Selected quad for the lemma: sin_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
sin_n church_n day_n indulgence_n 5,335 5 12.6268 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A37390 A Declaration of the principall pointes of Christian doctrine gathered out of diuerse catechismes and set forth by the English priests dwelling in Tournay Colledge. 1647 (1647) Wing D742; ESTC R17718 151,131 593

There are 20 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

bookes and the like 5. Which be the commandements of the Church Amongst diuerse others which cōcerne seuerall particular states of persons there be fiue which are commāded to all in generall First to be present at Masse vpon Sundayes and other commāded feasts and also to abstaine from seruile worke on the sayd feastes Secondly to fast the Lent the foure Ember weekes and commanded eues of feastes and to abstaine from flesh vpō Fridayes and Saturdayes Thirdly to confesse at the least once a yeare and to receaue the blessed Sacrament at Easter in our proper parish Church Fourthly to pay out tithes which shall be due Fifthly not to solemnize marriage within the prohibited times 6. Are the precepts of the Church different from the former commandements of God They are not different in effect they being all contained vnder that one wherein Allmighty God doth expressely command vs to obey and honour our father and mother by which he doth sufficiently oblige vs to obey the Church we being her children and she our parent and chiefe mother Besides that they serue as declarations of Gods commandements and as peculiar rules for their more exact and punctuall obseruation And so they are not to be accounted as burdens to the faithfull but as conuenient meanes to make them keepe exactly God his ten Commandements 7. How doth the first precept of the Church serue for this end By shewing vs the manner how we ought to fulfill God his third commandement for the light of nature doth only teach vs that we ought to giue some time particularly to God his seruice but how much time or what time rather then another and in what manner doth depend vpon the positiue institutiō of the Church and so as I noted aboue the Apostles haue changed the Sabaoth into our Lords day which is the day following Now the Church hath determined the manner by appointing vs to heare Masse and concerning the time she hath also ordained feuerall festiuall dayes besides our Lords day and she hath made choise of those dayes on which Allmighty God did worke the principall mysteries of our faith or did conferre by meanes of his seruants some singular benefits to his Church 8. How doth the second precept serue for this end It helpeth vs to obserue the sixth Commandement by mortifying our flesh and diminishing our sensuality 9. Why doth the Church make choise of those times rather then others to fast on The reason of it is first as for Lent because it was instituted by the Apostles to imitate our Sauiour in his fast of 40 dayes Ember dayes were also instituted by the Apostles at least the three first to consecrate the seasons of the yeare to God The eues of feastes are ordained by the Church to make vs more fitt to serue God the next day following Fridayes and Satturdayes are obserued by abstinence in memorie of our Sauiours passion who dyed on Friday and lay buried all Satturday 10. Is it a mortall sinne not to obserue the fasting dayes ordained by the Church Yes except they be excused by some necessary impediment which for the most part may be reduced to foure heades pouerty sicknesse imbecility of bodie and extraordinary labour of the bodie By the first beggars are excused and all that haue not meanes to get dayly one entire meale by the second those sicke are excused by licence obtained from their Curate whom the Physitian shall iudge vnable to fast by the third all personnes vnder twenty one compleat or aboue threescore and three yeares of age begun are likewise excused as also women great with child and nources by the fourth are excused labouring men and tradesmen who are forced to gaine their liuing by the sweat of their bodies Yet it is to be noted that all these persons are not excused from abstaining from flesh though they be permitted to eate two meales a day 11. Are all fasts to be obserued in the same manner No for in Lent it is forbidden not only to eate flesh but also to eate eggs and in some places white meats which notwithstanding are permitted on other fasting dayes but the rule to be obserued in this point is the custome of the countrie That which is to be obserued in all fasting dayes is that we eate but one entire meale a day and that at night we rest satisfyed with a small collation or drinking 12. What doth the third precept of the Church serue for It helpeth vs to obserue all the ten commandements in generall for whereas it consisteth of two partes to confesse and to communicate by confession we are purged from our sinnes and so haue lesse occasion to fall againe for nothing doth draw to sinne more then sinne it selfe by the holy communion we receaue strength to performe all that which we are obliged to doe in seruing God 13. Who are obliged to confession All those that are come to the vse of reason which is ordinarily conceaued to be at eight yeares of age and it is to be noted that the Church doth not by this precept of confessing once a yeare take of the obligation that euery man may haue of confessing oftener 14. What occasions be they that oblige a man to confession oftener then once a yeare First it must be supposed that none are obliged but such as are in mortall sinne amongst whom first those are obliged who by sicknesse or by reason of some other accident are in imminent danger of death as those are reputed to be who are to vndertake any long voyage at sea or who are in the warres and do vndergoe any actuall seruice with danger of being killed as also women that are ready to labour with childe and the like Secondly those who are to receaue the blessed Sacrament are also bound to goe first to confession in case they be in mortall sinne Thirdly those who hauing committed any mortall sinne do suspect that by deferring their confession they shall not remember it are bound to confesse it speedily 15. Who are obliged to communion All those who are of age sufficient to discern the greatnesse of this mystery which is conceaued to be ordinarily when one is 12 yeares old And it is to be noted that by Easter is vnderstood the eight dayes following and the eight dayes precedent to Easter day and also that those who communicate are bound to be fasting that is not to haue eaten or drunke any thing after midnight except it be in case of extreme sicknesse iudged such by Physitians 16. Ought one to communicate as often as he goeth to confession In the first aboue named cases he is bound to communicate when he confesseth if he hath opportuny but ordinarily speaking euery man would do well to confesse oftener then he communicateth especially those who for want of actuall deuotion or through spirituall slothfulnesse cōmunicate very seldome and if they fall often into mortall sinne they ought to prepare themselues by doeing worthy fruits of repentance whereof I shall speake
not wonder if in some cases the Priest imposeth so small a pennance in respect of the grieuous offences of the Penitēt as it happeneth in those who confesse great sinnes at the houre of death for the least outward act is significatiue and sufficient to testify our present intention 34. What do you gather from its being satisfactorie I gather from thence that the satisfaction ought to correspond to the grieuousnesse of the Penitents offences and that it ought to be a penall satisfaction that is such as doth chastise the body and manifest in the Penitēt zeale of God his iustice and a spirit of godly reuenge vpon himselfe for the sinnes he hath committed 35. What do you gather by its being medecinall I gather from thence that the pennance which the Priest imposeth ought to be proportioned to the diseased humour of the Penitent and such as may withdraw him from sinne and that it ought accordingly to be augmented or lessened as he findeth his Penitent to amend himselfe more or lesse 36. What do you gather by its being significatiue Since that its signification doth consist in testifying the sincerity of our inward repentance and an acknowledgement of our obligation to do worthy fruits of repentance in this life I gather first that when we haue performed the pennance imposed by the Priest we ought not therefore to desist but we must still go on in bewailing our sinnes all our life time for as S. Augustin sayth Poenitere est poenam tenere to repent is to perseuer in paine to the end sayeth he that one may punish by reuenging in himselfe that which he hath committed by sinning he therefore doth perseuer in paine who alwayes punisheth that which it grieueth him to haue committed Secondly I gather in case that the Priest should either through necessity as it happeneth when a Penitent is in danger of death or else through ignorance or by too much indulgence impose so small a pennance as would haue no proportion with the grieuousnesse of the sinnes whereof the Penitent is guiltie that then the Penitent by doing that small pennance must not thinke himselfe released of the debt he oweth for his sinnes nor acquitted of the obligation he hath to doe worthy fruits of repentance but he must do them voluntarily or by the aduise of his Ghostly father which will be more meritorious 37. Are we then obliged to do worthy fruits of repentance Yes for as by the Sacrament of Baptisme we do solemnly renounce the world and promise to abstaine from sinne so we do by the Sacrament of pennance which is a second Baptisme and called by the Fathers a laborious Baptisme not only renew our former promise made in Baptisme but also we do adde a new purpose signified by the pennance imposed by the Priest and accepted by the Penitent of repairing by worthy fruits of repentance the harme which we haue suffered by sinne And therefore the Councell of Trent teacheth that in the pennance for sinnes committed after Baptisme is contained not only a cessation from sinne a detestation of sinne and a contrite and humble heart which thinges are required in Baptisme but also satisfaction by fasting almes praier and other pious exercises of a spirituall life 38. From whence ariseth the obligation of worthy fruits of repentance It ariseth from two heads first from the precept for they are expressely commanded by God Secondly from the nature of the thing it selfe for the light of reason doth teach vs that we are bound both to satisfy God his iustice and also to repaire our owne losses when we are able the one being a kinde of restitution to be made to God and the other a kinde of restitution due to ourselues Wherefore to know how farre this precept of doing worthy fruits of repentance bindeth we must cōsider these two principall ends for which they were commanded And as for the first end which is to satisfy God his iustice for the temporall paine remaining after that the guilt of sinne is remitted you must note that the Minister of God cannot know how much repentance and contrition the Penitent hath nether can the Penitent nor the Minister know the value of the sayd contrition nor how much more he ought to do for due satisfaction and therefore in the primitiue Church they vsed to impose austere pennances for euery mortall sinne which they were to performe for a long time together yea for some sinnes they were to do pennance all their life time that so God his iustice might be more fully satisfied but in after ages the Church hath mitigated that former austerity releasing the Penitentiall Canons by frequent Indulgences which she granteth from time to time for the generall good of the Church which Indulgences vpon such occasions do likewise remit the paine due to sinne being granted by authority of the keies of the kingdome of heauen Wherefore it is certaine that we are not for the present obliged to the Penitentiall Canons but it sufficeth if the Priest impose such pennances as haue some proportion in chastising the sinner with as much paine and affliction as he tooke vnlawfull delight and content in his vnbridled passions by sinfull actions which also may be prudently moderated vpon iust occasions by remitting the Penitent for the rest to the generall fasts and mortifications obserued in the Church and to such voluntarie afflictions as he himselfe shall make choise of In which kinde it is to be noted that euery one is bound to vse voluntarily such pennances as he findeth necessary to keepe the spirit of compunctiō from decaying in his heart and to preserue him from danger of falling into a contempt of God his wrath and of reparation due to his iustice And therefore although it be true that we are not bound now to the actuall practise of the Penitentiall Canons yet we are obliged to be so prepared and disposed in minde as to be ready to vndergoe them in case they were absolutely necessary to satisfy the diuine iustice or that they were enioyned vs by the Church From whence it followeth that although those sinners who haue not leisure to do worthy fruits of repentance because they are surprised by death presently after their conuersion shall be purged by the paines of Purgatorie and so be saued as also those shall be who haue had leisure to do worthy fruits of repentance but haue performed them slackely and negligently yet those who neuer had an intention to do worthy fruits of repentance in this life or if they had such an intention did afterwardes when they had leisure totally neglect to do them will not finde a Purgatorie in the next world but eternall punishment in hell for their contempt of God his precept in not performing that which his iustice exacteth from vs in this life The second end for which the worthy fruits of repentance were commanded by God is medicinall and satisfaction as it hath relation to this end is defined thus Est
causas peccatorum exscindere earum suggestionibus aditum non indulgere Satisfaction of pennance is to cut away the occasions of sinne and to giue no entrance to their suggestions Where you must obserue that there is this difference in satisfaction as it hath relation to these two ends that in respect of the former end of satisfying for the temporall paine it may be released by indulgences of the Church and one member of the Church may also satisfy for another but the workes of satisfaction as it is a medicine cannot be dispensed with by any authority of the Church nor can one man performe them for another but euery man is bound to performe them himselfe otherwise they will be of no value for that end And therefore the Councel of Trent doth seriously admonish all Priests that they should not winke at the sinnes of their Penitents by enioyning small pennances for great sinnes least that thereby they themselues become partakers of other mens sinnes Now you must know that the immediate occasions of sinne which we are bound to cut of are of three sortes some are externall and outward to vs and consequently such as we may readily separate our selues from as for example the hanting of such or such persons the frequēting of such places the doing of such actions the vndertaking of such employmēts and the like whereby we are vsually drawne into any mortall sinne of what sort soeuer as of enuy detraction contētion sedition faction drunkennesse lechery or any other all which occasions are readily cut of by auoiding the sayd persons places actiōs employments c. Other occasions are within ourselues which although we do carry them about vs yet are such as we may in time totally free ourselues from and these are the reliques of actuall sinne that is the peruerse habits and stiffe inclinations to sinne which the custome of sinning leaueth in vs which habits we are bound to endeauour to roote out by the worthy fruits of repentance that so we may restore ourselues to the former state we were in before we sinned The third sort of occasions are also within ourselues and such as will beare vs company to our graues because we can neuer totally separate ourselues from them and these are the inclinatiōs co seuerall sinnes proceeding from the naturall disposition of our bodies ioyned to the generall cōcupiscence wherewith all mankinde is infected by originall sinne And although we are not able to separate ourselues totally from these peruerse inclinations of nature yet we may abate them so as to take away all immediate danger of being drawne by them into mortall sinne and this we are bound to do especially hauing found by experience in sinning actually after Baptisme our owne weakenesse and hauing discouered in particular those inclinations by which the Diuell and our concupiscence do draw vs into sinne And because this cānot be done but by doing worthy fruits of repentance therefore we are obliged to do them that thereby we may cut of all as well inward as outward immediate occasions of sinne In so much that it is to be feared of those who neglect to do this that either they neuer had that contrition which is necessary for the Sacrament of pennance or if they had it that it is decayed in them for true repentance sheweth it selfe in effects and as the Apostle sayeth it worketh stedfast pennance to saluation Nether must any man who hath vsed the austerity of pennance for some time thinke himselfe afterwards secure as if he had no need any longer to do worthy fruits of repētance for this is the sinne of pride the most odious sinne of any in the sight of God for the cure whereof he doth oftētimes permit such persons to fall into some palpable grosse sinne Wherefore the fruits of repentance so farre forth as they are medecinall are alwayes necessarie and must neuer be layed aside in this world for that originall concupiscence which drew vs into the first relapse after Baptisme and can neuer be rooted out in this life ought to render vs wary all our life time and to teach vs after a wound to take more heed and to worke our saluation with feare and trembling For to vse the wordes of the Councell of Trent since that we know that we are not as yet regenerated into glory but only into the hope of glory we ought to stand in feare of that strife which yet remaineth in vs with the flesh the world and the Diuell 39. What are the worthy fruits of repentance You must obserue that pennance is done two wayes the one inward consisting in the contrition of the heart the other outward consisting in the affliction of the flesh when we do condemne and reproue our sinne then we haue repentance when we do by ensuing satisfaction punish and correct our sinne then we begin to do the worthy fruits of repentance and when our paine in punishing and our diligence in correcting sinne is no lesse then our pleasure was in doing the sinne and our care in pursuing it then we do accomplish the worthy fruits of repentance As for example if one hath stolne other mens goods besides the ceasing from sinne and the restitution of the same goods let him begin to giue his owne if he hath vsed fornication a long time let him chastise his flesh as long time if he hath done iniury to any man in word or deed let him not only make amends with humble and good words but let him labour to reconcile his enemies with kindenesse and benefits In fine as a sinner before his conuersion was wholy occupied and busied in the workes of sinne so after his conuersion he ought to be as feruent and diligent in doing of good workes to the honour of God and his soules saluation according to that of S. Paul As you haue giuen the partes and members of your body and soule to serue vncleanesse heaping iniquity vpon iniquity so giue and apply the same partes and mēbers of your body and soule to serue rightiousnesse for your iustification That is to say take as much paines to purge and wash away the dreggs and filthinesse of your sinnes gathered by your naughty liuing as yee tooke pleasure before to defile and infect your soules by the same 40. What workes of pennance are the most proper to redeeme the paine due to sinne and to purge vs from the filthinesse it leaueth in vs Although all good workes in generall do helpe to both these ends yet you must note that those workes are most proper to satisfy for the paine which are in themselues painefull and do chastise the flesh whereas those are most proper to cure the diseased humours left by sinfull habits which are ioyned with the practise of their contrary vertues Howsoeuer there be three principall workes of satisfaction specially commēded in the Ghospel for both these ends which are fasting praier and almesdeeds Fasting is a medicine to heale perfectly those sinnes
them is so great as that they exceed all kindes of creatures in the world both men beastes birds fisshes plants and all other speciesses of thinges which we see vpon the earth And they are distinguished into three rankes which are called Hierarchies and euery Hierarchie consisteth of three orders whereof the highest are called Seraphins and the lowest Angells and amongst the highest Lucifer is held by many to haue been the chiefe of all who fell through pride and so although he was the perfectest creature that euer God made he is now become through his owne fault the most miserable and damned creature of all others The next to him as some conceaue was S Michaël who is in nature the perfectest creature of all that enioy God all though both in grace glorie the Blessed Virgin doth farre surpasse both him and all the rest 11. How many men were created at the beginning Only one that is Adam and out of him Eue the woman was made from whom afterwards all mankinde did proceed LESSON IV. Of Man 1. WHat is man Man is a reasonable creature made of body and soule 2. Of what was his body made Of the slime of the earth 3. Of what was his soule made It was made of nothing 4. What is a soule It is a spirituall substance ordained to informe a body immediatly created by God endued with vnderstanding and freewill whereby man is truly made to gods owne image and by which also he resembleth the Angells and differeth from all other mortall creatures 5. For what end did he create man That he might know God and knowing loue him and louing praise him for these are the thinges in which man ought to employ his whole life And his last end is to enioy him in heauen 6. Why hath God made mans body who is so noble a creature of so base a substance as is earth and dust Thereby to abate his pride and so keepe him humble by the consideration of his extraction 7. Wherefore did he make his soule so noble a substance To the end that he might be capable of enioying God himselfe and also that knowing his owne worth and dignity to be so farre exceeding all other mortall creatures his actions should likewise be answerable and surpasse the actions of all other inferiour creatures 8. What goods hath God bestowed vpon men Two sorts of goods some internall and belonging to the constitution of himselfe as the three powers of his soule whereby he is endued with reason and the fiue senses of his body with all the partes belonging to it others externall as the heauens and earth and all the thinges contained in them which were made for the entertainement and seruice of man 9. Which preuaileth most in man sense or reason For the first seuen yeares sense hath the whole gouerment of man but after seuen yeares reason by little and little beginneth to get strength and groweth on to the age of thirty the Philosophers not admitting a time of wisedome and cōstant iudgemēt vntill we come to the standing part of mans life which is when we leaue growing Yet she can neuer quite conquer sense by reason that it is deepely rooted and accustomed to sway vs by hauing had at first a long possession ouer reason 10. Which ought to sway most with vs sense or reason Certainely reason for if man be a reasonable creature as we haue defined him to be then reason must be the nature of man and so to do against reason were to do against nature and consequently to sinne Againe sense only considereth the present and so it is apt to precipitate vs into future inconueniences whereas reasō which forecasteth what is to come keepeth vs out of such dangers Moreouer reason hath one conduct and gouerment through all and settleth vs in a stable way tending to one incommutable good whereas sense setteth our hearts vpon vncertaine goods and such as may be taken from vs and so it putteth vs in casuality to be euer grieued for who looseth what he is in loue with must needes be grieued according to the measure of his loue 11. What becomes of mans body and soule after his death The body returnes againe to earth of which it was made as the graues do well testify the soule retaines its being for all eternity ether in hell or heauen 12. Doth euery soule presently after that it is separated from the body go immediatly ether to heauen or to hell No for some go first to purgatory before they go to heauen but those who go to hell go all immediately thither as soone as they are separated from their bodies 13. Which be those that go immediately to heauen The soules of those that dye in the state of grace and haue in this life payed all debt due for their sinnes for these soules whilst they were in their bodies did loue God aboue all thinges as being good in himselfe and therefore they could not choose but also desire to know and see him whom they loued so much And this same desire because it is of an immutable good remaineth also after death yea it is then much increased because the soule hauing no more any distraction by its senses it is wholy set vpon that obiect and therefore it would be miserable if it did not obtaine it But God who is all goodnesse can not be so cruell as to let one be miserable for louing him and therefore he doth immediately let himselfe be seen vnto him which is to be in heauen or perfectly blessed And so you see how those who dye in that happy state go immediately to heauen 14. Which be those that go first to purgatory before they go to heauen The soules of them who dye in the state of grace and haue not fully satisfied for their sinnes in this life for those soules at their death are in such a state that though they firmely loue God as their greatest and finall good and so are content to forgoe all thinges rather then offend him mortally yet their loue is not pure because they loue worldly thinges withall by an inordinate affection being loath to leaue them though thereby they know they should see God the sooner Now soules departing with such affections are not fit to see God vntill they be purified from all such drosse and so they remaine in paine not being able to attaine that blisse which they chiefly desire vntill by suffering they paie what is due to God his iustice or vntill by the churches helpe God of his mercy rectifieth them 15. And which be those vnhappy soules that go to hell The soules of them who dye without repentāce in ther woefull state of mortall sinne whereby whilst they liued they did fasten their soules vpon some other object more then vpon God from which after their death they cannot turne themselues to God for want of gods grace and so they can not see or enioy God for how should they enioy that which they doe not
diuine beliefe surpasseth the forces of our nature so that we cannot any way deserue it in so much that the holy Ghost doth inspire it into vs through his owne meere bounty And it is the first Theologicall gift of God by which we are disposed by litle and litle to obtaine the rest 5. Why is it called a light Because it enlightens our vnderstanding by making vs belieue the holy mysteries of our Christian fayth deliuered to vs by the Church 6. Why do you say deliuered to vs by the Church Because as I haue obserued before we cannot haue Catholike fayth but by the instruction of the church which proposeth to vs those truthes which God did reueale to his Apostles and disciples to the end that they should communicate them to others who were to succeed to themselues in the church and they againe to others and so till the end of the world 7. Who are those that succeeded to the Apostles and Disciples They are the Bishops and Pastours of the Catholike Church whom the Apostles and Disciples left behind them to teach vs that doctrine which they themselues had taught and preached before to the whole world And therefore we are boūd to belieue what the Bishops and Pastours of the Catholike Church teach because we are sure that the Catholike Church deliuereth to vs that same doctrine which the Apostles deliuered to her 8. How are we sure of this First because our Sauiour himselfe doth assure vs so for he telleth vs that the gates of hell shall not preuaile against his Church so that the Church is the supreme and certaine guide to which Christ directeth vs for the knowledge of the true faith and true religion Secondly because abstracting from supernaturall meanes reason it selfe doth conuince as much for the Church being vniuersall that is a Congregation of Christians dispersed through the whole world it followeth that she cannot propose a falsehood seeing that the Christians dispersed in so many countries as are necessary to make vniuersality cannot meete together and agree to frame a lye and therefore if they consent together that such a thing was deliuered vnto them for the doctrine of Christ it cannot choose but be so And this is that which Diuines call Traditiō which descendeth from father to sonne in all nations where the Catholike fayth is professed and when it is contradicted or called in to doubt the question is decided by a generall Councel which is a congregation of Catholike Bishops and Doctours gathered together out of all partes where the Church is dispersed And to this I meane to vniuersall tradition no heresy layeth clayme and yet Religion is so grounded vpon it that euen all Heretikes must acknowledge this same authority for the receauing of scripture So that we see how the vniuersality of the Church is euen in grounds of nature and abstracting from all supernaturall aduantages as great a warrant as can be that what the Church teacheth is that same which the Apostles and Disciples of Christ dispersed through the whole world had taught before Lastly we are sure that what the Church sayeth is true not only because she is vniuersall but also because she is inuested with all the other motiues that are apt to beget beliefe as santity vnity antiquity c. and so she is credible of herselfe in whatsoeuer she affirmeth LESSON XIII Of the Creed 1. What is the doctrine which the Apostles and Christ his Disciples taught It is chiefly that which is comprised in the Creed 2. Say the Creed 1. I belieue in God the father Allmighty creator of heauen and earth 2. And in Iesus Christ his onely sonne our Lord. 3. Who was conceiued by the holy Ghost borne of the Virgin Marie 4. Suffered vnder Pōtius Pilate was crucified dead and buried 5. Descended into Hell the third day rose againe from the dead 6. Ascended into heauen sitteth at the right hand of God the father Allmighty 7. From thence he shall come to iudge the quicke and the dead 8. I beleeue in the holy Ghost 9. The holy Catholike Church the communion of sanctes 10. Remission of sinnes 11. Resurrection of the flesh 12. Life euerlasting Amen 3. What is the Creed and who made it It is a briefe rule of our christian faith made by the 12. Apostles as a symbole or marke whereby to distinguish and know the true disciples of Iesus Christ from all others of what profession soeuer ARTICLE I. 4. What doth the first Article signifie I belieue in God the father Allmighty creator of heauen and earth It teacheth vs that God the father is the source and first producer of all thinges hauing produced within himselfe the other two persons and out of him selfe all created thinges And this God is omnipotent because he can doe all that he will and hath made of nothing both heauen and earth with whatsoeuer is in them as well Angells as men and the whole vniuersall world and is able to create more and more worlds without end 5. The sonne and the holy Ghost are not they also omnipotent Yes and they created the world with the father but creation and omnipotencie are particularly attributed to the father for they belong to him in a particular manner because he is the first ofspring of all production within himselfe from whence is deriued all creation and being out of him selfe whereas the other two persons haue their production and being from him as from their source and because production of thinges is done by power therefore power also properly belōgeth to him who is the first origine of all thinges produced So wisedome is attributed to the sonne because he is produced by the vnderstanding which is the seate of wisedome and goodnesse to the holy Ghost because he proceedeth by loue which hath goodnesse for its obiect 6. Why do we professe God his omnipotencie in the first article To the end that we may be prepared to beleeue all that which followeth although it surpasse humane force and also to let vs know how he created the world which did require an infinite power in the creator for otherwise he could not haue done it 7. Why do we say I beleeue in God and not I beleeue God or I beleeue a God There is a great difference betwixt beleeuing a God beleeuing God and beleeuing in God The first doth import only I beleeue there is a God and the second I beleeue all that which God reuealeth but the third doth import not only an act of faith but an act of faith and loue together and so the Apostles vsed expressely this kinde of speach I beleeue in God to teach vs that faith is vnprofitable without loue ARTICLE II. 8. DEclare the second Article and in Iesus Christ his onely sonne our Lord. I beleeue also in Iesus Christ who is the sonne of God the Father not by adoption or grace but by nature and the onely begotten of his owne substance in so much that he cannot beget any
doth receiue profit by the sacrifice preaching doth instruct whosoeuer will heare euery man in the church may assist his companion by prayer the liuing do assist the dead in purgatorie by almes and good deeds and the blessed in heauen do assist the liuing vpon earth by their continuall intercession for them to allmighty God ARTICLE X. 45. DEclare the tenth Article Forgiuenesse of sinnes I belieue that to the holy Catholike church only and to no other society there is giuen by God power for true forgiuenesse of sinnes by meanes of the holy sacraments whereby men from being children of the diuell and guilty of eternall damnation do become the children of God and heires of Paradise 46. How doth the Church forgiue sinnes By the meanes of Priests who as God his Ministers haue power to forgiue sinne by vertue of the sacraments and particularly of Baptisme and of Pennance by Baptisme only once but by Pennance as often as man sinneth and truly repenteth for it And this benefit is so much the greater because it is particular to the law of grace for no man either in the law of nature or in the law of Moyses euer had power to remit sinne ARTICLE XI 47. DEclare the eleuenth Article Resurrection of the flesh I belieue that in the end of the world all men shall rise taking againe the selfe same bodies which they had when they were liuing and this by the power of God to whom nothing is impossible but the elect shall haue their bodies glorious and beautifull and shall be lifted vp with their bodies into the aire to meete Christ at the day of iudgement whereas the cursed shall remaine on earth hideous and woefull to behold 48. Why did not the Apostles say the resurrection of man but the resurrection of the flesh To shew to vs that whereas man doth consist of two parts soule and body the body is only that which perisheth by death the soule being immortall and consequently vncapable of resurrectiō for nothing is reuiued but that which is first dead 49. Shall we rise in the same bodies that we had whilst we liued Yes to the end that the same body which contributed in this world to our good or euill life may likewise receiue an eternall recompense or punishment And in effect if we did not receiue the same body which dyed it would not be a resurrection but a new production for since that to be resuscitated signifyeth to take life againe that which is resuscitated must be the same which dyed before 50. How shall this be done We are sure that it shall be done and S. Paul is so certaine of it that he telleth vs that if the dead shall not rise Christ hath not risen We are sure also that it shall not be done by our owne forces for Philosophers teach vs that that which is once corrupted cannot be naturally reproduced but it shall be done by the hand of allmighty God who can make againe when he pleaseth that same thing which he hath once made 51. Shall all bodies rise with the same defects they had whilst they lived as being dwarfes giants lame monsters and the like No for these defects and deformities proceed only from the excesse or defect of nature whose worke they properly were But the worke of their resurrection being properly the worke only of God it must needs be perfect and without all defeat and therefore it is generally belieued that all the blessed shall rise in that perfect stature which nature should haue giuen them at the three and thirtith yeare of their age at which age our blessed Sauiour did rise himselfe ARTICLE XII 52. DEclare the twelfth Article Life euerlasting I belieue that there is reserued for good Christians life euerlasting by enioying the sight of God full of felicity and free frō all kinde of euill as contrarywise for infidelles and bad Christians there is a life full of eternall punishment ouerwhelmed with misery and voide of all good 53. In what doth the happinesse of this eternall life consist In knowing and louing God for knowledge and loue are the pleasures of the soule or minde which must needs be greater then the pleasures of the body since that the body hath pleasure by the mīde for take away the mīde or reflexion vpon the obiect and it hath none Now the content of loue encreaseth to the proportion of knowledge and amongst knowledges the most vniuersall giueth the greatest pleasure What pleasure then must it be to see God in himselfe who is beyond all causes and in whom all thinges are conteined We shall discerne in him the essences and reasons of euery particular thing from the creation of the heauens and millions of Angells to the parting of two dusts in the high way so that no variety can be sought which is not found in him Neither can we desire any change for no body desireth a change or variety vntill he hath a satiety of what he enioyeth that is vntill he hath perfectly knowne it and found it lesse then his desires for till then he hath rest content and quiet in the obiect he enioyeth Now God is farre beyond the capacity of our desires so that for all eternity we shall finde in him more then we can desire and consequently for all eternity haue vnspeakable content and rest in him Besides euery ones memory shall contribute to this contentment by remembring the dangers they haue escaped of loosing so great a good and by calling to minde their owne good actions wrought by them through God his grace in this world especially those great ones martyrdome teaching and virginity which speciall contents caused by the memorie of those vertuous heroike actions are called by some Diuines Aureolae 54. In what shall the paine of the damned consist It will consist likewise chiefely in the soule for as pleasure cometh to the body from the soule so doth griefe and therefore as the pleasure of the soule is greater then the pleasure of the body so must the griefe of the soule by being depriued of this pleasure needes be a paine surpassing without comparison all corporall paines 55. Must this next life needs be eternall Yes for those who see God cānot choose but loue him aboue all thinges God as we sayd before doth neuer faile to blisse them that loue him wherefore since that nether the blessed can leaue to loue nor God will leaue to blisse those that loue him their happinesse can haue no end And as for the damned they can neuer begin to loue because they want God his grace without which we cannot loue God aboue all thinges and therefore they must needs remaine for all eternity in the same miserable state into which they haue cast them selues through their owne fault 56. Shall the glorie of the Saints be equall in heauen No some shall haue greater glorie then others according as they haue serued God more or lesse in this world Yet all shall be equally content in
the stone the metall the painting c. for themselues but for their sakes who are represented by the images for the Persons themselues are honoured worshiped and prayed to in their images Wherefore S. Ambrose speaking of honouring images sayeth that he who crowneth the image of the Emperour doth honour him whose image he hath crowned And so Iacob did adore Ioseph in honouring the top of his rod or scepter for he made no account of the rod itselfe but only in consideration of him who held it No more doth the Church beare anie reuerence to iamges but meerly in consideration of them whom they represent and to denie them reuerence in this respect is a meere barbarousnesse and want of common sense 14. What kinde of worship is due to Images Certainly since that we worship the Saints in their Images by calling to minde their holines and that they are vnited in blisse to God the worship done to the image must needs be religious for iamges being vsed for a religious end they are belonging to God and holy and consequently to be vsed with respect for that reason since that no man can denie but that nature teacheth vs that all holy thinges ought to be vsed so And therefore it is a shortnesse of discourse in men to denie that vnto pictures which of they grant vnto other thinges 15. Must we also worship the Crosse Yes and in a more particular manner then other representatiue images and thinges because it was the instrument of our redemption and it calleth to our memorie the death and passion of our Sauiour In fine in all these points we do follow the custome of our fathers and the practise of the ancient Church and therefore all those who disallow them are condemned by the Church 16. What then are we commanded to doe by the first Commandement We are commanded to worship God by acknowledging him in our hearts to be our Supreme Lord and Master and to apprehend him as an incomprehensible essence not like to any thing fancyed by man 17. What are we forbidden to doe by this Commandement We are forbidden to giue this worship which is due to God to anie creature or to apprehend him like anie thing fancyed by vs. 18. What sinnes are reduced to this Commandement All those which are committed against Fayth Hope and Charitie for God is worshiped in our hearts by these three vertues and so in the first place the true religion is established and all false ones reiected by this Commandement 19. Who are those that offend against Faith First he offendeth against faith who doth not belieue at least implicitely by act or habitude firmely without doubting of their truth all that which the Catholike Church teacheth as matter of faith Now he belieueth implicitely by act who sayeth actually within himselfe I belieue whatsoeuer the Church teacheth as necessary to be belieued and he belieueth implicitely by habitude who hauing once made firmely the former act doth not afterwards recall it for by vertue of that act he is presumed still to be readie by Gods grace to make the like act whensoeuer he shall be obliged to it vpon anie occasion He also offendeth against faith who although he belieue implicitely all that the Church telleth vs yet is ignorant of that which he is bound to know explicitetly as that there is but one God that this God is iust good and perfect and in fine all the principall points which are contained in the Creede Those likewise offend against faith who belieue in generall and also in particular what they ought but yet doe dissemble their religion and forbeare to professe it when they are obliged either through feare or for other respects Those also who giue eare to Heretikes or reade hereticall bookes with danger to be peruerted or assist at the publike prayers of Heretikes All Magicians Coniurers and Witches who giue themselues to the Diuell or belieue in their hearts that diuells deserue anie honour from them offend against fayth All those likewise who vse the meanes of Coniurers to inuoke the Diuell for what end soeuer although it be to vndoe againe the mischieuous inchantments which they had made before yea though they doe not inuoke the Diuell yet if they desire to be assisted by their superstitious and magicall inuentions offend mortally All those offend against faith who vse certaine superstitions or put any confidence in them as some doe in hearbs gathered vpon the day of our Sauiours Ascension or on S. Iohn Baptists day others in a certain number of candles or the like In fine whensoeuer any thing hath not a vertue for that end for which it is vsed either by its owne naturall qualities or by some supernaturall force conferred vpon it through God his promise as Sacraments and such other remedies haue which the Church prescribeth it is to be esteemed superstitious and to make vse of such remedies either to cure diseases or to finde thinges that are lost is a mortall sinne 20. Who are those that offend against worshiping God by hope All those who dispaire of their saluation All those who presume so much in Gods mercie that they abādon themselues to all sorts of sinnes thinking that God will pardon them though they doe what wickednesse soeuer Those who through want of courage in miserie doe detest and hate their owne liues and being which God hath giuen them Those who being oppressed with calamities doe thinke that God hath abandoned them Those who hope so much in God that being sick or in other miseries they neglect humane meanes to relieue themselues thinking that God will cure them without their owne industrie 21. Who be those that offend against worshiping God by charitie All those who haue a distast against God because they doe not receiue what they desire Those who loue creatures more then him who is the creatour of them Those who are ashamed publickly to professe deuotion and loue towards God Those who mocke or disesteeme such persons as doe their dutie towards God calling them scrupulous persons Bigots or the like Those who despise the blessed who are vnited with God and mocke at their reliques at the Crosse at holy places miracles and other holy thinges it being euident that those doe not giue to God what charitie obligeth them vnto who doe not loue and reuerence that which hath a particular relation to God as holy thinges haue Lastly the sinne of pride is particularly reduced to this commandement for by pride we assume that to our selues which is due to God Now to conclud this first commandement you must note that this precept of charity is the summe of all the cōmandements for all are comprehended in this by which we are commanded to loue God with all our hart with all our strength and with all our soule in fine to loue him without measure or limits 22. How is it possible to accomplish this commandement which hath no measure nor limits It is true that this
commandement cannot be perfectly accomplished vntill we possesse allmighty God himselfe and enioy him entirely in heauen yet the want of this perfection in this world doth not render vs guilty of breaking this cōmandement as long as we do aspire vnto it by making a continuall progresse in it which is at last to be accomplished in heauen And to this purpose S. Augustin sayeth that the whole life of a good Christian is nothing els but a holy desire that is to say a continuall motion of our hart which carrieth it on according to S. Pauls admonition not to looke back but to aduance still further and further as Pilgrimes do whereof some go faster others slower in the same way yet all go on towardes their iournies end 23. What degree then of the loue of God is that which is necessary in this life for saluation Two thinges are absolutely necessarie for saluation touching the obseruance of this precept for those who are come to the vse of reason The first is that the loue of God be the most absolute the most affectionate the most generall and predominant ouer all our other louer and that it raigne ouer all our passions so that we must loue God not only more then our owne liues but also we must loue him generally and without exception more then all that which we desire or can desire For we must be truly and sincerely so disposed in the bottome of our harts as to loose all thinges that are most deare vnto vs and to suffer the greatest indignities that can be rather then to loose him and consequently rather then to commit the least mortall sinne This degree of the loue of God is absolutely necessarie to saluation for all men in the world and this degree is sufficient supposing it be accompanied with a second condition which is that hauing once this loue rooted in vs we endeauour still to encrease it more and more by our prayers by our good workes and by a deuoute rule of our whole life for let vs haue made neuer so great aduancement in charity we are still bound to go on and not to make a stand because we haue not yet attained to the perfect accomplishment of this precept of louing God with all our soule nether shall we attaine vnto it vntill we come to heauen and therefore not to go on is to go back Now seeing that the loue of God must be predominant ouer all our affections and raigne ouer all our passions the securest rule to know whether we haue truly this loue of God or no is to looke into the course of our life our actions and designes For as we see amongst worldly men that ordinarily in euery one some one passion is predominant ouer all the others which maketh that we esteeme some auaricious others ambitious others vaine glorious others addicted to pleasures others reuengefull accordingly as the loue of riches or of greatnesse or of glorie or pleasure or reuenge do raigne in them whereof we do iudge by their actions designes occupations and by the whole conduct of their life which is for the most part tainted by that principall affection that raigneth in them In the like manner no man hath reason to think that he loueth God aboue all thinges which is necessary to saluation if examining his life actions employments desires and pretensions he doth not finde that the principall part of them do tend towards God seeing that the loue which we owe to him is not a loue of wordes and thoughts but of effects and actions And therefore we must not deceaue ourselues taking the acts of our vnderstanding for acts of loue and affection for there is no man that hath the vse of reason whose vnderstanding doth not tell him taht we ought to loue God more then ourselues yea there is no true man who hath not an inclination to loue God more then himselfe but the loue of God doth not consist in that act of the vnderstanding nor in this inclination but it consisteth in putting this inclination in practise COMMANDEMENT II. 24. WHat are we taught by the second Commandement Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vaine It forbiddeth all false and vnnecessary oaths and all disrespect which is done to God by word of mouth for the respect we owe to the Maiestie of God doth oblige vs not to vse his name in anie thing whatsoeuer it be without some necessitie 25. When is it lawfull and no sinne to sweare It is lawfull to sweare when our oath is accompanied with truth iustice and iudgement without anie one of which conditions the oath will be sinfull and naught 26. Why were oaths inuented They were inuented for a remedie of humane imbecillitie to supplie the want of beliefe which we should giue to one an other when we affirme a truth and so if Adam had not sinned oaths had not been needfull 27. What is it to sweare with truth iustice and iudgement He sweareth with truth who affirmeth nothing but what he thinks himselfe to know certainly to be true He sweareth with iustice who doth not sweare all truths but only such as his oath shall hurt no bodie and in case he promise a thing by oath that the thing promised be lawfull and possible He sweareth with iudgement who obserueth these three conditions first if he doth not sweare any thing but only that which would not be belieued without an oath secondly if he sweareth nothing but that which is necessarie to be known for is necessarie to be known for some important reason thirdly if when he sweareth he performeth it by decent words and in due time and place and without passion or cholere 28. How many kindes of oaths be there First in regard of God whom we call to witnes they are twofold for we may either call him simply for witnes of a thing or els we may call him as reuenger of vntruths in case we say a false thing Secondly they are twofold in respect of the thinges we sweare the one is purelly affirmatiue the other hath also a promise ioined with the affirmation the first may concerne thinges past present or to come the second doth concerne only thinges to come which also is twofold for we may promised by oath either to man or to God And as we are bound to affirme nothing but truth so are we bound to make our promised true by obseruing it in case it be lawfull vnlesse by some accident it become morally impossible or vnlesse he vnto whom the promise is made dispenseth with it as if to man the man himselfe if to God the Church 29. What thinges are we commanded to doe by this Commandement As in the former we are commanded to honour God with our hearts so are we in this commanded to honour him with our tongues 30. What sinnes are reduced to this Commandement All blasphemie and so those offend against this Commandement who blaspheme either in thought or word by
obey the ordinances of the Church and of the Common wealth Secondly those who do murmure against their superiours either ciuill or ecclesiasticall and do censure their ordinances and manner of gouernment which murmuring is for the most part an occasion of great harme for such discourses do easilie beget in the harts of the hearers a contempt of their persons and authority which afterwards doth likewise infect the people and causeth contempt disobedience and disorder in the Common wealth Thirdly those who do speake ordinarily against the vocation behauiour and liues of Church-men and doe not beare a due respect vnto them And on the contrary side the Churchmen who haue care of soules offend greiuously if they do not administer the Sacraments and preach the word of God to those who are vnder their care and giue them spirituall instruction counsell and comfort As also if they do not giue almes to the poore as farre as they are able especially to such as are vnder their care Wiues offend against this commandement who do neglect or disdaine their husbands or do giue them an occasion of choler and doe not seeke to content them in all reasonable thinges As contrarywise husbands do abuse their authoritie which God hath giuen them ouer their wiues if they depriue them of honest liberty if they do not allow them commodities necessary for their entertainment if they treate them outragiously in words or deedes if without their consent they liue continually absent from them vpon any disgust or without a iust cause Pupills are bound to follow the counsell and aduise of their tutors And tutors offend if they take not care to instruct their pupills if they permit their goods to be dissipated through their negligence if they marry them disaduantageously either through fauour of for other respects Seruants offend by neglecting their seruice by murmuring against their Masters by speaking to their disaduantage by giuing them an occasion of choler by disposing of their goods without their consent c. Masters offend by too much rigour towards their seruants in exacting from them more then they are able to performe in not procuring their good as much as they can conueniently in reteining their wages from them that so they may be constrained to liue with them as also in hindering them from marrying or disswading them from any other course that may be notably disaduantageous to them to the end that they may thereby still haue them for their seruants COMMANDEMENT V. 48. DEclare the fifth Commandement Thou shalt not kill This forbiddeth vs to doe harme to any man in his life either corporall spirituall or ciuill and consequently it commandeth vs to protect and preserue him in all three so farre forth as we are able 49. Is it neuer lawfull to kill a man It is neuer lawfull to kill him spiritually but it may be lawfull to kill one corporally in these cases First if it be done by authority of Magistrates in way of iustice Secondly if it be done by souldiers in a iust warre by order of their Captaine Thirdly if it be done by any particular man in a iust defence of his owne or his neighbours life when in case he or his neighbour be sett on he cannot otherwise defend himselfe or his neighbour from being slayne and that these thinges be done without any rancour of minde or spirit of reuenge 50. Who are those that transgresse against this Commandement for as much as it concerneth corporall life First all those who kill voluntarily anie man excepting in one of the three former cases Secondly those who doe lame wound hurt or beate any man Thirdly those who desire counsell or when they may conueniently do not hinder any of the foresayd excesses And it is to be noted that the more cōsiderable the person is so much the sinne is greater as also if it be done in a place consecrated to God for it is a greater sinne to kill ones father brother kinsman churchman magistrate or one by whose industrie and labour a whole family liueth then to kill one that hath none of these qualities as also it is a greater sinne to perswade many then to perswade one only to commit any of the foresaid excesses Fourthly those iudges who condemne one that is innocent or also one that is guiltie without vsing all the formes that are requisite for his processe Fifthly those iudges who do not fauour the cause of an innocent person as also those who persecute him are guilty of his oppression Sixthly those magistrates who do not punish duells murders and all such like excesses Seuenthly those that praise and approue of such like excesses either before or after they are committed Eighthly all Phisitians Chirurgiens or Apothecaries who kill or hurt one notably although it be not done on purpose but by grosse and culpable ignorance for ignorance is esteemed malice in him who is obliged to know Ninthly those who procure to destroy the fruit in the wombe of a woman or if the woman herselfe should do it by dancing or any other excesse or by some grosse negligence though she thinke not of it for negligence also is esteemed malice where one ought to be diligent Tenthly those who see a poore man dying for hunger and do not relieue him Lastly those who kill themselues or without a iust cause expose themselues to imminent danger of death or being weary of liuing desire death yea if one should expose himselfe to martyrdome because he is weary of his life he would commit a grieuous sinne 51. Who be those that transgresse against this Commandement for as much as concerneth spirituall life First all those who infect others with Heresie or keepe those that are infected from returning to the true Church Secondly all those who either by word or by ill example do incite others to sinne or diuert them from doing good Thirdly those who do not correct their neighbour when they thinke probably their admonition would doe him good Fourthly Phisitians friends and seruants who assisting sicke persons do not aduertise them in time that they are in danger of death and to thinke of their conscience Fifthly all those who commit or resolue to commit any mortall sinne 52. Who be those that transgresse against this Commandement for as much as concerneth our ciuil life First all those who either by words or libells do diffame their neighbour whether it be by imposing a false crime vpon him or by discouering a true vice of his which was not knowne publikely before Secondly those who incite others to cōmit such diffamation against their neighbour or giue eare to them or do not diuert their discourse when they may Thirdly those who brag of their owne vices whereby they depriue themselues of that reputation with which they ought to liue in the world And it is to be noted that he who hath diffamed another man whether it be in a thing true or false is bound to restitution that is to repaire his honour
Fourthly those who do laugh at other men do discourse and talke of their defects do censure their actions do breake bitter iests vpon them and in fine do speake freely in preiudice of persons either presēt or absent And whereas many make no scruple of doing these thinges vnder pretence that they discourse only for recreation and passetime or that they say nothing that seemes to be of importance they do deceiue themselues exceedingly for ordinarily these kinde of discourses do cause a confusion and distaste in him who findes himselfe laughed at despised or ill spoken of wherevpon proceed oftentimes enmities and auersions from one another and a breach of mutuall correspondence and fraternall charitie Fifthly all those offend against this precept who do not carry to each other a due respect Where it is to be noted that many yea sometimes man and wife make little scruple when they haue vpbraided one another with all sort of contumelies and vented their whole choler but esteeme them as words spoken in the aire because no other harme followeth out of them not considering that God is more offended with the malice of the heart from whence such iniuries proceed then with the effects that follow out of them and therefore they deceiue themselues if they thinke it not a grieuous offence since that our Sauiour himselfe sayeth that he who calleth his brother foole is guilty of hell fire Sixthly whosoeuer hauing had some falling out with his neighbour doth disdaine him or put of to be reconciled vnto him or auoideth his company meerly out of rancour of minde offendeth against this cōmandement nether will it excuse him to say that he wisheth no more harme to him then to himselfe for God doth not only forbid vs to do or wish harme to our neighbour but also he commandeth vs to doe him good and expresse kindenesse to him vpon occasiōs both in deedes and in words Lastly those offend grieuously against this commandement who cause factions and seditions amongst parties as also those who nourish such disvnion of mindes by siding with either partie and doe not seeke rather to vnite them together by peace and quietnesse and the offence is the greater when by siding with either party they meddle in that which doth not belong vnto them as when Lay-men meddle in Ecclesiasticall affaires or matters of Religion for although differences in these kindes may oftentimes in Ecclesiasticall persons proceed from zeale in both parties yet in Lay-men it can neuer be excused from faction except it be where the Church hath publikely censured one partie COMMANDEMENT VI. 53. DEclare the sixth Commandement Thou shalt not commit adulterie We are forbidden by this commandement all sorts of actions words and thoughts contrary to chastitie and chiefly to violate the bond of Marriage 54. How many kindes of carnall sinnes be there There be seuen Adultery Simple fornication Incest Defloration Rape Sacrilege and sinne against nature Adulterie is a carnall act betwixt man and woman where one or both parties are married to a third person Fornication is when nether partie is married nor hath vowed chastitie nor are virgins nor allyed to one another Incest is when there is kindred or affinitie betwixt the two parties Defloration is when one or both parties are virgins Rape is when one of the parties of what condition soeuer the person be is forced to the act Sacriledge is when one or both parties are consecrated to God or when by any other persons a carnall action is committed in a holy place Sinne against nature hath also diuerse kindes which are not necessary to be explicated 55. Why is Adulterie named i● the prohibition of this Commandement rather then any of the other kindes Because besides the impurity of the act and the iniustice against our neighbour it containeth also a wrong done against the cōmonwealth in regard that lawfull heirs are depriued of their due by bastards and therefore a married woman that knoweth for certaine that she hath bastards who are accounted as her lawfull children is bound by sparing and other meanes to endeauour to recompence the losse that her husbands lawfull children or next heires shall receiue by her bastards 56. Who doe transgresse against this Commandement All those who either by thoughts words lookes or actiōs incite themselues or others to any of the former kindes of sinnes or to any kinde of carnall delight and although it proceed to no other deformity but only to the delight it selfe and in thought only yet it is a mortall sinne of it be with full deliberation and consent though it indure but a moment All those parents husbands and tutors who permit their children wiues or pupills to be drawne to such sinnes The same persons also though they should not consent to those indignities yet if they giue so much liberty to their daughters wiues or pupills as that they may be debauched they are guilty of their sinnes The same persons are also guiltie if through toe much rigour by denying to their children wiues or pupills that which is necessary to entertaine them according to their condition they should giue them occasion to yeeld to such persons as seeke to corrupt them Those who by their ill example do giue occasion to others to doe the like Those who by charmes and witchcrafts seduce other persons or cause them to be seduced Those who vse extraordinary meanes only to prouoke lust offend grieuously although they be married people and not only they but also Physitians and Apothecaries who furnish them with receipts and druggs for that end Those who by stealth or otherwise carry away a mans daughter or pupill against their parents or tutors consent if she be not past the yeares of tutelage commit a rape although it be done with designe of marriage and that she herselse consent to it They also who runne away with a widdow with intention to marry her against her will commit a rape as also do those who runne away with a mans wife And it is to be noted that those who seduce yong maides vnder pretence of marrying them whether they confirme their promise by oath or no or whether they intend to performe or no yet if the maide and her parents require it they are bound in conscience to marry her and sinne mortally if they do not except they be of a condition altogether vnequall or that the maide doe breake first with the man by being disloyall to him or that there should be danger of some notable infamie or scandall by the marriage in which cases he is bound to recompence the maide by giuing her a portion to marry her Lastly this commandement being made specially for the benefit and right vse of marriage all those married people do offend grieuously against it who expose themselues to danger of sinne by abstaining from the duty of marriage only for feare of hauing children especially seeing that multiplicity of children is the greatest benediction that married people can haue marriage
in the Sacrament of Pennance for some time before they communicate for by vertue of the Sacrament of Pennance of ten reiterated being ioyned with the worthy fruits of repentance they will afterwardes communicate more worthily Wherefore I should aduise those who communicate but once a yeare to confesse at least euery three monthes once and those who communicate euery quarter to goe to confession at least once a moneth as others who goe to communion more frequently would do well to confesse more frequently it hauing been the practise of many holy Saintes to confesse dayly though they did sometimes abstaine from communion LESSON XIX Of the three Euangelicall Counsells 1. IS there no more required for the practise of charity but only to obserue the commandements of God and his Church and other superiours Whosoeuer doth this hath as we haue sayed an assured marke of charity and therefore it cannot be doubted but that he hath charity in some measure Yet euery one that obserueth the commandements hath not charity in the same measure for he who obserueth them so as not to breake them in any matter of weight which maketh a mortall sinne remaineth in charity but for the perfection of charity there is required a more exact performance of them and especially of that great precept conteined in the first commandement of directing all our actions and thoughts to God his honour and glory the marke whereof is when we do auoyde euen veniall sinnes so farre forth as the condition of humane frailty will permit vs for although these smaller offences do not depriue vs of the grace of God yet they are vngratefull and displeasing to him because they do intrench in some sort vpon his commandements by hindering vs from performing them readily and with alacrity and by bringing vs into danger of breaking them grieuously Now as we see that one who loueth his friend entirely will not only do what he cōmandeth but he will do it also with alacrity and vse the best meanes he can for that end so shall we do the like towardes God if we loue him feruently 2. How shall we know which be the meanes to attaine to this perfection We may know this by looking vpon the life of our blessed Sauiour and by seeing what thinges those were which he exhorted those to who were nearest about him for certainly seeing that out Sauiour came to teach vs not only perfection itselfe but also the meanes to attaine vnto it and this by making himselfe our patterne that is by leauing vnto vs an example in his owne life for vs to imitate there can be no doubt but that those thinges which he himselfe embraced for our instruction and which he inured his most familiar friends vnto are the most efficacious meanes to attaine to the height of Christian perfection 3. Where shall we finde these thinges We shall finde them at large in the foure Euangelifts who writ the life of our blessed Sauiour and for that reason they are called the Euangelicall counsells and the practise of them is called particularly the imitation of Christ 4. How many be the Euangelicall counsells There be very many set downe in the Ghospell whereof there are three which are the principall called voluntary pouerty perpetuall chastitie and entire obedience of which the religious orders do make their essentiall vowes and by them they are mainely assisted to extirpate those three pernicious rootes from which most sinnes do proceed to wit luxury auarice and pride 5. What is meant by the counsell of Pouerty We vnderstand by it a voluntary renouncing all worldly wealth a thing which our Sauiour did teach both by word and example and after him the holy Apostles followed it and the first Christians did practise it at Hierusalem in the primitiue Church 6. Wherein doth consist the counsell of perpetuall chastity It consists in a resolution to abstaine perpetually not only from all sorts of carnall sinne but euen from lawfull marriage it selfe which also our Sauiour Christ did both teach and practise 7. Wherein consisteth the counsell of entire obedience It consists in renouncing our owne proper will and iudgemēt which in holy scripture is called the denying of our selues by submitting our selues to the will of a superiour for the honour and loue of God which counsell our Sauiour not only taught by word but also by perfect example submitting himselfe for so many yeares to his mother the blessed Virgin and to S. Ioseph his supposed father on earth 8. What fruit and profit is there gotten by obseruing these holy counsells They mainely helpe to take away the impediments of Christian perfection which consisteth in charity the impediments whereof are chiefly three to wit the loue of temporall goods which is taken away by pouerty the loue of carnall pleasures which is taken away by chastity and finally the loue of worldly honour and power which is takē away by obedience Moreouer whereas a man hath but three sorts of goods a soule a bodie and his exteriour wealth by giuing his exteriour goods to God by pouerty his body by chastity and his soule by obedience he maketh a perfect sacrifice to God of all he hath and thereby disposeth himselfe to the perfection of charity in the best manner that in this life is possible 9. Were these three Euangelicall counsells giuen to all Christians in generall Yes for although the embracing of them by vowe and in that manner as we haue declared them here belongeth properly to Religious men whereby they are afterwards tyed to them no lesse then if they were precepts and so are obliged to performe them more strictly then others are yet all Christians are called to that perfection which is attained by these three Euangelicall counsells and consequently ought to practise actually these three vertues pouerty chastity and obedience in some measure proportionable to the state and condition in which they liue as pouerty by giuing actually part of their goods to the poore and by enduring with patience and alacrity the want of such commodities which they themselues haue need of chastity by moderating the vse of lawfull marriage obedience by submitting themselues to the direction of some prudent and deuout person and by yeelding in indifferēt thinges to the will and iudgement of others with whom they cōuerse mortifying thereby their owne will and proper inclinations For since these are meanes to attaine to perfection of Christianity Christ who biddeth all Christians without exception to be perfect as his Father is in heauen doth also propose to all the practise of these his holy counsells which are the meanes that all who will attaine vnto perfection haue neede to practise in some degree or other so that there is no Christian whom these holy counsells do not concerne And whereas their condition of life will not permit laymen to practise actually these counsells in that latitude as Religious men do yet if they will attaine to that height of perfectiō which Christ calleth euery
we iudge it is aliue but if we see it not stirre we hold it for dead so when we see any man do many good workes and otherwise obserue no impiety or iniquity in him we haue iustreason to hope that he is in the state of grace and that he moueth by the life of charity 23. From whence proceedeth the incertitude of this knowledge It proceedeth from two heads first from the hidden corruption which lyeth in our hearts and infecteth those actions which we least suspect secondly from the hidden influences of those motions from God whereby out actions are purified and without which they are of no value which are not perceptible to any but to God himselfe 24. Can a man loose sanctifying grace when once he hath it Y s for otherwise all those who are baptized would be saued but alas it is easily lost vnlesse it be kept with great care and watchfullnesse LESSON XXII Of Sinne. 1. How is grace lost It cannot be lost by any thing but only by such actuall sinne as depriueth our soule of the loue of God 2. If so how is it possible to loose grace for loue cannot be lost but by hatred since one contrary is not expelled but by another and me thinkes no body can hate God If you remember we sayed that he who loueth one is bound by loue to do good for him whom he loueth if he can by performing all that towards him which is due vnto him whence it followeth that he who will not do these thinges to which he is bound by loue looseth his loue now a man may neglect to doe these thinges by louing some other thing the loue whereof hindreth him from performing what he oweth to God so that you see not only hatred of God but also loue of such thinges as hinder vs to doe what we ought to doe in loue to God that is all which he commandeth and is practised by the three Theologicall and foure Cardinall vertues taketh away our loue towards him 3. What then is actuall sinne It is a voluntary thinking speaking or doing something contrary to the law of God or a voluntary omitting to thinke speake or doe something commanded by the law of God 4. Is there no other sinne but actuall sinne Yes there is also originall sinne which is that wherewith we are all borne and which cometh to vs by inheritance from our first parents Adam and Eue. But we are freed from this sinne by baptisme when we first receaue grace and it neuer returneth more 5. How many sortes be there of actuall sinne Two generall ones mortall and veniall 6. How can any sinne be veniall since that all sinne is the neglect of our duty towards God and he who neglecteth his duty forbeareth to loue and so looseth charity which losse as you say is the death of our soule You must know that though we cannot loose charity but by neglecting our duty yet all neglect of duty looseth not charity for loue or charity is of its owne nature mutuall and therefore we cannot loose it but that we must loose also our friend his loue towards vs so that we do not loose charity by any other neglect but such as breaketh the mutuall bōd of loue if then not euery thing as the taking of a pinne is a sufficient cause for our neighbour to fall out with vs we loose not out loue towards him for taking a pinne from him but we loose it by those acts only which are a sufficient cause for ordinary wise men to breake of conuersation and friendship with vs and not by what is lesse then that And the same may be said of the duty which we owe to ourselues or to Allmighty God for whereas man oweth certaine duties to himselfe the neglect of them may come to be such as if another man should do it vnto you you would haue iust cause to fall out with him and so though you do not fall out with yourselfe for the like occasion yet it is not for want of cause Againe it may be also so little a neglect as that it would be vnreasonable for you to fall out with him now this second neglect of your duty towards your selfe is only a veniall sinne whereas the former is mortall And the same is to be said of misrespect towards God for if it were such as done to one to whom we owe all that we are should according to the rule and decrees of his iustice giue him an occasion to breake of friendship with vs it is a mortall sinne if not a veniall 7. Why are these two kindes of sinnes so called one mortall the other veniall Because by the one we breake friendship with God and so we are depriued of his grace and become guilty of eternall damnation and spiritually dead for charity or the loue of God is our spirituall life and for this reason it is called mortall by the other we make no breach of friendship nor loose God his grace or charity by them and so because they are such of their owne nature as that their pardon may be easily obtained by the workes of grace which still remaineth in vs they are called veniall 8. What then is mortall sinne It is a wilfull and witting transgression in a matter of weight against a known commandement of God of the Church or of some lawfull Superiour Where any of these three conditions are wanting it is at most but a veniall sinne as first if it be not against a known commandement secondly if it be not in a matter of weight thirdly if it be not done with perfect consent and deliberation 9. How many sortes of veniall sinnes be there There are three for some are such because the kinde or obiect of them is of its owne nature of small consideration and generally slightly respected by men others are such because they are slight by reason of the smallnesse of the matter though the deformity of the obiect be of a kinde in its owne nature considerable others againe are such because they are performed by ouersight or without deliberation for if one should kill a man by chance his sinne might be but veniall or none at all and yet if afterwards when he did reflect vpon it he should be pleased with the harme he had done this complaisance would be a mortall crime though the act it selfe were only veniall or no sinne at all 10. How many wayes is a veniall sinne made mortall Foure wayes first when one committeth a veniall sinne with such affection that he is resolued to commit it though it were mortall Secondly when the end of doing it is a mortall sinne as when one telleth a slight lye thereby to induce one to fornication the telling of a lye with this circumstance is a mortall sinne though he should not afterwards commit fornication Thirdly when one perceiueth that by committing a veniall sinne he shall giue an occasion to a mortall one by scandall or any other way Fourthly
only vpon worldly thinges and that the seruice of God and the saluation of our soule is least in our thoughts and the most neglected of all our occupations certainly we do grossely deceiue ourselues if this notwithstanding we imagine that we do loue God aboue all thinges or that the loue of him is the most cordiall loue of all our loues as if we will be saued it must be according to that which hath been sayd Less 17. Num. 23. because our vnderstanding doth tell vs it must be so For this appretiation of loue by which we are bound to preferre God aboue all thinges doth not consist in discourse but in affection and the rule or marke of our affection is not our vnderstanding but as I sayd before our actions for the very damned themselues do know by their vnderstanding as well as we that God is the last end they ought to adhere vnto Now you will easily vnderstand by this why Christian people are commonly instructed to know which are the seuen deadly sinnes to wit that thereby they may discerne the seuerall rootes from whence all their particular sinnefull actions proceed and so when they examine their cōscience see what passion it was that induced them to sinne that they may by searching diligently from what source their sinnes proceed cut them of in the roote it selfe and by abating those affections and passions which are most predominant in them auoid the danger of damnation and eschew those rockes against which all the wicked do suffer shipwracke 21. What meanes is there to cut of these routes of sinne By practising the seuen contrary vertues 22. Which be they They are humility liberality chastity fraternall charity sobriety patience and diligence 23. What is the effect of a sinfull act It hath chiefly two effects the first is called by Diuines Macula which if the act be a mortall sinne maketh the sinner abominable and hatefull in the sight of God and so depriueth him of God his grace The second is called Reatus poenae whereby he is guilty of eternall punishment if the sinne be mortall And although when the sinne is remitted the former effect be perfectly taken away yet this second effect is not allwayes wholy abolished but only lessened by chāging the eternall punishment into temporall by which we are to satisfy God his iustice either in this world by doing worthy fruits of pennance or in the next by suffering the most grieuous paines of Purgatory vnlesse it be remitted vs through indulgences grāted by the Church But nether indulgences nor other workes will auaile vs any thing vnlesse the sinne it selfe be remitted and God his grace recouered 24. May we then recouer God his grace though our sinnes be neuer so great Yes for the mercy of God is infinite and neuer forsaketh vs as long as we liue in this world but if we dye without grace it is not recouerable in the next LESSON XXIII OF the seuen Sacraments 1. WHat be the meanes which God hath left to abolish sinne and to recouer grace when we haue lost it They are the holy Sacraments of the new law instituted by Iesus Christ 2. What is a Sacrament of the new law It is an outward and sensible signe which hath vertue and efficacie to sanctify men and doth giue them a right to certaine speciall helpes of grace proper to each Sacrament which signe representeth in some sort the speciall effect of that grace whe rewith allmighty God inuisibly imbueth our soules when we receiue the Sacrament 3. What is the difference betwixt Sacraments and sacramentalls Sacraments differ from sacramentalls because they are the maine instruments of grace and cannot be instituted by any but by Christ himselfe whereas sacramentalls are instituted by the Church and are only made by certaine blessings as holy water and the like which though they be blessed yet they do not produce infallibly the effect for which they are blessed 4. What is the difference betwixt the Sacraments in the old law and the Sacraments in the now law The Councell of Florence teacheth vs that the Sacraments of the old law were only figures of grace to be giuen by Christs passion but they did not cause grace whereas the Sacraments of the new law according to the doctrine of the same Councell do both containe grace and also cause it in those who receiue them worthily Wherefore you are to vnderstand that as God Allmighty brought the Iewes to loue him by temporall promises and rewards that he might afterwards giue them celestiall ones so their Sacraments made them capable only of temporall blessings as Circumcision made the Iew to be one who had part in the land of promise their purifications made him to be one who might offer Sacrifice and be heard for obtaining of children peace long life c. And therefore they were sayed to cleanse the bodie not the soule to be empty and poore elements Whereas the new law doth bring vs to loue and serue God by the immediate promise of supernaturall rewards and so the Sacraments of Christians if they be worthily receiued do giue the thinges themselues which these corporall promises did signify that is celestiall goods as Baptisme maketh a man to be one whose share is in heauen c. 5. How many Sacraments be there There are seuen Baptisme Confirmation holy Euchariste Pennance Extreme vnction Order and Matrimonie 6. But what say you to these who tell vs that t it is no where put downe in scripture expressely that the number of Sacraments instituted by Christ is seuen neither more nor lesse I answer that it is not also set downe in scripture that there be only two Sacraments Baptisme and Euchariste and no more or that these very two be Sacraments and yet no man doubteth of them Wherefore as we gather out of scripture that these two be Sacraments because they haue all thinges essentiall to a Sacrament that is that they conferre grace by an outward sensible signe so do we by the same rule sinde in scripture that there are seuen Sacraments neither more nor fewer Besides we are assured of the same by tradition which is the maine ground of Christian Religion Moreouer do not the Protestants admit that there are twelue principall articles of our beliefe to which all the rest are reduced and yet where do they finde this number expressely in scripture 7. Were none of these seuen Sacraments instituted by man but all by Christ himselfe No not any one of them for as God alone is the sole fountaine of all iustice grace and purity so he hath thought good not to communicate to any but to reserue vnto his only sonne the power to ordaine Sacraments which are the principall instruments that produce grace and purify vs from sinne 8. Why did he institute them in the number of seuen Because our spirituall life is proportioned to our corporall now in our corporall life these thinges are required First to be borne that is to begin
to liue Secondly to get strength and greatnesse to be able to ouercome such cōtrarieties as would destroy life Thirdly to be nourrished whereby life is conserued whilst we performe the actions for which it was giuē vs. Fourthly we haue need of physicke in case we be sicke And fifthly of comfortable diet to recouer strength after sicknesse Sixthly of preseruation in case of danger to be infected And lastly of procreation to giue life vnto others to succeed in place of those who dye that mākinde may not wholy perish So also in our spirituall life we are borne by Baptisme and so are made members of Christ his familie we are strengthened and get growth by Confirmation we are nourished by the holy Eucharist we are cured of sicknesse by Pennance we are freed from the lāguishing which remaineth after sicknesse by Extreme vnction we are preserued from infection by Matrimonie which belongeth properly to married persons because their state of life is exposed to most eminent dangers of the world and the flesh By Matrimonie also the Church is still supplyed with a new carnall progenie into which the true worship of God may be introduced and perpetuated And lastly by Order we are prouided of spirituall fathers who are to multiply spiritually new issue by propagating the fayth and making new Christiās To whō also as being our fathers it belongeth to bring vs vp gouerne and direct vs in our spirituall life And so we see how all these seuen Sacraments are necessary the fiue first for euery man in particular the sixth which is Order for the whole bodie of the Church and the last which is Matrimony for one whole particular state in the Church that is for euery one that liues in that state and indirectly or remotely also for the whole Church 9. Are all Sacraments of like necessitie No for Baptisme is absolutely the most necessary because it is necessary for all either in effect or desire Next to Baptisme is Pennance for it is also absolutely necessary for all such as after Baptisme sinne mortally at least in desire if they cannot get it in effect Order is necessary for the whole Church and Matrimony likewise 10. Are all Sacraments of like excellencie No for the Sacrament of the holy Eucharist is more excellent then the rest without companion because it containeth Christ himselfe and therefore it is called the holy Sacrament 11. Into how many kindes are Sacraments deuided The generall deuision of them is into two sortes for some do conferre vnto vs the first grace that is do put vs absolutely in the state of grace when we are out of it others conferre vnto vs a second grace for they suppose vs to be in the state of grace and so do only augmēt the grace which we haue already Now Baptisme and Pennance were instituted by Christ to conferre vnto vs the first grace and the other only to augment grace 12. Which of the Sacraments is the first in order Baptisme for by it we begin to liue the life of grace LESSON XXIV of Baptisme 1. What is Baptisme Baptisme is a Sacrament which Iesus Christ did institute principally to cleanse our soules from originall sinne with which we are all borne Wherefore by the helpe of this holy Sacrament we become new borne againe into the happy life of grace and from accursed children of our first parent Adam we become the sonnes of Iesus Christ and heires of eternall blisse 2. What is the outward sensible signe in this Sacrament It is the washing by water and pronouncing the sacramentall wordes to wit I baptize thee in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost 3. Where do yon finde a promise of grace to this outward signe In the last of saint Marke He who shall beleeue and be baptized shall be saued And in the third of S. Iohn Vnlesse one be borne againe of water and the holy Ghost he cannot enter into the kingdome of heauen 4. Why are we baptized in water To signify vnto vs that is the water doth cleanse our bodies so doth Baptisme by the vertue of the bloud of Iesus Christ cleanse our soules and wash them from all their sinnes both actuall and originall 5. Why are we baptized in the name of the blessed Trinitie Because the blessed Trinitie is the principall obiect of our faith whereof man doth make his first profession in this Sacrament to be thereby receiued into the bodie of the Church 6. May a man dying without the Sacrament of Baptisme be saued Yes in two cases first by suffering Martyrdome for the honour of God whereby he is baptized in is owne bloud and this is therefore called the Baptisme of bloud Secondly in case he dye truly contrite for his sinnes with a desire of the Sacrament of Baptisme but is preuented by death without his owne fault and this is called Baptismus Flaminis or baptisme of the spirit because he receiues the grace and happie effect of the Sacrament of Baptisme although by accident he be depriued of the outward action of the Sacrament 7. To what end are Godfathers and Godmothers appointed in the Sacrament They are appointed as spirituall Parents to the Childe for its future instruction if neede shall require and also to witnesse its inrolement into the happy list of Gods adopted children Now out of this obligation of taking care that these who are baptized be instructed which Godfathers and Godmothers do tye themselues vnto it will appeare how this wholesome and ancient constitution of the Church is extremely abused by those Catholikes who vndertake to be Godfathers and Godmothers to the children of Heretickes without being first assured that either they themselues or others shall be permitted to instruct them in the true Catholike Religion or if hauing such assurance they should after wards neglect to performe the same As on the contrary side it is also a most intollerable abuse for any Catholike to permit an Hereticke to be Godfather or Godmother to his childe since that heresie doth render a man vncapable of that office as also those are vncapable of it who are excommunicated or interdicted or if they be not baptized or are ignorant of the rudiments or first principles of Christian Religion as children fooles mad men and the like 8. Cannot the Childs owne Parents supply the Godfathers and Godmothers place No the Church doth exprssely forbid it as declaring by this ceremony the great difference betwixt the spirituall life of mē and the corporall life which the parents giue whose loue and care is oftentimes more sensuall and carnall towards their children then spirituall in seeking the wordly interest of their bodies more then their eternall and spirituall profit 9. Doth the Godfather and Godmother contract by Baptisme a spirituall affinitie to the partie baptized Yes and not only to him but also to his father and mother So likewise he that baptizeth is allyed to the childe and to his father and mother 10. How
must we come prepared to receiue this Sacrament The preparation due to infants resideth in the Church which supplying their want of age doth offer them vp to Iesus Christ But those who are come to the vse of reason require more for they must be instructed in the chiefe mysteries of the Catholike fayth they must beleeue them all actually they must detest all sinne they must loue God actually they must haue a resolution to liue well they must in fine voluntarily offer themselues to be children of God by Baptisme 11. What Sacrament folleweth next after Baptisme Confirmation for ordinarily according to nature we must first grow and get strength before we can feed of solide meat such as is the holy Eucharist which the holy Fathers call the meat of the perfect LESSON XXV Of Confirmation 1. WHat is Confirmation It is a Sacrament instituted by Christ to conferre vnto our soules the holy Ghost and an increase of our baptismall grace with a manly strength to resist and encounter couragiously with all our ghostly enemies and to professe constantly the faith of Iesus Christ 2. Who are our enemies The Diuell the world and the flesh The Diuell that is all the power of hell The world that is all the contagious infection which proceedeth from the mutuall conuersation of men The flesh that is the naturall inchnation to euill which we all feele within our selues 3. Who is the holy Ghost which is conferred by this Sacrament He is the third person of the blessed Trinitie with his graces and giftes 4. How do we receiue him by this Sacrament seeing that we receiued grace before by Baptisme We receiue him here more particularly because by this Sacrament his graces and gifts are more radicated in our soules whereby we become strong and vigorous in vertue by receiuing the perfection of Charitie for the ghostly life which we receiue by Baptisme is but weake and feeble in respect of that improuement which we receiue by Confirmation And so this Sacrament is called by the holy Fathers the accomplishment and perfection of Baptisme 5. What is the outward sensible signe in this Sacrament It is the annoynting with holy Chrisme by the hands of the Bishop which is called in the scripture the imposition of hands 6. Where do we finde a promise of grace in scripture to this outward signe We finde it in the 16. Chap. of S. Iohn where Christ told his Apostles that when he went away himselfe he would send the holy Ghost vnto them And the performance of this Sacrament appeareth in the act when the holy Ghost descended vpon the Apostles and when those that were baptized receiued the holy Ghost anew by the imposition of the Apostles hands which is a signe that Christ instituted this ceremony for it is certaine that the Apostles could not by such a ceremonie haue giuen the holy Ghost if he had not ordained it for that end 7. What is Chrisme It is a holy ointment composed of oyle and baulme by oyle is represented the strengch which we receiue by this Sacrament as souldiers of Iesus Christ by baulme is represented the effusion of all vertues by the holy Ghost into our soule which send forth a sweet odour before God and Angells as baulme doth before men wherevpon S. Paul sayeth that we are before God the sweet odour of Iesus Christ So that by this Sacrament we become perfect members of the militant Church and receiue weapons and courage to enter confidently into the battell which we are to vndergoe in this world to receiue at last an eternall crowne with Iesus Christ Which also is signified by the little blow which the Bishop giueth when he confirmeth by which signe he teacheth vs to begin to suffer with patience all the encounters that the enemies of our soule and saluation shall make against vs. 8. Why are we annoynted in our forehead when we receiue this Sacrament To let vs know that the holy Ghost is giuen vnto vs by this Sacrament to imbolden vs and to expell from vs shame and feare of professing the faith of Christ which shame and feare principally haue their seate in the forehead or countenāce of man 9. With what preparation ought we to receiue this Sacrament First we must be baptized before we receiue it Secondly we must be in the state of grace for the preparation required to all Sacraments that were instituted to conferre only an encrease of grace is to haue the first grace and so those that are in mortall sinne must first receiue the Sacrament of Pennance or at least haue an act of Contrition before they can be confirmed And the reason of it is euident for as it is impossible that a dead body should grow corporally so it is impossible that a dead soule should grow spiritually vnlesse it be first reuiued 10. Are we obliged to receiue the Sacrament of Confirmation Yes we are obliged vnder paine of sinne to seeke it and to receiue it if we can conueniently for this much at least is gathered out of the holy Fathers who say that without it we are not perfect Christians this Sacrament hauing been instituted by Christ to conferre vnto vs the plenitude of the holy Ghost and the full perfection of Baptisme Besides the seuen Sacraments hauing been instituted by Christ as certaine principall knots of Christian life his very instituting this a Sacrament obligeth vs to make vse of it for institution in a thing of such weight is equiualent to a command and so he who neglecteth to receiue it when opportunity of hauing it is giuen sinneth For it would be a strange kinde of spirituall slouth not to seeke and much more to neglect that meanes when opportunity is offered to receiue it which Christ hath purposely established in his Church to strengthen and arme vs against our spirituall enemies we being on all sides so straitly beset and infested with them during this life but especially when before persecutours and Tyrants we are obliged to make profession of our fayth 11. Wherefore is it that this Sacrament as also Baptisme and holy Order cannot be reiterated or taken againe the second time It is because besides the particular grace proper to each seuerall Sacrament these Sacraments haue also a second effect which they cause in our soules called by Diuines a Character that is a spirituall signe imprinted in our soules whereby we are knowne to belong to Christ Iesus as persons deputed to some certaine functions in his familie 12. Why do these three Sacraments conferre a Character Because by these we are put into seuerall states or vocations according to the seuerall functions whereunto we are deputed by receiuing them 13. What is a state It is an immutable or perpetuall condition of life whereby a man is solēnely deputed and obliged to some certaine acts and workes worthy his vocation which is truly to be seene in those who receiue the three mentioned Sacraments For by Baptisme we become seruants of Iesus
forbearing to communicate so frequently he findeth himselfe to decrease in vertue and in respect towards the Sacrament then he is to be exhorted to continue still his custome of communicating frequently But if he who communicateth frequently findeth himselfe still with the same imperfections without making any progresse in vertue or that his reuerence and respect towards the Sacrament is any way thereby diminished then he is to be aduised for a time to forbeare to communicate so frequently and to endeauour by workes of mortification and other spirituall exercises to rēder himselfe more worthy of so frequent accesse to that holy table vntill his Ghostly father shall iudge it conuenient for him to frequent the Sacrament as formerly 18. What communion ought to be esteemed frequent In those persons who are not subiect to the distractions of the world but haue leasure to dispose of themselues as they please and to attend to spirituall imployments it may be accounted frequent communion to communicate constantly once a weeke but in others whose vocation and condition doth tye them to worldly employments and continuall distractions I should esteeme it frequent communion though they should communicate but once in fifteene dayes or three weekes vnlesse their continuall distractions be supplied by extraordinarie vertue 19. What Sacrament followeth the holy Eucharist Pennance for when we are sicke we must first be cured of the disease it selfe before we can vse remedies to take away the relickes of it LESSON XXVII Of Pennance 1. WHat is the Sacrament of Pennance It is a Sacrament instituted by Christ for the remission of sinnes cōmitted after Baptisme whereby they that are baptized are restored againe vnto grace when by mortall sinne they haue lost the same 2. Where finde we the institution of this Sacrament In the 20. chapter of S. Iohn As my father sent me so do I send you receiue yee the holy Ghost whose sinnes yee shall pardon they shall be pardoned them and whose sinnes yee shall retaine they shall be retained 3. What is the outward and sensible signe in this Sacrament It is the confession of the sinner and the wordes of absolution pronounced by the Priest for to the end that a crime may be remitted reason requireth that one should confesse it and make the quality of the crime manifest to him who is to remit it and also that he who hath authority to remit it should pronounce the sentence of absolution after that he hath iudged concerning the nature of the crime 4. Where is grace promised to this Sacrament It is promised in these words whose sinnes yee shall pardon they shall be pardoned them for sinnes cānot be pardoned but by grace And we finde the practise of this Sacrament in the Acts where the people casting themselues at the feete of the Apostles declared the sinnes which they had committed 5. Who haue power to administer this Sacrament None but Priests who haue receiued it from God and the Church 6. What conditions are required in the Priests that administer this Sacrament They be many but for as much as ought to satisfy the Laity we may reduce them all to one that is to haue approbation and commission from the Bishop of the place to exercise that function For although besides authority or iurisdiction there is also required doctrine and intention yet he ought to be held sufficient in doctrine who hath been approued by his Bishop for such and likewise he is to be presumed to haue a reall intention to do what the Church intendeth to do by this Sacrament who hath demanded approbation to do that which the Church doeth 7. If a man be ashamed to confesse his sinnes to one priest may he make choice of an other Yes if he do declare vnto him truly the state of his conscience that is not only the sinnes he is guilty of but also whether he be accustomed to do them without amendment Howsoeuer it were better allwayes to keepe one ghostly father for otherwise he is in danger to get little profit by his confessions and so may put his saluation in hazard which dependeth mainely on the fruits of this Sacrament 8. What must we do to receiue this Sacrament First after a due examen of conscience we must confesse to a Priest approued by the Bishop all our sinnes that are mortall committed since our last confession or which we haue omitted or forgotten to declare in former confessions or if we haue not mortall ones we must confesse some veniall ones with hearty sorrow and firme purpose to endeauour to cōmit them no more and with the like purpose to do the pennance which shall be enioyned vs for satisfaction of our sinnes and so with all humility receiue absolution So that besides the absolution and imposing of pennance which are required on the Priests part three thinges are required on the penitents part to wit Contrition Confession and Satisfaction and the Sacrament doth consist of all these fiue partes CONTRITION 9. Why is Contrition necessary for this Sacrament Because this Sacrament was instituted to recouer God his grace and loue towards vs which we had lost by offending him now we see that when we haue offended one the readie way to gaine his loue againe is to repēt and acknowledge our fault this being the most naturall meanes to soder friendship vp againe when once it is broken And so we see that by nature euery noble heart perceiuing his enemy subiect vnto him taketh compassion of him and seeing him now no more the same he was thinketh meete to change likewise his course towards him 10. What is Contrition It is a sincere repentance proceeding from the motion of the holy Ghost touching our hearts which maketh vs to detest our sinnes and to conuert our selues to God For whereas by sinne a man is auerted from God by louing some vnlawfull obiect so by contrition his heart is auerted from the vnlawfull obiect formerly embraced and conuerted againe to God by louing him anew 11. How many sortes of Contrition be there It is deuided into two generall sortes the one is perfect which is absolutely called Contrition the other is imperfect which is vsually called Attrition Which difference ariseth from the seuerall degrees of conuerting our selues to God for sometimes our conuersion may be so perfect as to make vs not only forbeare our former sinfull actions and complaisance in vnlawfull obiects but also to detest them more then hell it selfe whereby through the powerfull working of God his grace in our hearts our affection towards God becometh greater then the loue of our selues and is more firmely rooted in vs then the loue of any vnlawfull obiect so that if it please God to preserue vs in this disposition we do easily afterwards ouercome any temptation be it neuer so great Sometimes againe our conuersion may be so weake as that although it be able to make vs forbeare and detest sinne for the present because it is greater then our present adhesion
acts of repentance that is austere acts of pennance with feruent deuotion thereby to abate their affection to sinne which is the cause that rendereth their purposes inefficacious and so to continue vntill it shall please God by his grace to strengthen their resolutions and to amend their life for ensuing amendement is the surest rule that either the Ghostly father or the penitent himselfe can haue to discerne whether his repentance be true and sincere or no. From whence you may gather the miserable condition of such persons who goe to cōfession but once a yeare and presently without any remorse of conscience fall againe into the same sinnes and continue so without thinking euer of mending their liues vntill the yeare be come about againe for it is to be feared that all such persons for want of a firme purpose to amend do turne the precept of the Church into an annuall sacriledge to their greater damnation CONFESSION 18. Why is Confession necessary Because it is commanded by Christ to be vsed And the conueniences of it are great first it is the most naturall easement of sinne for we see by experience that when one hath committed any foule fact secretly it loadeth his heart vntill he hath broken his minde to some one or other Secondly it is the readiest way to amendement for no man can aduise himselfe against his owne peruerse inclinations so well as an other and that an other may do it it is necessary he should know the particular quality and condition of the seuerall faults the penitent cōmitteth Thirdly there can be no repentance without humiliation of ones selfe for there is nothing more detestable in the sight of God then pride which doth alwayes accompany sinne now there can be no more efficacious meanes inuented to humble a man then confession by reason of the confusion that man hath to open his secret sinnes to an other man and to lye prostrate at the feet of one peraduenture as infirme as himselfe expecting iudgement and absotion from him 19. What is Confession It is a voluntary accusation made by à penitent of the sinnes he hath committed himselfe to a Priest capable to absolue him accompanied with griefe for hauing committed them and with a firme purpose not to commit them any more for confession is nothing worth vnlesse it be ioyned with contrition By the word voluntary we are taught that a confession made by constraint such as criminalls make before iudges by force of torment is of no value for God aboue all thinges seeketh the will of man By the word Accusation we are taught that we must say determinately that we haue done such and such a thing and not as some vse to say if I haue offended God in such or such a kinde of sinne I accuse my selfe of it for he is not esteemed to accuse himselfe of a fault who confesseth it with an if when he is certaine he hath committed it By this word also we are taught that it is supperfluous to tell any thing so in generall as some do as that you loue not God and your neighbour as you should do and such like which spendeth time to no profit for your Ghostly father knoweth that of you as well as your selfe so that he who doth not tell some thing in particular in case he can do it is not esteemed to accuse himselfe sufficiently By those vords The sinnes he hath committed himselfe we are taught that the penitent ought to confesse his sinnes with such discretion as that in accusing himselfe he accuse no body else for example if one hath committed fornication or any other sinne in company with an other he must tell the condition of the person when it is necessary to declare the nature of the sinne but he must not name him or her but contrary wise he must be warie not to say any thing whereby the person may be knowne By these words also we are taught that we must not accuse our selues of sinnes which we haue not committed so that those who through simplicity accuse themselues of all that is contained in the forme of examen of conscience set doune in their manuall do make an vnprofitable confession and offend in doing so 20. What be the conditions of Confession They be chiefly three first that it be humble with a true and submissiue acknowledgement of our fault accompanied with shame fastnesse Secondly that it be sincere that is not done for any sinister end as out of custome to do what other men do or for feare of some disgrace or punishment if they doe it not but it must be done with intention meelrey to appease the wrath of God Thirdly that it be entire that is that we do not voluntarily or through negligence conceale any mortall sinne not any circumstance that doth change the nature of the sinne and that we declare the number of euery kinde of mortall sinne and not confesse halfe to one halfe to an other 21. Which be the circumstances that do change the nature of the sinne They be reduced to six Person Place End Quantity Time and Scandall the circumstance of the person is to be declared in case of carnall sinne according to that which hath been set downe in the sixth commandement as also in other sinnes when there is a particular prohibition or when one is obliged by his profession not to commit them as if one strike a Churchman he is bound to declare that circumstance because there is a particular prohibition but if he coozen à Church-man in buying or selling he is not bound to declare the circumstance of his person In like manner if a Churchman commit murder he is bound to declare himselfe to be a Churchman be cause it is an action contrary to his profession The circumstance of place is to be declared when it is a sacred place in foure cases that is in the case of theft declared in the seuenth commandement of actuall carnall sinne of murder and of drunkennesse when they are committed in the place it selfe But he who committeth these sinnes only in thought or desire although it be in the church is not bound to declare the circumstance of the place vnlesse his desire was to accomplish his sinne in the Church for in case of such a desire although he were out of the Church when he had it he is bound to declare the circūstance of the place intended The circumstance of the end or motiue is to be declared when any action is done for some end that is a mortal I sinne in it selfe as if a man steale a sword to kill with it he committeth adubble mortall sinne Quantity though it change not the nature of his sinne is yet to be declared in theft as how much he hath stolne or in any other harme done to his neighbour how great it was Time also which belongeth properly to sinnes of desire though it change not the nature of the sinne yet men ought to declare how long they
which we haue done by concupiscence and desire of the flesh against ourselues and our owne bodies Humble and deuout praier and especially dayly meditation of our Sauiour his Passion is a medecine to heale perfectly the pride of life the contempt of godlinesse and presumption of minde which are sinnes immediately against God The giuing of almes is a medecine to heale perfectly those sinnes which are committed by couetousnesse deceipt oppressiō and vniust dealing against our neighbour Now the Scripture ioyneth for the most part these three together because one without the other two is of little value for fasting without lifting vp our minde to God by praier and without mercy to a mans neighbour is little regarded by God and his praier who will not bridle the desires of his flesh or shutteth vp his mercy from his neighbour that needeth it is not heard by God no more are almes meritorious if they want the fellowship of praier or be ioyned with surfeiting on the pleasures of the world but when all three are ioyned together they are of great force to appease the wrath of God and to purge our soules from all filthinesse And here it is to be noted that vnder fasting are contained all bodily paines and labours as watching lying vpon the ground vsing of hairecloth disciplines and the like which ought not to be vsed but with discretion and by aduise of Ghostly fathers that they may correct but not destroy the body Vnder praier are contained the praiers of others as of Priests poore Schollers poore men and such as by our liberality are procured to pray for vs. Vnder almes are contained all the workes of mercy as well corporall as spirituall all which are of great value it being vndoubtedly the most efficacious meanes to obtaine mercy at God his hands to exercise first the same ourselues vnto our neighbour 41. Which workes are those that are called the workes of Mercy They are of two kindes seuen corporall and seuen spirituall The corporall are 1. To feed the hungry 2. To giue drinke to the thirsty 3. To clothe the naked 4. To harbour the Pilgrim 5. To visit the sicke 6. To helpe the imprisoned and to redeeme captiues 7. To bury the dead The spirituall are these 1. To giue counsel to those who want it 2. To instruct the ignorant 3. To correct the sinner 4. To comfort the afflicted 5. To pardon offences 6. To suffer patiētly iniuries 7. To pray for the liuing and the dead and for those who persecute vs. And this may suffice for this mportant part of the Sacrament of Pennance which is of such weight as that the neglect of it is the chiefe cause why so few are saued whereby that sentence of our Sauiour is verified multi sunt vocati pauci vero electi and which caused S. Ambrose to say that it is easier to finde one that hath kept his first innocency of Baptisme then one that hath done conuenient pennance And therefore we ought continually to stirre ourselues vp to do worthy fruits of repentance by considering that the sufferings and paines of this life are not equall to that fault which is remitted nor to that paine which we haue deserued nor yet to that glory which is reserued for vs. Now you must know that besides this satisfaction due to God his iustice and the reparation which we owe to ourselues for the recouery of our former strength and vigour in grace there is another due to our neighbour in case that our sinne be an act of iniustice towards him which reparation is done by restitution and making him an amends for the harme done to him and the Penitent is obliged to performe this whether the Priest imposeth it or no. And you must note as well concerning sacramentall satisfaction as also the restitution to our neighbour that it is sufficient for the validity of the Sacrament that you haue truly and really an intention when you go to confession to performe these thinges and therefore if afterwards you do not performe them though you commit a new sinne and so are bound to confesse it when you goe next time to confession yet your precedent confession was valide and needs not to be repeated 42. What Sacrament is next in order to Pennance Extreme Vnction for by it we recouer our former strength after our fall and take away those languishings which the mortall disease of sinne doth leaue behinde it LESSON XXVIII Of Extreme Vnction 1. WHat is Extreme Vnction It is a Sacrament instituted by our blessed Sauiour for the sicke to blot out the relickes of their sinnes remainīg through negligence after the former Sacramēts that thereby their soules may be strengthened against the last temptatiōs and fierce assaults of the diuell and of death or else thac they may recouer their bodily health if it be expedient to their saluation 2. What are these relickes of sinne They are a kinde of weakenesse or languishing left in the soules of them who haue neglected after they haue offended God to cure themselues perfectly by pennance and to re-establish themselues firmely in the state of grace 3. What is the outward and sensible signe of this Sacrament It is the annointing the sicke person with oile 4. Where do you finde in scripture grace promised to this visible ceremony In the Epistle of S. Iames in these words Is any one sicke amōgst yee lett him call in the Priests of the church and lett them pray ouer him annointing him with oile in the name of our Lord and the praier of faith shall saue him who is sicke and our Lord will comfort him and if he be in sinnes they shall be pardoned him 5. Who are the ministers of this Sacrament None but such as are Priests 6. Are we obliged to receiue this Sacrament Yes for the reason aboue alleaged in so much that if any man lying sicke in extreme danger of death hath sufficient opportunity to procure the administration of this Sacrament he is bound to procure it 7. What preparation is necessary for this Sacrament He who receiueth it is bound to be in the state of grace for he who is sicke cannot be a conualescent vnlesse he be first cured of his disease and freed from danger of death Besides he is bound to haue a desire to receiue the Sacrament to the end for which it was instituted in case he be in his senses when it is giuen him 8. At what time is this Sacrament to be receiued Many commit great folly and errour herein driuing it of vntill their very agony and losse of senses whereby for want of more ample disposition with which in their better iudgemēt they might receiue it they loose a great part of the grace which this Sacrament might happily conferre vnto them the true time therefore to receiue this Sacrament is when the physitians shall iudge the party to be in apparent danger of approaching death that heauēly remedies being applied when humane helpes are iustly
it as a Sacrament it is necessary for euery one in particular that embraceth the state of wedlock in the Church in so much that it would be a great sinne for any Christians to cōtract a marriage without obseruing those conditiōs which are necessary to make it a Sacrament or which are required to make the administration of it lawfull and therefore diligence must be vsed before-hand to see that there be no impediment that may render the Sacrament either inualide or the reception of it vnlawfull 5. What impediments do render the Sacrament of Marriage vnlawfull They are many as for example the prohibition of the Church that is of the Bishop or of any other in his place who may vpon iust occasions forbid for a certaine space of time such or such persons to marry together As also if either person hath made a simple vow of chastity or a vow to enter into Religion or to be a Priest or not to marry 6. What impediments be they which make the Sacrament inualide and the contract of Marriage of no force They are foureteene concluded in these verses Error conditio votum cognatio crimen Cultus disparitas vis ordo ligamen honestas Si sis affinis si forte coire nequibis Si Parochi duplicis desit praesentia testis Raptaue sit mulier nec parti reddita tutae Where you must note concerning Consanguinity that the marriage is inualide if the parties be allyed to one another within foure degrees of kindred inclusiuè and the same is also of Affinity 7. What is the end of Matrimony The immediate end is corporall generation of children the remote end is their spirituall regeneration by Baptisme and proportionably their nurriture and education conformable to these two generations 8. Are then all Fathers and Mothers bound to instruct carefully their children Yes and to teach them exactly not only by words but also by example all that which cōcernes faith and Christian behauiour that they may serue God euery one according to his condition for a father ought to be in his family as the Bishop is in his Church according to S. Chrysostome and S. Augustine 9. How cometh it to passe notwithstanding that the Apostle doth preferre a single life before Marriage that marriage should haue this excellency aboue a single life as to be a Sacrament Because it is an Image of the sacred vnion betwixt Iesus Christ and his Church for as Iesus Christ is one with his Church so that they cannot be separated so is the husband inseparably one with his wife and as Iesus Christ hath loued his Church and her children so much as to dye for them so ought a husband to loue his wife and the children which God hath giuen him most perfectly and cordially Besides the state of marriage hath many burdens and therefore men haue need of a speciall grace to sustaine them which is conferred to them by this Sacrament 10. Which be the fruites and good effects that spring from the grace of this Sacrament First by the grace of this Sacrament the married people are much enabled to preserue true loue and mutuall loyalty to each other Secondly it conferreth to them grace to giue good and vertuous education to their children Thirdly it giueth strength to support with Christian courage the great and many tribulations which the Apostle assures vs that the state of marriage is subject vnto 11. What is the reason that we finde so few of these happy effects to proceed from the grace of this Sacrament but see very often the quite contrary in their place The reason is because so few dispose themselues with due preparation to receiue this Sacrament some aiming only at their owne temporall wealth or sensuall pleasure others imploying their whole industrie in meere profane thoughts as in prouiding sumptuous great cheere costly apparell and jouiall mirth scarce admitting one serious cogitation for the spirituall disposition of their soules vnto this holy Sacrament Others finally by their sinfull life and brutall sensuality do loose the grace of God and by this meanes they also frustrate both the grace and the former many good fruites of this Sacrament and are most iustly punished with the quite contrary most vnhappy effects of impatience brawling hatred and jealosy LESSON XXXI Of God his Actuall grace 1. Were the Sacraments instituted for no other end but only to produce in vs habituall or sanctifying grace Yes they were instituted also to be principall instruments for the obtaining of God his assistant actuall grace that is euery Sacrament doth obtaine from God that actuall grace for vs which shall be necessary when we are to performe those thinges for which each Sacrament was instituted 2. How is this done This is done through the vertue of sanctifying grace receiued by the Sacramēt for Sacraments haue this property that they do conferre vnto vs together with habituall grace a speciall title whereby God is ready to giue vs more abundantly his actuall assistant grace when any occasion requireth it which title is nothing else in the opinion of many but the habituall grace it selfe as conferred by the Sacraments From-whence we may gather how carefull we ought to be to preserue this habituall grace for by loosing it we loose not only the habituall grace it selfe but together with it we loose also the speciall title which we had by the Sacrament to God his assistant actuall grace and so we are depriued of the same speciall title for euer vnlesse through God his infinite mercy we do recouer againe by true repentance our former habituall grace And this is to be vnderstood in respect of our selues only for where the particular helpes obtained by the Sacrament do concerne the good of others as they do in the Sacrament of Order then though the Minister be neuer so wicked yet his functions will be valide and he himselfe oftentimes be assisted with speciall helpes or discharge his office though peraduenture not for his owne profit yet for the benefit of those he gouerneth 3. Why do you say that the Sacraments do giue vs a title to that actuall grace for which each Sacrament was instituted Because each Sacrament was instituted for a peculiar end and so euery one of them doth not conferre vnto vs a speciall title to any grace but only to that for which it was instituted for by the grace of Baptisme we obtaine those helpes from God which are necessary to ouercome the temptatiōs that occurre through the common condition of humane frailty in a more plentifull measure then ordinarie By the grace of Confirmation we obtaine those helpes which are necessary to ouercome extraordinary temptations as persecution of Tyrants and the like By the grace of the holy Eucharist we obtaine those helpes which are necessary to make vs loue God feruently and to do heroicke workes of charity By the grace of Pennance we obtaine God his assistance to produce worthy fruites of repētance By the grace of
states of life be so diuerse it happeneth out that euery man may haue examples in their owne kinde to be affected vnto and many times this maketh a greater profit by such an affinity to their owne condition then by a great deake of preaching or good counsel And so you may see what obligation there is to honour Saints and to pray vnto them towit when the Church for the cōmon good of her children presseth it then that is to be done whatsoeuer she commandeth and it is a sinne to omit it But in other occasions and at other times euery particular man as farre as he findeth need or helpe by this variety in his priuate deuotion so farre he doth very well to follow it especially if he findeth that it stirreth vp a failing deuotion in him for the end of this as of all all other pious exercices must be God himselfe and the better performing of our duty towards him 6. What thinke you of the vse of pictures and hanging of lampes before them in honour of the blessed Virgin and other Saints First as for pictures if we belieue nature and experience the vse of them in generall is very profitable and in some sort necessary in the Church of God for the instruction and spirituall profit of the faithfull First for memories sake for as often as we see pictures so often do we remember the thing painted and whether we haue need of often remēbring heauen and heauenly thinges let euen our cold and euill life beare testimony Secondly when a man saith his praiers before a picture of our Sauiour or of any Saint by addressing himselfe vnto it he maketh thereby a great apprehension of the Saint as if he himselfe were present vnto whom he praieth and by cōsequēce praieth with a greater respect and attention Thirdly it serueth for an addresse of the praier and especially if he vse any corporall gestures withall for as the ancient Christians were vsed to turne themselues to the East and the Iewes towards the Temple when they would adore God the East and Temple seruing for a determination of their action so much more when I bow or do any other reuerence or pray before a picture it is a determination of my praier or respect vnto God or vnto that Saint whose picture it is Lastly it is a helpe to him that praieth for pictures beare with them an expression oftentimes which would cost many words and workes of our memory As he who looketh on a crucifixe if he desire to represent to himselfe and fixe in his heart the wounds and passion of our blessed Sauiour he may finde a great facility and quickenesse to do it by hauing the picture before his eyes As for hanging lampes before pictures of Saints it is to represent their glory in heauen or the burning charity with which they were endued here on earth and so these and such like expressions are apt to breed a greater apprehension in men which is a meanes to make them pray the better and consequently obteine more at God his hands and therefore are allowed and recommended in the Catholike Church 7. How are we to pray to Saints By honouring them here vpon earth and by obseruing their feastes according to the order of the Church and also by reading their liues by saying such praiers to them as are approued by our Pastours and chiefely of all by imitating the vertues which they did particularly excell in 8. Are we to pray to all the Saints alike No for we ought to haue a particular deuotiō to our blessed Lady aboue all the rest because she is the Mother of God and most neare vnto him of any creature And amongst the other blessed we ought chiefely to pray to our Angell Gardien seeing that it hath euer been the constant faith of Christians that euery one hath an Angell for his gouernour for our Sauiour hath told vs that the Angells of the little ones see the face of his heauenly Father And next we are to pray to such particular Saints as we our selues make choise of to be our Patrons 9. What praier is ordinarily vsed to our blessed Lady The Aue Maria. LESSION XXXV Of the Aue Maria. 1. SAy the Aue Maria Haile Marie full of grace our Lord is with thee blessed art thou amongst all women and blessed is the fruit of thy wombe Iesus Holy Marie Mother of God pray for vs sinners now and in the houre of our death Amen 2. Who made this prayer The holy Catholike Church borrowing the words wherewith the Angel and Saint Elizabeth did salute the blessed Virgin The first words Haile full of grace our Lord is with thee blessed art thou amongst all women were spoken by the Angel Blessed is the fruit of thy wombe were spoken by Saint Elizabeth The Church hath added the other words which make the second part of the praier or rather the holy Ghost hath made the whole praier by whom all three the Angell Saint Elizabeth and the Church haue been inspired 3. Declare the first sentence of this praier Haile Marie full of grace our Lord is with thee The first word vsed by the Angell is a salutation which importeth all happinesse which one can desire for in Latin it is Aue which cometh from aueo which signifieth to desire or wish for and there is vnderstood some nowne as salutem pacem gaudium c. but none is expressed in particular because he who vseth this word wisheth to him whom he saluteth all kinde of happinesse that he himselfe will ioyne to the word and can imagine or desire Which expression was most proper from the Angel to the blessed Virgin since that the cause of his coming to her was to bring her the newes from whence all happinesse was to come both to her selfe and to the whole world The second word Marie doth signifie her person and her dignitie Her Person because it was her owne proper name giuen vnto her by the inspiration of tho holy Ghost as we may piously belieue her dignitie because it signifieth in Hebrew Mistresse or Ladie and who can be more truly Mistresse and Ladie of all thīges then she who is Mother to the Creatour of all thinges It signifieth also the sea starre and she is truly a starre that conducts all those who take her for their guide through the sea of the world into a secure hauen By the next word the Angel doth shew that she was replenished with grace and worthily is her soule declared full of graces because she had the priuiledge as it is piously belieued and taught by the Church neuer to be infected with originall sinne and most certainly neuer to commit any the least veniall actuall sinne Full of Grace because her life was a true mirrour of chastity humilitie meekenesse obedience patience faith hope charity and in fine of all vertues By those other words our Lord is with thee the Angel doth aduertise the blessed virgin of the mystery which was