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A34049 A companion to the altar, or, An help to the worthy receiving of the Lords Supper by discourses and meditations upon the whole communion office to which is added an essay upon the offices of baptism and confirmation / by Tho. Comber ... Comber, Thomas, 1645-1699. 1675 (1675) Wing C5450; ESTC R6280 319,234 511

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And though this Child cannot perform them at Present yet if it live to years of Discretion it must either do the Will and walk by the Laws of God or else it can never come to Eternal Life Math. 19.17 Wherefore as you promised they should forsake all evil before so now you engage they shall do that which is good c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clement Constit without which neither they nor you your selves can be admitted to the Kingdom of Heaven Perhaps some will say this is a hard saying and such as had rather dispute than obey and are readier to question than perform their Duty will alledge it is impossible to keep all the Commandments but it is dangerous thus to charge God d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil ho 19. Mandando imp●ssibilia non praevaricatores homines facit ●ed humiles Bern in Cant. Facere quod possis petere quod non possis monet Aug. de nat grat as if he were a hard Master who though he binds us to our whole Duty yet will not exact more than we are able and is contented if we do what we can and lament that we can do no more and pray to him to strengthen us still to do better yet withal we are obliged to do all that God requires and in strictness are Sinners for every wilful neglect The sum is that this Child is engaged to believe and live like a Son and Servant of God because it is now about to be adopted and sealed in this Holy Sacrament Which is so solemn and sacred a thing that it ought to be ushered in with this necessary and compleat Preparation SECT II. Of the Administration of Baptism §. 1. The short Prayers for Sanctification of the Child O Merciful God grant that the old Adam in this Child may be so buried c. These Prayers are the Address to this holy Laver and since the Covenant is now made it is fit the Minister should more peculiarly interceed with God for grace to perform it And these as an excellent Author notes do supply the place of the Old Exorcisms which at first seem to have been certain Divine a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril praef ad Catech. Prayers collected out of Gods word for the purifying of the Soul and the exclusion of Satan from thence In like manner these short and pious forms are made in behalf of the party baptized that he may obtain the benefits of Baptism and be secured against the Enemy The first being a Petition for Regeneration the second for Sanctification the third for Power against spiritual Enemies the fourth for encrease of Grace All which are so necessary that every one of them requires our devout joyning in them 1. The first Collect is taken out of Rom. 6.4 5 6. where the Apostle teacheth us that a principal end of Baptism is for the mortifying of the old b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophylac ad Coloss Man or old Adam that is for the destruction of Original Corruption and the extirpation of all evil concupiscence which when it is slain and buryed as it were then the new Man that is a gracious disposition doth succeed by the Spirits entring into us and as of old the Baptized Person was plunged over the head and came up again like a new Person as Jesus out of his Grave after his Resurrection so we pray according to the antient phrase c Vetus Adam in Lavacro ●otus moritur Novus cum Christo renascitur Hieron in Ruffin That the Old Adam or corrupt Nature in this Child may be mortifyed so as the new nature may appear in it That is that it may be born again in this Laver of Regeneration and not only have the guilt but the power of original Corruption taken away also 2. As the former Collect Petitions for the removing of the Cause so this for the destruction of the effects for carnal affections and inclinations to Lust Covetousness and Vain-glory do spring from Original Sin and are the Branches and Fruit of that Root of Bitterness now if these remain they will soon intice this new Souldier into the Enemies Quarter and make him lust to return to Aegypt notwithstanding all these Renuntiations wherefore we pray that the Spirit may root up these evil fruits and plant in their stead spiritual affections Heavenly desires holy purposes the Love of God c. that so it may keep its Covenant with ease and delight We pray that the Lusts of the flesh may grow weaker and weaker like the House of Saul and the Graces of the Spirit stronger and stronger like the House of David 2 Sam. 3.1 or as St. Paul speaks That the Body that is the affections of the Body may be dead as towards sin but the Spirit Life as towards Righteousness Rom. 8.10 3. The third Collect goes further and sues for spiritual strength not only that it may not be conquered but may Conquer and Triumph over those Enemies which this Child hath now defyed it seems indeed impar congressus an unequal match for a frail Man to contend with the flesh within the Devil without and the World round about him but Christ hath overcome the World John 16.33 and if we will use it he gives us grace in Baptism to subdue the Flesh and defeat the Devil who can do little when our Corruptions do not join with him d Diabolus plus confidit in adjutorio carnis quia est hostis domesticus Bern. Med. c. 4 Eva nostra caro nostra idem therefore let us take the Shield of Faith e Ephes 6.16 1 John 5.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Catech. 5. and follow our Victorious Leader so shall we be Conquerours our selves and then we may pray the more chearfully for this Infant it is now like the Israelites newly escaped out of Aegypt and will certainly be pursued but we hope it shall see all these Enemies Dead and sing a Triumphant Song over them in the Heavenly Canaan We know that humane Nature hath no such power of its own and therefore we beg it of him that is able to subdue all things to himself and O how blessed will this Child be if it be Master of its own desires and have learned to despise the World and be able to stand against all the wiles of the Devil 4. The last Collect advanceth still higher desiring that this Child and all other to whom this Salutary Rite shall be Administred may not only cease to do evil but learn to do well Isai 1.16 17. not only escape the pollutions of the World but add to their Faith Vertue 2 Peter 1.4 5. We pray that they may be indued with Grace and Heavenly Qualities Meekness and Charity Faith and Patience Temperance and Sobriety Zeal and Devotion c. so that they may obtain Eternal Life which though it be not due by the Servants Merit f Vita aeterna justitiae quidem stipendium
Pelagians denied it but they are therefore condemned by the Milevitan Council Can. 2. and confuted by St. Augustine ad Bonif. l. 3. It is confest they can shew no visible signs of spiritual life in the operations thereof no more can they of their having a rational Soul for some time and yet we know they have the power of reason within them and since all Infants are alike either all do here receive a Principle of New Life or none receive it wherefore I see no reason why we may not believe as the Antients did that Gods Grace which is dispensed according to the Capacity of the Suscipient is here given to Infants to heal their nature and that he bestoweth on them such measures of his Spirit as they can receive for the malignant effects of the first Adams sin are not larger than the free gift obtained by the second Adams righteousness Rom. 5.15.18 And if it be asked how it comes to pass then that so many Children do afterwards fall off to all impurity I answer so do too many grown Persons also and neither Infants nor Men are so regenerated in this life as absolutely to extinguish the concupiscence for the flesh still will lust against the Spirit g Baptizatus caret quidem omni peccato sed non omni malo remanet siquidem concupiscentia Aug. advers Julian Dimittitur concupiscentia carnis non ut non sit sed ut in peccatum non imputetur id de Bapt. Concup l. 1. c. 5. ad agonèm manet non consentientibus nihil omnino nocitura idem de remiss l. 2. c. 4. but then God gives the Spirit also to lust against the flesh Gal. 5. He leaves the Corruption to try and exercise us but so that he engageth to enable us to get the better through this new nature planted in us if we will improve it and follow the Dictates of his holy Spirit but by neglect or wilful complying with the flesh we may lose this grace again Our Gracious Father hath already done his part and will do it more and more as the Child shall be capable and willing to receive it and if this seem strange to any whose Opinions are taken up from later Definitions of Regeneration let them dispute with holy Cyprian not with me who saith h Eadem gratia spiritualis quae aequalitèr in Baptismo à credentibus sumitur in conversatione atque actu nostro postmodum vel minuitur vel augetur Cypr. ep 76. ad Magnum The Grace of God is equally distributed in Baptism but it may either be diminished or encreased afterward by our Acts and Conversation The sum is That Baptism doth seal a Pardon to us for all former Transgression and begets us again to the hope of Eternal Life that it restores us to the favour of God and gives us a new Relation to him and finally it heals our nature by the Spirit hereby conveyed to us and though all this be upon condition of our keeping our part of the Covenant yet that makes not Gods mercy less nor ought it to diminish any of our Praises but only it must make our Prayers at present more earnest and the Childs care hereafter more strict to make this its calling and Election sure This is I hope the sense of our Church as well as of the Primitive and if so it will not be material to a judicious Christian for any to say it doth not agree to some modern Systems The other Parts of this Exhortation we shall not need further to explain here because we mentioned them in the begining and there are no objections against them and they are all repeated in the ensuing Collect where we will speak more practically of them §. 2. Of the Lords Prayer Our Father which art in Heaven c. Whensoever we pray we are Commanded to say Our Father Luke 11.2 because whatsoever we need is comprized in that divine form and when this leads the way it prepares God to hear all the rest giving efficacy to them and supplying the defects of them But still we must apply it to the present occasion And now let us consider we could never say Our Father with respect to this Infant before whereas the whole Congregation being about to Petition for this new Member of their Society and lately adopted Child of God may fitly now say Our Father which art in Heaven and since he hath given to it and to us the Holy Name of Christian we ought to pray that this his Name may be Hallowed in our lives and that his Kingdom of Grace may be compleated by these daily accessions till the coming of his Kingdom of Glory in the mean time that all we his Earthly Children may do his will and submit to his Providence as those in Heaven ever do We must pray that God will henceforth take a Fatherly care of this Infant among the rest of his Children Giving both to it and to us our daily bread And that he will please to forgive to it its Original and to us our Actual Sin even as we are engaged in a Covenant of Charity and promised to forgive all the World as one of his prime commands Finally we must beseech him to defend both it and us from the Temptations which we have renounced that so we may not fall into the Evil of Sin or Punishment nor fall off from the Grace in which we stand All which for this new Brother of our Society which yet cannot pray for it self and also upon our own Account we must conclude with a hearty Amen §. 3. Of the last Collect. We yield thee hearty thanks most merciful Father for that it hath pleased thee c. As the foregoing Exhortation did perswade us to conclude this Office with Praises and Prayer so here the Church hath prepared an excellent form to express both and according to the method there prescribed here is First most hearty Thanksgivings for the benefits of Baptism 2. Most humble Petitions that the Party which hath received them may walk answerably 1. We begin with Acknowledgments and Praises in imitation of the Jews who when the Child is Circumcised do use to say Blessed be the Lord our God who hath sanctified us with his Precepts and commanded us to bring this Child into the Covenant of Abraham i Fagius in Deuter. 10.6 Buxtorf Synagog cap. 2. But this Child enters into a better Covenant established upon better promises so that we have more cause to bless God than they nor ought we to Question whether the Grace of the Sacrament be received or no since the Church of old did ever suppose it even in Adult Persons because they knew the Lord was ever ready on his part and had promised to be with his Church to the end of the World in this very Administration Math. 28. ult Hence in the East they sung after Baptism the 32. Psalm Blessed is he whose iniquity is forgiven c. and St.
the Phrase is frequently used by the Fathers in this Case The sum of them is to desire that whatsoever is shadowed in the Outward part and signified in Rite may in Substance and reality be fulfilled o Baptismus salutaris est si perfectum est in corde quod factum est in Corpore Augustin and that whatsoever the Scripture affirms to be the duty of all baptized Persons may be particularly performed by this Child That as this Child hath in figure imitated Christs Death and Resurrection so it may hereafter live as one dead unto sin and all the desires of it but alive unto righteousness and ready to execute all the commands thereof That as it is baptized into the Faith of Christ Crucified for Sin so it may mortifie and kill all its corrupt affections until it have utterly abolished all the powers of Lust and Concupiscence and brought the flesh in subjection to the Spirit We pray that it may not renew the guilt that is remitted nor fall back into the bondage from which it is delivered that it may not defile what God hath cleansed nor expel what he hath given but when it comes to understanding that it may make use of the Grace that is offered unto it and improve the beginings planted in it and live like one of Gods Children and one of the Society of Saints and then we are assured that it shall not only have an Interest in the merits of Christs Death but feel the power of his Resurrection and finally it self also shall rise again in the Resurrection of the Just of which this Mystery is a pledge p Baptismus itaque resurrectionis pignus est imago Ambros in Rom. 6. We do most ardently therefore desire this Infant may lead a holy life for if it live like Jesus on Earth it shall live with him in Heaven if it be an obedient Son it shall not fail of the Inheritance if it follow the steps of holy Saints it shall go whither they are gone and with them at last sing Hallelujahs in Everlasting Glory And oh what pity is it that when this Child is set in the right way thither when it is put into such a state that neither former Guilt nor future power of Sin can stop its passage if it hold fast the Grace received what pity is it I say that it should fall off and lose all again And yet too many do thus Apostatize and exchange Life for Death Liberty for Bondage and Heaven for Hell whose sad Catastrophe doth stir us up most heartily to pray that this poor Infant may never do the like but through the Continuance of the grace of God may lead the rest of its life according to this blessed beginning for Jesus sake and let all the People say Amen §. 4. The concluding Exhortation to the Sureties Forasmuch as this Child hath promised by you that are his Sureties to renounce c. The Church hath always had an especial care that this Vow of Baptism may be conscientiously performed And in regard that nothing tends more directly to the securing of Holiness and Religion here is added endeavours to our Prayers for the fulfilling thereof In the first Ages when those of riper years were Baptized the Exhortation q Alloquimur recentèr baptizatos ut animos accendamus sive ad virginalem integritatem sive ad continentiam vidualem sive ad ipsius thori conjugalis fidem Aug. de Civ dei l. 1. cap. 27. was directed to the Persons themselves and there are many excellent Tracts of the Fathers made upon that occasion But now that Children are most commonly the Subjects of Baptism who are not yet capable of Admonition here is a serious and earnest Exhortation made unto the Sureties Which if it be well considered will shew how base it is for any to undertake this Trust meerly in Complement how absurd to put little Children whose Bond is not good in humane Courts upon this weighty Office and also how ridiculous for those who have taken this duty upon them to think they can shake off this Charge again and assign it over to the Parents which are the evil Customs of this Licentious Age It is sure that if this Institution of Godfathers and Godmothers were prudently undertaken and well performed there could not be a more effectual means to repair the decay of Christian Piety and therefore it is very lamentable to behold how slightly men enter upon it and how little they do regard it afterwards For remedy whereof I wish that all Sureties would well weigh this Excellent Exhortation which contains First A review of what they have done Secondly A direction concerning what they are to do Thirdly A reason why it is so necessary that these things should be done by them 1. They have engaged for a Minor unto Almighty God the God of truth and the Judge of all Men they are become Sureties and Bondsmen r Quicunque viri quaecunque mulieres de sacro fonte filios spiritualiter exceperunt cognoscant se pro ipsis fide-jussores extitisse August de Temp. Serm. 136. for this Child unto the Majesty of Heaven and it is a hainous Crime to deal falsly with him ſ Eccles V. 2.4 Quam gravia vincula promittere Deo non solvere Ambros in Luc. 20. and he will in no wise be mocked You have undertaken that this Infant shall renounce the Devil believe in God and serve him and though the Childs wilful Apostasie doth not forfeit your Bond yet your own negligence may if you do not endeavour to instruct and amend him God knows it is not in your power to give the Childs Grace but it is in your power to teach and to admonish and if you will not do so small a matter the Child is lost through your default and it is apparent you care not what you promise to Almighty God for the least that a Bondsman can do is to call upon the Debtor to discharge what is owing nor can there be a more easie condition than that the Surety shall be free if he do but often admonish him that he is bound with to pay the Debt Consider therefore all you that are concerned what you have done and then it is easie to gather from thence what you are obliged unto 1. To teach these Children the nature of their Baptismal Vow and this was of old appointed even as to grown Persons when they had been baptized in haste in Cases of imminent danger they were to be taught afterwards what favour God had done them and what duty they owed for the same t Qui in aegritudine constituti baptismum perceperunt facti sani fidei symbolum doceantur ut noverint quâ donatione digni sunt habiti Concil Laodicen Can. 59. Much more is it necessary in the Case of Infants wherefore The Godfather or Godmother saith an antient Author ought to signifie to those whom they have received from the
to Repentance and our Monitor to prevent the like misdoings for the future But I am the briefer in this consideration because my main design tends to the Holy Sacrament And also because the Church hath here placed the Ten Commandments principally as the Rule and Measure of that Examination which St. Paul makes to be necessary before we eat thereof 1 Cor. 11.28 For the same Apostle teacheth us that by the Law is the knowledge of Sin Rom. 3.20 And experience also sheweth that there is no readier way to discover our iniquities and humble us for them than the serious application of this exact Rule to our perverse and crooked paths I shall therefore Secondly Give Directions how we may so try our ways by them as to prepare our selves for this Heavenly Feast To which purpose let it be considered that this duty of Self Examination is never so necessary as now when we purpose to receive the Holy Communion For it is but hypocrisie to seek a pardon for sins which we never perceived our selves guilty of and foolish presumption to make a Covenant before we have weighed the conditions to which we are to be obliged Until we see the number and apprehend the heinousness of our transgressions and fear the vengeance due unto us for them we are altogether unfit for the Commemoration of his Death who suffered for our offences It is the sight and sense of sin alone that will shew us what need we have of so glorious a Redeemer This will shew us our obligation to Jesus and teach us heartily to praise God for him and passionately to beg an interest in him whilest he that doth not discern his guilt nor foresee his danger is stupid and unmoved at this amazing spectacle of a bleeding languishing dying Saviour and hath no love nor no fear No tears nor no desires No relenting or indignation for what is past Nor any vows and wishes as to the time to come and shall be judged an unworthy Receiver So that if you desire comfort in benefit from or acceptance at the holy Table I charge you to be exceeding curious and diligent in this Examination The Pythagoreans and better sort of Heathens did strictly call themselves to an Account every night before they went to sleep where they had been what evil they had done or what good they had left undone And shall not they condemn those Christians who will not do the same once in a Month or three or four times in a Year especially upon so solemn an occasion and for so excellent an end as to procure a pardon sealed for all their misdemeanours The Rabbins perswade the devouter Jews to spend a whole Month together before the Feast of Expiation Buxtorf Synag Judaic c. 18. in examining all their lives assuring them that all those offences which they discover shall be forgiven them in that great day Which may more truly be applied to this Ordinance That holy Anchoret which the Patriarch of Alexandria found in the Egyptian desarts said he had imployment enough there where he had nothing else to divert him for his whole life to judge and condemn himself And shall not we be justly condemned of the Lord who think a day or two too much to be so imployed But I hope I need add no more to perswade to so good a work And therefore supposing this a sufficient Conviction to those who have any care of their Souls I shall proceed to direct how we must examine our selves by these Commandments § 5. When the Minister gives warning of an approaching Communion We must contrive to have at least one whole day separated to this so necessary Trying and judging our selves And first As this Law was given in the Wilderness Exod. 19.1 So we cannot use it in a crowd but when we purpose thus to apply it we must retire from the World and lay aside all secular business h Secessi de populo in me unicum negotium est mihi Tertul. de pall c. 5. Psal 4.4 and carry our minds with us into some place of privacy that we may wholly attend this great work which will take up our whole time and imploy all our faculties For we communicate so seldom and generally live so carelesly between one time and another that our Sins are numerous our Consciences intricate and many things forgotten and all confused So that it is not for us to alledge that the Primitive Christians did not use such solemnity of Preparation For they lived strictly received daily or weekly and kept their Souls always in good Order For which cause I suppose neither were the Commandments appointed to be read in the Antient Liturgies Did we lead such lives we might be accepted with lesser and shorter preparatives But most of our hearts will tell us the case with us is far otherwise Secondly Having thus chosen a time and place for the undisturbed proceeding in this grand affair we must resolve to spend it Fasting Dan. 9.3 not only that we may not be diverted or lose any of this precious time by our meat but that our minds may be more spiritual and more clear our body more gentle and more at the command of the Spirit i Infirmitas carnis vigorem mentis exacuit ut affectis artubus vires corporum in virtutes transferantur animorum Salv. lib. 1. de prov that our hearts may be tender and more apt to grieve for Sin and fear Gods wrath as also that we may punish our flesh for the gratifying of which most of our Sins have been committed that we may acknowledge our selves unworthy of our daily bread And finally declare that we desire peace with God more than our very food and do so earnestly hunger and thirst after Jesus that we forget our bodily sustenance Thirdly Begin this work with humble and hearty Prayer to him that sees your heart and must be your Judge Beseech him to help you to prevent his judgment by condemning your selves Desire him to fix your thoughts strengthen your memory and to work upon your affections that you may perceive how often how heinously and how long time you have offended and may with a relenting wounded heart bewail the same Fourthly After this rise up and meditate how merciful thy God hath been in not summoning thee to his Tribunal as yet and in giving thee this opportunity to prevent a sad and final Doom Remember thy heart is deceitful and not willing to see its own baseness or to discover its own shame nor apt to censure it self k Prov. 21.2 Nemo non benignus sui judex Sen. de ben l. 2. Nemo suae mentis motus non astimat aequos Quòdque volunt homines se bene velle putant aright And yet cursed are they that do this work of the Lord deceitfully Jer. 48.10 for it will be their own ruine Wherefore resolve to set about it with all possible sincerity and strictness as believing thou mayest never
blessed to us to approach the terror is not to affright us from this Heavenly Feast but from impenitence and an angry spirit which turn this food of life into very poison § 11. There●ore if any of you be a Blasphemer of God an hinderer or slanderer of his Word an Adulterer or be in Malice or Envy or in any other grievous Crimes Repent you of your sins or else come not to that holy Table lest after the taking of that holy Sacrament the Devil enter into you as he entred into Judas and fill you full of all iniquities and b●ing you to destruction both of Body and Soul The first Ages of Christianity considered how positively our Saviour had forbidden us to give that which is holy to the malicious and to cast this Pearl as they interpreted it of the Lords Body to those that wallow in Swinish pleasures Math. 7.6 and observed how plainly St. Paul had described the danger of such if they should receive it 1 Cor. 11.29 Wherefore they did very strictly forbid all such to approach these Mysteries and by Canons of Councils and the Sentence of Excommunication did keep back all notorious sinners And if any such presumed to come the Jewish Priests did not more zealously oppose the Kings offering Incense 2 Chron. 26.17 than the Christian Bishops did the prophane accesses even of the Emperours themselves to whom in all things else they submitted Thus was Philippus the Emperour placed among the Poenitentes before he might be Communicated a Euseb hist Eccles l. 6 cap. 25. Anno 246. And Theodosius was resolutely kept back by the famous St. Ambrose b Theodor. in hist Tripa●titâ l. 9. c. 30. till he had bitterly lamented the slaughter of the Thessalonians St. Chrysostome also protested he would dye rather than Administer this Sacrament to the Unworthy But besides all this when the Celebration was to begin then did the Deacon stand up and proclaim that all unbaptized Infidels Hereticks c. c Nullus Catechumenus nullus auditor nullus infidelis nullus haereticus Qui primam orationem perfecistis Discedite pueros Recipite Matres Ne Quis contra aliquem Const Apost should depart and none to stay that had any quarrel nor any to come in Hypocrisie which custom is imitated by our Church in this Denunciation wherein we most plainly shew obstinate sinners their danger as St. Peter did to Simon Magus Acts 8.21 22 23. we appeal to their own Consciences charging them to examine faithfully and if they find themselves guilty we warn them as they love their Souls not to come till they have repented We do not finally bid them not to come at all but only to stay till they have repented because it may be useful as St. Augustine notes for such notorious offenders to stay till another Communion and to meditate that their being excluded here on Earth whilst others enter in to have Communion with Christ is the sad Emblem of that Day when if they do not now repent they shall see many holy Persons go in and sit down with Abraham c. in the Kingdom of God while they themselves are cast out So that whether by Excommunication or by this Warning they are excluded for the present it is the Ministers love to them and is intended only for their Souls health d Quid prodest non ejici è coetu piorum nam ejici remedium est gradus ad recuperandam sanitatem ejectionem meruisse summa malorum est Cypr. de dupl Martyr to bring them to repentance that they may be fit against another opportunity As to the sins enumerated they are the most scandalous and heinous both against God and Man viz. Swearing and Blasphemy Opposing or despising Gods Word Adultery and Fornication Malice and Envy with other grievous Crimes such as Murder or Theft Drunkenness or Oppression of which whosoever is guilty St. Paul affirms they shall not enter into the Kingdom of God 1 Cor. 6.9 10. and therefore how can they be received to this Holy Table It were easie to shew out of Tertullian St. Cyprian and the ancient Councils that every one of these offenders were of old rejected and not suffered ever to come into these Mysteries unless upon a very great Repentance and publick humiliation after five or seven years separation Which pious Custom did make very much for the honour of this Sacrament and for the bringing such to repentance that so they might escape everlasting vengeance The very Heathens would not offer their Sacrifice until the Herald had warned all unhallowed persons to depart nor might the Sacrificer proceed till he were assured there were none present but such as were duly prepared e Hostis Vinctus Mulier Virgo Exesto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Stuckius Apud Graecos Sacerdos quaerit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Resp populi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sard. de Mor. Gent. l. 3. c. 15. Have we not then much more reason to enjoin the absence of all wicked wretches from this Heavenly Mystery And yet we imitate our Master herein who did not by force drive out the Jews John 8. but set their own Conscience upon them Even so f Nos à Communione quenquam prohibere non possumus nisi aut sponte confessum aut in aliquo judicio Ecclesiastico vel seculari nominatum atque convictum Aug. Homil. 50. we violently cast out none unless publick and convicted Criminals But we appeal to every Mans Conscience and set before them the danger of coming with wicked purposes for so they imitate Judas who notwithstanding that plain Caution Math. 26.24 sat down with a heart full of Treachery and Covetousness John 13.26 27. but instead of being a partaker of Christ Satan did enter into him and confirmed his wicked purposes so that he came to destruction of Body and Soul Repent therefore Oh you prophane Wretches being warned by so terrible an Example or else your judgment is inevitable for if you continue in these damnable sins you die and if you think to find favour by laying hold of Christs Body you are mistaken g Jerem. 11.15 Nunquid carnes Sanctae auferent à te malitias tuas Vulg. Lat. Vide Math. 12.45 Heb. 10.26 for you prophane the mystery violate Gods Covenant trample on the Blood of Christ to which you have no right so long as you live in open defiance to his Laws and if you will come thus you give Satan more power over you both to corrupt you and to ruine you yet if you stay away you cannot escape unless you do repent and if you would do that after a while you might be received However we have delivered our Souls by giving you this warning do not you cast away yours by despising it § 12. And because it is requisite that no man should come to the Holy Communion but with a full trust in Gods Mercy and with a quiet Conscience therefore if there be any of you
thus offendeth Secondly For the sins of our Words which are the superfluous scum of an evil heart running over out of the mouth p Math. 12.34 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 S. James 1.21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Alas how many lies and slanders Oaths and Curses boasting flattering and filthy speeches proceed thence Beside infinite and innumerable vain words q 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quod fine utilitate loquentis dicitur audientis S. Hieron all which the Jewish Doctors say shall be noted in a Table to be produced and read before us in the hour of Death r Vajikra Rab. Sect. 26. And a greater than they saith we shall give an account for them in the day of Judgment Math. 12.34 Thirdly For our Deeds of Wickedness all which are open to God and our Consciences and many of them publick and notorious to the World By these we have done great dishonour to God brought much of scandal on Religion and done real injury to our Neighbours Let us therefore reflect upon all this and consider that we have offended in all these kinds and whereas we should have glorified God in our Hearts with our Lips and by our Lives we have sinned 〈…〉 ●ry one of these ways that is as many 〈…〉 ar● capable of sinning against the Divine 〈…〉 ●nd that our Confession may be more humble and passionate let us further meditate of the dreadful effects of such and so many Sins St. Paul informs us they produce in God Indignation and Wrath against us Rom. 2.8 And oh how terrible a thought it is to think that God is angry with us this makes the Spirits of darkness tremble and melts the heart of an ingenuous Christian into tears and mourning But it may be we fancy as Basilides of old that God will see no sin in us or being so merciful however will not be so much incensed at us and so we shall confess with Agags vain Confidence 1 Sam. 15.32 that the danger of death is past Oh take heed When God hath said that he hates all iniquity and vowed yea sworn that he will punish it what madness and presumption is it to think he is not just or not serious This is so vain and so impudent that it adds one greater to all the former sins ſ Nemini itaque facilis sua causa fit nullus difficiliùs evadit quam qui se evasurum praesumpserit S. Salvian and thus to hope against sense and reason and the truth of God hath been the ruine of thousands The Church therefore will have us to acknowledge that we have deserved the wrath of God yet not as the Athenians who obliged the Malefactor convicted by Law to confess himself worthy of Death that they might ground the sentence upon his own words but that God may upon our free acknowledgment most freely acquit us for Jesus sake If we believe we have merited the indignation of the Almighty we shall fear it and if we fear it we shall strive to escape it and so we shall never feel it t Hoc metueret conscientia nostra si crederet si autem crederet caveret si caveret evaderet Cypr. de un Eccl. And thus the Divine Anger may bring us to Repentance and become the Instrument of our Pardon u Indignatio ejus non est ultionis executio sed magis est absolutionis operatio Tertul. in Marc. Consider how great a miracle of Patience it is that God hath not begun with us how miserable we shall be if ever we fall into his avenging hands and how great a mercy it is that he is pleased to try us now once more And if either his love can draw us or our own danger drive us by repentance into the Arms of his Mercy we may yet be saved and his name glorified in our deliverance § 6. We do earnestly repent and are heartily sorry for these our misdoings the remembrance of them is grievous unto us the burden of them is intolerable In pursuance of our first general affirmation we did before acknowledge and now we do bewail our manifold sins That is the first and this the second part of every just Confession and surely when we have owned the facts to be so many and so abominable we cannot but be exceedingly grieved for them the boldest Sinners being hardly so confident when their crimes are discovered to say they do not repent of them and therefore our hearts must be moved with those passions which our mouths do here express in so many and dolorous terms First We must repent most seriously and fervently w Earnestly Graeca Vers Lit. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nota verba duplicata in Hebr. passionem exprimentia Nostrates reddunt earnestly Job 7.2 c. Jerem. 31.20 I do earnestly or passionately remember him still having indignation against our selves that ever we did commit them and wishing again and again they had never been done Secondly We must be heartily sorry for them and if possible we must testifie the real Passion which we feel by our tears Bassianus could never look upon the Picture of his Brother Geta whom he had slain but he wept as Ael Spartianus reports and can we with dry Eyes behold Christ Crucified for our Sins We do not read saith St. Ambrose what Peter said but we do read that he wept bitterly and there was a mighty Oratory in those tears x Interdum lachrymae pondera vocis habent Ovid. 3. de Pont. El. 1. yet if our temper be not apt to express it self in tears we must be truly sorry and sometimes the heart may bleed when the Eyes shed not one drop Thirdly We must look back upon them with a sad Remembrance we acted them rashly in the hurry of a Temptation not discerning the evil or the danger of them but now that we soberly view the guilt the shame and the misery following upon them the remembrance of them is grievous to us as the murther of Clitus was to the Grecian Conqueror when his Wine was gone and his reason returned for then he was like to have done violence to himself for so base an Act. Alas we have grieved our dear Father in committing them and the recollecting of that must be as grievous to us as the acting of them was to him Fourthly We must feel the heavy burden of them y Nullum onus graviùs est quam sarcina peccatorum pondus flagitiorum Amb. Ep. 18. In the day of our madness we never felt the strokes nor discerned the load but now that we discover our condition the grief the shame and the fear do even sink us with the mighty pressure Our Souls are greatly vexed they go stooping and bowed down Baruch 2.18 they are a sore burthen too heavy for us to bear Psal 38.4 and in this distress we pray with the Greek Church z 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Liturg. Eccles Graecae O Lord stretch out thy
the Tenth concerning the Virgin Mary not till the year 1095. But our prudent Reformers have retained only five of the most ancient which are concerning the principal Acts of Christ His Incarnation Resurrection Ascension and sending of the Holy Ghost all which we may very properly bless God for over this Commemoration of his Passion because they are either the Precedents to his Death or the consequents thereof only that of the Holy Trinity is added both as it is a fundamental Article of our Faith and a great mystery and because many Sundays are reckoned by it Now for the use of these we must note that as the greater Feasts of the Jews continued seven or eight days so these Prefaces are to be repeated some days after the great day to which they principally belong both that the mercy may be better remembred by often repetition and also that all the people who in many places cannot Communicate in one day may join in praising God for it Which being the great end of them the best method to promote that and fit the receivers with peculiar praises for these solemnities will be to ground a devout Meditation upon every one of these Prefaces proper for those who do partake of the mysteries at any of these Times A Meditation for the Communion at Christmas § 9. Welcome thrice blessed Day the desire of all Nations whose distant glories made the Father of the faithful to rejoice and whose approaches fill'd the World with wonder and expectation thou wert ushered in with Angelick Hymns and celebrated ever since with Anthems of praise because thou didst bring forth joy and a Redeemer to Mankind Happy am I that I have a Sacrifice of Thanksgiving in my hand to express the delight which my heart doth feel This holy Table is the Altar upon which I offer my acknowledgments for all mercies and oh how many how great are those which this day brings to my remembrance so infinite they cannot be expressed and yet so excellent they must not be forgotten This day hath reconciled Heaven and Earth and made contradictions friends to find a way to help us as if nothing might disagree when man was at peace with God O my Soul summon all thy powers to admire and worship for all is Miracle and the height of Wonder Eternity begins to be the Maker of all is made himself an infinite Majesty is shrunk into the dimensions of a span The word is made flesh and God becomes Man yet remains God still Here is a Mother who knew no man a Son that had no Father on Earth a Child of Adam untainted with the Cantagion that infects all his Posterity an Infant honoured with a new and glorious Star adored by Kings worshipped by Angels yet born in the condition of the meanest fortune All hail sweetest Saviour how lovely is thy condescension how honourable thy abasement thou hast more splendor in the Rags of thy Humility than all the Grandeurs of this World could give thee thou art more a King because thou wouldst be like a slave for our sakes and conquerest more hearts by thy stupendious love and unparallel'd self-denyal O how shall I celebrate this great Solemnity wherewithal shall I set forth my gratitude for this most auspicious Day I will receive the Cup of Salvation and with ravishments of delight feast upon that precious Body and Blood which Jesus did this day assume for me It is not enough dearest Lord that thou wast born for me unless thou art also born again in me and as it were become incarnate in my heart In thy Birth thou wast made one with us thou didst put on flesh and wert a partaker of our humanity And thou hast appointed this holy Sacrament that I might be one with thee be replenished with thy Spirit and a partaker of thy divine nature Nor is it any incongruity if I remember thy Passion and praise thee for thy Incarnation at once for as soon as thou wast born thou didst begin to die and the life which was here begun compared to that glorious life which thou didst leave was it self a very Death but therefore thou wast born that thou mightest be capable to suffer that death for us which thy Divinity could not feel and thus thy Nativity was the first Scene of thy Passion for it introduced thy Death and that effected our Salvation so that I will remember both together For in both thou hast most admirably humbled thy self to the depth of misery and yet I doubt not but thou wouldst have stooped lower if it had been either necessary or possible But there needs no more testimonies of thy love Blessed Jesus I am already overwhelmed with these which are so strange and undeserved so sweet and ravishing that my Soul could not contain if it did not vent it self in thy Praises Therefore with Angels c. A Meditation for the Communion at Easter § 10. O my soul adorn thy self with the garments of gladness prepare thy most triumphant Hymns to go forth and meet this great returning Conqueror Thou didst rejoice when he was pleased to undertake the Combate and didst celebrate his entrance into the lists with Praises how then will it ravish thee to behold him come off with such success and honour His warfare is now accomplished and he hath passed through the scorn and cruelty of Men the malice and rage of Devils the just but severe anger of God yea the shaddow of Death and the Regions of Eternal horror and after all this thy Surety is set at liberty for he hath paid all thy Debts and cancelled all those dismal Bonds by which thou wert forfeited to eternal Ruine Thy Champion is Victorious and as the Trophees of his Conquest he hath the Keys of Death and Hell and leads them both in triumph vanquished and disarmed Blessed be he that cometh in the name of the Lord We receive thee dearest Saviour as born to us a second time and this shall be thy Birth-day also the Nativity though not of our Emperor yet of thy Empire thy Restauration to a state of immortality Thy former Birth did shew thee to be the Son of Man but this declares thee to be the Son of God and now we know that our Redeemer liveth he that loved us so infinitely as to dye for us doth now ever live to interceed on our behalf he that expressed such kindness to us in his Passion hath so fully demonstrated his own Power in his Resurrection that we are sure he is as able as willing to deliver us Let the Heavens rejoice and the Earth be glad for this is the Day that the Lord hath made a day to be had in everlasting remembrance a Time destined to jubilee and rejoicing Behold how nature is raising it self from the grave of Winter and seems annually to celebrate the memory of her Lords Resurrection in her green and fresh attire A season chosen by God for Festival 3000. years ago and observed
ever since by Jews or Christians or both with the greatest solemnity See how those blinded Jews rejoice over their Paschal Lamb in the midst of all their Calamities for the deliverance of their Fathers But we have a nobler Passover for a greater deliverance Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us therefore let us keep the Feast and that upon the precious Body and Blood of the Lamb of God who was slain but is alive again and behold he lives for evermore Wherefore I will go to thy Altar with joy and tell out thy works with gladness O most mighty Saviour who hast not only died for my sins but risen again for my Justification and indeed what comfort could I have found in this memorial of thy Death if it had not been for thy Resurrection this Sacrament would have only remembred thy sufferings and renewed my sorrow to think that so excellent a Person had perished in the attempt of my deliverance but now it is become a Feast of joy because it is an assurance of thy Resurrection as well as a Commemoration of thy Passion And since thou livest sweetest Jesus we live also thy Resurrection raiseth our hearts from sad despair it gives a new life to our hopes it makes our sorrows light our labours easie our lives chearful and our death advantage because it hath lost its sting and is become the gate into immortality We can charm all our fears and troubles with this one word The Lord is risen yea the Lord is risen indeed For thou hast washed us in thy own blood and made us Kings and Priests to God to offer up at this thy Altar never-ceasing Praises Therefore with Angels c. A Meditation for the Communion on Ascension-Day § 11. I see O merciful Jesus thou art content for our sakes to stay here upon Earth when Heaven longs for thy return thou hast these fourty days denied thy self the full fruition of thy glories to dispel the sorrow and confirm the Faith of thy Disciples and yet at last their tears and embraces shew how loth they are to depart from thee But behold the day of thy Triumph is come and the holy Myriads are sent to wait upon thee the Heavenly Singers that go before cry Open your selves ye everlasting doors that the King of Glory may come in to whom the Angels which come out to meet him answer in extasies of amazement Who is the King of Glory and all the Chorus that follow after reply Even the Lord of Hosts he is the King of Glory and thus with hymns and joyful acclamations is Jesus welcomed to his antient and most glorious Throne And now O my soul why standest thou gazing into Heaven he is too high to be discerned too bright to be seen with mortal Eyes since Cherubins are dazled at his splendor He is gone to his proper place and ascended thither whither thy desires carry thee and where ere long thou shalt see him face to face Thou standest like Elisha looking after him and lamenting thy Masters departure but he hath left his Mantle behind him even the mysteries of this holy Sacrament which to thy Faith is the flesh which he was cloathed with all and is designed to convey a double portion of his spirit unto thee so that it appears he hath left his Love with us when his Person was taken from us Away then with these sighs and tears lament no longer the absence of thy Lord for he is in this Blessed Feast he is here in his comforts and graces here in his merits and his love and his spirit can Minister the same benefits hereby which his personal presence would have given thee Go then with all possible speed and taste of this Heavenly Provision delight in it above all the sweetnesses in the World because it contains so many pledges and emblems of thy glorious Redeemers love when thou beholdest him that is thy head so advanced make haste to unite thy self nearer to him by partaking of his Body and Blood that thou maist finally reign with him in the mean time raise up thy thoughts above this lower World declare thy desire to be with Jesus send thy heart before and protest if he had not left thee some little tastes of his sweetness in the repast of this holy Table by the way thou couldst not have endured so long without him There is nothing which he loves comparable with his Throne in Heaven unless it be an humble and thankful heart into which I am about to receive him and as the Coelestial Quire welcomed him thither so will I receive him with joy into my poor Soul Therefore with Angels c. A Meditation for the Communion on Whit-Sunday § 12. I will go to thy Altar O Lord with a New-Sacrifice of Praise because thou hast given me a fresh instance of thy Love this day thou art slow to punish thy Enemies but speedy to comfort thy servants for no sooner was thy misery changed into glory but we received the greatest demonstration of thy affections no sooner didst thou put on thy Crown in Heaven but the Earth felt the bounty of thy Dispensations for it was not possible for thee sweetest Jesus to let thy promise remain long unperformed or the sad expectations of thy Disciples unsatisfied Being assembled therefore this Day with one heart in one place they are suddenly surprized with wonder and inspired with a Heavenly Power such as they had never felt before vigorous as a mighty wind chearing as the morning light inflaming their hearts with zeal and filling their mouths with Anthems indited in the languages of all the World Oh wonderful change their ignorance is turned into learning their mistakes into infallibility their fear into courage their weakness into strength their sorrow into joy and they in a moment made able to confound the Arts and conquer the oppositions of the Heathen World and maugre all the devices of Satan to set up the Kingdom of the Lord Christ And shall not we praise thee for these miraculous dispensations by which the Gospel was made known even to us in these utmost corners and last of times Yes holy Jesus we will also meet with one accord at thy Table not doubting but thou wouldst give us the same measures of thy spirit there if our duty or our necessity did require it it is enough to us that thou knowest our needs more than will supply them we dare not ask less thou wilt not give Thou hast given us thy self wherefore we believe thou wilt not deny us thy spirit without which we can have no interest in thee nor benefit from thee We come not gracious Lord with the carnal Jews to devour thy flesh but to partake of thy spirit which only giveth life the flesh profiteth nothing Behold thy Spirit hath converted Millions let me therefore together with thy precious Body receive here such proportions of thy holy spirit as may suppress my evil affections revive my dead heart comfort
my dejected mind and turn my ignorance into knowledge my knowledge into practice and make that practice so sweet and easie that this may be a day of joy to me also solemnized in the white garments of sanctification and rejoicing And finally let not this Heavenly Inspiration be only expressed in extasies and holy fervors this day but let thy spirit rest upon me and dwell in me for ever So shall I always have cause to bless thee for so incomparable a gift Methinks I feel already the force thereof bearing down my corruptions and its bright beams driving away the mists of sin and error I find its flames warming my heart with Zeal and Charity and its quickning power opening my sealed lips to shew forth thy praise Therefore with Angels c. A Meditation for the Communion on Trinity-Sunday § 13. O admirable mystery to be adored in the profoundest silence by the contemplation whereof when I am struck with amazement I can learn humility and discover my own ignorance and I have the opportunity of exercising a nobler Faith than if I could comprehend it with my shallow reasonings and imperfect demonstrations The Trinity in Vnity and the Vnity in Trinity hath been derided by the Heathens and endeavoured to be perplexed by the wits of all kinds of Hereticks but it sufficeth me blessed Jesus that thou hast revealed it and thy Holy Church divided in too many other things hath universally agreed in this great Truth And I am the more confirmed in it because I learn by it to worship with a regular devotion from hence I am taught to pray to the Father in the name of the Son through the assistance of the Holy Ghost and as long as I live will I praise thee and magnifie thee in this manner I will bless thee particularly at this holy feast for so excellent a revelation for this Ordinance it self contains many things above my understanding and is all mystery The Trinity is the Article and this Sacrament the Rite which do distinguish thy true Religion from all the Sects in the World wherefore by observing this Rite I do embrace this Faith and upon the representation of thy death I do profess to live in it and die for it resolving never to have other Lord And when I find the Father giving the Son given and the Holy Ghost dispensing that gift unto my Soul in this sacred Communion it shall be a greater confirmation to my Faith in this Divine Mystery than can be acquired from the most curious search into it However I am resolved my Reason shall vail to thy Word and I will be content to stay for a full apprehension of this sublime Truth till I am advanced to a state of Angelick Perfection and come to behold the glories of the Trin-une God till then I will bless thee for what I know and believe more than I can conceive and I will worship the same Majesty which the Heavenly Quire doth in these addresses Therefore with Angels c. PARTITION III. Of the Celebration SECT I. Of the Address § 1. THE nearer we approach to these mysteries the greater reverence we must express The very Heathen could say men should be always best when they came to the Gods a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pythag. ap Plur. de superstit and therefore so much better by how much they come nearer Our late rejoicing might savour of too much confidence if it were not allayed with this Act of humility which is the immediate Address to this holy Feast There is somewhat agreeable to this some Apology or acknowledgment in all antient Liturgies but that of St. James comes the nearest to this of ours I come to this divine and supercoelestial mystery unworthy indeed but relying on thy goodness And afterwards Turn not away from us sinners who are celebrating this dreadful and unbloody Sacrifice for we trust not in our own righteousness but in thy bountiful mercy c. But in none so fully as in this present form can the devout Soul express its sense of its own unworthiness and its desires to taste of this Heavenly Banquet as by our usual method will be more clearly manifested The Analysis of the Address Sect. 2. The Address hath two Parts 1. An Apology for this our approach shewing 1. The ground thereof 1. Negatively We do not presume to come to this thy Table O merciful Lord trusting in our own righteousness 2. Affirmatively But in thy manifold and great mercies 2. The persons coming We are not worthy so much as to gather up the Crumbs under thy Table 3. What he is to whom we come But thou art the same Lord whose property is always to have mercy 2. A Prayer for a blessing upon it noting 1. To whom we pray Grant us therefore gracious Lord 2. What we pray for so to eat the flesh of thy dear Son Iesus Christ and to drink his blood 3. For what end 1. A present advantage by the 1. Cleansing of our Bodies that our sinful bodies may be made clean by his Body 2. Purifying of our Souls and our Souls washed through his most precious blood 2. A continual benefit by an inseparable U●ion And that we may evermore dwell in him and he in us Amen A Practical Discourse upon the Address § 3. We do not presume to come to this thy Table O merciful Lord trusting in our own righteousness but in thy manifold and great mercies When Josephs Brethren were invited to his House they durst not enter till they had made their Apology at the door because they esteemed themselves both criminal and unworthy Gen. 43.20 How then shall we that are greater offenders and more unworthy presume to sit down at the Table of the King of Kings before we have expressed our reverence and humility It is his goodness indeed to do us this honour but then it is at least our duty to be so just as to confess it is a free and undeserved favour agreeing rather to the nobleness of the giver than to the deserts of the Receivers b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysos Now how can we better declare this than in the words of that favourite of Heaven Dan. 9.23 the Prophet Daniel whose Prayer was heard before it was finished because he presented it not trusting in his own Righteousness but in Gods manifold and great mercies Dan. 9.18 And that we may speak these words with the same sincerity and make these addresses with the same sense of our own unworthiness Let us consider 1. How dangerous it is to come to this Holy Sacrament with a proud heart For Pride is foolish c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theodoret. therap ser 1. and unreasonable in it self dishonourable and injurious to God offensive and troublesome to our Brethren hardening and mischievous to our selves and especially it is most odious and contrary to our Lord Jesus whose humility we are here to remember Solomon accounts it an uncomely
Blessed Sacrament on purpose to purifie us and unite us unto our dear Redeemer Why then do we stand looking one upon another Gen. 42.1 and not rather look up to him that only can help us all will not our own necessities open our mouths nor his tender mercies incourage us to call upon him to give us grace that we may eat and live We do intend to eat but we had better not eat at all than not eat So k 1 Cor. 11.28 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So let him eat Psal 26.6 So will I compass c. as God requires and So as to be bettered thereby Now to the pure all things are pure but unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure Titus 1.15 In vain therefore should we desire in the following Prayer of Consecration that these Elements should become the body and blood of Christ if we did not first pray that we might worthily receive them There must be a change in us or else though Christs natural flesh and blood were here and we should eat and drink thereof every day we could not partake of Christ l Qui discordat à Christo nec carnem ejus manducat nec sanguinem bibit etiamsi tantae rei sacramentum quotidiè indifferentèr accipiat Prosp sent 341. It is our eating with Faith and penitence love and holy purposes that makes it to be Christs body and blood to us most wisely therefore hath the Church ordered that before we pray for the Consecration of the Symbols we should desire to be Consecrated our selves Thus St. Ambrose in that Prayer said to be used by him before he Communicated saith O holy Bread which camest down from Heaven and givest life to the World come into my heart and cleanse me from all defilements of flesh and spirit enter into my Soul heal and sanctifie me within and without Let us consider the spots and stains the foulness and diseases with which our bodies and Souls are overspread and then behold this salutary and living Manna which hath power to restore us to an excellent purity and to make us amiable in the Eyes of God and then we shall heartily put up this Petition we shall hunger and thirst after it groan and long for it m Famelicus accedo ne recedam impastus si antequam comedam suspiro da vel post suspiria ut comedam August Med. c. 39. as it is reported St. Catherine was wont to do with the same passion that the Child doth for the Breast of its Mother Let us come then with most ardent desires and summon up all our Powers now the Angel is so near who makes our Bethesda Medicinal let us passionately cry out and say Lord hast thou set open this Fountain and wilt thou let a wretched Creature die for thirst in thy presence hast thou prepared such balm to heal me and shall I languish here before thee I know if thou wilt thou canst make me clean here is the very instrument in thy hand Grant therefore holy Jesus that I may duly apply it and rightly use it and then it shall prepare me for thee and unite me to thee by such inseparable Bonds as shall never break unless Eternity can have an end Blessed are they that So eat thy flesh and So drink thy blood So as thou requirest and So as thy Saints of old have done for they have been cleansed at this Fountain and here their Vnion with thee first began Oh happy season Excellent opportunity Lord let me do it well this once and I am thine for ever Amen The Paraphrase of the Address § 6. Holy God! thou mightest justly wonder to see so many grievous Sinners daring to come so near but We do not impudently rush upon these dreadful mysteries nor do we presume to come to this thy Table where Angels do attend as if we deserved this Honour O merciful Lord We do not approach trusting in our own Righteousness for alas we have done nothing which can bear that name but that which drew us hither was our confidence in thy manifold and great mercies which exceed our manifold and great offences And now that we are before thee we must still confess whatever favours thy goodness heaps upon us that we are not worthy by reason of our sinfulness and backslidings so much as with the Dogs to gather up the Crumbs which fall under thy Table not fit to receive the least mercies or measures of grace from thee much less to sit as guests before thy Majesty at this Heavenly Feast But yet we make bold to do this because thou art not to be changed by our sins being ever the same Lord whose property is to be unwearied with well-doing and never wanting in pity and thou art wont always to have mercy on those who confess their offences as we have done Grant unto us therefore gracious Lord by the present assistance of thy holy Spirit so to eat the flesh of thy dear Son Iesus Christ spiritually in this Sacrament and so to drink his blood as that we may receive all the benefits of his Cross and Passion even that our sinful and defiled bodies may be made clean by his holy and immaculate body and our Souls which are polluted in every faculty washed through his most precious blood which taketh away the sins of the World Let us be so wholly purifyed that we may now begin to be inseparably united to Jesus and that we by Faith may evermore dwell in him abiding in his love and that by his spirit he may dwell in us always Amen SECT II. Of the Prayer of Consecration § 1. AFter all this Preparation we need not ask with Isaac Gen. 22.7 where is the Lamb for the Burnt-Offering for God hath provided his own dear Son whose blood being already spilt is so efficacious and all-sufficient that there is now no need of any other but this unbloody Sacrifice a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril cat Myst 5. incruentam oblationem Liturg. 5. Marci sacrificium absque sanguine Liturg. S. Basil to be offered and that in memorial of that great Sin-offering which taketh away the sins of the World 1 Pet. 2.5 And for this purpose Christ himself hath b Ille mirabilem quandam victimam pro nostra omnium salute obtulit memoriam nobis tradens loco sacrificii continuo offerendam Euseb praep Evang. l. 1. c. 10. appointed these Creatures of Bread and Wine ordaining that because they are designed to express so great a Mystery they shall have a peculiar Consecration The antient Greeks and Romans would not taste of their ordinary Meat and Drink till they had hallowed it by giving the first parts thereof to their Gods c Romani Graeci in convictu familiari ciborum particulis vino in ignem conjectis libamina Diis dabant Alex. ab Alex. gen dier l. 5. c. 21. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Porph. de abst l 2. c. 20. The
we follow the example of Jesus who though he was able by his very word to make the Elements what he pleased yet he did first give thanks or crave a blessing to shew us what we must do m 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. in Math. 26. He had given thanks in order to the Passover before Luke 22.17 and therefore it is likely that he made a peculiar Thanksgiving now relating to this mystery n Vid. Buxt Synag Jud. cap. 13. for so the Jews were wont to have several forms for the Passover o Super Pacifica benedicunt cum comedunt ea hoc modo Benedictus tu Domine Deus noster qui sanctificasti nos praeceptis tuis mandasti nobis comedere de Pacificis R. Salom. for the Peace-offerings yea distinct Graces for the meat and for the drink What the very words were with which our Saviour blessed God is not recorded so that all Churches have used their liberty in the manner of expressing this with some variety in the Phrase but as to the substance and design they are the same nor doth any Liturgy want some such supplication The Latine Church saith We humbly beseech and intreat thee O most merciful Father by Jesus Christ thy Son our Lord that thou wouldst accept and bless these gifts c. in St. Ambrose Make this our Oblation valid reasonable and acceptable which is made for a figure of the body and blood of Jesus Christ In the Liturgy of St. Basil We beseech thee let thy holy Spirit come upon us and upon these gifts here set forth to bless and sanctifie them c. And to name no more in that called St. Clements We offer to thee O Lord our King according to his institution this Bread and this Cup and we beseech thee vouchsafe to look graciously upon these gifts set forth in thy sight Now it is requisite that the whole Congregation should in heart join in this part of the Prayer to make it the more prevalent with Almighty God Math. 18.19 And to quicken us to ask with the greater Ardency let us consider how great a thing it is which we desire how earnestly did Moses pray when he was to bring water out of the Rock how fervently did Elijah call on his God when his sacrifice was to be kindled from Heaven but we do now beg a greater matter and for a much more noble end We behold the Creatures of Bread and Wine and we know them to be as yet no more p Antequam ergo consecretur panis est Ambros de sacr l 4 c. 5. But we desire they may be made the body and blood of Christ to us that although they remain in substance what they were yet to the worthy Receiver they may be something far more excellent which nothing can effect but that word q Si ergo tanta vis est in sermonibus Domini Jesu ut inciperent esse quae non erant quanto magis operatorius est ut sint quae erant in aliud commutentur Idem which made all things out of nothing We are not now begging for the meat that perisheth but for that which endureth to everlasting life John 6.27 yet we ought to hope he will grant us this request because we are about to partake of this Ordinance both in a right manner as Christ did institute it and to a right end viz. for a memorial of his Death we long after our Saviour with a mighty Passion and in this manner he hath chosen to communicate himself therefore we may chearfully request that by the receiving this Bread and Wine which he hath chosen we may become partakers of his most blessed Body and blood for St. Paul assures us the Bread thus blessed is the Communion or Communication of Christs Body There needs no real change in the substance of the Elements for this participation is not by sense but by Faith This lively representation by the operation of the Spirit gives us a fresh remembrance of the Love and Merit of our Redeemers Passion so that by Faith we lay hold upon him as the only satisfaction for our sins and then the Power of God doth by these Symbols communicate our Lord unto us and convey unto our Souls all the salutary benefits of that great expiation We have all the real effects the virtue and the comfort of receiving Jesus though we do not tear his flesh with our teeth And if it may please God to make us partakers of the benefits of Christs Passion we will not inquire into the manner but we will believe because we feel the effects and rejoice in the graces that flow from him nor shall we desire more § 7. Who in the same night that he was betrayed took Bread The best pattern for the Celebration of this mystery is to be taken from the divine Author thereof our Lord Jesus whose Words and Actions are in this particular so punctually related in the Gospels on purpose to direct us in this solemnity and when the Rite was disordered in the Church of Corinth St. Paul 1 Cor. 11. sends them to the first Institution as to the Rule and Canon by which they ought to rectifie all that was amiss and for this reason as we have noted no Church in the World did ever omit these words of our Saviour by which they believed the Consecration to be principally made Wherefore let him that Ministers pronounce them with great deliberation and the profoundest reverence remembring he speaks in the person of Christ And let each Communicant think he is placed among the Disciples in the presence of Jesus at his first Supper and since every Word and Action is big with Mystery let him fix both his Eye and his heart upon the Holy Table and prepare to entertain every particular with a suitable Meditation And first when the time is mentioned in which this Heavenly Feast was instituted viz. The same night in which he was betrayed r 1 Cor. 11.23 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In quâ nocte tradebatur Litur Clem. In nocte quâ tradebat se ipsum pro vitâ mundi Lit. S. Basil Perperam itaque Missal Rom. habet Qui pridie quam pateretur even the last night which he lived in this mortal Body Then consider in this manner Behold what kind of Love O my Soul is expressed by thy Redeemer when our sins his treacherous servant and his enraged Enemies were contriving his Death he was designing an excellent benefit for us the stream of his affections was so strong that no baseness or ingratitude could check it we might have expected that the horror of this dismal night should have made him repent of his undertaking and have put him upon reversing all his former favours but lo he adds a greater than ever he had given before and appoints this as a seal to confirm and convey the rest unto us Thy Love was stronger than death and when all the terrors of
to the Congregation § 1. 2. Desires the Child may obtain them in The Lords Prayer § 2. The last Collect § 3. 3. Directions in order thereunto in The concluding Exhortation to the Sureties § 4. §. 1. The first Question Quest HAth this Child been already Baptized This Question howsoever it hath been derided by ignorant or impious Persons must by no means be omitted because it is necessary before we begin this great mystery that we be certified it hath not been done already since it is a rite never to be repeated for as there is but one one Lord and one Faith so there is but one Baptism Ephes 4.5 And because Baptism of old was called Illumination a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Just Martyr therefore that place of the Apostle b Heb. 6.4 Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Syriac Arab. Aethiop semel baptizatos ita explicat Ambros de poenitent l. 2. c. 2. of the once enlightened hath been usually expounded of those that have been once Baptized and afterwards did Apostatize but besides what is intimated in Scripture the Antient Church doth positively condemn the repeating of Baptism c Concil 1. Carthag Can. 1. Anno 330. item Concil 3. Toletanum Vnus omnino Baptismus est nobis tam ex Domini Evangelio quam ex Apostolicis literis Tertul. de Bapt. Renovatio per sacri baptismatis lavacrum secundâ vice fieri non potest Ambros in Heb. 6. provided the party were baptized in the Name of the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost And whereas the Council of Nice Can. 19. S. Cyprian and Tertullian speak of Baptizing again those who had been baptized by Hereticks it was because they esteemed their Baptism no Baptism d Illis ideoque nec Baptismus unus quia non idem quem cum rite non habeant sine dubio non habent nec capit numerari quod non habetur Tert. de Bapt. c. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Hieros as not being performed in the Name of the Holy Trinity according to Christs appointment So that it is absurd and impious to do this over again and therefore we ask this Question which also may admonish the Minister and the whole Congregation to be very serious and devout now in behalf of this present Infant since it can never more have the like opportunity for its Purification And as to those of riper years it doth highly require their care to do it well For They cannot saith St. Cyril come to this Laver twice or thrice to correct the Omissions of the first time if it be ill done at first it must remain so for ever §. 2. The first Exhortation Dearly beloved for as much as all men are Conceived and born in Sin c. There is a mutual Covenant in this Sacrament between God and Man but there is so vast a disproportion between the parties and so great a condescension on the part of the Almighty who designs only our advantage in it and is moved purely by his own free grace to agree to it That it becomes us to begin this Office with Prayer and that we may pray with Understanding this Exhortation is premised wherein we are taught 1. The Reasons why we must pray for this Infant 2. What it is which we must ask in its behalf 1. The Reasons are introduced with a Courteous salutation directed not only to the Sureties but to the whole Congregation who are stiled Dearly Beloved because they are all Christians and invited to join because they were once in the same condition which Nature cannot give even that this Child may be washed in Soul with the Spirit as well as with Water on the Flesh and not only be listed in the Register of visible Christians but have its name written in Heaven Nature hath polluted but it cannot cleanse the Parents have transmitted Sin but cannot remove it the Minister can provide Water and perform the external Rite but it is above humane power or the possibilities of Nature to make these things effectual to the Child 's Eternal Salvation wherefore we have the more reason to cry most passionately to him that only can effect all this §. 3. The first Collect for the Child Almighty and Everlasting God who of thy great mercy didst save Noah c. Being prepared with the former Motives and Directions the Minister invites us in the antient Form Let us pray and goes before us in these two pious Composures in the first of which there are three Parts 1. A Preface laying down the encouragements to this Request 2. The Request it self 3. The End for which we make it 1. When the Preface hath minded us that he whom we call upon is Almighty in Power and Everlasting in Duration it doth Commemorate the Antient Types of Holy Baptism together with the Consignation thereof in the Person of our Lord Jesus that by Remembring what God hath done by and for the Element of Water with respect to this Mystery we may heighten our own Expectations and learn to hope for great things from it and engage the Almighty to make the present effect answerable to so early and so noble an Apparatus as himself had made thereunto 1. St. Peter assures us the Saving of Noah in the Flood was a Type of our Salvation by Baptism 1 Peter 3.21 and many of the Fathers take notice of it also m In diluvio quoque jam tunc figura Baptismatis Ambros de ●acr l. 1. c. 6. Baptismum ut ita dixerim Mundi Tert. de bap Cap. 8. Cyril Hieros cat 3. The Flood was the Baptism of the World the iniquity whereof was purged by Water and all that was Corrupt was buried in that Universal Deluge until at last in token that the Evil was Expiated the Dove did rest upon the renewed face of the Earth and was the Messenger of Peace to those who were saved by those Waters Thus our old Man is buried in Baptism and our Sins washed away yet so as the new Man is restored thereby and sealed with the Holy Ghost 2. St. Paul affirms that God did prefigure the Christian Baptism by the Passage of the Israelites through the Red Sea 1 Corinth 10.2 Which Tertullian observes in these words The people ready to leave Egypt escaped the force of Pharaoh by going through that Water which drowned the King and all his Army which figure is more manifest in the Sacrament of Baptism n Illud mare nostri Baptismi figura fuit Ambros de Mansionibus Israelit Cyril 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cateches 3. for all Nations are delivered from the World by Waters and leave the Devil their former Ruler and Oppressor overwhelmed in them de bapt Cap. 9. Now if God did twice save the whole Church by Water on purpose to typifie the efficacy of Baptism before it was instituted we may very reasonably believe that now the substance is come he will much more save a few Children or
believing Persons thereby 3. And it is the more probable that we shall prevail when we ask this mercy because that Our Lord himself was pleased to honour this Ordinance by causing it to be Administred to himself by St. John in the River Jordan Math. 3.17 And He was Baptized saith St. Ambrose not that he might be cleansed but that he might cleanse the Waters that they themselves being washed by the flesh of Christ which knew no sin might have a right to be used in Baptism ever after Ambr. in Luc. 3. and the grace which it received from him it pours upon us Christians idem Serm. Domin 6. post Pentec Yet we must not fancy as Tertullian and St. Ambrose note that this Sanctification was derived only to that one River whereupon some of old would be baptized no where but in Jordan For the Blessing was communicated say they to all Water that should ever be used to this purpose Now if the great end why Jesus was baptized were to Hallow the Water to this use we may the more chearfully present our Petition that the Party to be baptized may find supernatural effects from this holy Laver. 2. The Petition therefore advanced upon these Premises is First For Gods general Pitty to be expressed towards this infant because it is miserable by nature and liable to his wrath 2. Particularly that he will please to wash and purifie it from all its Natural Pollutions by the living Water John 7.38 even his holy Spirit o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophyl in Johan 3. which alone can cleanse the Soul and which gives the power of cleansing to this Water We pray that he who gave so many illustrious Types of Baptism before its Institution and at its first Original dignified it with the presence of his own Son that he will now look with Compassion on the original misery of this Child and wash it wholly away by his Spirit 3. And we ask this the more fervently because there will follow so blessed an effect upon our being heard viz. 1. Privative if it please him so to wash away the Sin of this Child it shall be delivered from Gods wrath Math. 3.7 since his wrath doth not remain on those whose Sins are pardoned but when the iniquity the cause is gone the wrath is removed also 2. There will follow also positive effects even the Seeds of Sanctifying Graces which will manifest themselves in due time The sum is that if it be washed with the Spirit it shall not be left to perish in the general deluge but be taken into the Church as Noah into the Ark p Ecclesia est arca figurata Tertul. de bap In illa mirandae capacitatis arca Ecclesia figuratur Ambros de voc gen l. 2. c. 4. and so be saved from the common destruction and although this Child as the Ark q Navicula illa figuram Ecclesiae praeferebat quod in mari id est seculo fluctibus id est persecutionibus tentationibus inquietatur Tert. of old be tossed a while upon the troublesome Waves of this World yet if Faith be the Pilot Hope the Sails and Charity the Lading no boisterous Billows shall be able to overwhelm it but it shall triumphantly and joyfully ride over these Surges until they have conveyed it safe to the Port of Immortality All these Graces are the fruits of that One Spirit so that if here it be received all these happy effects will be the consequents thereof §. 4. The second Collect for the Child Almighty and immortal God the aid of all that need c. To express our earnestness and importunity we do again renew our Address and in this second Prayer we request First That this Child may be pardoned and regenerated Secondly That it may be adopted and accepted by Almighty God both which are enforced with their proper motives 1. The first Petition is ushered in by a solemn Invocation wherein we call upon God by all those Attributes which do express his Power and Mercy we confess him to be Omnipotent and immortal 1 Tim. 6.16 the reliever of the needy Psal 10.16 69.33 the helper of those that fly to his Protection John 6.37 He giveth Eternal Life to Believers and raiseth those that are Dead John 11.25 and therefore he is the fittest to be sollicited in behalf of a weak and helpless infant dead in trespasses and sins Yea we esteem our selves happy that we have so great and so good a God to come unto in its behalf for here we do present him with an object suitable to his Might and his Mercy and since this poor Creature is so miserable but yet can neither apprehend its own misery nor speak in its own behalf we our selves become its spokesmen that it may be born again in this Laver of Regeneration and have all its Sins both pardoned and removed and doubtless so Charitable a Prayer from so many Hands presented to such a God for so deplorable an object cannot return empty 2. The next Petition proceeds further and craves that when the sin is removed and the nature renewed it may be most favourably received by God and adopted for his own Child And herein we seem to imitate that antient custom prescribed by the Roman Law in that kind of Adoption which was called Adrogation r Arrogatio autem dicta quia genus hoc in alienam familiam transitûs per Populi rogationem fit Au● Gellius noc Att. 5. 19. Et Justinian instit l. 1. titul 11. de Adop Sect. 1. whereby a Child being to be adopted into a better Family was admitted by the approbation of the High Priest and at the Intercession of all the people in a publick Assembly Thus we who are already Citizens of Heaven do all join in requesting there may be one more added to our number and received into the Houshold of God And the motive to this Petition is no less than Gods gracious Promise by Jesus Christ Math. 7.7 that if we ask we shall have which St. Luke applies to the giving of the Holy Spirit Chap. 11.13 and some of the Antients refer this promise to this very mystery Nor can this promise be urged more properly For we have brought this infant to Heaven Gate but we cannot make it the Child of God nor let it in so that all we can do is to ask and seek to him to open the Gate and to receive it who hath promised to hear the Prayers of his Church The External washing is but a temporal priviledge and only makes this Child one of the number of the visible Church But the Heavenly washing of the Soul ſ Aquâ enim corpus abluitur Spiritu animae delicta mundantur Ambros in Luc. 3. Quod incorporale est invisibilitèr abluatur idem is an Everlasting Blessing and doth purifie the Soul and fit it for Eternal Life t Foelix Sacramentum aquae nostrae quâ abluti delictis pristinae caecitatis
est sed tibi gratia cui gratia est ipsa justitia Aug. ep 105. ad Sixt. Presb. yet shall be bestowed by the Mercy of the Master upon all that are so qualified Let us then earnestly beseech this blessed Lord who is the Fountain of eternal goodness and doth govern and dispose of all things to give abundant grace to this his new Servant so that it may have the comfort of these graces here and the reward of them hereafter through his Mercy which Crowneth in us that which he hath first given to us for Jesus sake Amen §. 2. The Prayer of Consecration Almighty and everliving God whose most dearly beloved Son Iesus Christ c. The word of God teacheth us that the World was darkness and a Chaos until the Spirit moved upon the face of the Waters Gen. 1.2 from whence the rude and indigested matter received a quickning influence which produced that beauty and order which we now behold And as it was in the first Creation and Generation of all things so it is in the new Creation and Regeneration of a Christian the Spirit moving upon the Waters of Baptism giveth Light and Life and bringeth in order and comeliness instead of the confusion and darkness which Sin had caused wherefore since there is so great a work to be done by the Spirit we must most humbly beseech that the holy Spirit may return to its antient seat as Tertullian speaks It is true our Lord Jesus did sanctifie Water in general to the mystical washing away of Sin but when this particular Water is to be used in so sacred a Ministry and to so admirable purposes it is necessary it should first be sanctified by the word of God and Prayer 1 Timoth. 4.5 that is by repeating the Words of Christs Institution and by Petitioning for the descent of the Holy Spirit which are the two Parts of this Prayer Yet if any shall ask why we Consecrate the Water and where we have an express command in Scripture for it S. Basil g Benedicimus Aquam baptismatis ex quâ autem Scripturâ nonne ex tacitâ traditione Basil de Spir. Sanc. cap. 27. Answers We do this as well as many other weighty things because of the Constant Tradition and continual Practice of the Church which is a sufficient Warrant in matters so reasonable and pious as this is Now that the Primitive Christians did always use a Prayer for the Consecrating of the Water doth appear by many Witnesses h Oportet vero mundari sanctificari Aqua priùs à sacerdote ut possit baptismo suo peccata hominis qui baptizatur abluere Cypr. l. 1. ep 21. Venit sacerdos Precem dicit ad fontem invocavit Patris nomen Praesentiam filii Spiritûs Sancti Vtitur verbis coelestibus Quod baptizemus in Nomine Patris Filii Spiritûs Sancti Ambros de sacr l. 2. c. 5. In Ecclesia Aqua sacerdotis prece sanctificatur Aug. de bapt in Donat. and which is more their Prayer did consist of two principal Parts as ours also doth viz. 1. The repetition of Christs Word Math. 27.19 and a Petition for the Holy Spirit Only the present form is somewhat fuller having First a Typical Allusion as to the Original of Baptism Secondly A recital of the Institution thereof Thirdly A double request grounded on these premises 1. For the sanctifying of the Water 2. For the right disposition of the Child to receive the benefits conveyed thereby 1. This great Petition is introduced by remembring a remarkable passage in the Passion of Christ viz. the flowing of blood and Water from his holy side as he was hanging on the Cross which the Fathers say was from no natural cause but that it was miraculous and a mystery designed to signifie that as Sin had entred into the World by the Woman made by a wound in Adams side So Salvation came in by the two Sacraments of Water and Blood i Aqua ad lavacrum sanguis ad potum Ambros de virgin ad Marcellin l. 3. idem in Luc. 23. de Sacram. l. 5. c. 1. item Tertul. de bapt c. 16. which flowed from the side of the second Adam and therefore we follow Antiquity in this application and encourage our selves to expect great things from him whose suffering did occasion this Mystery and who poured out his hearts blood for us 2. Our Lord did not only figure this Sacrament in a mystical manner but after his Resurrection by a plain and express Commission made it a perpetual Sanction That all Nations should be Baptized in the Name of the Father c. Math. 28.19 Wherefore since it is by his Command that we go about this Mystery we do repeat the Words of our Commission to shew that we expect the inward part and the efficacy of all from him who set us upon the work And since he is God blessed for ever and now also glorified and invested with all Power in Heaven and Earth Math. 28.18 we believe his words k Accedat verbum ad Elementum fit Sacramentum Augustin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dictum Oraculi Pythii ap Herodot 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philo de sacrif Abel are sufficient to effect whatsoever he would have done in Baptism There are many believe that in this as well as the other Sacrament the Consecration is made by the divine efficacy of the words of Christ Yet that we may not rest in the repetition of the Syllables only 3. Here is added the requests of the whole Congregation who are all bound to join in this great request that it may be the more prevalent when so many who are already Christian do beg the holy Spirit for the making these Waters effectual to the party now to be baptized And the two former particulars do add much strength to this Petition which we may thus Express O thou who didst so livelily typifie this sacred Ordinance in thy Passion and so plainly institute it after thy Resurrection let us not want thy Presence and thy influence now that we are going about it by express Commission from thee Behold we do all unite our most fervent desires that thou wilt by this Water effect that which far transcends all humane Power Amen Now the things desired are two First That whereas this which we have provided is but common Water yet upon our humble supplication he will send down his Holy Spirit upon it l 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Catech. 3. Ita de sancto viz. Spiritu sanctificata natura aquarum ipsa sanctificare concepit Tertul. de bapt c. 4. that it may signifie operate and effect all that ever any Soul received in this holy Laver and convey all the blessings of Baptism unto this Child We do not desire nor expect the Water should be changed in substance but only sanctifyed to a new purpose and impregnated with a spiritual property for the mystical washing away of Sin And
Ambrose saith the Priest spoke to the Person Baptized in this manner God the Father Almighty who hath regenerated thee by Water and the Holy Ghost and forgiven thee thy Sins c. which shews that the Antients did not question the effect of the Sacrament no not in Persons of Age until their future Conversation declared they had broke their Covenant how much more then ought we to believe this in the Case of Infants who can put no impediment to the Grace of God and are all alike so that either all or none receive these blessings Now the particulars for which we bless our most merciful Father they are Three all of them acts of free Grace and effects of a mighty favour and all of them highly beneficial to the party on whom they are bestowed First That it hath pleased God to Regenerate this Infant with his Holy Spirit which is an invaluable mercy For whereas it was by its first Birth guilty of Original Corruption and lyable to Eternal Death in this second Birth that guilt is done away and that Obligation to Death cancelled and so shall ever remain unless it fall under it again by actual disobedience And whereas it was defiled and corrupted in the principles of its being deprived of the image of God under the Power of Sin and the Dominion of the Flesh in a servile wretched condition so that it could never have pleased God Rom. 8.8 nor conquer'd its evil affections nor had it any assistance or strength so to do But now it is born of the Spirit and purifyed in the inward Man and the image of God is begun to be drawn anew it hath a new principle put into it which will resist the flesh and may wholly in time subdue it it is in Covenant with God and hath promises of aid from him so that its nature is healed at present and shall be sanctifyed throughout hereafter if this Grace be not expelled again it was an Object of divine wrath a Vessel fit for destruction a corrupt abominable Creature but now it is beloved purifyed and restored it is admitted to a state of Pardon put into a Capacity of pleasing God and Conquering all its Enemies and it hath as fair possibilities of glory as the best of Gods Saints which now injoy it once had Oh let us bless the Almighty for this change for from such beginnings Eternal felicity uses to spring and this little seed by the divine influence and careful cultivating will thrive and grow into a state of perfection and immortality 2. We must praise him that he hath adopted it for his own Child which is a consequent of the Regenerating it for God adopts none for his Children till he hath first sanctified k Pythagoraei vocant Deum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hierocles them and made them in some measure like himself Now how excellent a favour is this also that so poor a Wretch whose Kindred was Worms and Corruption if not evil Spirits should so freely be adopted by the King of Kings not because he wants Children of his own the usual reason of Adoption l Adoptio solet fieri 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aulus Gellius Divus Augustus amissis liberis nepotibus exhaustâ Caesarum turbâ adoptione domum desertam fulsit Senec. Consol ad Marc. Sect. 15. for besides the Holy Jesus the Blessed Angels are all Sons of God nor yet because he deserved this favour was this Child Adopted But of his own infinite goodness Our Heavenly Father takes the Slaves of his Enemy whose lives are forfeit to his Justice and not only pardons them but makes them his own Children and thereby gives them the best freedom even the glorious liberty of the Sons of God m Eum servum quem Dominus actis intervenientibus filium suum nominaverit liberum esse constituimus Justin institut l. 1. tit 2. Sect. 12. Rom. 8.21 and intitles them to a Portion of his Grace and also an Inheritance in his Glory and a right to the Crown of Life Oh who can parallel this mercy or how can we sufficiently express it Lastly We are to give thanks that this Child is made a Member of the Church it is a rare mercy that the great Husbandman should take this dead Branch of a wild Olive only fit to be fuel for Eternal Flames and graft it into the true Olive Rom. 11.17 so as to make it partake of the same Spirit and grace which is derived from the Root into the most flourishing and fruitful Branches That this Stranger should be incorporated into the Society of Christs Holy Church and made a Denizon of the New Jerusalem n 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost The Chief Captain purchased his freedom in the Roman City at a very great rate Acts 22.28 and it was formerly thought a reward for the greatest merits to give them the Priviledges of a Roman but behold one that could deserve nothing most freely made a Fellow-Citizen with the Saints and of the Houshold of God Ephes 2.19 admitted to all the Franchises and Immunities that belong to the Communion of Saints Blessed be God! Could this poor Infant understand its own happiness herein or were it able to express it self it would most passionately sing praises and be ravished with Admiration at so marvellous bounty and condescension but since the Child cannot do this as yet let us to whom the like favour hath been shewed lend it our Tongues and Hearts to bless the Lord at present and let us really rejoice in remembrance of our own Mercy so that the Name of his Majesty may be magnified as it ought to be Amen 2. To our Thanksgiving we must add Petitions and beseech Almighty God that it may not receive this Grace in Vain And herein also we have a President in the Jewish Rites where the Circumciser having ended the Circumcision saith O our God and the God of our Fathers strengthen and preserve this Infant unto his Parents c. and as he hath entred into the Covenant of Circumcision let him enter into the state of Marriage and good Works But our Prayers are more spiritual viz. for inward Grace rather than outward Blessings and good Reason for all these benefits will vanish unless they be afterwards improved they will not have their full effect unless the Conditions be performed Neither we nor the Primitive Church do believe them to be so regenerate or so endued with the Spirit but that by sloth and wilful iniquity they may be deprived of all again their Corruptions are not so mortified but that by complyance and base negligence they may revive again so that the last Estate shall be worse than the first and it shall be more tolerable for Heathens than for vile Apostates Wherefore we beg most humbly and earnestly that this Child may live as one upon whom such great favours are bestowed The Words of these Requests are St. Pauls Rom. 6.4 5 6. and ver 11 12 13. and
us of an Holy Virgin that conquered all the Devils Temptations by Crying out I am Baptized I am a Christian If we fall off to an Evil Faith or Wicked Life we are not only disobedient or deceived but perjured and forsworn and we forfeit all the Grace that we had begun to receive and the Glory to which we were sealed Let our lives shew we did obtain some Grace in Baptism by early beginning to cultivate that good Seed before it be choked with the Weeds of evil Lusts Let the younger labour to keep out sin by speedy applying themselves to good exercises and the elder labour to regain by unfeigned Repentance their former Purity remembring from whence they are fallen so shall Baptism not only let us into the way to Heaven but be a means to keep us in the same till we come to the enjoyment of a blessed Immortality Amen A Brief Discourse upon the Office of Confirmation THE Conclusion of Baptism being an Admonition that the party Baptized may be brought to Confirmation would have obliged us to treat of this Rite there but because the Church hath made it a peculiar Office we may allow it a peculiar Discourse and it doth most fitly follow that of Baptism being so nearly allyed to it and in pursuance of that great Vow to the observance whereof we are all so strictly bound only before we enter upon the Parts of this Office we shall first survey the Original thereof Although our Lord Jesus did not expresly institute Confirmation as he did Baptism and the Holy Eucharist and so it is not properly a Sacrament yet Aquinas fancies the reason why this had no positive institution was because the Holy-Ghost which is herein to be communicated was not given till after Christs Ascension John 7.39 yet in his promising the Holy Spirit to his Disciples and to remain with his Church for ever John 14.16 he seemed to suppose that there should be some Rite instituted by them for the perpetual Collation of the Spirit The first Converts indeed whom the Apostles Baptized were confirmed by the immediate Hand of God and he by miraculous gifts of the Holy Ghost sealed their Baptism and attested the Religion into which they had entred But it was not long before the Apostles were appointed to Minister in giving the Holy Spirit to the newly Baptized and then they instituted the Rite of Laying on of hands and God was pleased so far to approve their institution that he did actually give wonderful measures of the Spirit to those on whom they laid their hands thereby honouring the Governours of his Church and engaging all the Members thereof to be subject to them and to be at Peace one with another This appears from that famous instance Acts 8.14 15 16 17. where when the Samaritans had been Converted and Baptized by Philip the Deacon they did not receive the Holy Ghost until St. Peter and St. John had Confirmed them a Id quod deerat à Petro Johanne factum est ut oratione pro eis habitâ manu impositâ invocaretur infunderetur super eos Spiritus Sanctus Quod nunc quoque apud nos geritur Cypr. ep ad Jubai ita Hieron in Lucif Innocent l. 1. ep 3. c. from whence the Fathers generally deduce this Practice But that this was generally constituted among the Apostles is evident because St. Paul meeting with some Baptized Persons at Ephesus did in like manner lay his hands upon them and confirm them Acts 19.6 of which he minds them Ephes 1.13 In whom also after that ye believed ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of Promise And so we may justly believe he did in other Churches whereupon he saith to those of Corinth 2 Corinth 1.21 22. Now he which Confirmeth us b Graec. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with you in Christ and hath Anointed us is God who hath also sealed us c. And when this great Apostle comes to reckon up the Fundamentals of Religion Hebrews 6.1 2. amongst them he placeth The Laying on of Hands which cannot well be meant of the Imposition of hands in absolving Penitents since that is included in Repentance before nor yet of Ordination which is one of those Mysteries of perfection to which St. Paul goes on Chap. 7. But in regard it follows Baptism and is a Doctrine to be taught to Catechumens or young beginners it is most likely to be meant of Confirmation and so it is interpreted by St. Chrysostome The Doctrine of being prepared to receive the Holy Spirit which is given by imposition of hands St. Cyprian also applies that of our Saviour John 3.5 of being Regenerated with the Spirit as well as with Water to this Mystery c Tunc enim plenè sanctificari esse filii Dei possunt si Sacramento utroque nascantur cum scriptum sit Nisi quis natus fuerit ex Aquâ Spiritu c. Epist 72. Which is so often alluded to in Scripture and so plainly to be proved from thence that those who disallow it are forced to pretend that this Apostolical Usage Laying on of Hands was only a Personal Priviledge and was to cease when miraculous inspirations did not accompany it But besides that we might argue that the Spirit is to abide in the Church for ever and that Christians have and need it now though not in such wonderful measures yet as really and effectually to the purposes of Sanctification as any had it then wherefore there is no reason the Rite of Communicating it should cease besides this I say we can easily Confute this pretence by shewing that the Church did in every Age continue this Custom of Confirming after Baptism which proves they did not imagine it was a Temporary Institution We might here alledge the Testimonies of Dionysius and Clemens Romanus as also the Epistles of Vrban and Melchiades d Dionys Eccles hierar cap. 4. Clement Constit l. 3. c. 17. Epist 4. Urban Epist ad omnes fidel Melchiad Epist ad Episc Hispaniae which though they are not so antient as their pretended Authors yet in their due place are not wholly to be rejected these therefore we omit as being liable to Exception But we find in Eusebius that the Asian Bishop not only Baptized but Confirmed the young Man which St. John delivered to him e Euseb Eccles hist l. 3. cap. 17. Tertullian who lived in the second Century plainly affirms That they laid on hands after Baptism to invite the Holy Ghost f Dehinc manus imponitur advocans invitans Spiritum Sanctum de Bapt. cap. 6. And elsewhere The flesh is sealed that the Soul may be defended the flesh is shadowed by imposition of hands that the Soul may be illuminated by the Spirit g Idem de Res carnis Cap. 8. About fifty years after St. Cyprian is most express Vpon those saith he who have been baptized in the Church and received Ecclesiastical and lawful
strength a Sed ne putes te viribus tuis hoc posse attende cujus est opis August in loc but we may have Help from him who made Heaven and Earth and therefore ought not to despair II. Psalm Cxiii 2. Blessed be the Name of the Lord Answ Henceforth World without end And since the Name of this glorious Lord God hath been our only help and shall be so for ever Have we not all possible reason to magnifie and praise his Name now our selves yea and to desire that it may be Blessed and glorified to all Eternity for he pitied and visited us he redeemed and washed us from our Sins in the Laver of Regeneration and in the fountain of his Sons Blood and he hath now encreased the number of his professed Servants Oh that his Mercy may be remembred for ever and ever III. Psalm Cii 1. Lord hear our Prayers Answ And let our Cry come unto thee From the Remembrance of his former favours we are encouraged to ask for more and in this Humble manner we crave Audience of the King of Heaven before our Supplication begin The Bishop is going to pray and cry to God on our behalf and we and all the Congregation are about to join with him in Prayers for the good Spirit which we need and in earnest Cries to be delivered from the Evil Spirit to which we were in Bondage first therefore we crave acceptance and desire that by his Answering our Requests we may perceive our Cry hath come unto him or as St. Augustine observes the Phrase is doubled to shew the vehement desire and fervent affections of the Petitioners b In geminatione affectus petentis est Aug. in locum Wherefore we must speak this with an earnest Devotion so shall we no doubt make way for the following Prayer to pierce the Clouds §. 4. The first Prayer Almighty and Everliving God who hast vouchsafed to regenerate these t●y Servants c. Before the Imposition of hands there was a Prayer made for the gifts of the Spirit to be poured forth upon the party to be Confirmed as appears by the Testimonies of S. Cyprian Tertullian Ambrose c. before cited For although the Spirit do go along with the Water in Christian Baptism yet the Apostles thought it necessary to lay their c Spiritus autem Sanctus in solâ Catholicâ per manus impositionem dari dicitur Aug. in Donat. de Bap. l. 3. c. 15. hands on the Baptized that they might receive the Spirit in greater measures and the Fathers thought it was particularly given by this Rite Nor is it any wonder saith one d Raban Maurus de institut Cleric lib. 1. cap. 30. if a man have a double Vnction in order to receiving the Holy Ghost since the Spirit was twice given to the Apostles themselves John 20.22 Acts 2.4 especially since the Spirit is given to several purposes as the former Author notes viz. In Baptism to consecrate an habitation to God In Confirmation to declare that the seven-fold grace of the Holy Ghost is come into us with a fulness of Sanctity Wisdom and Virtue Or as Eusebius Emissenus serm de Pentec In Baptism the Holy Spirit gives what is sufficient to make us innocent but in Confirmation it gives increase and makes us gracious In short there the Spirit was bestowed to cleanse us from sin here to adorn us with all its Graces e Albaspin observat lib. 1. 25. According to which Antient Doctrine this Prayer is Composed First to acknowledge the former gift and then to Petition for the second in the very words almost of that Antient Prayer which came between Baptism and Confirmation in the Greek f 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euchologion Graecor pag. 355. offic S. Baptism Liturgy Blessed art thou O Lord God Almighty Who now hast pleased to regenerate this thy new inlightened Servant by Water and the Holy Ghost granting him a pardon of all his voluntary and involuntary Sins Do thou O Lord and merciful Governour of all bestow upon him also the seal of the gift of thy Holy Omnipotent and ever to be adored Spirit c. And it is very fit we should praise God for the Grace of Baptism before we beg that of Confirmation especially because the washing of us from Original Sin in the holy Laver did cleanse and prepare us that we might be pure Temples for the Holy Ghost to dwell in the greater measures of the Spirit now begged are but in pursuance of the former mercy The Lord did then consign us to the Spirit and now we pray it may visibly exert it self He then lifted us as his Souldiers and we have been ever since by Catechising trained Gen. 14.14 and now are going into the Field against our spiritual Enemies so that we shall need more visible and more efficacious assistances wherefore we pray for all the gifts of the Holy Spirit which in the Old Greek and Latine Translations are reckoned up to be seven Isai 11.2 and from thence are transcribed into this Prayer and these seven are put for all because the Scriptures describe the gifts of the Holy Ghost by seven Spirits Revel 1.4 Chap. 4.5 5.6 whence also we often read in the Antients of the sevenfold Grace of the Spirit g Ambros in Luc. 9. item Raban Maurus lib. 1. c. 30. and the number Seven is put for the Holy Spirit it self h Septenario numero significatur Spiritus sanctus August de Civ dei l. 11. c. 31. But for these seven here reckoned up it is certain they were in the same Words repeated in the Office of Confirmation as long ago as St. Ambrose his time who saith Remember that thou hast received the Spiritual seal the Spirit of Wisdom and Vnderstanding the Spirit of Counsel and strength the Spirit of Knowledge and Godliness and the spirit of holy fear i Ambros lib. de initiand c. 7. And in another place k Idem de Sacram. lib. 3. cap. 2. It remaineth after Baptism saith he that we be made compleat when upon the Prayer of the Priest the Holy Spirit is poured into us the Spirit of Wisdom c. as before Where he further instructs us that all gifts and graces belong to the Spirit but these are the most Eminent and Principal so that they are put for all the rest We must not be too curious in the particulars since many of the Words seem to be synonymous yet we may thus distinguish these seven gifts 1. The Spirit of being wise in Spiritual things 2. The Spirit of apprehending what we are Taught 3. The Spirit of prudent managing all our Actions 4. The Spirit of power to execute all our religious purposes 5. The Spirit of discerning between good and evil 6. The Spirit of Devotion in Gods service 7. The Spirit of Reverence to be expressed towards God in our whole Conversation These are the blessed gifts for which the Bishop prays
super hominem August in Donat. de bap l. 3. c. 17. and St. Ambrose notes that even St. Paul himself was not so bold as to communicate the Spirit autoritatively to his new Converts but he begs it of God for them Coloss 1.9 t Impetrare optavit non imperare praesumpsit Ambros de Spir. Sanc. l. 1. c. 7. Now the party confirmed ought chearfully to hope this Prayer shall be accepted and while the Bishops hand is over our head we ought to meditate that God himself will keep us in the shadow of his hand Isai 49.2 and that by this Rite is signified that the Lord will stretch out his Hand to Defend us against all our Spiritual Enemies We have given up our selves to be his Servants and the Hand of the Lord is with us Luke 1.66 that is his Spirit is upon us and if we keep close to him none can pluck us out of his hand John 10.28 29. but we may continue his for ever Satan will assault us the World will allure us and the Flesh will entice us to break this Vow but the Holy man prays we may be defended by the Spirit of grace so that we may never fall off as too many have done It is a comfort to see so many Dedicating themselves to God but it is also a sad consideration that scarce one of twenty remember this engagement but they first forsake God and then he forsakes them for ever 1 Chron. 28.9 Oh then let us pray that neither we nor any of our Relations may prove Apostates or Backsliders but that we may remain under the divine protection and continue his to our lives end For if we keep united to this Living Root we shall not only live but flourish grow and bring forth more and more fruit John 15.2 The Grace now imparted is of that nature that if we cherish it we shall encrease daily therein and therefore the Bishop prays we may not only have the Spirit at present but that we may grow in Grace every Day even until we be fitted for glory and be partakers of Gods Heavenly Kingdom as the Council of Laodicea speaks And since so excellent a Prayer is made by so eminent a Person with so antient a Rite let every one for himself and every one for his Children Servants or Friends add thereto a most affectionate Amen §. 7. The Versicle Response and Lords Prayer The Lord be with you Answ And with thy Spirit Our Father c. We have fully discoursed of these Devotions Comp. to the Temple Part. I. and shall only note here That the Parties Confirmed having professed their Faith and vowed Obedience ought now to be saluted as Brethren and are to be reckoned among the Faithful as being sealed with the Seal of God and now belonging unto his Family u 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gregor Nazianz. The Spirit hath been given to them we pray therefore it may remain with them The Bishop desires the Lord may assist them in blessing his Name for these Mercies and they mutually pray the Lord may assist the spirit of the holy Man who is praying for them And then all most fitly join in saying the Lords Prayer Which the whole Church sayeth and shall say unto the end of the World August retract lib. 1. cap. 19. §. 8. The Proper Collect. Almighty and Everlasting God who makest us both to will and to do those things that be good c. Without me saith Christ ye can do nothing John 15.2 and the better sort of Heathens confessed that the power to do good as well as the will to chuse it was from Heaven x 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 · Pindar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 · Hierocles which Truth as it is expressed in St. Pauls words Philip. 2.13 is made the foundation of this address We have heard these Persons willing to chuse and ready to promise that which is good wherefore we confess God gave them the will and he can only give them Power to perform that which they have promised and since he hath made them willing already we hope he will make them able also for though the will be good yet if it produce no suitable actions it will but aggravate their Condemnation and that is the reason why we pray so oft and so earnestly for them The Bishop hath now in imitation of the Apostles as all Parties confess y Hic unus locus abundè testatur hujus ceremoniae originem fluxisse ab Apostolis Calvin in Heb 6. Exempla Apostolorum veteris Ecclesiae vellem pluris aestimari Zanchius Vide Chemnit Examen Concilii Trident. part 2. de confirm laid his hands upon these Persons and as Christ shewed his favour to little Children Math. 19.15 by laying his hands on them and expressed his love to St. John by the same sign Revel 1.17 So the Holy Man hath laid his hands on these as a token of Gods favour and therefore he is concerned to pray that it may not be an empty and insignificant sign but that the Hand of God may be over them for ever even when his hand is removed and that Gods Spirit may be always with them which Petitions are well Paraphrased by that Prayer of the Greek Church Lay thy mighty hand upon him and protect him by the power of thy goodness keep this holy Seal inviolable and vouchsafe to bring him to Eternal Life and to fulfill all thy good pleasure z 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 · Eucholog in offic ablut post S. Baptism For thus it is desired here that the Hand and Spirit of God may continue with us the one to assist us in the understanding the other to help us in the performance of the Divine Word till we come to everlasting happiness The Word of God shews us the way to Heaven The Spirit makes us to understand and obey the Directions thereof so that if God hear this Prayer we cannot miss of that blessed end And here we must observe to what end the Holy Ghost is given us in this Ordinance not to make us able to speak with Tongues but to know the Word and do the Will of God It is the saying of the famous St. Augustine The Spirit which is now given by imposition of hands is not attested by temporal and sensible miracles as it was at first for the commendation of our Faith while it was young and to enlarge the beginnings of the Church For who doth now expect that those on whom hands are laid for receiving the Holy Ghost should presently begin to speak with tongues but yet the divine Love is understood to be secretly and invisibly inspired into their hearts by the Bond of Peace which enables them to say The love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Spirit which he hath given us August de Bapt. in Donat. lib. 3. cap. 16. So that we must not despise Confirmation in our Church though it be not
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Suidas whether he were fitted to come or no. The Magistrates of Sparta were wont to examine all the Citizens how well they observed Lycurgus's Rules honouring those that were found blameless with the Title of Approved h 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Persons and shall we not think our pains well bestowed if our merciful Father give that Character of us I grant that after our strictest Examination we cannot bespeak our God with the confidence of the Grecian Wrastler who challenged Jove as he was just to give him the Victory if he had duly prepared all things for the Exercise Clem. Alex. but yet the severer search we make before we come the greater Comfort and the more success we shall have in our approaches Obj. But some will say it is too late for men to consider now when they are come to the Altar and it is impertinent to urge it here since all is done that can be done in this matter in order to this Communion Ans Not so for if any have presumed to come altogether unprepared it is not yet too late to warn them of their sin and danger And it were better for them to go out to day saith St. Cyril i 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Hieros praef ad Catechum Meliùs est de mediâ viâ recurrere quam semper currere malé that they might come better fitted against the next opportunity yea Christ himself adviseth Math. 5.23 24. in some Cases to leave our gift before the Altar and retire till we are better disposed intimating that it offends God● less to withdraw even from the beginning of his service than to proceed if we are unfit St. Ambrose knowing the Emperour Theodosius to be guilty of blood unrepented of although he was come to the Church with purposes to Communicate sent him back from thence with a serious Exhortation to Repentance k Recede igitur ne conare novo scelere scelus ante editum augere in vit D. Ambros So also St. Chrysostome being disturbed by a malicious and impertinent request just as he was about to consecrate the holy Symbols went out of the Church and desired another to finish the mystery which he durst not do being discomposed in his mind l Palladius in vit Chrysost Secondly But if we have in any measure prepared our selves yet is not this Exhortation to be thought unseasonable for as the most famous Orators though they had composed their Orations some days before yet were wont privately to recite them immediately before they spoke them to the P●ople so it becomes us Christians to review the Records and sad Catalogues which we saw yesterday and briefly to act our Examination over again lest if the number and heinousness of our sins be at present out of our mind we should become as obdurate as if we never had beheld them What was done yesterday was to humble us just now and we are at this instant m 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arr. in Epic. l. 1. to give the proof what we did in private and St. Pauls adding and so let him eat seems to direct us to make this the immediate duty before our receiving Let us then remember afresh what we found upon our inquiry and if we pass directly to the participation from this review of our offences we shall no doubt become so penitent and desirous of Pardon as not to be judged presumptuous Receivers § 4. For as the benefit is great if with a true penitent heart and lively Faith we receive that holy Sacrament for then we spiritually eat the flesh of Christ and drink his blood then we dwell in Christ and Christ in us we are one with Christ and Christ with us Although the command of God by his Apostle is enough to require our obedience yet it is here backed with two of the most prevailing motives of all shewing that it is not only required of us to examine our selves but necessary for us and that we ought to do it for our own sake n 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arrian in Epic. l. 2. 1. Because of the great benefits of worthy receiving 2. The dreadful danger of coming unprepared And first if we bring with us a penitent heart and a lively Faith the benefits are so many and so excellent that whosoever considers them cannot but long for them and they that obtain them may despise all other pleasures because they are as blessed as they can be on this side Heaven and are they not worth a little pains to dispose our selves for them They are surely most unworthy of them who will lose them rather than submit to the trouble of a sincere Examination of themselves The particular benefits are here expressed in the words of Christ John 6.54 55 56. in that mystical Sermon wherein he did secretly prepare the minds of his Disciples for this Sacrament shortly to be instituted and clearly alludes to the same The first benefit is the spiritual eating Christs body and blood For the humbled Sinner believing in the Incarnation Death and Passion of Jesus and receiving this Bread and Wine in token that God hath given him for his sins and that he doth rely on him as his only Redeemer This doth convey to such a penitent Believer all the benefits of the Birth and the Death of Jesus and as the Bread and Wine being received do communicate to us all the strength and comfort that they contain so the worthy Receiver by apprehending and embracing a Crucified Saviour draws perswasions of his pardon and encouragement to his Graces and so hath spiritually eat the flesh and drunk the Blood of Christ and hence flows the second benefit viz. His Dwelling or remaining in us and we in him that is when he have thus received our Saviour there is a blessed Communion between him and our Souls for he communicates of his fulness to us and we open our necessities to him and Thirdly hereby there is produced so near an Vnion that God esteems us as members of his dear Son lays our sin upon him and imputes his satisfaction to us and consequently all those benefits are derived to us which are mentioned by many and found by the Devout Communicant hope of pardon encrease of Grace assurance of our Resurrection and the expectation of Eternal Glory O Blessed mystery which dost communicate my Saviour and convey his Graces to me which givest me an interest in him and makest me one with him whom my Soul loveth How am I ravished with the sweetness of this Heavenly Feast how strongly do these benefits attract me if any pains or cost trouble or difficulty stand in my way I will account the pains to be pleasures the cost gain the trouble delight and the difficulty easiness which leads me to such blessedness O my Soul dost thou not wish with all thy Powers to be reconciled to God to be one with Christ and to be filled with the Spirit behold the
means to accomplish all these desires Do but examine into thy own heart till thou relentest for thy sins and search into Gods Mercy till thou art perswaded of his love And with this penitent believing heart come and partake of this spiritual Banquet and though thou dost not press thy Saviours flesh with thy Teeth which would do thee no good yet thou shalt really partake of all the benefits of his Death and become one with him and receive all from him that thy Soul doth either need or desire § 5. So is the danger great if we receive the same unworthily for then we are guilty of the body and blood of Christ our Saviour we Eat and Drink our own Damnation not considering the Lords Body we kindle Gods wrath against us we provoke him to plague us with divers Diseases and sundry kinds of Death The fear of losing the former benefits will be a sufficient motive to an ingenuous temper to prepare yet many are so obdurate as to rush upon this Ordinance without any preceeding care But that we may deliver our Souls the Church enjoins not only in the former but in this present Exhortation also that the Minister shall warn them not to come in so rude a manner the Heathen Man allows not that any should worship their Gods en passant o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plutar. nor unless they had first prepared themselves at home and can such addresses be endured in the highest mystery of the best Religion Let such from the mouth of St. Paul hear and consider First The greatness of their sin 1 Cor. 11.27 29. Secondly The severity of their punishment ver 30.1 Their sin who come hither as to an ordinary solemnity and eat of this as common food not considering that the Lords Body and blood here p Nec se judicant nec sacramenta dijudicant sed sicut cibis communibus irreverentèr sacris utuntur lib. de Card. op Christi ap Cypr. is in Scripture q Hebr. 6.6 Chap. 10.29 accounted Crucifying the Son of God again as much as in them lyeth r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 putting him to an open shame trampling upon him and accounting the blood of his Covenant as an unholy thing they use him as his Murtherers did shedding his blood not with design to be saved by it ſ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophil in 11 1 Cor. but suffering it to be spilt in vain They receive no benefit by it and yet they make a memorial of it which wounds Christ deeper than all the Cruelty of his Crucifiers did from them he expected no other but from these he doth t Quid est autem reos esse nisi dare poenas mortis Domini occisus est enim ab iis qui beneficium ejus irritum ducunt Ambros in loc so that they are guilty of his Body and Blood and shall be proceeded against as those that offer violence to the Lord Jesus By eating and drinking of this memorial of his Sacrifice they own he hath died for them but by their impenitence and perseverance in evil they declare that they will not be saved thereby And thus this sacred and salutary Rite which in its own nature would assure their Salvation and is designed by Christ to convey his benefits unto them u 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophylac ut supr is by their unpreparedness and iniquity turned into poison and a Curse and they being before fit for Condemnation by adding this Act of presumption they do accelerate and confirm it Secondly Their punishment will be answerable for they may be sure it will enflame the wrath of God to behold men so stupid and insolent to his dear Son and their Redeemer perhaps this wrath may only be expressed in temporal punishments shorter sicknesses lingring Diseases or sudden Death so it was at Corinth x 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophyl ut supr Febribus infirmitatibus corripiebantur multi moriebantur Ambros in loc so were the Jews cut off who profaned the Passover Exod. 12.15 and thus many Apostates in the Primitive times were possest by the Devil for coming to the Eucharist before their reconciliation to the Church but if the Lord forbear shewing these visible judgments he hath ways enow and an Eternity coming on to chastise this presumption Wherefore ye bold and careless sinners who come in ignorance or in malice without Faith or Devotion sorrow for former or purposes against future iniquities consider what you do and what you must suffer for coming in this unfitness we tremble at the danger you run upon yet who shall pity those who might have escaped all the evil and gained infinite blessings only by a small preparation § 6. Iudge therefore your selves Brethren that ye be not judged of the Lord repent you truly of your sins past have a lively and stedfast Faith in Christ our Saviour amend your lives and be in perfect Charity with all men so shall ye be meet partakers of these holy mysteries That which God and his Church intend as caution to all that they may come better prepared is by the slothful and unbelieving made a pretence for their total abstaining but these dangers as St. Paul shews ver 31. might soon be avoided if we would judge our selves for then we should not be judged of the Lord Let us therefore set up a Tribunal in our own Breast y 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophylac Bonum judicium quod divinum praevenit quod divino subducit volo praesentari vultui irae tuae judicatus non judicandus Bern. in Cantic 55. and laying Gods Law before us let our memory read the Indictment and our penitential thoughts urge the accusation and that till we be convinced and plead guilty so shall our Conscience pronounce the same sentence upon us which otherwise would more dreadfully have issued out against us from the Divine Judicature It will condemn us as foolish base ungrateful wretches deserving the wrath of God and Eternal Damnation And when we are thus convicted we shall see it necessary by Faith to lay hold of Gods Mercy and further this will most effectually move us to amend our lives z Deprehendas te oportet antequam emendes Sen. Ep. 28. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Simplic ad Epic. and discover what need we have to forgive all Men who our selves have so much to be forgiven so that it appears if we duly judge our selves all the other duties will follow in order let the danger of unworthy receiving therefore only make us more strict in our Examination for there is danger also if we do wholly stay away a Vtrobique grande periculum ideo mag●● necessitas instat ne indigni inveniamur Bern. de ordin vitae But the lesser hazard is on their side who set themselves to do their duty in the best manner they are able If we have by due process condemned our selves before it will