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A94296 Of religious assemblies, and the publick service of God a discourse according to apostolicall rule and practice. / By Herbert Thorndike. Thorndike, Herbert, 1598-1672. 1642 (1642) Wing T1054; Thomason E1098_1; ESTC R22419 207,469 444

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much to my purpose For it is plain that this is not the doctrine of the now Church of Rome when being to shew how the elements are consecrated he produceth the prayer of the Church joyned to the institution of Christ Which is to say that by virtue of Christs institution executed by the Church with prayer to God to ratifie and accept the elements presently offered to be the figure and remembrance of the body and bloud of Christ they are deputed to become this Sacrament In the Canon of the Masse these words are somewhat changed from that which is set down in S. Ambrose for they are read thus Vt nobis corpus sanguis siant dilectissimi Filii tui Domini nostri Jesu Christi That they may become to us the body and bloud of thy most beloved Sonne our Lord Christ Jesus And it seemeth that they were changed on purpose that this Sacrament might not be called a Figure of the invisible Grace of it But in the mean time it is manifest that here prayer is made for the effect of Christs institution in these elements and that nothing can be more crosse to this doctrine of the now Church of Rome then their own Service S. Ambrose observed that after the institution is rehearsed the elements are called the body and bloud The reason seems to be because they were intended to be deputed to become this Sacrament by prayer grounded on the institution of Christ which it is joyned with But it should seem that after the institution there followed in the ancient form of the Latine Church a prayer to the purpose though not in the terms of that which now followeth in the Canon of the Masse the close whereof is this Vt quot quot ex hac altaris participatione Sacrosanctum Filii tui corpus sanguinem sumserimus omni benedictione coelesti gratiâ repleamur That as many as shall receive the holy body and bloud of thy Sonne by participating of this altar may be fulfilled with thy heavenly benediction grace Which is plainly in lieu of the second point of that prayer alledged out of all the Eastern Liturgies desiring the like effects of grace by the means of this Sacrament upon them that communicate If any man think that the Forms hitherto described import that the ancient Church intended to consecrate the elements in the sense of the now Church of Rome that is to abolish the corporall substance of them and substitute that of the body and bloud of Christ in stead not in the true sense to depute them to become visible signes tendring and exhibiting the invisible Grace which they figure he shall much prejudice the truth which we professe The due advantage whereof hath been long since proved to be this that the errour pinned upon it is not to be found so much as in the Service of the Church where it is bred maintained Whē Prayer is made cōcerning the elements in the Canon of the Masse Vt nobis corpus fiant dilectissimi Filii tui Domini nostri Jesu Christi That they may become to us the body and bloud of thy welbeloved Sonne our Lord Christ Jesus These words to us make an abatement in the proper signification of the body and bloud For the elements may be said to become the body and bloud of Christ without addition in the same true sense in which they are so called in the Scriptures But when they are said to become the body and bloud of Christ to them that communicate that true sense is so well signified and expressed that the words cannot well be understood otherwise then to import not the corporall substance but the spirituall use of them In the Greekish form prayer is made that the elements may be made or become or be changed or translated into the body and bloud of Christ That also among our Writers of Controversies is acknowledged to be verified and is indeed easily verified though we suppose them not to cease to be what they were but to become what they were not that is visible signes exhibiting the invisible grace which they figure To which meaning that which alwayes follows in that form directs us when prayer is made that the elements may become the body and bloud of Christ so that they which receive them may be fulfilled with the blessings of his grace Which is to say that they may become that which they are called to wit the body and bloud of Christ not in respect of the corporall substance and kind whereof they consist but in respect to the spirituall communion which they exhibit And indeed when S. Ambrose saith that after consecration the body of the Lord and his bloud onely is named and signified and expressed this also seems to import a great abatement of the proper signification of the body and bloud of Christ As being so called and named and signified to us not because the substance of their nature and kind is abolished but because it comes no more into consideration as not concerning the spirituall benefit of them that communicate Which seemeth to be the true reason why Church-writers continually call the elements by the names of that which they exhibit without such addition as might import that abatement whereof now we speak who neverthelesse otherwhiles stick not to acknowledge that the species of the elements that is in their sense not the outward appearance of the accidents as those of the Church of Rome disguise the true meaning of the Latine word but the inward nature and substance of their kind doth remain as it was It remaineth now to declare both the right purpose and true meaning of that prayer for all States of the Church which in all Liturgies that I have seen is made at consecrating the Eucharist and before the receiving of it In that which hath been hitherto represented out of the Constitutions of the Apostles as in the most of the Eastern Liturgies immediately after the Consecration hitherto described The beginning of it there is thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Further we pray thee O Lord for thy holy Church from end to end which thou hast purchased with the precious bloud of thy Christ that thou wouldst keep it unmoved unwaved till the end of the world And for all Bishops that divide the word of truth aright Further we pray thee for the meannesse of me that offer to thee For the whole Presbytery for the Deacons and all the Clergy that Further for the King and Powers that they may keep peace toward us Further we offer to thee for all the Saints that have pleased thee from the beginning of the world Further we pray thee for all this people reckoning virgins widows married and infants Further we intreat for this city for the sick the banished slaves travellers and those that are at home that Further we pray thee for those that hate us and persecute us for thy name for those that are without and go astray
he should be much mis●aken that should so understand it but taking up controversies within the Church after ●his course And all to this purpose that on ●he Lords day they might communicate ●hat they might give and receive the kisse of peace that when the Deacon pronounced 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let no man ●ave a quarrell or suspicion against any they might neverthelesse draw near Such was ●he beginning of the externall Jurisdiction of ●he Church by which it may be judged whether it were first bestowed by the indulgence of Christian Princes or by them con●inued upon the practice of the Church be●ore the Empire was Christian But of this we speak not here as not concerning the Government of the Church in Spirituall ●atters wherein as members of the Church we communicate That standeth indeed and ●ometh to effect by the free consent of members of it so farre as Religion is not the Law of that Kingdome or Commonwealth ● which it flourisheth Because our Lord ●●dued not the Ministers of his Kingdome with that power to constrain obedience ●hich himself used not upon earth But as ●he Laws of Kingdomes and Common-●ealths inforce the Execution and outward ●ffect of Ministeries instituted in the Scri●tures in this respect not the power of excommunicating alone but of preaching and ministring the Sacraments and whatsoeve● else belongeth to the Office is derived from the Common-wealth that is in our particular from the Imperiall Crown of this Kingdome because it is exercised with effec● outwardly that is of doing the work though not of producing the inward end and purpose of converting the soul by Laws inforced by it The like is to be said of all tha● is done in deputing those that receive any Order in the Church to the exercise of any part of that function which the Order received importeth The right and charge o● it must rest upon those Ministeries that an● incharged with the oversight and government of such matters according to the Scriptures and by whom it must be exercised were the Common-wealth not Christian● But the power that inforceth the effect o● that which they do in this and all parts o● their Office is derived from the Secular Arm of the Common-wealth that cherisheth th● Church in the bosome of it As for Excommunication by Judges Delegate or High-Commissioners that is by men not of thes● Orders First it proceedeth upon Rules directed by the Church and then the course o● it is not so agreeable to the tenour of Scripture as to the necessities of the Kingdome For that is here to be averred again that th● Presbyteries whereof we speak are differenced from the rest of the people as Benches composed of none but persons Ordained by Imposition of hands for the purpose of Teaching the people and Ordering and Governing Spirituall matters So you have the Office described in all places where there is remembrance of it in the Scriptures Onely in the words of the Apostle 1. Tim. v. 17. Let the Elders that rule well be counted worthy of double honour especially those that labour in the Word and Doctrine it is imagined that two kinds of Presbyters as well as two parts of their Office are expressed one of Ministers of the Church another of the people one perpetuall the other ambulatory for their time both alike interessed in the Government of the Church the Office of Preaching charged upon the one How little of this is set down in the words of the Apostle were the sense of them that which is pretended let all the world judge yet this is the state of that discipline which hath been pressed as one of the essentiall marks of avisible Church But the purpose is now to satisfie that which hath been alledged from the collections of Justellus upon the Africane Canons to make good this pretended meaning of the Apostle and that from the Apostles own words He hath there produced out of Church-writers of the age of S. Augustine and Optatus or underneath much remembrance of certain Persons styled in those Writers Seniores Ecclesiarum Elders of Churches As in S. Augustine cont Cresc iii. 56. Clerici Seniores Cirthensium Epist 136. Peregrinus Presbyter Seniores Ecclesiae Musticanae regionis in Ep. Conc. Cabarsussitani apud S. Aug. in Psal 36. Seniores Ecclesiae Carthaginensis and to these persons are ascribed certain Acts retaining at least to the Government of those Churches As The Church goods are deposited in their hands Optatus lib. i. They reprove a drunkard August Serm. xix De verbis Domini They are present at an Ecclesiasticall Judgement Greg. l. xi Ep. 19. The Elders of the Church at Carthage solicite the sentencing of their Bishops cause Epist Concil Cabarsussitani apud August in Psal 36. these and more particulars produced by Justellus Out of Origen iiii cont Celsum that the Church had certain of the people to inform them of scandalous offenses whereupon they might proceed to reproof or censure But observe first the style of the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Tim. 5. 17. and Heb. xiii 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 agreeing with that of Tertullian Apolog. cap. 39. PRAESIDENT probati quique Seniores and of Firmilianus Ep. lxxv Cypr. In qua PRAESIDENT majores natu and Ignatius afore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All expressing the first rank of the Church in which after the Bishop they put the Presbyters Compare herewith the rank in which we see these Elders of the people in the time of Optatus and S. Augustine placed in these writings from whence the remembrance of them is alledged In Actis Purgat Caecil Felicis Episcopi Presbyteri Diaconi Seniores August iii. cont Cresc 56. Clerici Seniores Cirthensium and then let common sense judge whether these that stand in rank and style behind all degrees of the Clergie be the men that the Apostle placeth in the head of the Church as Rulers of it or how those that governed the Church can come behind Deacons and inferiour Ranks whom they governed The truth is in that age when the Latine tongue began to decay and corrupt they are called Seniores in the Authours alledged by Justellus in the same sense as now in the Vulgar Languages into which the Latine is changed Signori or Scigneurs And therefore there is remembrance of Seniores locorum Seniores regni Childeberti out of Gregory of Tours as well as Seniores Ecclesiae signifying the Aldermen of Commonalties and Lords of the Kingdome as well as the Chief persons of such or such a people that acknowledged the Christian Faith at such time as all were not Christians but Churches and Commonalties in which they subsisted made bodies distinct in persons as well as in nights In that regard it seemeth they are called sometimes Viri Ecclesiastici Ecclesiasticall persons that is belonging to the Church because there were others of like rank which being Heathen belonged not to it rather then for any settled charge in these
concerned the edification of the Church in doctrine whereof there he speaketh and of nothing else And thereupon conclude that Pastours and Doctours are both one there with the Apostle For what reason else can be rendered why there is no remembrance of Pastours in either of those other places wherein the Apostle maketh a more particular reckoning of the Ministeries of the Church both to the Romanes and to the Corinthians What reason but this Because they are set down in both places under the name of DOCTOURS Well may it seem that the Office of them whom the Synagogue called PASTOURS being referred in the Church to the inferiour Order of Deacons the name stuck upon those that ministred the food of the soul in the Church which is for the purpose of it Clemens Epist ad Cor. p. 63. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Be a man faithfull be a man able to utter knowledge be he wise in discerning discourses be he pure in works He seemeth to point at some of the Presbyters there in whom these abilities were Tertull. de praescript c. 3. Quid ergò si Episcopus si Diaconus si Vidua si Virgo si Doctor si etiam Martyr lapsus à regula fuerit What then if a Bishop if a Deacon a Widow a Virgin if even a Martyr shall fall from the rule In this list of principall ranks in the Church Presbyters have no room unlesse we understand them in the name of DOCTOURS the best part of their Office Theodoret Epit. Haer. l. v. c. penult 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What can they say of the Incestuous person at Corinth who was not onely vouchsafed the divine mysteries but also had attained a Doctours Grace He followeth S. Chrysostomes conjecture which conceiveth that the Corinthians were puffed up as the Apostle blameth them 1. Cor. v. 3. with the opinion of that man because he was one of their Doctours that is one of the Presbyters of that Church that exercised the Office of Preaching and by that means bore sway among the people In fine the Apostle intendeth by Doctours the same that are so called in all Ecclesiasticall Writers that is the Bishops or such of the Presbyters as were seen in Preaching It is worth the observing that Beza hath expounded those whom the Apostle calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no otherwise then Deacons and Presbyters meaning indeed those Elders of the people which he imagined But having shewed that there never was any such in the Church well may we take his judgement along with so much of the truth as he acknowledgeth which deserveth still more credit from the President of Synagogues which had Elders some learned some not some that preached and some that did not as hath been said Salmasius of late in his work De Foenore Trapezit hath shown some evidence of two sorts of Presbyters in the first times of the Church But according to his admirable knowledge he saw withall that they were all of one rank in the Church all of the Ecclesiasticall Order all made by Imposition of hands and by consequence none of those Elders of the people which have been set up to manage the keys of the Church that is the Office of the Ecclesiasticall Order according to the Scriptures Besides it is to be observed that the Office of Bishops which name he thinketh most proper to those Presbyters which preached not but were exercised in ordering Church-matters and Presbyters is described almost in all places where there is mention of it in the Scriptures by both qualities of Teaching and Governing the Church Which is my argument to conclude That howsoever some mens abilities might be seen in the one rather then in the other howsoever some men according to their abilities might be applied to this rather then to that yet both Offices concerned the whole Order that of Preaching in chief To which though some attained not yet all are incouraged to labour towards it as the most excellent work of their place as by S. Paul allowing them that double maintenance ESPECIALLY in that respect So by these Constitutions allowing them that double portion at their Feasts of Love for that purpose that they may take pains in the Word of Doctrine as the words go there Be it then resolved that the Presbyters of the Church at least part of them were those Doctours whereof the Apostle writeth and from thence be it considered what distempers slight mistakes in the sound of the Scripture bring to passe when we see the Order of Doctours distinct from that of Presbyters pressed as a point of that Discipline that maketh one of the essentiall marks of a visible Church But whether the Prophets of the Primitive Church which taught the people at their Assemblies were Presbyters or not is not so easie to determine Some of them we have reason enough to think were be it but for those Prophets of Antiochia Acts xiii 2. that ministred unto the Lord and fasted when the Holy Ghost said unto them Separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I have appointed them and those other among whom Timothy received Imposition of hands with prophesying 1. Tim. iv 14. But that all Presbyters were Prophets or all Prophets Presbyters is more then I can resolve Of these Prophets henceforth we are to intreat CHAP. V. Prophets in most of the Churches remembred by the Apostles The Gift of Languages the purpose and nature of it The Limbes and Branches of both these Graces in S. Paul Of Praying and Praising God by the Spirit Those that spake strange Tongues understood what they said Interpretation concerneth all that was spoken in strange Languages They prayed and studied for Spirituall Graces Prophesying in S. Paul signifieth singing Psalmes Prayers of the Church conceived by immediate inspiration The nearnesse of the Graces of Prophesying and Languages The ground and meaning of the Apostles Rule It proceedeth of none but Prophets What is to be judged in that which Prophets spoke The custome in the Primitive Church of many Preaching at the same Assembly came from hence IN the beginning of the Christian Faith it pleased God for the propagation and maintenance of it to revive the Grace of Prophesying decayed and lost among his Ancient people in a large measure in most of the Churches planted by the Apostles though there be not found so much concerning their Office any where as in this Church of Corinth In the Church of Jerusalem the mother of all Churches Acts xi 27. And in those dayes came Prophets from Jerusalem to Antiochia xv 32. And Judas and Silas being Prophets also themselves In the Church of Antiochia Acts xiii 1. Now there were in the Church that was at Antiochia certain Prophets and Doctours At Thessalonica 1. Thess v. 20. Despise not Prophesying At Corinth as we see at large At Ephesus Ephes iv 11. And he gave some Apostles some Evangelists some Prophets some Pastours and Doctours At Rome Rom. xii 6. Whether Prophesie according to
late practice among them which he prescribeth is called in the Misna Beracoth v. 3. Taanith ii 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he that cometh down before the Ark The reason if my conjecture mistake not being this Because the place where he sate among the Elders was higher then that of the people by some steps so that he must come down those steps to stand before them with his back to the people in doing Service As R. Benjamin in his Itinerary p. 75. describeth the chief Synagogue at Bagdat that before the Ark there were ten stairs of marble in the top whereof sate the head of the Captains of the linage of David Now it is to be known that things related in the Misna written in the dayes of Antoninus Pius are not to be understood as if they were of no greater standing then that time but are the most Ancient Orders of that people practised and delivered long afore from hand to hand as things not lawfull to be committed to writing and then first written for fear that their manifold dispersions might bring their Rules and Orders into oblivion as themselves professe As for the practice of the Church next to the Apostles let me use the advantage which is due to the truth and prescribe one thing in their way that intend to prove it to be against the Scripture and the Apostle forbidding to stint the Spirit to use prescript forms in praying which is this That it is not enough for their purpose to shew out of some Church-writers that some Churches might referre themselves in the direction of their devotions to their Bishops or to their Presbyters but it behoveth them to shew that they did it as acknowledging that sense of the Apostle alledging their reason and forbearing it as against Scripture For there is a great deal of reason why that course might be tolerable and sufficient in the beginning while the Church was oppressed by the secular Powers of the Empire and the fear of persecution contained the people in respect to the Orders of their Pastours and them in respect to their Office which afterwards when the world was come into the Church and the Empire become Christian would not serve the turn Then as it was requisite that all Rules of the Church should receive force from the secular Arm so might it prove requisite that the Order of Publick Service should be settled in a prescript form though it had been left to the discretion of particular persons afore in regard of that good and bad fish that was come into the Net and might take the occasions pointed at to make rents in it But I alledge this exception to put them in mind that no Ecclesiasticall writer hath yet been alledged to use their reasons which giveth just evidence of the Novelty of the opinion grounded on it Not because I do think the cause needeth it or that any time of the Church can be shewed after the Apostles and the time of extraordinary Graces wherein a prescript form of Publick Service hath not been used much lesse that any such thing is proved by the words of Justine Martyr and Tertullian produced out of their Apologies for the Christians wherein they inform the Powers of the Empire what the Christians did at their Assemblies Which had they been but turned right into English would have made it appear that they inforce either another sense or quite contrary to that which they are produced to prove The words of Justine the place aforenamed Apol ii 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which they translate Then he who instructed the people prayed according to his ability 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they translate He that instructed the people signifying him that governed the people to wit in Ecclesiasticall matters True it is the same person did both but the same word signifieth not both this by the way But 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they translate according to his ability as if 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were both one You shall see a difference by the Ebrew Their Ancient Doctours have this saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Whosoever saith Amen VVITH ALL HIS MIGHT the Gate of the Garden of Eden is opened to him Musar C. iv And in the same manner of speech Maimoni describing their Morning Service c. ix 1. and the people answer Amen be his great Name blessed for ever and to all everlastings VVITH ALL THEIR MIGHT Whereas the same Rabbi in another place Taanioth c. iv 1. describing the speech of him that Preached humiliation to the people at the Fast of seven dayes whereof afore addeth and proceedeth in such like discourses according to his ability untill he humble their hearts and they repent perfectly In the Ebrew it is here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the other places 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first is in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in English that signifieth according to his ability this with all his might so much difference there is and the mistake it causeth no lesse then thus They will needs make Justine dream as much as themselves do of making shew of mens faculties in conceiving Prayers who speaketh of nothing but that earnestnesse of Devotion with which he saith the Bishop or Presbyter came to consecrate the Eucharist more proper without doubt to that prime point of Gods Service which he thus expresseth That he sendeth forth Prayers and Thanksgivings VVITH ALL HIS MIGHT In fine when Justine speaking of the Thanksgiving which the Eucharist was consecrated with saith that he made it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with all his might he meaneth neither more nor lesse then afore speaking of the Common Prayers of the people which he saith they made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or earnestly as shall be said The words of Tertullian Apolog. C. xxx Illuc suspicientes Christiani manibus expansis quia innocuis capite nudo quia non erubescimus sine monitore quia de pectore oramus pro omnibus Imperatoribus It is justly excepted that these words are not to the purpose as containing the private devotions of Christians compared with those of the Pagans Neverthelesse the subject of these Prayers which he prosecuteth afterwards is the same with the Prayers of their Assemblies whereof he speaketh C. xxxix and giveth just cause to think that he speaketh of private forms of devotion borrowed from the publick He saith there that Christians prayed with hands stretched out to protest their innocencie bare-headed to professe that they were not ashamed touching the Gentiles that covered hands and faces in praying which he interpreteth a confession of guilt in the hands an acknowledgement of shame in the face which that habit signified as hath been said And in the same strain he goeth on to tell them that whereas they had their remembrancers to suggest the devotions they addressed to their severall Deities which he calleth Monitours the Christians prayed without Monitours because
same service of Prayers ought to be performed both at ninth houres at three after noon and evenings It hath been said of late that this Canon first confined the Prayers of the Church to a set Form commanding to use alwayes the same but such an one as every one composed for his own turn This is argued from the iii. Councel of Carthage after this of Laodicea Can. xxiii where it is said Et quicunque sibi preces alicunde describit non eis utatur nisi priùs eas cum instructioribus fratribus contulerit And whosoever copieth out Prayers for his use from any where let him not use them till he have debated them with his more learned brethren Afterwards that the forms to be used be first allowed in the Synode we are told was first ordered in the ii Councel of Milevis some few years after this The words are these Placuit etiam illud ut preces vel orationes seu missae quae probatae fuerint in Concilio sive Praefationes sive Commendationes seu mannum Impositiones ab omnibus celebrentur nec alia omnino dicantur in Ecclesia nisi quae à prudentioribus tractatae vel comprobatae in Synodo fuerint nè fortè aliquid contra fidem vel per ignorantiam vel per minus studium fuerit compositum It seemed good also that those Prayers or Masses which have been allowed in the Councel whether Prefaces or Commendations or Impositions of Hands be frequented of all so that none at all be said in the Church but such as have been treated by the more discreet or allowed in the Synode lest perhaps something against the Faith be composed either through ignorance or too little heed With what judgement these bold conjectures are imposed upon the world for truth is now to be considered First it is acknowledged on all sides among men of learning that there is a great deal of confusion in these Africane Canons as they have been published in the Collection of Councels In particular by Justellus his preface and edition of those Canons it appeareth that the Councel which is there called the iii. of Carthage Caesario Attico Coss A. D. CCCXCIII did make Canons which are yet extam in the Code published by Justellus in number xxiii the rest of the L. fathered upon it are packed together most of them out of the Councel of Carthage in which that Code was inacted Post Cons Honorii xii Theod. viii A. D. CDXIX whereof neverthelesse this is none But this ii Councel of Milevis Theod. vii Palladio Coss A. D. CDXVI decreed indeed against Pelagius and Celestius but made no Canons whereof we have just remembrance the xxvii fathered upon it are packed together out of diverse Africane Councels one whereof is that of Carthage Honorio vii Theod. ii Coss A. D. CCCCVII among the Canons whereof there is one which in the Copie published first in Greek by Du Tillet since with the Originall Latine by Justellus is in number ciii in these terms Placuit etiam hoc ut preces quae probatae fuerint in Concilio sive Praefationes sive Commendationes seu manûs Impositiones ab omnibus celebrentur nec aliae omnino contra fidem praeferantur in the Collection called the Africane Councel proferantur sed quaecunque à prudentioribus fuerint collectae dicantur This also seemed good that these Prayers which have been allowed in the Councel whether Prefaces or Commendations or Impositions of hands be frequented of all so that by no means others against the faith be preferred or said but these that have been composed by the more discreet be said Balsamon upon this Canon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It seemeth some Bishops took upon them to say Prayers not customed It seemeth indeed inconvenience was perceived by the unconformitie of particular Episcopall Churches upon alterations made by the Ministers of them in their form of Service Therefore it is provided That the Service to be used be first approved in the usuall Synode of the Africane Churches that all Episcopall Churches of those Provinces might be conformable But this supposeth a Form which those Churches had how should else provision be made against alteration in it And this being without doubt the Authentick Canon from which both those recited have been jumbled into the Councels specified neither can we allow them more credit then can be thought due to him that pleased to make that jumble nor can we admit any other sense of the words of them then the words of this Canon inforce Which sense being of no more consequence will not be worth the while further to dispute And it is to be observed that some Western Canons have provided to the same purpose that all the Churches of the same Province be conformable in point of Service Conc. Venet. C. xv Rectum quoque duximus ut vel intra Provinciam nostram Sacrorum ordo psallendi una sit consuetudo We have also thought it right that in sacred offices and the order of singing the same custome hold through our Province Conc. Epaon C. xxvii Ad celebrandum divina Officia Ordinem quem Metropolitani tenent Provinciales observare debebunt For celebrating divine Offices those of Provinces shall be bound to observe the Order which the Metropolitanes hold By which appeareth the point aimed at in all these Canons to make the whole Province conformable in Divine Service Which was without doubt the intent of that of Laodicea expounded by Zonaras by that ciii of the Africane Canons 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The same thing saith he doth this present Canon also ordain Thus it is easy to perceive that this Canon of Laodicea providing that the order of Prayer be alwayes the SAME intended not to appoint the SAME Minister alwayes to use the same order of Prayers as is imagined but that there should be one Form unalterable with respect to the Diocese of Asia for which it was Originally made As that of Carthage for the Diocese of Africk and others for their severall Provinces And because they allow by this Canon every man to compose his own service so it be alwayes the same let them take notice how this agreeth with Zonaras 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Therefore saith he this Canon seemeth to order the same that whosoever would shall not compose Prayers and say them at Assemblies And now judge whether he or these new Masters is best at expounding the Canons Onely observe That this xviii Canon of Laodicea concerneth not the Service of those Assemblies at which the Eucharist was celebrated of which alone that ciii Africane Canon proceedeth the title whereof is De precibus ad altare dicendis of Prayers to be said at the Altar Whereupon it might perhaps be conceived that the said pretended Milevitane Canon where it ordereth the Prayers of the Eucharist requireth them to be allowed by the Synode where it requireth them either to be allowed by the Synode or else treated by
the time while the people assemble Whereas the solemn beginning of our Service with Confession of sinnes serves to put the people in mind that it is all the solemn service of God that follows and of the attention of mind and devotion of spirit which they ow it by the preparation of confessing and putting away sinnes requisite to make it acceptable The more have they to answer for that make it their employment to extinguish in the minds of the people that respect to this part of Gods Service which the Order of the Church hath laboured to procure and with the blessing of God had procured had not their peevishnesse been that will not have God served unlesse it be that way they like Whatsoever honour the praises of God reverently and attentively performed might have yielded him whatsoever good fruit the learning of his Scriptures might have brought forth in his people is with justice to be required at their hands that have been the means to intercept it by the unjust disgrace which they have stuck upon the settled Order of this Service Now as concerning the Ancient and generall course of Gods praises and reading the Scripture it appeareth by Justine Martyr and Tertullian that the Order of reading the Scripture in the Church was arbitrary in their time as accommodated to the condition of the times and occasions of their Assemblies by the guides of severall Churches The one of them saith that the Scriptures are read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as farre as occasion serves The others words are these Apologer C. xxxix Coimus ad literarum Divinarum commemorationem si quid praesentium temporum qualit as aut praemonere cogit aut recognoscere We assemble to repeat the Scriptures of God not like those that will not Assemble till they be read what the condition of the present times inforceth either to forewarn or to recognize The Ordér which is accommodated to the Condition of the times cannot be certain and appointed afore The reason why a set Order in these parts of publick Service is now preferred before the disposition of the Guides of Churches from time to time is the same for which men choose to live by positive law rather then by the will of their Rulers though if men were as they should be it is manifest that they might cut straighter by the thred of Justice applying right reason to the case then ruling their proceedings by a generall that was not built upon the particular The Order might be better were it left to particular disposing but the courses of the world inforceth to presume that it would be for the worse Besides in Ecclesiasticall matters by a set Order we attain uniformitie with other Churches to help towards the unitie of the whole we avoid disputes about what is most fitting which in matters of this probable nature must needs be endlesse we avoid jealousies and umbrages upon that which is not customable What this amounts to S. Augustines experience may teach us Serm. cxliv. de tempore Volueram aliquando ut per singulos annos secundùm omnes Evangelist as etiam Passio legeretur factum est audierunt homines quod non consueverunt perturbati sunt I had once a desire that every yeare the Passion also as the Resurrection in Easter-week should be read according to all the Evangelists it was done men heard what they had not wont to heare and were troubled How unjust the charge of the Masse upon our Service is hath appeared in the first point of it how untrue it is will appear in the next that is in the Order of Psalmes and Lessons at the daily Morning and Evening Service For if because the Breviarie and Masse contain a certain order of Psalmes and Lessons for the Service of God therefore all orders of Psalmes and Lessons to that purpose are derived from the Breviarie and Masse and chargeable with the corruptions of them what shall become of the Ancient Church before there was any such thing as Breviarie or Masse that is either form of publick Service in the opinion of those that professe this or according to the truth as the Masse importeth the corruptions of publick Service What shall become of the Church under the Apostles when publick Service consisted of the same Ingredients as hath been shewed and the Order of them is no more then S. Pauls rule Let all things be done decently and in Order But if the meaning of these clamours be to say that this same Order of going over the Psalter once a moneth at daily Morning and Evening Service of going over the Bible or all the most convenient of it once a yeare is the Order of the Breviarie and Masse it might concern all men either of honestie or shame though not to look into the Breviarie or Masse of which they are so confident yet to look upon the Preface of this our Service which they condemne without understanding and think whether men of common sense would use all those excellent reasons to excuse the alteration of that course which now they are accused for retaining But granting all to be true which is so apparently false were the Masse worse then it is and all this the very Order contained in it is it possible that any man of judgement or conscience should think it enough to say that this or that is in the Breviarie or Masse and never trouble himself to shew that it is part of the corruptions which they contain What reason is there to prove that the Order of the Psalter once a moneth is not for the Service of God and the edification of his Church This Church abolisheth not the use of Psalmes to musicall tunes where they may have place in the course of our Service Is it demanded further that the monethly course of the Psalter be abolished to make them room If it be the Church is bidden to losse and the service of God shall suffer in it the people is now more plentifully conducted to the knowledge of God and his praises according to his own word then the ruder sort shall have much ado to dream over a Psalme in a great deal of time in a manner so farre from that decencie to which it pretendeth as may be a just means to dead the devotion of such as are not set upon a good edge The Answers of the people represent in some sort that most ancient and commendable fashion of Antiphones and teach them their office and conduct them to bear their part in the praises of God not to sit by as Hearers where they are to be Actours And where that fashion may be represented to the truth in the more skilfull Congregations of Collegiate and Cathedrall Churches what a strange prejudice is it that will not suffer reasonable persons to relish the advantage of it in the service of God But all this affords no ground to condemne the course of those more skilfull Congregations of Collegiate and Cathedrall
down their throat the form of the Masse was related afore Vt nobis Corpus Sanguis fiat dilectissimi filii tui Domini nostri Jesu Christi and it was shewed that Transubstantiation is not contained in these words Neverthelesse because there might be offense taken at the words upon the sense of those that use them we see them altered into those terms wherein the truth of that which is done is most excellently expressed to the intent of the Scripture and true sense of the Primitive Church in these words Heare us O mercifull Father and those which follow In like sort because the very term of Offering and Sacrifice though used with a farre other meaning then the Church of Rome professeth seemeth to sound their meaning it is not onely removed out of the Prayer for the whole state of Christs Church but the prayer it self removed to stand afore the Consecration as we conjectured it did stand in the Africane Churches and not after it to give opinion that Christ present by Consecration was sacrificed then for the quick and dead as the Church of Rome imagineth Of the rest of the Service of the Eucharist I shall need to say nothing having shewed that in the ancient Church as with us the time of communicating was transacted with Psalmes after that Thanksgiving the dismission upon that The people is dismissed with the blessing in our Service as in the most ancient form related in the Constitutions of the Apostles and so in the Reformed Churches of France though they use that of Moses still frequented by the Synagogue In the Service prescribed for Lords dayes and Festivalls when the Eucharist is not celebrated it is not strange if something be added above the ordinary course to make it more solemn though it had been rather to be wished that the world were disposed for the true solemnity of it Is the voice of the Law calling us to mind our offenses and moving to crave pardon and grace for the future nothing to the Service of God The Lessons of the Epistles and Gospels belong indeed to the first part of the Service as hath been shewed but shall we take them to come from the Masse where they are last found or from S. Hierome from whom they seem first to have come And was it not convenient in them to remember what the Church celebrateth at severall seasons and solemnities of the yeare and to promote the edification of the Church and instruction of the people in the mysteries of the faith by giving Preachers a subject of their Sermons sutable to those solemnities Last of all though the world is not disposed to the continuall celebration of the Eucharist yet was it requisite in reverence to the Apostles Order and the universall practice of the Church that the prayer for all states of the same should be used at almost all solemn Assemblies which because it alwayes went along with the Eucharist as it is used serves to put us in mind what is wanting In fine though all Forms of Service devised by men must needs remain disputable and happy it is when so they are but upon slight matters so my hope is that from hence will appear that the form which we use deserves this commendation that it is possible to alter it for the better but easie to alter it for the worse Thus farre upon the Principles propounded in the beginning of things remembred in the Scripture concerning the publick Service of God and the most ancient and generall practice of the Church to expound them I have discoursed the substance and form of Gods Publick Service at solemn Assemblies for that purpose the circumstances of it and the particular form which we use Of the rest of Ecclesiasticall Offices and the Course we use in them it was not my purpose to say any thing at the present In which neverthelesse the reasons hitherto disputed will easily take place to show both that it is for the edification of the Church that the performance of them be solemn and by prescript form and that the form which we use is exceeding commendable CHAP. XI How the Form of Publick Service is ordered Dependance of Churches is from the Apostles for that and other purposes How the preaching of Lay men imports Schisme The good of the Order of Publick Service ANd now without further dispute it is to be seen what is prescribed concerning the Publick Service of God in the Scriptures and what is left to be ordered by humane appointment The particular Offices whereof it consisteth of Publick Prayers and the Praises of God of reading and expounding the Scriptures of the Celebration of the Eucharist and the rest are prescribed and recommended to the Church in the rules and practice of holy Scripture The Order and Form in which they are to be performed is acknowledged on all hands that it ought to be prescript yet is it no where prescribed in the Scriptures but left to humane Ordinance That which is to be Preached is acknowledged on all hands to be referred for the most part to the private endeavours of particular persons not in respect to any immediate inspiration of the holy Ghost otherwise to be quenched but because it is the ordinary means to instruct and admonish whole Congregations in that which most concerneth them of the knowledge and doctrine of the Scriptures Publick Prayers some think are to be ministred according to the disposition and discretion of particular guides of particular Congregations by virtue of the Apostles Ordinance forbidding to Quench the spirit Here it is proved that because it is confessed that the Grace of praying by immediate inspiration is not now extant therefore the purpose of this Ordinance ceaseth and that the ordinary rule of the edification of the Church to be attained by the Order and Comlinesse of these things which are done at publick Assemblies is followed to farre more purpose in the use of a form prescript and uniform It is further here to be observed that whatsoever may concern the honour of God the unity of the Church the truth of Religion and the recommendation of it is most effectually to be procured as procured it was from the beginning of our Faith by the dependance of Churches visibly derived from the appointment and ordinance of the Apostles It hath been declared that according to that which was done by Barnabas and Paul ordaining Presbyters through the Churches Acts xiv 22. according to that which Titus is instructed to ordain Presbyters through the Cities Titus 1 3. that is Colledges of Presbyters to order the Churches founded in populous Cities so throughout the whole Christian world were all Churches of Cities thought meet for their greatnesse whether instituted by the Apostles or propagated thence governed by Presbyteries or Colledges of Presbyters the Heads whereof were Bishops in Succession to the Apostles We know the Gospel attained to the Countreys and Territories lying under these Cities upon the preaching of
the Apostles the Scripture saith Acts xiii 49. upon the first preaching of Paul and Barnabas The word of the Lord was dispersed all over the Countrey and Clemens disciple of the Apostles Epist ad Cor. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Preaching therefore through Cities and Countreys they made the first-fruits of them trying them by the spirit Bishops and Deacons of such as should believe speaking of the Apostles and their time And we are ready to believe that Congregations might be planted in these Countreys and Territories during their time though we reade nothing of it here and the division of titles and Churches that is City and rurall Congregations in the Church of Rome is assigned in the Popes lives to a farre later time then this But do we not know that according to the generall and Primitive Custome of the Church these rurall Congregations received their Ministers from the Mother-Churches in which their Ordinations were made Doth it not appear to common sense that the form of Gods publick Service as it hath been described uniform in the main ingredients from the beginning unconformable in particulars of lesse moment was practised by particular congregations according to their Mother-Churches Doth not the distinction of Dioceses or as they were first called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 habitations adjoyning to chief Cities received in all parts of the Church proclaim that the institution and appointment of it cannot have been accessory and particular but universall and Primitive And what cause have we to doubt that the holy Ghost directing the Apostles should move them to that Course which according to the condition of the world must needs be most reasonable Or who can doubt that according to the condition of the world it is most reasonable to presume that frequent and populous residences must needs be furnished of men of best abilities and means to know the right course of ordering publick matters of the Church for most advantage to the truth of Religion the Peace of the Church and the Service of God rather then that vulgar and rude Congregations inflamed with the ignorance and malice and overweening of unable guides should choose for themselves not onely in things necessary for their own souls health wherein all have their due interesse but in things concerning the generall state of the Church which they are neither bound nor able to understand I must confesse to have written heretofore that in the time of the Apostles the work of Preaching seemeth to have gone rather by mens abilities then their Offices And now I hope in good time having declared here severall regards in which this is verified It hath been shewed that of the the same Ecclesiasticall Order the same Bench of the Church some Presbyters exercised the abilities of Preaching some not It hath been shewed that the rank of Prophets furnished by the immediate inspiration of God for the more plentifull performance of that work in the beginning of the Gospel cannot be thought to have been the same with that of Presbyters And if any man stand upon it it shall not trouble me to yield that which Grotius of late hath observed and under the Church of Rome Ferarius de Ritu Concionum ii 6. That in the Primitive times of the Church Lay men were licensed to preach by the Bishops of Churches according to the instances alledged in the letter of the Bishops of Palestine to Demetrius of Alexandria in Origens case related by Eusebius For it seemeth most agreeable to the Succession of Scribes after the Prophets in the Synagogue seeing it is neither reasonable to conceive that Scribes were denied this Office when they were found fit nor that those to whom it was granted were all Elders of Synagogues And by this an easie reason is given how our Lord and his Apostles are admitted to speak in the Synagogues as licensed and invited by the Elders and Rulers of them according to the Scripture Acts xiii 14. And perhaps the Custome might remain in the Church after propheticall Graces for the instruction of it were ceased that those which had the knowledge of the Scriptures without inspiration should be admitted to speak to the people But what is all this to these mechanick persons that make themselves Churches and the Churches them their Ministers without education without calling without acknowledgement of one Church of God They please themselves in observing that S. Paul used his trade while he Preached the Gospel as they do And in that perhaps there is as much mistake as in the rest For it is not all one for a Preacher to be bred to a trade from his youth and for him that is bred to a trade from his youth to become a Preacher when he please To me there is so much difference that I yield the one to be S. Pauls case as the world sees the other to be theirs It is observed in Scaligers Elenchus and elsewhere that S. Paul in that particular made use of his education under Gamaliel in regard it was the custome of their Doctours to breed their Scholars to a trade as well as to the knowledge of the Law which they were to professe And there is a saying among them in Pirke Aboth of this tenour to my remembrance Alwayes with the Law let a man learn the way of the earth the meaning is a trade for his maintenance Hereupon it is ordinary for their Rabbies to be sirnamed by their trade And in Maimoni Talmud Torah C. iii. you have divers sayings of their ancient Doctours that with the Law a man is to practise a trade for his maintenance as this All Law that is all learning of the law with which there is not work in the end comes to nothing and draws on naughtinesse and the end of such a man is he falls to robbe creatures And in C. ii afore He that exercises a trade with the studie of the law must spend three houres of the day at his trade and nine at his study which are divided as it follows there The knowledge then of these abilities to which this education tended taken according to publick Order of that time and the exercise of them for the publick instruction of the people allowed according to the same seem to contain sufficient warrant of humane calling to speak to the people in the Church in them that were not Ministers of it S. Ambrose in Eph. iiii Vt ergò cresceret plebs multiplicaretur omnibus inter initia concessum est evangelizare baptizare Scripturas in Ecclesia explanare That the people of believers might increase and multiply in the beginning it was granted to all to preach the Gospel and to baptize and to expound the Scriptures in the Church There is a difference between that which he calleth preaching the Gospel and expounding the Scriptures in the Church though both are called preaching among us For it is one thing to publish the Gospel where there is no Church another to minister
the doctrine of the Scriptures where there is The Scripture witnesseth that those which were dispersed upon the persecution raised about Stephen did the one without difference Acts viii 4. xi 19. It is no more then all Christians must do so farre as they hold themselves able to advance the faith As for expounding the Scriptures in Churches settled where Order took place in that also S. Ambrose his words may be verified that it was granted to all that is to all conditions whether Ministers of Churches or not But no otherwise granted then hath been said upon knowledge of competent abilities according to the practice of publick Order derived as it seems into the Church from the Synagogue But doth this fault the publick Order of this time that confineth the publick exercise of this Office to the publick ministeries of the Church The course of education being open to all and the performance of that course proved and presumed according to publick Order of all that pretend to these ministeries the ministeries of Congregations being furnished by that publick Order to authorize others in Congregations so appointed would be to choke the edification of the Church by setting up perpetuall emulation and difference But how eminent soever mens abilities are how well soever known to themselves or the world to undertake the instructions of the people without publick Order in publick Assemblies is a thing that no Scripture no time no Custome of the Primitive Church will allow To tread all that learning under foot without which the knowledge of the Scriptures is not to be had upon humane endeavours to undervalue the abilities of a learned age in comparison of the boldnesse of mechanick persons in spending the mouth without sense underneath seemeth to be the wantonnesse of this time for after-ages to admire But for private persons against publick Order and the unitie of the Church to call such Assemblies and to exercise these pretended abilities in such Assemblies as publick Order forbiddeth is neither more nor lesse then Schisme let them that do it advise at whose doore the sinne of that Schisme lieth For the publick profession of this Church is the same that hath been proved these so many years to contain no cause of separation in it And these that separate are so farre from setting a foot new or from proving old charges that they seem to be yet to learn whether there be any such thing as proving that which they say or not The unitie of the Church is a thing commanded by God the divisions that and shall arise in the Church are a thing foretold by God He that hath foretold that divisions shall come hath commanded that they shall not come To me it seems a strange reason because God hath foretold that Heresies shall come in for men therefore to set open the doore and for publick Order to take a course by the independance of Churches to allow as many religions as Conventicles The dependance of particular Congregations upon Episcopall Churches for the Originall relateth to the institution of the Apostles for the end to the unitie of the Church The dependance of these Bishops Churches upon the seats of Metropolitanes and Patriarchs acknowledgeth a mere humane Originall from the state of the Romane Empire and the residence of the chief Powers of it but not without respect to the Gospel first planted according to the president of the Apostles in the most eminent cities and thence derived into the Countreys about But relateth to the same end of one Church as procuring the actuall correspondence of all the members of it Since Religion is become part of the State of several Kingdomes and Common-wealths they are not to receive from one another the laws that inforce the exercise of it but it is requisite that the exercise of it through each Kingdome and Common-wealth be uniform by Ecclesiasticall rules advised by each Church and inforced by each Kingdome and Common-wealth the dependance of particular Congregations upon Episcopall Churches in the exercise of Religion according to such Rules continuing inviolable as the institutiō of the Apostles Now regard we the truth of Religion regard we the peace of the Church regard we the honour and glory of God and the credit of our Profession towards such as are without this dependance of Churches is not more effectuall in any point of Religion then in the uniform and prescript form of Gods Publick Service What means is there so effectuall to convey and settle the truth professed in the minds of all people then to glorifie God in it and according to it in the continuall exercise of his service What means so powerfull to obtain the peace of the Church from God to preserve it with men as to joyn in the same uniform service of God for the purpose As for the honour of God and the commendation of that profession which we make let common reason not possessed with prejudice be judge whether the voluntary extemporary conceptions of particular Ministers of Congregations or the forms maturely advised by the most able shall prove the more probable means to procure it Let the publick exercise of Religion consist in speaking to the people more then men have learned of the knowledge of the Scriptures in permitting men to vent their own passions or perhaps factions for the devotions of their people for their Prayers and Thanksgivings to God Let the Preachers Office consist in speaking by measure of time not by weight of matter let it consist rather in the exercise of the lungs then of any knowledge in the Scriptures Let the Hearers Office consist in patience of sitting still so many glasses or rather in censuring the Preachers abilities in Praying as well as in Preaching for to that the office of praying in the Church may come And those that are affected to the Profession with the best shall be forced for love of truth to lament that it is so much scandalized hindred by them that pretend to advance it But let the Praises of God the hearing of his Scriptures read and expounded the Common Prayers of the Church and the celebration of the Eucharist be performed with that discretion for the Order with that choise for the substance with that reverence for the outward visage and fashion of what is said and done respectively at each of these parts of Gods Publick Service and let not me doubt that God the Authour and men strangers to our profession shall joyn in making good and acknowledging that of the Apostle 1. Cor. xiiii 25 that God is among us of a truth FINIS ¶ The Authour upon his revisall desires the Reader in these severall places to adde and reade as followeth Pag. 15. line 12. after his own adde And indeed the passage seemeth to have been crowded in hither out of Justine Martyr his dialogue with Trypho the Jew though contrary to his meaning for it appeareth that the Jews of that time gave not leave to drink warmed