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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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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-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
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
styling the one Canonical the other Apocryphal As for the second Lessons the Church in them goes on in her ordinary course The HYMNS Te Deum c. AFter the Lessons are appointed Hymns The Church observing S. Pauls Rule Singing to the Lord in Psalms and Hymns and Spiritual Songs every way expressing her thanks to God The antiquity of Hymns in the Christian Church doth sufficiently appear by that of our Saviour S. Matth 26. When they had sung an Hymn they went out upon which place S. Chrys. sayes They sung an Hymn to teach us to do the like Concerning singing of Psalms and Hymns in the Church we have both the Precepts and Examples of Christ and his Apostles S. Aug. Ep. 119. S. Paul ordered it in the Church of Coloss. Singing to your selves in Psalms and Hymns Col. 3. Which we find presently after practised in the Church of Alexandria founded by S. Mark Eus. Hist l. 2. c. 17. where Philo reports that the Christians had in every place Monasteries wherein they sang Hymns to God in several kinds of Meeter and Verse S. Ambrose brought them into Millaine to ease the peoples sad minds and to keep them from weariness who were praying night and day for their persecuted Bishop and from hence came all Hymns almost to be called Ambrosiani because that by him they were spread over the Latin Church With the Morning and Evening Hymns God is delighted saies S. Hierome and Possidius in the life of S. Augustine tells us c. 28. that towards the time of his dissolution S. Augustine wept abundantly because he saw the Cities destroyed the Bishops and Priests sequestred the Churches prophaned the holy Service and Sacraments neglected either because few or none desired them or else because there were scarce any Priests left to administer to them that did desire them lastly because the Hymns and Lauds of God were lost out of the Church These Hymns are to be said or sung but most properly to be sung else they are not so strictly and truly called Hymns that is Songs of praise and not only by the Church of England but by all Christian Churches of old was it so practised and so holy David directs Psal. 47. 6. O sing praises sing praises unto our God O sing praises sing praises unto our King The profit of which singing Hymns is much many wayes especially in this that they inkindle an holy flame in the minds and affections of the hearers O how I wept sayes S. Aug. in the Hymns and holy Canticles being enforc'd thereunto by the sweet voices of thy Melodious Church by reason of the proneness of our affections to that which delights it pleas'd the wisdom of the Spirit to borrow from melody that pleasure which mingled with heavenly mysteries causes the smoothness and softness of that which touches the ear to conveigh as it were by stealth the treasure of good things into mens minds to this purpose were those harmonious tunes of Psalms devised And S. Basil. in Psal. By pleasing thus the affections and delighting the mind of man Musick makes the service of God more easie When we sing or say these Hymns we stand which is the proper posture for Thanksgivings and Lauds Psal. 134. Praise the Name of the Lord standing in the Courts of the Lord. And 2 Chron. 7. 6. The Priests waited on their office the Levites also with instruments of musick of the Lord which David the King had made to praise the Lord with the 136. Psalm because his mercy endureth for ever when David praised by their ministery and the Priest sounded Trumpets before them and all Israel STOOD The erection of the body fitly expresses the lifting up of the heart in joy whence it is that rejoycing in Scripture is called the lifting up of the head S. Luke 21. 28. Lift up your heads for your redemption draweth nigh So then joy being a lifting up of the soul and praise and Thanksgiving being effects of joy cannot be more fitly expressed then by erection and lifting up of the body Standing in the Courts of the Lord when we sing praise unto him After the Morning first Lesson follows Te Deum We praise thee O God or O all ye works of the Lord c. called Benedicite The first of which We praise thee O God c. was as is credibly reported framed miraculously by ● Ambrose and S. Augustine at his Baptism and hath been in much esteem in the Church ever since as it deserves being both a Creed containing all the mysteries of Faith and a most solemn Form of Thanksgiving Praise Adoration and what not and so hath that other Canticle O all ye works of the Lord in the which the whole Creation praises God together been received and esteemed universally in the Church Concil Toletan 4. c. 13. After the Second Lesson at Morning Prayer is appointed Blessed be the Lord God of Israel called Benedictus or O be Ioyful in the Lord called Iubilate After the Evening Lessons are appointed Magnificat or My soul doth magnifie the Lord and Nunc dimittis Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace or else two Psalms And very fitly doth the Church appoint sacred Hymns after Lessons For who is there that hearing God speak from Heaven to him for his fouls health can do less than rise up and praise him and what Hymns can be fitter to praise God with for our salvation than those which were the first gratulations wherewith our Saviour was entertained into the world And such are these Yet as fit as they are some have quarrell'd them especially at Magnificat My soul doth magnifie the Lord and Nunc dimittis or Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace The Objections are these That the first of these was the Virgin Maries Hymn for bearing Christ in her womb The latter old Simeons for seeing and holding in his arms the blessed Babe neither of which can be done by us now and therefore neither can we say properly these Hymns The answer may be that bearing Christ in the womb suckling him holding him in our arms is not so great a blessing as the laying up his holy word in our hearts S. Luke 11. 27. by which Christ is formed in us Gal. 4. 19. and so there is as much thanks to be returned to God for this as for that He that does the will of God taught in his word may as well say My soul doth magnifie the Lord as the holy Virgin for Christ is formed in him as well as in the Virgins womb S. Matth. 12. 50. Whosoever doth the will of my Father which is in heaven the same is my brother and sister and mother And why may not we after the reading of a part of the new Testament say Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace as well as old Simeon for in that Scripture by the eye of Faith we see that salvation which he then saw and more clearly reveal'd We have then
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
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
therefore is it called also the Constantinopolitan Creed This Creed began to be used in Churches at the Communion Service immediately after the Gospel in the year of our Lord 339. Afterward it was established in the Churches of Spain and France after the custome of the Eastern Church Conc. Tolet 3. c. 2. and continued down to our times The Reason why this Creed follows immediately after the Epistle and Gospel is the same that was given for the APOSTLES CREED following next after the Lessons at Morning and Evening prayer To which the Canon of Toledo last cited hath added Another Reason of the saying it here before the people draw neer to the holy Communion namely That the breasts of those that approach to those ●readful mysteries may be purified with a ●●ue and right faith A third reason is given by Dionys. Eccl. Hierar c. 3. par 2. 3. It will not be amiss to set down some passages of his at large because they will both give us a third reason of using the Creed in this place and discover to us as I conceive much of the ancient beautiful order of the Communion-Service The Bishop or Priest standing at the Altar begins the melody of Psalms all the degrees of Ecclesiasticks singing with him This Psalmody is used as in almost all Priestly Offices so in this to prepare and dispose our souls by holy affections to the celebration of the holy mysteries following and by the consent and singing together of divine Psalms to work in us an unanimous consent and concord one towards another Then is read by some of the Ministers first a Lesson out of the Old Testament then one out of the New in their order for the reasons before mentioned in the discourse of Lessons at Morning Service After this the Catechumens the possessed and the penitents are dismist and they only allowed to stay who are deem'd worthy to receive the holy Sacrament which being done some of the under Ministers keep the door of the Church that no Infidel or unworthy person may intrude into these sacred Mysteries Then the Ministers and devout people reverently beholding the holy signs not yet consecrated but blest and offered up to God on a by-standing Table called the Table of Proposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Praise and bless the Father of Lights from whom as all good gifts so this great blessing of the Communion does come with the Catholick hymn of praise which some call the Creed others more divinely The Pontifical Thanksgiving as containing in it all the spiritual gifts which flow from Heaven upon us the whole mystery of our salvation when this hymn of praise is finished the Deacons with the Priest set the holy Bread and Cup of Blessing upon the Altar after which the Priest or Bishop saies the most sacred that is the Lords Prayer gives the Blessing to the people then they in token of perfect charity a most necessary vertue at this time of offering at the Altar S. Mat. 5. 23. salute each other After which the names of holy Men that have lived and died in the faith of Christ are read out of the Diptychs and their memories celebrated to perswade others to a diligent imitation of their vertues and a stedfast expectation of their heavenly rewards This commemoration of the Saints presently upon the setting of the holy signs upon the Altar is not without some mystery to shew the inseparable sacred union of the Saints with Christ who is represented by those sacred signs These things being rightly performed the Bishop or Priest that is to Consecrate washes his hands a most decent Ceremony signifying that those that are to do these holy Offices should have a special care of purity I will wash mine hands in innocency O Lord and so will I compass thine Altar Psal. 26. 6. After he hath magnified these divine gifts and God that gave them then he consecrates the holy Mysteries and having uncovered them reverently shews them to the people inviting them to the receiving of them Himself and the Priests and Deacons receive first then the people receive in both kinds and having all received they end the Service with a Thanksgiving which was Psal. 34. After the Epistle and Gospel and the confession of that Faith which is taught in holy Writ follows THE SERMON Amb. ep 33. ad Marcel Leo 1. Ser. 2. de Pascha which usually was an exposition of some part of the Epistle or Gospel or proper Lesson for the day as we may see in S. Augustine in his Serm. de Temp. according to the pattern in Nehem. 8. 8. They read in the book in the law of God distinctly and gave the sense and caused the people to understand the reading And the Preacher was in his Exposition appointed to observe the Catholick interpretation of the old Doctors of the Church as we may see in the 19. Can. of the sixth Council of Constantinople held in Trull The Canon is this Let the Governors of Churches every Sunday at the least teach their Clergy and people the Oracles of pie●y and true Religion collecting out of Divine Scripture the sentences and Doctrines of truth not transgressing the ancient bounds and traditions of the holy Fathers And if any doubt or controversie arise about Scripture let them follow that interpretation which the Lights of the Church and the Doctors have left in their writings By which they shall more deserve commendation than by making private interpretations which if they adhere to they are in danger to fall from the truth To this agrees the Canon made in Queen Elizabeths time Anno Dom. 1571. The Preachers chiefly shall take heed that they teach nothing in their preaching which they would have the people religiously to observe and believe but that which is agreeable to the Doctrine of the Old Testament and the New and that which the Catholick Fathers and Ancient Bishops have gathered out of that Doctrine These Golden Canons had they been duly observed would have been a great preservative of Truth and the Churches peace The Sermon was not above an hour long Cyril Catech. 13. Before the Sermon no prayer is appointed but the Lords Prayer the petitions being first consigned upon the people by the Preacher or Minister who is appointed to bid the prayers as it is in Edw. 6. and Queen Eliz. Injunctions that is to tell the people beforehand what they are at that time especially to pray for in the Lords Prayer which in the 55. Can. of the Constit Anno Dom. 1603. is called moving the people to joyn with the Preacher in praying the Lords Prayer Of old nothing was said before the Sermon but Gemina Salutatio the double Salutation Clem. Const. l. 8. c. 5. Optat. 1. 7. The Bishop or Priest never begins to speak to the people but first in the Name of God he salutes the people and the salutation is doubled that is the Preacher says The Lord be with you and the people answer
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
the same reason to say it that old Simeon had and we should have the same spirit to say it with There can nothing be more fitting for us as we have said than having heard the Lessons and the goodness of God therein Preach't unto us to break out into a Song of Praise and Thanksgiving and the Church hath appointed two to be used either of them after each Lesson but not so indifferently but that the Former Practice of exemplary Churches and Reason may guide us in the choice For the Te Deum Benedictus Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis being the most expressive-Jubilations and rejoycings for the redemption of the world may be said more often than the rest especially on Sundayes and other Festivals of our Lord excepting in Lent and Advent which being times of Humiliation and Meditations on Christ as in expectation or his sufferings are not so fitly enlarged with these Songs of highest Festivity the custom being for the same reason in many Churches in Lent to hide and conceal all the glory of their Altars covering them with black to comply with the season and therefore in these times may be rather used the following Psalms than the foregoing Canticles as at other times also when the Contents of the Lesson shall give occasion as when it speaks of the enlargement of the Church by bringing in the Gentiles into the Fold of it for divers passages of those three Psalms import that sense And for the Canticle Benedicite O all ye works of the Lord it may be used not only in the aforesaid times of Humiliation but when either the Lessons are out of Daniel or set before us the wonderful handy-work of God in any of the Creatures or the use he makes of them either ordinary or miraculous for the good of the Church Then it will be very seasonable to return this Song O all ye works of the Lord bless ye the Lord praise him and magnifie him for ever that is ye are great occasion of blessing the Lord who therefore be blessed praised and magnified for ever The APOSTLES CREED The Creed follows At ordinary Morning and Evening prayer and most Sundaies and Holy-daies the Apostles Creed is appointed which Creed was made by the Apostles upon this occasion sayes Ruffinus in Symb. n. 2. The Apostles having received a Commandment from our Lord to Teach all Nations and withal being commanded to tarry at Hierusalem till they should be furnish'd with gifts and graces of the holy Spirit sufficient for such a charge tarried patiently as they were enjoyned expecting the fulfilling of that promise In the time of the stay at Hierusalem they agreed upon this Creed as a Rule of Faith according to the analogy of which they and all others should reach and as a word of distinction by which they should know friends from foes For as the Gileadites distinguished their own men from the Berjamites by the word Shibboleth Iudges 12. 6. And as Souldiers know their own side from the Enemy by their Word so the Apostles and the Church should know who were the Churches friends and who were enemies who were right believers who false by this word of Faith for all that walkt according to this Rule and profest this faith she acknowledged for hers and gave them her peace but all others that went contrary to this rule and word she accounted Enemies Tertul. de praescrip led by false spirits For he that hears not us is not of God hereby know we the Spirit of truth and the spirit of error 1 Iohn 4. 6. This Creed is said daily twice Morning and Evening So it was of old Aug. l. 1. de Symb. ad Catech. cap. 1. Take the Rule of Faith which is call'd the Symbol or Creed say it daily in the Morning before you go forth at Night before you sleep And l. 50. Hom. 42. Say your Creed daily Morning and Evening Rehearse your Creed to God say not I said it yesterday I have said it to day already say it again say it every day guard your selves with your Faith And if the Adversary assault you let the redeemed know that he ought to meet him with the Banner of the Cross and the shield of Faith above all taking the shield of Faith Ephes. 6. Faith is rightly called a Shield S. Chrys. in loc For as a Shield is carried before the body as a wall to defend it so is faith to the soul for all things yield to that This is our victory whereby we overcome the world even our Faith Therefore we had need look well to our faith and be careful to keep that entire and for that purpose it is not amiss to rehearse it often and guard our soul with it Cum horr●mus aliquid recurrendum est ad Symbolum When we are affrighted run we to the Creed and say I believe in God the Father Almighty this will guard your soul from fear If you be tempted to despair guard your soul with the Creed say I believe in Jesus Christ his only Son our Lord who was crucified c. for us men and our salvation that may secure your soul from despair If you be tempted to Pride run to the Creed and a sight of Christs hanging upon the Cross will humble you If to Lust or uncleanness to the Creed and see the wounds of Christ and the remembrance of them if any thing will quench that fiery dart If we be tempted to presume and grow careless take up again this shield of Faith see Christ in the Creed coming to judgment and this terrour of the Lords will perswade men In a word the Creed is a guard and defence against all temptations of the world all the fiery darts of the Devil all the filthy lusts of the flesh Therefore above all take the shield of Faith saith S. Paul and be sure to guard your soul Morning and Evening with the Creed thy symbol of the most holy Faith Besides This solemn rehearsing of our Creed is a plighting of our faith and fidelity to God before Devils Angels and Men an engaging and devoting of our souls in the principal faculties and powers of it our reason and understanding and will wholly to God the Father Son and holy Ghost to believe in the ever blessed Trinity whatsoever flesh and blood shall tempt to the contrary which is an high piece of loyalty to God and cannot be too often perform'd It is that kind of Confession that S. Paul says is necessary to salvation as well as believing Rom. 10. 10. For it is there said Verse 9. If we confess with our mouth as well as if we believe with the heart we shall be saved it is that kind of Confession that our Lord Christ speaks of S. Matt. 10. 32. Whosoever shall confess me before men him will I confess also before my Father which is in Heaven And therefore since it is a service so acceptable it cannot be thought unreasonable for the Church to require it
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
members of it in whose welfare the Churches peace chiefly consists After this we pray particularly for those sorts of men that most especially need our prayers such amongst others as those whom the Law calls miserable persons The Litany is not one long continued prayer but broken into many short and pithy Ejaculations that the intention and devotion which is most necessary in prayer may not be dull'd and vanish as in a long prayer it is apt to do but be quickned and intended by so many new and quick petitions and the nearer to the end the shorter and livelier it is strengthening our devotions by raising in us an apprehension of our misery and distress ready as it were to sink and perish and therefore crying out as the Disciples did Master save us we perish D Lamb of God hear us D Christ hear us Lord have mercy upon us Such as these are the active lively spirited prayers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which S. Iames mentions and tells us avail much S. Iames 5. 16. The Doxology or Glory be to the Father c. is much used in our Service after Confession after Athanasius's Creed and especially after each Psalm and Canticle as a most thankful adoration of the holy Trinity upon reflection on the matter going before And therefore is very fitly divided betwixt the Priest and people in saying it according as the matter going before was and it is in those places said standing as the most proper posture for thanksgiving or Adoration Here in the Litany it is said in a way somewhat different for after that the Priest and people have in the supplications afore going besought God that He would arise help and deliver them as he did their fore-fathers of old for his Names sake and Honour the Priest does Collect wise sum up This praying that by such deliverances all glory may redound to God the Father Son and Holy Ghost as it was in the beginning is now and ever shall be c. the people answering only Amen as it were after a a Collect and continuing kneeling because both this as it is here used and other parts of the Litany before and after are matters of humble supplication and so most fit to be tendred to God in that posture In the former part of the Litany the Priest hath not a part so proper but that it may be said by a Deacon or other and it useth to be sung by such in Cathedral and Collegiate Churches and Chappels and both it and all other our alternate Supplications which are as it were the Lesser Litanies do much resemble the ancient Prayers indicted by the Deacons as we have said but in the latter part of the Litany from the Lords prayer to the end the Priest hath a part more peculiar by reason of the eminen●y of that prayer and other Collects follow wherein the Priest doth recommend again the petitions of the people to God as in that prayer ●●e humbly beseech thee O Lord mercifully to look upon our infirmities c. and Solemnly offers them up to God in the behalf of the people to which the people answer Amen and therefore these Collects after the Litany though the matter of them hath been prayed for before particularly in the Supplications foregoing may be said without the charge of needless tautology for here the Priest does by vertue of his sacred Office solemnly offer up and present to God these petitions of the people as it was usually done in ancient Liturgies Praying God to accept the peoples Prayers as he doth more than once in S. Chrys. Liturgy particularly in that Prayer which we have out of it in our Litany For when the Deacon hath as we have observed ministred to the People several Petitions to which they answer Lord have mercy Litany-wise then the Priest Collect-wise makes a Prayer to God to accept the peoples petitions the Deacon in the mean time proceeding to dictate to the people more Supplications which the Priest in another Collect offers up to God Solemnly but secretly so that though in some of those Collects the Priest at the Latter end spake out so that the people might hear and answer Amen or Glory be to the Father or the like which they might well do for though the Prayer were said by the Priest secretly yet it was prescribed and such as the people knew before hand yet some of them were said throughout secretly by the Priest to which the people were not required to make any Answer The reason of these Secreta secret prayers said by the Priest may be partly for variety to refresh the people but chiefly as I conceive that by this course the people might be taught to understand and reverence the office of the Priest which is to make an atonement for the people and to present their prayers to God by that very offering of them up making them more acceptable to God All which depends not upon the peoples consent or confirmation of his office but upon Gods alone appointment and institution who hath set him apart to these offices of offering gifts and Sacrifices for the people Heb. 5. 1. And therefore as it was appointed by God that when Aaron by his Priestly office was to offer for the people and make an atonement for them none of the people were to be present Lev. 16. 17. So the Church ordered that at some times when the Priest was making an atonement for the people and offering up for them and the acceptation of their prayers the Merits and Passion of Christ none should seem actually to assist but the Priest should say it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 secretly and mystically Yet lest the people should be unsatisfied and suspicious that the Priest had neglected this his office which they could not be assured that he had performed because it was done secretly therefore the Church appointed that the Priest should at the end of the Service come down from the Altar and standing behind the Pulpit in the midst of the people say a loud prayer call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Goar P. 154. which was a sum or Compendium of all that the people had before petition'd for which he then solemnly offered up to God The Church of England is generally in her Common Prayers as for an humble so for an audible voice especially in the Lords Prayer appointing it to be said in the Rubrick before it with a loud that is an audible voice not secretly and this for the more earnest repetition of so divine words and to make them more familiar to the people But though this Church does not order the Priest to say these Prayers secretly yet she retains the same order of offering up by the Priest in Collects following the peoples foregoing supplications The Litany is appointed in the Rubricks to be read Wednesdays and Fridays the dayes kept in the Greek Church for more solemn Fasts because the Bridegroom was then taken from us being sold by Iudas on
in will and deed Next S. Iohn who suffered Martyrdom in will but not in deed being miraculously delivered out of boyling Cauldron into which he was put before Port-Latin in Rome Lastly the holy Innocents who suffered in deed but not in will yet are reckoned amongst the Martyrs because they suffered for Christ whose praise these his witnesses confest and shewed forth not in speaking but in dying Collect for the day The reason of the choice of the Epistles Gospels and Collects for these dayes is plain these being all priviledged dayes that is days which have in Scripture their peculiar histories But ●or the Collect for S. Stephens day we may note in particular That as the Church offers up some of her Collects directly to the Second Person of the Trinity so one of them is this for S. Stephens day and very properly For as S. Stephen in the midst of his Martyrdom prayed to Jesus saying Lord Iesus receive my spirit and Lord lay not this sin to their charge so the Church in imitation of this blessed Proto-Martyr upon his day calls upon the Lord Jesus also desiring of him such a spirit as that of S. Stephen to love and pray for our Enemies which is that Heroical and Transcendant vertue which is peculiar to Christian Religion Before we endeavour to shew the antiquity of these days in particular it will not be amiss to give some account of the ancient observation of Saints dayes in general That the observation of Saints days was very ancient in the Church will appear by these testimonies following The Councel of Carthag 3. c. 47. tells us that the Church did celebrate the Passions and Anniversaries of the Martyrs This Counc was held in S. Augustines time S. Aug. in Psal. 88. Attend therefore my Dearly Beloved All of you unanimously hold fast God your Father and the Church your Mother Celebrate the Saints Birth-days so they Anciently called the dayes of their Death and Martyrdom with sobriety that we may imitate them that have gone before us that they may joy over us who pray for us that so the Blessing of God may remain upon us for ever Amen Amen Chrys. Hom. 66. ad Pop. Antioch The sepulchres of the Saints are honourable and their dayes are known of all bringing a festival joy to the world Before these S. Cyprian l. 4. ep 5. We celebrate the Passions of the Martyrs and their days with an anniversary commemoration And before him Anno 147. the Church of Smyrna says the same Enseb. Hist. l. 4. c. 15. If it be demanded why the Church kept the days of the Saints deaths rather than of their Birth or Baptism The answer may be 1. Because at their deaths they are born Citizens of Heaven of the Church triumphant which is more than to be born either a man or a Christian a member of the Church Militant whence as above said these days were usually styled by the Ancients Their Birth-days 2. Then do they perfectly triumph over the Devil and the world by which the Church Militant hath gained to her comfort an example of persevering constancy and courage and the Church Triumphant hath gained a new joy by the addition of a new member For surely if the Saints and Angels in heaven joy at the conversion of a sinner much more do they joy at the admission of a Saint into Heaven Thus much of the Saints days in general For these three holy days in particular that they are ancient S. Augustine shews us who hath Sermons upon all these days Tom. 10. And Chrysol who hath Sermons upon S. Stephen and Innocents And Origen in his Comment upon these words A voice was heard in Rama tells us the Church did and did well in it to keep the Feast of Innocents and there is as much reason for the keeping of S. Stevens day who was the first Martyr and of S. Iohns the beloved Disciple and Evangelist as for the keeping of Innocents and therefore it is to be thought that the Church did then as well observe them as this ●ince as we have proved she did keep the days of Martyrs Sunday after Christmas THis Sunday hath the Collect with Christmas-day and the Epistle and Gospel treat about the same business the birth of Christ for we have not yet done with the Solemnity of Christmas Thus great Solemnities have some days after them to continue the memory of them in prorogationem Festi Feast of CIRCVMCISION or Newyears-day THe Feast of the Circumcision is affirmed by Learned men to be of a later institution for though many of the ancients mention the Octave of Christmas and Newyears-day yet they do not mention or seem to keep it say they as a Feast of the Circumcision But suppose it be so yet surely it cannot be denied that there is reason enough for the keeping of this day solemn as it is the Feast of Christs Circumcision For as at Christmas CHRIST was made of a woman like us in nature so this day he was made under the Law Gal. 4. 5. and for us took upon him the curse of the Law being made sin for us and becoming a surety to the offended God for us sinners Which suretiship he seal'd this day with some drops of that precious blood which he meant to pour out whole upon the Cross. As by his Birth we received the adoption of Sons so by his Circumcision the redemption of the Law and without this his Birth had not availed us at all The Epistle Gospel and Collect are plainly fit for the day This Holy day hath no fast before it the Reason we shall shew and to save trouble we will here once for all shew Why some Holy-dayes have Fasts before them and then Why this and some other have none For the first It was the religious custom of the primitive times to spend the night or a greater part of it before the Holy-dayes in watching and prayers and tears partly to prepare them for the more solemn and religious observation of the Holy-day following partly to signifie that we should be as the blessed Saints were after a little time of mortification and affliction translated into glory and joy according to the Psalm Heaviness may endure dure for a night but joy cometh in the morning Thus after a Vigil comes a Holy-day These Vigils or night-watches being in continuance of time abused by the wickedness of some who under colour of those holy nightly exercises stole a liberty of intemperance lust and other villany were say some by the wisdom of holy Church to avoid scandal turn'd into Fasts which still retain the old name of Vigils The truth of this Assertion I question for neither do I find any decree of holy Church for bidding these Vigils the 35. Can. of the Counc of Eliber and the fifth Can. of the Counc of Altisiodorum or Auxeres which are usually produced to this purpose coming far short of such a prohibition nor is it so probable
Ruffin in Symb. Tertul. de praescrip This the Catholick Church received from the Apostles Holding this rule we shall be able to convince all Hereticks whatsoever that they be departed from the truth Irenaeus l. 1. c. 3 19. In the next place holy Church directs the Priest to examine the sick person concerning his life and conversation especially concerning these two particulars 1. Whether he forgives all the World 2. Whether he hath satisfied all injuries done to others without which the medicine of repentance which is necessary to the sick persons salvation will not profit him For the first our Saviour tells S. Matth. 6. 14. That unless we forgive others neither our persons nor our Prayers will be accepted God will not forgive us And for the second Non remittetur peccatum nisi restituatur ablatum Repentance without restitution and reparation of injuries cannot be true and serious or if it can it cannot profit Aug. ep 5. For if he that is injured by another cannot be forgiven of God unless he forgives him that injured him how can he that injures others and does not make him restitution hope for pardon Chrysost. Hom. 15. in S. Matth. The Priest therefore is to advise him that whereinsoever he hath injured any he should make satisfaction to the uttermost of his power By the uttermost of his power is not meant that he must give to the injured persons all his estate nor that he must restore four-fold for injuries done which was required in some cases under Moses Law by way of punishment rather than of satisfaction but that he be careful to the uttermost of his power that the person injured be so repair'd that he be no loser by him which is all that by the law of justice which commands to give every man their due is required Ezek. 33. 14 15. When I say to the wicked he shall surely die if he turn from his sin if he restore the pledge give again that he hath robbed it is not if he restore fourfold but if he restore that which he hath robbed he shall surely live Then the Priest is to admonish the sick person to settle his estate For the discharging of his own conscience and quietness of his Executors But holy Church exhorts men to do this work in their health that when they are sick they may not be troubled about the world but may bestow their whole time and care as it is fit about setling and securing their future estate And were men possest with that fear and trembling that S. Paul speaks of Phil. 2. 12. they would be careful to gain all the time that might be then to work out their salvation The Minister may not forget to move the sick person and that most earnestly to liberality towards the poor This is to have mercy upon our own souls saies S. Aug. or Christum scribere haeredem to make Christ our heir Fo● when the poor receives from us Christ stands by and reaches out his hand to receive with them In as much as ye have done it to one of these little ones ye have done it to me S. Mat. 25. 40. As it is always necessary to be put in mind of this duty so especially at this time of sickness For then we are failing and therefore most necessary it is then to make friends of the unrighteous Mammon that when we fail they may receive us into everlasting habitations S. Luke 16. 9. Then we are going to give up our account to God and therefore then most necessary it is to do the best we can to procure a gracious Absolution at the day of judgment Now nothing seems more powerful with God to procure that than liberality to the poor Come ye blessed for I was hungry and ye gave me meat S. Mat. 25. 34 35. Here shall the sick person make a special Confession if he féel his conscience troubled with any weighty matter It would be considered whether every deadly sin be not a weighty matter After which Confession the Priest shall absolve him After which follows a most excellent prayer or two and the 71. Psalm all very fit to a sick persons condition as will appear without an Interpreter to the attentive Reader A most excellent and pious Benediction of the Priest concludes all and so ends this Office Of the Communion of the Sick THe Churches care for the sick ends not here For besides all this she appoints that if the sick person desires it the Priest may communicate him in his private house if there be a convenient place where the Curate may reverently minister Rubr. before priv Com. of Sick so was the ancient decree of holy Church Nic. Can. 13. Cod. Eccl. univer Generalitor omni cuilibet in exitu posito Eucharistiae participationem petenti Episcopus cum examination● oblationem impertiat To every man that is ready to depart out of this world let the Bishop after examination and trial give the holy Communion if he desires it For this saies the Counsel is antiqua Canonica lex ut siquis vità excedat ultimo necessario viatico minime privetur This is the ancient law of the Church saies this Conc. there concerning him that is dying that whosoever he be he shall not be denied the last and most necessary viaticum of his life This viaticum or provision for the way is the holy Communion as is plain in the Canon cited For though as learned Albaspineus observes this word Viaticum was applyed to more things besides the Eucharist as to Alms to Baptism to Absolution which are all necessary helps in our journey to heaven Yet in this Canon I conceive the Viaticum or provision for the way to be the holy Eucharist For in the first part of the Canon it is call'd Vltimum Viaticum the last provision for the way which cannot be meant of any other properly but of the holy Eucharist For the rest for instance Absolution of which Albaspineus understands this Canon is Reconciliatio Altaribus a Reconciliation to the Altar or Sacraments as it was anciently call'd a fitting or qualifying of the Communicant for the holy Eucharist and therefore to go before it as the 76. Can. of Carth. 4. directs and for Alms they are part of the fruits of penance and so necessary to fit us for Absolution and Baptism is janua Sacramentorum the first admission into Christs Church which gives the first right to the Communion and Sacrament-of the Church and therefore all these being pr●ced●●ous to the holy Eucharist cannot be call'd any of them ultimum viaticum the last provision but only the Euchari●● it self Besides in the last part of the Canon there is expresly mentioned the participation of the Eucharist which must be the same with the Viaticum in the first part as may appear by this The Canon immediately before this had ●rected that penitents especially those of the first or second degree should fulfil the C●urches tax before they
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
from it It will not therefore follow that the name of Priest which is no shadow of things to come though it were Jewish would become unlawful to Christians 2. The names of those rites and ceremonies which were most Jewish and are grown damnable to Christians may still be lawfully used by Christians in a spiritual and refined sence S. Paul who tells that the Circumcision of the Jews is become so unlawful that if it be used by Christians with an opinion of the necessity aforesaid it forfeits all their hopes of salvation by Christ Col. 2. 2. uses the word Circumcision frequently particularly in that very Chapter Ver. 11. In whom ye Christians are circumcised See p. 149. 3. The word Priest is not a Jewish name that is not peculiar to the Jewish Ministery For Melchisedeck who was not of Aarons Order or Priesthood is called a Priest by S. Paul to the Hebrews often and our Saviour is a Priest after the Order of Melchisedeck and the Ministers of the Gospel are call'd Priests by the Prophet Esay 66. 21. Ier. 33. 17. where they prophesie of the times of the Gospel as will appear by the Context and ancient Exposition Lastly S. Paul where he defines a Minister of the Gospel as well as of the Law as hath been proved p. 78. of the Ration calls him Priest Heb. 5. 8. Chap. To sum up all then That name which was not Jewish but common to others that name which was frequently and constantly used by Primitive Christians that name by which the Prophets foretell that the Ministers of the Gospel shall be called Lastly that name by which S. Paul calls them may not only lawfully but safely without any just ground of offence to sober men be used still by Christians as a fit name for the Ministers of the Gospel and so they may be still called as they are by the Church of England in her Rubrick Priests Pag. 236. lin 13. Add this This Sacrament should be received fasting 3. Counc of Carthag can 29. And so was the practice of the universal Church sayes S. Aug. Epist. 118. which is authority enough in things of this nature namely circumstances of time c. to satisfie any that do not love contention 1 Cor. 11. 16. Yet it will not be amiss in a word to shew the reasonableness of this Catholick usage And the first reason may be this because our minds are clearest our devotion quickest and so we fittest to perform this most high service when we are are in our Virgin spittle as Tertullian expresses it A Second is this it is for the honour of so high a Sacrament that the precious body of Christ should first enter into the Christians mouth before any other meat S. Aug. Ep. 118. It is true that our Saviour gave it to his Disciples after Supper but dare any man quarrel the universal Church of Christ for receiving it fasting This also pleased the holy Ghost that for the honour of so great a Sacrament the body of Christ should first enter into the Christians mouth before all other meats Neither because our Saviour gave it to his Disciples after Supper will it necessarily follow that we should receive it so mingling the Sacrament with our other meats a thing which the Apostle seems to reprehend 1 Cor. 11. there was a special reason for our Saviours doing so his Supper was to succeed immediately to the Passeover and therefore as soon as that was over he instituted his and that he might the more deeply imprint the excellency of this mystery into the minds and hearts of his Disciples he would give it them the last thing he did before he went from them to his Passion knowing that dying mens words move much but he no where appointed what hour and time it should afterward be received but left that to be ordered by them that were after his departure to settle the Churches namely the Apostles and accordingly we find S. Paul 1 Cor. 11. rectifying some abuses and prescribing some rules for the better ordering of some Rites and Ceremonies about the Sacrament and promising when he should come to settle an order for the rest verse 34. from whom S. Aug. seems to think that the Catholick Church received this custom of receiving the Sacrament fasting Ep. 118. Of the Translation of the PSALMS in the Book of Common Prayer THe PSALMS in our English Liturgy are according to the Translation set forth in the latter part of King Henry the Eighths Reign after that Petrus Galatinus had brought in the pronouncing and writing the name Iehovah never before used or heard of in any Language which is used in this our Translation Psal. 33. 12. Psal. 83. 18. The Bishops Bible set forth in the beginning of Queen Elizabeths reign and used in Churches till the New Translation under King Iames though a much different Translation from the former in other parts yet retains the same Psalms without any alteration And therefore whereas it hath Notes upon all the rest of the Books both of the Old and New Testament it hath none at all upon the Psalms not so much as references to parallel places The Reason hereof I suppose was to avoid offending the people who were used to that Translation and to whom the Psalms were more familiar than any other part of the Bible As S. Hierom in his Edition of the Latin Bible retains the Psalms of the Old Latin Translation out of the Septuagint though himself also had translated them juxta Hebraicam Veritatem as they are extant at the end of the Eighth Tome of his works This Our Translation was doubtless out of the Hebrew And though it tyes not it self so strictly to the Letter and words of the Hebrew as the Later Translations would seem to do but takes the Liberty to vary a little for the smoothing of the Language yet it holds to the sence and scope more than some suppose it doth and many times much more than those who would seem to stick so close to the Letter Some have had a conceit that this Translation was out of the Septuagint or which is all one in effect out of the Vulgar Latin But the Contrary is evident and will appear to any man that shall compare them but in any one Psalm In one Case indeed this Translation may seem to follow the LXX and Vulgar Latin against the Hebrew namely in addition of some words or Clauses sometimes whole Verses not found in the Hebrew But this Case excepted where it once agrees with the LXX and Vulgar Latin against the Hebrew it forty times agrees with the Hebrew against them And for these Additions 1. They were made to Satisfie them who had missed those words or Sentences in the former English Translations finding them in the Greek or Latin See the Preface to the English Bible in folio 1540. 2. In that Edition 1540. they were put in a different Character from the rest and in some Later Editions
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-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
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