run men into it Suppose some Preacher should be so careful as not to vent any thing unsavory yet the Church cannot be secured of all and therefore must not allow a general liberty Nay suppose the Church could be assured of all Preachers care in this particular that their prayers should be for matter sound and good yet how should it be reasonable for the Church to allow any private person or Preacher to offer up to God a prayer in the name of the Congregation as their joynt desire to which they never before consented themselves nor their Governors for them A Preacher may pray for his Auditory by himself though they know it not nor consented to it before hand but it is not imaginable how he should offer it up in their name or call it their prayer to God as sometimes the use hath been which neither they themselves nor their Governours whom Christ hath impowred to make prayer for them have consented to or acknowledged for theirs no more than any man can call that the Petition of a Town which he shall present in their names though they never before consented to it or so much as saw it before it was presented This Form of bidding Prayers is very ancient we may see the like in S. Chrys. and other Liturgies which they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Allocutions in which the Deacon speaks to the people from point to point directing them what to pray for as hath been said before This is all the difference betwixt them and this that in them the people were to answer to every point severally Lord have mercy c. In this they are taught to sum up all the Petitions in the Lords Prayer and to pray for them all together This was the practice in King Edw. the Sixth's time as appears by Bishop Latymer Iewel and others in those daies whose Forms of Bidding Prayers before Sermon are to be seen in their writings If there be no Sermon there shall follow one of the Homilies set forth So was it of old appointed Conc. Vas. c. 4. If the Parish Priest be sick or cannot preach let the homilies of the holy Fathers be read by the Deacon Part 2. The OFFERTORY followes which are certain sentences out of holy Scripture which are sung or said while the people offered Durant Offerings or Oblations are an high part of Gods service and worship taught by the light of nature and right reason which bids us to honour God with our substance as well as with our bodies and souls to give a part of our goods to God as an homage or acknowledgement of his Dominion over us and that all that we have comes from God 1 Chron. 29. 14. Who am I and what is my people that we should be able to offer so willingly after this sort for all things come of thee and of thine own have we given thee To bring presents to him that ought to be feared Psal. 76. 11. This duty of offerings was practised by the Fathers before the Law with a gracious acceptation Witness Abel Gen. 4. 4. Commanded in the Law Exod. 25. 2. Speak to the children of Israel that they bring me an offering So Deut. 16. 16. Confirmed by our Saviour in the Gospel S. Matth. 5. 23. Therefore if thou bring thy gift to the Altar and there remembrest that thy brother hath ought against thee leave there thy gift before the altar and go thy way first be reconciled to thy brother and then come and offer thy gift If any man conceives that this offering here mentioned was a Jewish perishing rite not a duty of the Gospel to continue let him consider First that there is the same reason for this duty under the Gospel as there was under or before the Law God being Lord of us and ours as well as of them and therefore to be acknowledged for such by us as well as by them Secondly that all the rest of our Saviours Sermon upon the Mount was Gospel and concerning duties obliging us Christians and it is not likely that our Saviour should intermix one only Judaical rite amongst them Thirdly that our Saviour before all these precepts mentioned in this his Sermon whereof this of oblations is one prefaces this severe sanction S. Matth. 5. 19. Whosoever shall break one of the least of these commandments and shall teach men so shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven which could not be truly said concerning the breach of a Jewish outworn rite 4. That our Saviour hath carefully taught us there the due manner of the performance of this duty of oblations like as he did concerning alms and prayers and no man can shew that ever he did any where else nor is it probable that he should here carefully direct us how to do that which was presently to be left and was already out of force as this was supposing it to be a Jewish rite We may then I conceive suppose it for a truth that oblations are here commanded by our Saviour Add to this that offerings were highly commended by the Gospel in the Wise men that offered Gold Frankincense and Myrrhe S. Matth. 2. 11. and that they
In the faith and fear of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 come hither or as our Liturgy saies draw near the people Answer Amen Amen Amen Blessed be he that comes in the Name of the Lord and so come and receive in both kinds Every Parishioner shall communicate at the least three times in the year whereof Easter to be one Rubr. last after the Communion In the Primitive Church while Christians continued in their strength of Faith and Devotion they did communicate every day This custome continued in Africa till S. Cyprians time Orat. Dom. We daily receive the Eucharist for to be our food of salvation And after him till S. Augustines time Ep. 23. ad Bonifac. Insomuch as these words in our Lords Prayer Give us this day our daily bread they interpreted of the Eucharist as being daily to be celebrated But afterward when charity grew cold and devotion faint the custome grew faint withal and within a small time began to be left by little and little and some upon one pretence and some upon another would communicate but once a week In the East-Church they grew to a worse custome betimes which in after Ages came into the Latin Churches too They fell from every day to Sundaies and Holy daies only and from thence to once a year and no oftner S. Ambr. is cited for the proof of this De Sacram. l. 4. c. 4. But this wicked custome of receiving the Eucharist but once a year was but of some Greeks in the East saies S. Ambrose there which cannot properly be understood of any but the Diocess as it was anciently called or Patriarchate of Antioch For though the Eastern Empire whereof Constantinople was the Metropolis contained many Provinces yet the Eastern Church or Greeks in the East were properly those of Antioch Theodor. Hist. 1.5 c. 9. And possibly some of these might be so supine as hath been observed but of the Greeks in general no such careless custome can be affirmed for S. Chrysost. tells us that in his time in every meeting or congregation of the Church the healthful mysteries of the Eucharist are celebrated Hom. 26. in Matth. In regard of this neglect after-Councels did as the Church of England make Canons that if men could be got to receive it no oftner yet they should be forc'd to receive it at least three times in the year Christmas Easter and Whitsontide Nor was he to be reckoned amongst good Catholick Christians that did not receive at those feasts Conc. Agat c. 18. Eliber c. 81. as they are cited by Gratian. de Consor dis 2. Three times a year at the least they were to receive whereof Easter to be one and good reason For when Christ our Passeover was Sacrificed for us then of all times let us keep a Feast with this holy banquet 1 Cor. 5. 7. These Canons were made for the Laity but for those of the Clergy that lived in Cathedral and Collegiate Churches where there were enough of themselves to make a sufficient company to receive the Sacrament they were bound to receive much oftner every day Edw. 6. Liturg. every Sunday at the least Rubr. 4. after the Communion Thus we see holy Church her care to bring all her Children Clergy and Laity to the heavenly banquet of the body and blood of Christ she invites all to a frequent and due receiving of this holy Sacrament in most passionate and kind manner in that most excellent exhortation next after the prayer for the Catholick Church militant here on earth An exhortation fit to be read weekly by the Priest and seriously considered daily by all the people In which holy Church one while exhorts us by the mercies and bowels of Christ to come to this holy feast another while terrifies us by the indignation of God against those that despise his so great love and refuse to come she sends her Ministers as the man in the Gospel S. Luke 14. to tell them all things are ready● and to bid them in the Name of God to call them in Christ's behalf to exhort them as they love their own salvation to come to this holy Supper and those that notwithstanding all this bidding shall go about to make excuses because they had bought a Farm or would try their yoke of Oxen or because they were married holy Church by her Canons and Laws endeavours to compel to come in at least three times in the year And it were to be wished that all those that despise the Churches passionate exhortations and contemn her wholsome Canons and commands in this particular would seriously at last think of that dreadful sentence of our Lord upon those that still refuse so great mercy I say unto you that none of those men which were bidden shall taste of my Supper S. Luke 14. 24. None of those that are thus bidden by Christ and his Church to his holy Supper the holy Communion and shall refuse to come shall ever taste of his great Supper hereafter or eat and drink with him at his Table in his Kingdom S. Luke c. 22. 29. If any of the Bread and Wine remain the Curate shall have it to his own use Rubr. 5. after the Communion Service That is if it were not consecrated for if it be consecrated it is all to be spent with fear and reverence by the Communicants in the Church Gratian de Consecr dist 2. c. 23. Tribus Concil Constant. Resp. ad Qu. 5. Monachon apud Balsam Theophil Alexand cap. 7. Part 4. After all have received we say the LORDS PRAYER according to ancient Custome Ambr. l. 5. de Sacram. c. 4. The people are to repeat every Petition after the Priest Rubr. If the Church did ever devise a thing fit and convenient what more than this That when together we have all received those heavenly Mysteries wherein Christ imparts himself to us and gives visible testification of our blessed Communion with him we should in hatred of all Heresies Factions and Schisms declaredly approve our selves united as Brethren in one by offering up with all our hearts and tongues that most effectual prayer Our Father c. In which we profess our selves Sons of the same Father and in which we pray for Gods pardon no otherwise than as we forgive them that trespass c. For which cause Communicants have ever used it and we at that time do shew we use yea every syllable of it as Communicants saying it together with one consent and voice This done the Priest offers up the Sacrifice of the holy Eucharist or the Sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving for the whole Church as in all old Liturgies it is appointed and together with that is offered up that most acceptable Sacrifice of our selves souls and bodies devoted to Gods service Of which see Rom. 12. and S. Aug. de Civit. Dei l. 10. c. 6. Then we say or sing the Angelical Hymn GLORY BE TO GOD ON HIGH c. wherein the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy does admirably
perceive that we are Christians HOOKER 1. 5. Eccl. pol. § 75. There being in those dumb shews nothing but what heathens and pagans do How can any unlearned or unbeliever be convinced by them that either we who are present at them do or that he ought to believe any part of Christian Religion but when the unlearned or unbeliever hears us sing triumphant songs to God for our victory over death when he hears holy Lessons and discourses of the Resurrection when he hears us pray for a happy and joyful Resurrection to Glory by all these he must be convinced that we do believe the Resurrection which is a principal Article of Christian faith and the same may be the means to convince him also and make him believe the same and so fall down and worship God And this is according to S. Paul's rule 1. Cor. 14. 23 24 25. who thence concludes that all our publick religious services ought to be done that the unlearned or unbeliever may be convinced and brought to worship God For the due performance of these holy publick services a Priest ordained for men in things pertaining to God Heb. 5.1 is required by the Church as it ought to be and as it was of old S. Chrys. Hom. 4 in Hebr. Ambr. Ser. 90. It was an ancient custom after Burial to go to the holy COMMVNION unless the office were performed after noon For then if men were not fasting it was done only with Prayers Conc. Carth. 3 29. Can. Funeral Doles were an ancient custom Chrys. Hom. 32. in Mat. Thanksgiving of Women after Child-birth commonly call'd the CHVRCHING OF WOMEN THe Woman when she comes to give her thanks shall kneel near to the place where the holy Table stands but in the Church of Rome she was to kneel at the Church door The Woman may come to give her thanks whensoever she shall be able Decretal l. 3. Tit. 4. But if she be likely to live she is required by the Civil Law according to the Tradition of the Church to forbear the coming to partake of the holy Mystery forty days after the Birth Not for any unholiness in the Woman or incapacity of receiving the holy Mysteries at that time for if there be fear of death she may receive them as soon as she please after the birth but for some secret reasons in the Law which are set down Constit. Leon. 7. The Woman that is to be Churched is to have a Veil and good reason For if as S. Paul 1 Cor. 11 sayes Every woman when she prayes in publick ought to have a veil or covering on her head in token of her modesty and subjection then much more when she is to sit in a more eminent place of the Church near to the holy Table apart from the rest of her Sex in the publick view ought she to have such a Veil or covering Nor can it be deemed unreasonable for her at that time to have a Veil or habit distinct from others that so it may be known for whom thanks is then particularly given The Preface following Forasmuch c. is left arbitrary to the Priest but the prayers are all prescribed Then shall the Priest say the 121. psal I have lifted up mine eyes unto the Hills c. The Church appointing this Psalm at this time does not intend to perswade us by this that this Psalm was pen'd for such a particular occasion as this or that the promises of Gods protection and assistence there expressed were directly and primarily made to persons in that danger of child-birth but because the Psalm at the very beginning tells us all that our help comes from God it is thought seasonable at this time to be used to mind the woman from whom she hath received that mercy of deliverance and to whom she is to return the honour due for such a mercy even to him from whom comes all our help the Lord that made heaven and earth And this were enough to justifie the Churches choice of this Psalm at this time in that part of it is so fit for this business in hand though it were not penn'd upon this very occasion for so we find Hezekiah commended for appointing of the Psalms of David and Asaph to set forth the praises of God in the publick services 2. Chr. 29. 30 although neither had Hezek and the Church then the very same occasions to use them which David and Asaph had nor did every particle of those songs so directly and properly belong to Hezekias and the Church then as they did to David and Asaph But not only the beginning of this Psalm but even the whole body of it is fit and suitable to this service and those promises of divine assistence therein exprest though they were primarily and in their first intention made to the Church of the Jews yet in their proportion they do belong to the person coming to give thanks and to every one that shall lift up their eyes to the Hills and trust in God For not Israel at large but Israel lifting up her eyes to God and trusting in God is the formal and true object of this promise which therefore belongs to every such person as shall be so qualified so depending upon God This rule S. Paul hath taught us Heb. 13. 5. applying there the promise made particularly to Ioshuah Chap. 1. 5. to every one of us that shall contentedly depend upon God as Ioshuah was commanded to do in expectance of that promise Let your conversation be without covetousness and be content with such things as ye have For he hath said I will not leave thee nor forsake thee So that we may boldly say the Lord is my helper One verse of this Psalm may perhaps at the first sight seem not so well expressed namely this the sun shall not burn thée by day nor the Moon by night for the Moon does not burn but cool But it i● easily cleared by taking notice that to burn is not always taken in the strict and proper sence but usually in a larger whereby it is the same with to grieve or hurt a ordinary skill in language will enform us so the meaning is The Sun shall not hurt thee by day nor the Moon by night whose shine is held to be very hurtful After the Psalm follow the Kyrie or short Litany and the Lords Prayer so admirably good and useful that there is scarce any publick service dispatcht without them after these follow some Verses and Responds of which and the reason of their use together with the antiquity of it hath been said already and need not be here repeated But there is one thing observable in these Responds or Answers which was not spoken of hitherto nor was so observable in some of the former Verses and Responds as in these here and that is this that some of these Answers are not of themselves intire sentences or petitions as the others were but are parts or ends of the
service p. 316. Reasons why 318 c. The advantage of having our Services performed in such places p. 320 321. That Service may be said privately and why p. 333 c. The Diptychs p. 217. Doxology or Glory be to the Father c. p. 25 32. Dominica Vacat or Vacans which and why so called p. 190. Dominica refectionis p. 132. Dominica in Albis or post Albas rather why so called p. 155. E. Ejaculations commended by S. Aug. p. 62 63. Of Ember-weeks p. 128. which they are ibid. Why Wednesday Friday and Saturday observed in them ibid. On Easter-day special Hymns instead of the usual Invitatory p. 141. Proper Psalms for it p. 143. and proper Lessons 145 c. The Antiquity thereof p. 147. Contention in the Church when to be kept p. 148. The determination of the Nicene Council about it ibid. How to find out Easter p. 150. Munday and Tuesday in Easter-week why kept p. 150. Easter solemnized of old Fifty days together 151. Baptism ministred anciently at no times but the Eves of Easter and Whitsuntide p. 153. The new Baptized come to Church in White Vestures with Lights before them ibid. Baptism ministred all times of the year p. 154. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Easter p. 175. Epiphany used of old for Christmas-day p. 115. Mistakes upon the Identity of the word ibid. In Latin Epiphany why ibid. Of the Antiquity thereof p. 116. Of the Sundaies after the Epiphany p. 116 c. Epistles p. 92. of the Antiquity and fitness of the Epistles and Gospels p. 92 93. Epistles from Trinity to Advent and the reason of their choice 185 c. F. Fast. See Lent Good-Friday c. If a Fast for an Holyday fall upon an Holy-day then the Fast is to be kept the day before that p. 114. To Feast on Friday is not to hold Communion with the Catholick Church but with the Turks p. 88. The Week of Fasts which and why so called p. 134. Festivals S. Andrew p. 198. Conversion of S. Paul p. 199. why kept rather than the day of his death ibid. S. Philip p. 202. S. James p. 204. The Apostles in the Primitive times had not several days of Solemnity saith Durandus not probably though p. 202. One day for all ibid. In the Latin Church the Calends or first of May. In the Greek the Feast of S. Peter and S. Paul ibid. No Fast on S. Philip and S. James why p. 204. S. John Baptist his Birth celebrated and why p. 204. His beheading 205. S. Michael and All Angels why a Feast then p. 205. Tutelar Angel of the Church of the Jews and so of the Christians p. 206. All Saints why kept p. 206. S. Stephen p. 106. 109. S. John H. Innocents The Observation of Saints Days ancient p. 107. The Days of Saints deaths kept rather than of their Births or Baptism why p. 108 ●●9 ●ome Holy days have Fasts and some 〈◊〉 111 113 114. Purification of S. Mary p. 200. Feast of Circumcision or New-years day p. 110. Of a later institution ibid. Great solemnities have some days after them in Prorogationem Festi ibid. Font. Baptism to be at the Font p. 258. Why so called ibid. placed in the Church-Porch Significantly ibid. After in Churches but not all but only in the City Church hence called the Mother Church ibid. in high Veneration p. 259. G. Glory be to the Father c. is both Hymn and Creed p. 25. A fit Close for any religious Services ibid. Glory be to the Father c. said at the ends of Psalms never quarrelled by any till Arius 32. Glory be to the Father c. in the Litany p. 85. Glory be to thee O Lord. Reason of saying it when the Gospel is named p. 213. Thanks be to God for this Gospel Vsed to be said after the Gospel and the Reason of it p. 214. Godfathers p. 255. Good-Friday a most strict Fast. Why so called p. 137. The Gospel out of S. John why upon that day ibid. The Antiquity thereof p. 138. Gospel R●tes used at the reading of the Gospel p. 213 c. Standing at the Gospel ibid. To kiss the Book the Fashion in some places p. 214. Of Gospels and the reason of their choice p. 93. Reason of saying Glory be to thee O Lord at the Gospel 213 c. Of the Gospels from Trinity to Advent p. 183. H. Holy-days p. 88. They are either Fasting-days or Festivals p. 89. Are of excellent use ibid. Of the particular Festivals p. 90 91 92. Holy week which and why so called p. 134. Called also Great Week ibid. Holy Table so called considering the Eucharist as a Sacrament p. 327. The Altar so called considering the Eucharist a Sacrifice ibid. And so it is called Heb. 13. 10. and S. Matth. 5. 23. p. 328. Altars always had in high estimation p. 330. The Holy Tables set where the Altars stood ib. Of Hymns the Antiquity of them p. 42. Most properly to be Sung p. 44. And why ibid. The profit of it ibid. Standing the proper posture of Hymns ibid. Why 45. Te Deum framed miraculously by S. Ambrose and Aug. ib. Why Hymns after Lessons 46. And why those appointed ibid. Magnificat Nunc Dimittis quarrell'd at Answered p. 47. L. Lent The Antiquity thereof p. 122. In imitation of Moses Elias and our Saviour p. 123. Why not kept immediately after Christs Baptism p. 123,124 Why call'd Lent p. 125. In Lent the glory of the Altar's hid why 48. Benedicite then used p. 49. Te Deum Benedictus Magnificat Nunc Dimittis may be said more often Excepting in Lent and Advent why p. 48. The Litany p. 79. Vsed in Processions why ib. Vsed at the Communion Ordinations c. ib. Probable to be derived from the Apostles Times p. 80. Donum Precum ib. Of the Litany of our Church 81. The Sum of it 81 82. The Nature of it Short Ejaculations 82. The former part of the Litany may be said by a Deacon as in Cathedral and Collegiate Churches The Later peculiarly by the Priest and why 84 85. Secretae what they are The reason of them 86. The Litany when to be said and why then 87 88. The Litany a distinct Service p. 208. Lords Prayer p. 22. The frequent use thereof why ib. The Doxology omitted in the Lords Prayer why p. 23. But deliver us from evil Amen Said by the people when and why ib. Give us this day our daily Bread understood by the Fathers of the Eucharist 237 238. No prayer before Sermon but the Lords Prayer p. 220. The Lessons Of the choice of them out of the Old and New Test. p. 33 39. Mingling Services of divers sorts a wise Constitution of the Church why 34. At the Reading of the Lessons the Minister is to turn to the people 35 36. The Prophet Esay read last before Christmas and why p. 40. A several course in reading Lessons Ordinary p. 39. for Sundaies p. 40. for Saints days p. 41. The
Capellae hujus Iesu ●mni adparatu adest tandem Reverendissimus in Christo pater Honourandissimus Lancelotus Episcopus Wintoniensis Septembris 17. Anno I620 Hora octava matutina aut circiter erat autem dies Dominicus Episcopus Capellam statim ingressus induit se pontificalbus quem secuti itidem qui ipsi à sacris domesticis aderant Matthaeus Christopherus Wren SS Theol. Bacc. Sacerdotalibus induuntur Egressus dein cum illis Episcopus convenarum magna stipante caterva Fundatorem affari orditur in haec fere verba Captain Smith you have been an often and earnest Suiter to me that I would come hither to you now that we are come hither to you what have you to say to us Tum ille praefata humi●lime Reverentia schedulam porrigit quam suo nomine recitari cupit per Willielm Cole qui Episcopo à Registris erat eam ille ad nutum Episcopi clara voce sic perlegit IN the Name of Richard Smith of Peer-tree in the County of Southampton Esquire Right Reverend Father in God I present unto you the state of the Village of Weston and the Hamlets Itchin Wolston Ridgeway and the part of Bittern Mannor being all of the Parish of S. Maries near Southampton in the Diocess of Winton as well in his own as in the name of the Inhabitants of the said Village Hamlets c. wherein are many Housholds and much people of all sorts who not only dwell far from the Church but are also divided from the same by the great River of Itchin where the passage is very broad and often dangerous and very many times on the days appointed for common-Common-Prayer and that Service of God so tempestuous as the River cannot be pass'd and so the people go not over at all or if any do yet they both go and return back in great danger and sometimes not the same day Besides in the fairest weather at their return from Church they press so thick into the Boat for haste home that often it proves dangerous and ever fearful especially to women with child old impotent sickly people and to young children many times also they are forced to baptize their children in private Houses the water not being passable and when they lye sick they are without comfort to their souls and dye without any Ghostly advice or counsel their own Minister not being able to visit them by reason of the roughness of the water and other Ministers being some miles off remote from them And thus much formerly having been presented to your Predecessor he favourably gave leave to the said Richard Smith to erect a Chappel on the East-side of the said River at the only proper Cost and Charges of him the said Richard Smith which Chappel being now finish'd with intent and purpose that it may be dedicated to the worship of God that his Holy and Blessed Name might there be honour'd and called upon by the said R. Smith his Family and the Inhabitants aforesaid who cannot without great danger pass over unto their Parish Church I in the name of the said Richard Smith and in the names of them all do promise hereafter to refuse and renounce to put this Chappel or any part of it to any prophane or common use whatsoever and desire it may be dedicated and consecrated wholly and only to religious uses for the Glory of God and the Salvation of our Souls In which respect he humbly beseecheth God to accept of this his sincere intent and purpose and he and they are together humble Suiters unto your Lordship as Gods Minister the Bishop and Ordinary of this Diocess in Gods stead to accept of this his Free-will offering and to decree this Chappel to be severed from all common and profane uses and so to sever it as also by the Word of God and Prayer and other Spiritual and Religious Duties to dedicate and consecrate it to the sacred Name of God and to his Service and Worship only promising that we will ever hold it as an holy Place even as Gods House and use it accordingly and that we will from time to time and ever hereafter as need shall be see it conveniently repair'd and decently furnisht in such sort as a Chappel ought to be And that we will procure us some sufficient Clerk being in the Holy Order of Priesthood by your Lordship as Ordinary of that place and by your Successors to be allowed and licens'd and unto him to yield competent Maintenance to the end that he may take upon him the Cure of the said Chappel and duly say divine Service in the same at times appointed and perform all other such offices and duties as by the Canons of that Church and the Laws of the Realm every Curate is bound to perform Post haec Episcopus CAptain Smith is this the Desire of you and your Neighbours Quo affirmato Ille In the Name of God let us begin Orditur igitur à Psalmo 24. THe earth is the Lords and all that is therein c. Alterni vero respondent uterque Sacellanus sic deinceps ad finem Psalmi dicta autem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 paulatim se promovet Episcopus ad portam Capellae atque recitat è Psalmo 122. I Was glad when they said unto me we will go into the House of the Lord. Our feet shall stand in thy Gates O Jerusalem Substitit it aque prae foribus universa multitudo intrante Episcopo Fundatore cum Sacellanis qui genua statim flectunt ubi spectari commodè audirique possint à plebe atque Episcopus infit Let us dedicate and offer up unto God this Place with the same prayer that King David did dedicate and offer up his I Chron. 29. 10. BLessed be thou O Lord our God and the God of our Fathers for ever and ever c. usque ad finem vers 18. paucis mutatis Deinde MOst glorious God the Heaven is thy Throne and the Earth is thy Footstool what house then can be built for thee or what place is there that thou canst rest in Howbeit we are taught by thy Holy Word that thy will is not to dwell in the dark Cloud but that thy delight hath been ever with the Sons of Men so that in any place whatsoever where two or three are gathered together in thy name thou art in the midst of them But specially in such places as are set apart and sanctified to thy name and to the memory of it there thou hast said thou wilt vouchsafe thy gracious Presence after a more special manner and come to us and bless us Wherefore in all Ages of the world thy Servants have separated certain places from all prophane and common uses and hallow'd unto thy Divine Worship and Service either by inspiration of thy blessed Spirit or by express Commandment from thine own mouth By inspiration of thy holy Spirit So didst thou put into the heart of thy Holy Patriarch Iacob to
erect a stone in Bethel to be an house to thee which act of his thou didst call for and highly allow of By express Commandme●t from thine own mouth So did Moses make thee the Tabernacle of the Congregation in the Desert which thou didst honour by covering it with a Cloud and filling it with thy Glory And after when it came into the heart of thy servant David to think it was in no wise fitting that himself should dwell in an house of Cedar and the Ark of God remain but in a Tabernacle thou didst testifie with thine own mouth that in that David was so minded to build a House to thy Name it was well done of him to be so minded though he built it not The material Furniture for which house though his Father plentifully prepared yet Solomon his Son built it and brought it to perfection To which House thou went pleased visibly to send fire from Heaven to consume the Sacrifice and to fill it with the Glory of thy presence before all the people And after when for the sins of thy people that Temple was destroyed thou didst by thy Prophets Aggai and Zachary by shewing how inconvenient it was that they should dwell in cieled houses and let thy house lye waste stir up the spirit of Zorobabel to build thee the second Temple anew which second House likewise by the fulness of the Glory of thy presence thou didst shew thy self to like and allow of Neither only wert thou well pleased with such as did build thee these Temples but even with such of the people afterwards as being moved with zeal added unto their Temple their Mother Church lesser places of prayer by the names of Synagogues in every Town throughout the Land for the Tribes to ascend up to worship thee to learn thy holy will and to do it Which very Act of the Centurion to build thy people a Synagogue thou didst well approve and commend in the Gospel And by the bodily presence of thy Son our Saviour at the feast of the Dedication testified by S. Iohn didst really well allow of and do honour to such devout Religious services as we are now about to perform Which also by thy holy Word hast taught us that thine Apostles themselves and the Christians in their time as they had houses to eat and drink in so had they also where the whole Congregation of the Faithful came together in one place which they expressly called Gods Church and would not have it despised nor abused nor eaten nor drunken in but had in great Reverence being the very place of their holy Assemblies By whose godly examples the Christians in all Ages successively have erected and consecrated sundry godly houses for the Celebration of Divine Service and Worship Monuments of their Piety and Devotion as our eyes see this day We then as Fellow-Citizens with the Saints and of the Houshold of God being built upon the Foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Jesus Christ himself being the head corner-stone walking in the steps of their most holy Faith and ensuing the examples of these thy Patriarchs Prophets and Apostles have together with them done the same work I say in building and dedicating this house as an habitation for thee and a place for us to assemble and meet together for the observation of thy Divine Worship invocation of thy Name reading preaching hearing thy most holy Word administring thy most holy Sacraments above all in thy most holy place the very gate of Heaven upon earth as Iacob nam'd it to do the work of Heaven to set forth thy most worthy praise to laud and magnifie thy most glorious Majesty for all thy goodness to all men especially to us of the Houshold of Faith Accept therefore we beseech thee most gracious Father of this our bounden duty and service accept this for thine house and because thine Holiness becomes thine house for ever sanctifie this house with thy gracious presence which is erected to the honour of thy most glorious Name Now therefore arise O Lord and come into this place of thy rest thou and the ark of thy strength Let thine eye be open towards this House day and night Let thine ears be ready towards the Prayers of thy children which they shall make unto thee in this place and let thine heart delight to dwell here perpetually And whensoever thy servants shall make to thee their petitions in this House either to bestow thy good graces and blessings upon them or to remove thy punishments judgments from them hear them from Heaven thy dwelling place the Throne of the glory of thy Kingdom and when thou hearest have mercy and grant O Lord we beseech thee that here and elsewhere thy Priests may be cloathed with Righteousness and thy Saints rejoyce in thy Salvation And whereas both in the Old and New Testament thou hast consecrated the measuring out and building of a material Church to such an excellent Mystery that in it is signified and presented the fruition of the joy of thy Heavenly Kingdom we beseech thee that in this material Temple made with hands we may so serve and please thee in all holy Exercises of Godliness and Christian Religion that in the end we may come to that thy Temple on high even to the holy places made without hands whose Builder and Maker is God so as when we shall cease to pray to thee on Earth we may with all those that have in the like manner erected such places to thy Name and with all thy Saints eternally praise thee in the highest Heavens for all thy goodness vouchsafed us for a time here on earth and laid up for us there in thy Kingdom for ever and ever and that for thy dear Sons sake our Blessed Saviour Jesus Christ to whom c. BLessed Father who hast promised in thy holy Law that in every place where the remembrance of thy Name shall be put thou wilt come unto us and bless us according to that thy promise come unto us and bless us who put now upon this place the memorial of thy Name by dedicating it wholly and only to thy Service and Worship Blessed Saviour who in the Gospel with thy bodily presence didst honour and adorn the Feast of the dedication of the Temple at this dedication of this Temple unto thee be present also and accept Good Lord and prosper the work of our hands Blessed Spirit without whom nothing is holy no person or place is sanctified aright send down upon this place thy sanctifying power and grace hallow it and make it to thee an holy habitation for ever Blessed and glorious Trinity by whose Power Wisdom and Love all things are purged lightened and made perfect enable us with thy Power enlighten us with thy Truth perfect us with thy Grace that both here and elsewhere acknowledging the glory of thy eternal Trinity and in the Power of thy Divine Majesty worshipping the Unity we may obtain to the
fruition of the glorious Godhead Trinity in Unity and Unity in Trinity to be adored for ever God the Father God the Son and God the Holy Ghost accept sanctifie and bless this place to the end whereunto according to his own Ordinance we have ordain'd it to be a Sanctuary to the most High and a Church for the living God The Lord with his favour ever mercifully behold it and so send upon it his spiritual Benediction and Grace that it may be the House of God to him and the Gate of Heaven to us Amen Haec precatus Episcopus Baptisterium adit atque impositâ manu ait REgard O Lord the Supplications of thy Servants and grant that those Children that shall be baptiz'd in this Laver of the New birth may be sanctified and washed with the Holy Ghost delivered from thy wrath received into the Ark of Christs Church receive herein the fulness of Grace and ever remain in the number of thy faithful and elect Children Suggestum dein GRant that thy Holy Word which from this place shall be preach'd may be the savour of life unto life and as good seed take root and fructifie in the hearts of all that shall hear it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quoque GRant that by thy Holy Word which from this place shall be read the hearers may both perceive and know what things they ought to do and also may have Grace and Power to fulfil the same Sacram etiam Mensam GRant that all they that shall at any time partake at this Table the highest blessing of all thy Holy Communion may be fulfill'd with thy Grace and Heavenly Benediction and may to their great and endless Comfort obtain Remission of their sins and all other Benefits of thy Passion Locum Nuptiarum GRant that such persons as shall be here joyned together in the holy estate of Matrimony by the Covenant of God may live together in holy Love unto their lives end Vniversum denique Pavimentum GRant to such bodies as shall be here interr'd that they with us and we with them may have our perfect consummation and bliss both in body and soul in thine everlasting kingdom Tum flexis genibus ante sacram Mensam pergit porro GRant that this place which is here dedicated to thee by our Office and Ministry may also be hallowed by the sanctifying power of thy holy Spirit and so for ever continue through thy Mercy O blessed Lord God who dost live and govern all things world without end Grant as this Chappel is separated from all other common and profane uses and dedicated to those that be sacred only so may all those be that enter into it Grant that all wandring thoughts all carnal and worldly imaginations may be far from them and all godly and spiritual cogitations may come in their place and may be daily renew'd and grow in them Grant that those thy servants that shall come into this thy holy Temple may themselves be made the Temples of the Holy Ghost eschewing all things contrary to their profession and following all such things as are agreeable to the same When they pray that their prayers may ascend up into Heaven into thy presence as the Incense and the lifting up of their hands be as the morning sacrifice purifie their hearts and grant them their hearts desire sanctifie their spirits and fulfil all their minds that what they faithfully ask they may effectually obtain the same When they offer that their Oblation and Alms may come up as a Memorial before thee and they find and feel that with such Sacrifices thou art well-pleased When they sing that their souls may be satisfied as with marrow and fatness when their mouth praiseth thee with joyful lips When they hear that they hear not as the word of man but as indeed it is the Word of God and not be idle Hearers but Doers of the same Populus interea tacite ingressus in imis substitit dum haec in Cancellis agerentur quibus finitis sedes quisque suas jussi capessunt atque ad solennem Liturgiam Sacellani se parant Alter Sacellanorum coram sacra mensa venerans sic incipit IF we say we have no sin we deceive our selves and the truth c. Confessionem Absolutionem Dominic 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 recitant c. Psalmos canunt pro tempore accommodos Ps. 84. 122 132. alternis respondente populo quibus facultas erat libri Lectio prima definitur ex 28. Gen. à ver primo ad finem Hymn Te Deum c. Lectio secunda ex secundo capite S. Joh. à vers● 13. ad finem Hymn Psal. 100. I Believe in God c. Et post usitatas Collectas hanc specialem addidit Episcopus O Lord God mighty and glorious and of incomprehensible Majesty thou fillest Heaven and earth with the Glory of thy presence and canst not be contain'd within any the largest compass much less within the narrow walls of this Room yet forasmuch as thou hast been pleased to command in thy holy Law that we should put the Remembrance of thy Name upon places and in every such place thou wilt come to us and bless us we are here now assembled to put thy name upon this place and the Memorial of it to make it thy house to devote and dedicate it for ever unto thee utterly separating it from all worldly uses and wholly and only consecrate it to the invocation of thy glorious Name wherein supplications and intercessions may be made for all men thy sacred Word may be read preached and heard the Holy Sacraments the Laver of Regeneration and the Commemoration of the precious death of thy dear Son may be administred thy Praise celebrated and sounded forth thy people blessed by putting thy Name upon them we poor and miserable creatures as we are be altogether unfit and utterly unworthy to appoint any earthly thing to so great a God And I the least of all thy servants no ways meet to appear before thee in so honourable a service yet being thou hast oft heretofore been pleased to accept such poor offerings from sinful men most humbly we beseech thee forgiving our manifold sins and making us worthy by counting us so to vouchsafe to be present here among us in this religious action and what we sincerely offer graciously to accept at our hands to receive the prayers of us and all others who either now or hereafter entring into this place by us hallowed shall call upon thee And give us all grace when we shall come into the house of God we may look to our feet knowing that the place we stand on is holy ground bringing hither clean thoughts and undefiled bodies that we may wash both our hearts and hands in innocency and so compass thine Altar I am alter Sacellanus denuo exiens venerans ante sacram Mensam incipit Litaniam in fine cujus recitavit hoc ipse Episcopus O Lord God who dwellest
not in Temples made with hands as saith the Prophet yet hast ever vouchsafed to accept the devout endeavours of thy poor servants allotting special places for thy Divine Worship promising even there to hear and grant their requests I humbly beseech thee to accept of this days duty and service of dedicating this Chappel to thy great and glorious name Fulfill O Lord I pray thee thy gracious promises that whatsoever prayer in this sacred place shall be made according to thy will may be accepted by thy gracious favour and returned with their desir'd success to thy glory and our Comfort Amen Post benedictionem populi cantatur Psalm 132. conscenditqne suggestum M. Robinson Theol. Bac. Funàatoris summo rogatu Episcopus hoc ei tandem concessit geminas sorores ille atque Fundator in uxores duxerant sed utraque defuncta jam tertiis gaudebat thalamis Concionator Thema ejus desumptum è 28 Cap. Gen. vers 16 17. inter caetera doctè egit de omnipraesentia Divina ubivis Lo●orum tum speciatim pro beneplacito suo in Ecclesia deque reverentia veneratione ibi debita Pergitur in Liturgia qua Mulier quaedam paupercula purificanda ad limen Cancellorum accedens genua flectit gratiasque post partum solenni Ecclesiae ritu agit Baptizandus autem vel Matrimonio jungendus nullus aderat Itur dein ad Coenae Dominicae administrationem Sacellanorum altero ad Austral●m altero ad Septentrionalem partem sacrae mensae genu slectente dicente OUr Father c. Ante Epistolae lectionem hanc specialem Collectam una cum Collecta solita pro Rege recitat Sacellanorum alter MOst blessed Saviour who by thy bodily presence at the Feast of Dedication didst honour and approve such devout and religious services as we have now in hand be thou present also at this time with us and consecrate us into an Holy Temple unto thy self that thou dwelling in our hearts by Faith we may be cleansed from all carnal affections and devoutly given to serve thee in all good works Amen Epistolam secundus Sacellanus ante Saecram Mensam stans legit ex 1 Cor. cap. 3. à vers 16. ad finem SS Evangelium prior Sacellanu● ibidem stans recitat ex 10. cap. 8. Iohannis à vers 22. ad finem Dein Symbolum Nicenum omnibus etiam stantibus Post illa Episcopus sede sua egressus coram sacra mensa sese provolvit atque ait Let us pray the prayer of King Solomon which he prayed in the day of the Dedication of his Temple the first Temple that ever was 2 Chron. 6. ab initio vers 18. ad versum 40. quo finito ait THus prayed King Solomon and the Lord appeared unto him and answered and said unto him I have heard thy prayer and have chosen this place for my self to be an house of Sacrifice 2 Chr. 7. 12. Thus did God answer We have prayed with Solomon answer us O Lord and our prayer as thou didst him and his Behold the face of thine Anointed even Christ our Saviour and for his sake grant our requests Dein in Cathedram ibidem se collocat assidentibus Thoma Ridley Cancellario Episcopi à dextris à sinistris vero Doctore Barlo Archidiacono Winton Actumque Consecrationis pileo tectus promulgat in hanc formam IN Nomine Domini Amen Cum strenuus vir Richardus Smith de Peer-tree in Comitatu Southampt Armiger pia Religiosa Devotione ductus Capellam hanc in quodam solo vasto vocato Ridgway-heath juxta aedes suas communiter nuncupat as Peer-tree infra Parochiam Ecclesiae paroch Betae Mariae juxta villam Southampt Dioceseos jurisdictionis nostrae continentem intra muros ejusdem in longitudine ab Oriente ad Occidentem 50 pedes dimid aut circiter in latitudine vero ab Aquilone ad Austrum 20 pedes dimid aut circiter propriis suis sumptibus aedificaverit erexerit construxerit candemque Capellam Cancellis ligneis distinxerit sacra Mensa decenter instructa Baptisterio Pulpito sedibus convenientibus tam ipfra super solum quam supra in modum Galeriae Campana etiam aliisque necessariis ad divinum cultum sussicienter decenter ornaverit nobisque supplicaverit tam suo nomine quam aliorum inhabitantium in villa de Weston ac Hamlettis de Itchin Ridgway ac quorundam etiam inhabitantium in Manerio nostro de Bitterne de Parochia praedicta quatenus nos authoritate nostra ord●naria Episcopali pro nobis successoribus nostris dictam Capellam ab usibus pristinis communibus profanis quibuscunque separare in usu● sacros divinos consecrare dedicare dignaremur Nos Lancelotus permissione divina Winton Episcopus pio religioso tam ipsius quam aliorum in villa Hamlettis praedictis habitantium desiderio in hac parte favorabiliter annuentes ad Consecrationem Capellae hujus de novo propriis sumptibus dicti strenui viri Richardi Smith sic ut praefertur erectae ornatae authoritate nostra ordinaria Episcopali procedentes ●andem Capellam ab omni communi profano usu in perpetuum separamus soli divino cultui ac divinorum celebrationi in perpetuum addicimus dicamus dedicamus Ac insuper eadem authoritate nostra ordinaria Episcopali pro nobis Successoribus nostris licentiam pariter facultatem in Domino concedimus ad rem divinam ibidem faciendam nempe Preces publicas sacram Ecclesiae Liturgiam recit andam ad Verbum Dei sincere proponendum praedicandum Sacramenta Sacrae Eucharistiae Baptismatis in eadem ministranda Matrimonia solemnizanda Mulieres post puerperium ad gratiarum actionem publicam recipiendas adjuvandas Mortuos sepeliendos caeteraque quaecunque peragenda quae in aliis Capellis licite fieri possunt solent Ac tam Presbytero in Capell● praedicta deservituro preces divinas dicendi caeteraque praemissa faciendi quam Domino Ric. Smith Familiae ejus reliquisque in dictis locis haebitantibus preces divinas audiendi caeteraque praemissa percipiendi plenam in Domino potestatem concedimus Eandemque Capellam ad levamen Anglice a Chappel of Ease sub dicta Ecclesia parochiali B. Mariae juxta villam Southampt tanquam Matrice Ecclesia sua quantum in nobis est de jure divino Canonibus Ecclesiae Statutis hujus Regni Angliae possumus in honorem Dei sacros inhabitantium usus nunc in futurum consecramus per nomen Capellae IESU in Parochia Sanctae Mariae juxta villam Southampt sic consecratam fuisse esse in futuris perpetuis temporibus remanere debere palam publice pronunciamus decernimus declaramus per nomen Capellae IESU nominamus appellamus sic perpetuis futuris temporibus nominandam appellandam fore decernimus Privilegiis insuper omnibus singulis in