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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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such a God to ask it of and such a Prince to ask it for whose endeavours are a great incouragement to this Petition What is further requisite the following Analysis and Paraphrase will supply The Analysis of the second Collect. Sect. 9. This Collect hath four Parts 1. The Compellation Almighty and Everlasting God 2. The ground of this Petition being God● word concerning 1. His power over Kings W● are taught by thy Holy Word that the hearts of Kings ●re ●n thy hands 2. His Providence about them and that thou dost dispose and turn them as it seemeth best to the godly Wisdom 3. The Petition it self and in it 1. For what is made We humbly beseech thee so to dispose and govern the heart 2. In behalf of whom of CHARLES thy Servant our King and Governour 3. To what end viz. 1. Gods glory that in all his thoughts words and works he may ever seek thy honour and glory 2. The Nations good And study to preserve thy People committed to his charge in Wealth Peace and Godliness 4. The Motives to make it effectual taken 1. From Gods mercy Grant this O merciful Father 2. Christs merits for thy dear Sons sake Iesus Christ our Lord Amen The Paraphrase of the second Collect. § 10. O Almighty Lord and everlasting God who art infinitely powerful and ever the same We chearfully call upon thee for our gracious Prince because we are taught by thy Spirit in thy Holy Word that the hearts of all men yea even the Counsels and purposes of Kings which seem of all other the most unsearchable and unalterable yet are in thy hands and at thy Command So that thou canst direct them to any good or restrain them from any evil and that thou dost by thy over-ruling Providence dispose and turn them as the Rivers of Waters Giving such event to every design as it seemeth best to thy divine and godly wisdom by which thou dost manage all the World Wherefore we humbly beseech thee thou great Moderator of Heaven and Earth so to dispose the Counsels and govern the heart of our gracious Soveraign CHARLES thy Servant our just and rightful King and Governour as may best conduce to his and our mutual comfort To which end let thy mighty power cause that in all his purposes and thoughts words and works he may most religiously and earnestly ever seek to advance thy honour and glory by defending thy Gospel administring Justice and making it his constant care and study to preserve all his Subjects who are thy people and by thee committed to his charge in a most flourishing prosperity that they may increase in wealth and abound in plenty continue in peace and dwell safely in the profession of Religion and in the practice of vertue and godliness throughout all Generations Grant this we beseech thee O merciful Father of thine own gracious nature especially now we plead in this Sacrament for thy dear Sons sake and in remembrance of the Death of Iesus Christ our Lord and our Redeemer Amen SECT V. Of the Epistle the Gospel and the Creed § 1. WHen to these Prayers for outward Prosperity we have added the Collect of the Day of which see Comp. to the Temple as a Petition for internal grace and a fit preparation for the following Portions of Scripture out of which it is taken and to which it commonly doth refer Then followeth the Reading of the Epistle and Gospel And it is evident that long before the dividing of the Bible into Chapters and Verses it was the Custom both of the Greek and Latin Church to read some select portions of the plainest and most practical parts of the New Testament at the Celebration of the Eucharist in imitation of the Jewish Mode of reading the History of the Passover before the eating of the Paschal Lamb. Buxtorf Lexic Chald. So that we find mention of reading the Apostolical and Evangelical Writings in this Office not only in the Liturgies of St. James St. Clemens St. Basil c. but in Just Martyr Tertullian St. Augustine and others of the Fathers who most of them have their Homilies still extant upon them And Strabo affirms they were appointed by the first Successors of the Apostles p Walafrid Strabo de reb Eccl. c. 22. For the Counsel of Valentia q Sacrosancta Evangelia ante munerum illationem in Missâ Catechumenorum in ordine lectionum post Apostolum legantur Concil Val. Can. 1. Anno circa 500. post Christum did only fix them to that place wherein now they stand before the Offertory that so the Catechumens might have the benefit to hear them For the particular choice of them they are the very Quintessence of the New Testament And first The Epistles are either plain and pressing Exhortations to some necessary Christian Duties or rare discoveries of Gods mercy or gracious promises of Pardon and Assistance And they are first read in remembrance of that first Mission of the Apostles when they went before their Masters face to every City whither Christ would come Luke 10.1 that the Epistle may be as the Harbinger for the Gospel And sure it is fit these being the words of the Servants that the last place and greatest honour be reserved to the words of their and our Master Secondly For the Gospel it is either some remarkable History of Christs Life or Death some Eminent Miracle or some curious Parable and part of his Divine Sermons which is therefore last read because the Epistles do usually contain instruction in the Mysteries of Salvation but the Gospel presents the Example of Jesus to the imitation whereof all our knowledge is but subservient Eph. 4.13 And to this may be referred surely that ancient custom of standing up at the reading of the Holy Gospel so frequently enjoined by the forementioned Liturgies r Legitur Evangelium stantibus omnibus cum timore reverentiâ Liturg St. Basil Stantes audiamus S. Evangelium Lit. St. Chrys Vide etiam Sozom hist l. 9. c. 19. Constit Clem. l. 2. Canon Apostol 61. and so universally practised among Christians both to express an extraordinary reverence to our Lords own words and also that we may shew our selves ready to obey by standing in a posture fit presently to execute his commands and to follow him whithersoever he calls us The Gospel hath such affinity to Christ that it is properly the word of God and bears the name of our Lord. Heb. 4.12 13. 1 Cor. 1.24 To receive Christ and to entertain his word with Faith is all one Finally to believe the Gospel is called eating Christs flesh and drinking his blood John 6. and is a kind of spiritual Communion Wherefore it is fitly read before this Sacrament and at the Altar even when there is no Celebration because we must hearken to it with the like reverence receive it with the like joy and return it with the like gratitude as if Jesus himself was sacramentally or visibly
sociis pro aegrotis pro afflictis in summo pro omnibus iis qui egent Auxilio Cyril Catech. 5. exactly agreeing with this of our Church St. Chrysostome also saith That the Priest standing at the Altar did offer Prayers and Praises for all the World for those that are absent and those that are present for those that were before us and those that shall be after us while that Sacrifice is set forth Hom. 26. in Math. For which cause our Communion Office in the Rubrick before this Prayer appoints the Bread and Wine to be set upon the Table first and then stirs us all up with that solemn Let us pray for the whole Estate of Christs Church c. And if as we are worshipping without we remember him that is praying within the Vail and by imitating his general Charity do unite our supplications to his all-poweriul Intercession we may no doubt obtain the Iargest and the choicest blessings in the Treasures of Heaven §. 2. The Analysis of the Prayer for the Whole Church § 2. This Prayer as the beginning intimateth consisteth of Three main Parts with a Preface and Conclusion 1. The Preface shewing 1. To whom it is made Almighty and Everliving God 2. On what ground we make it Who by thy Holy Apostle hast taught us to make Prayers and Supplications and to give Thanks for all Men 2. Prayers for the Acceptance of 1. Our Alms We humbly beseech thee most mercifully to accept our Alms and Oblations 2. Our Petitions and to receive these our Prayers which we offer to thy Divine Majesty 3. Supplications and Intercessions made 1. Generally for 1. The whole Church together Beseeching thee to inspire continually the Vniversal Church with the Spirit of Truth Vnity and Concord 2. All its Members And grant that all they that do confess thy Holy Name may agree in the truth of thy Holy Word and live in Vnity and godly Love 3. Especially its Temporal Governours We beseech thee also to save and defend all Christian Kings Princes and Governours 2. Particularly for this Church viz. 1. The Governours of it 1. Temporal 1. The King Especially thy servant CHARLES our King that under him we may be godly and quietly governed 2. The Magistrates And grant unto his whole Council and to all that are put in Authority under him that c. 2. Spiritual Give grace O heavenly Father to all Bishops 2. Ministers and Curates that they may both by their Life and Doctrine set forth c. 3. The People 1. For the spiritual good of all 1. In these Duties And to all thy People give thy heavenly grace especially to this Congregation c. 2. In the rest of their lives truly serving thee in Righteousness and true c. 2. For the Afflicted Temporal Relief And we most humbly beseech thee of thy goodness O Lord to comfort and succour c. 4. Giving Thanks by 1. Praising God for the Saints departed And we also bless thy Holy Name for all thy Servants departed th●s Life in thy faith and fear 2. Applying it to our selves Beseeching thee to give us grace so to follow their good Examples that with them we may be Partakers of thy Heavenly Kingdom 5. The Conclusion of the Whole Grant this O Father for Iesus Christ his sake our onely Mediator and Advocate Amen A Practical Discourse upon the Prayer for the whole Church Sect. 3. Almighty and Everliving God who by thy Holy Apostle hast taught us to make Prayers and Supplications and to give thanks for all men These two glorious Attributes of Omnipotence and Eternity so clearly distinguish God from all Creatures and are so properly the Character of an infinite Majesty that he is sometimes called the Almighty Psal 91.1 Job 21.15 and sometimes He that liveth for ever Dan. 4.34 Rev. 4.9 without any other denomination wherefore they are placed here to strike a Religious reverence into us because of his infinite perfections to whom we make this Address and yet also to confirm our Faith and excite our hope that though we petition for so many persons and so great Blessings we shall be heard by him who is mod mighty in Power and who hath through all times preserved his Church and though one Generation goeth and another cometh yet he ever liveth and is always the same But that which may still encrease our hope is that this Almighty and Everliving God is not only able to grant these Prayers but hath expresly commanded us by his Apostle St. Paul to make them 1 Ep. Timothy 2.1 I exhort therefore that first of all Supplications Prayers Intercessions and giving of thanks be made for all Men Now had he not intended to grant them he would not have enjoined us to make them shall Esther fear to speak or to speed when the King commands her to ask Chap. 5.3 or will the Lord reject that Petition which is drawn up by his own Direction Behold how closely the Church hath followed the Apostles Directory for here in this form we have as the Analysis doth manifest first Prayers that is Petitions for Good d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophil in 1 Tim. 2. then Supplications or deprecations of evil in which are comprehended Intercessions and so not named here that is desiring some good or some deliverance from evil for others and lastly giving of thanks for mercies already received And surely all the Liturgies in the World ought to be composed by this Rule as ours most plainly is for the Morning and Evening offices do chiefly consist of Prayer The Letany is in the first part Supplication in the second Intercession and this Communion office may well be accounted Eucharistical being full of Hymns of Thanksgiving This for the kinds of our Requests now the Persons for whom we are to pray are all men which surely God commands in pursuance of those Precepts of Universal Charity of which this universal intercession is an excellent indication For no man can pray for all the World if he hates any one person he that prays for all must be in Charity with all and it is also an effectual means to oblige all people to us and tame the furies of our Enemies it being barbarous and highly infamous to prosecute those that heartily pray for our good And now if our hearts be filled with true Christian Charity such as is necessary for this holy Communion we cannot but rejoice to meet so excellent an opportunity to express our desire of the welfare of all Mankind Let us then with all possible Devotion offer up this Sacrifice Love this pious and prudent intercession which is enjoined by him that purposes to grant it and printed by Charitable Souls who will infinitely rejoice in the success thereof viz. the prosperity of the whole Church § 4. We humbly beseech thee most mercifully to accept our Alms and Oblations and to receive these our Prayers which we offer unto thy Divine Majesty It seems to have been
is given for you Our Heavenly Physician being about to cure the Diseases of our Souls having thus prepared the Remedy and presented it to us he doth first direct the use of it a Medicus non tantum curat sed etiam monet Sen. ep 94. and Secondly Tell us what it is We are not taught to carry it about to gaze at and to be adored but to Take and Eat it For Christ having made himself a Sin-offering for us desires that Sacrifice may be accepted as ours and would have us to share in the benefits thereof wherefore he hath made this a Peace-offering as the memorial of it and invited us to take and eat our Portion that so he may be one with us and we with him And when we hear him so lovingly call us to feast with God upon the remainders we may very fitly fall into these Contemplations There is indeed a mighty difference between the feeding of my Body and the refreshing of my Soul that which enters in by the mouth cannot of it self reach thither yet I am commanded when I come for spiritual relief to Take and Eat and I will not enquire but obey because he that prescribes this method can work wonders and at once satisfie both Body and Soul wherefore I will perform the outward part and at the same time lift up my Soul above these visible representations and being sensible of my offences against Heaven while my mouth is chewing the holy Bread my Faith b Quod esca est carni hoc animae fides Cypr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil shall feast upon the satisfaction made by my Redeemers Passion until I find my Soul is nourished with the Joy the Peace and the Comfort which it draws from thence As he hath made his Oblation mine by his designing it for me so I will make it mine also by a particular application O strengthen my hand by a lively Faith and open my mouth by fervent desires so will I take and eat this and rejoice in so lively an Emblem which leads me into that within the vail and while I am performing the bodily part let my soul feel the spiritual efficacy of thy grace that I may not eat unworthily or to Condemnation Lord I feed upon thy love I lay hold upon thy Promises I will take and eat these as well as the material part if thou wilt please to enable me so to do Furthermore lest I should be mistaken and either not understand or not believe the true worth of this incomparable gift he is pleased to tell me what it is This is my Body saith he which is given for you and by that word he makes it to be so to every true Believer wherefore the Minister ought to pronounce this so reverently and so deliberately that the Communicants may have time to exercise their Faith because their senses cannot discover any material alteration For the true understanding whereof let me here digress a little for the satisfaction of such as are not prejudiced nor contentious We know how stifly the Roman Church contends for the literal exposition of this Text and what Tragedies have been acted upon those who did not so understand it but we have great reason to believe That our Saviour did not intend by these words to change the substance of the Bread and Wine into his natural Flesh and Blood For I. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This being Neuter cannot agree with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bread which is Masculine and it is very probable that our Lord did herein as in other things imitate that Phrase which the Jews used at the Feast of the Passover This is the Bread of affliction which our Fathers did eat c. and This is the Body of the Paschal Lamb which our Fathers did eat c. as the Talmud tract de Pasch declares For as that was not the very Bread nor the very Lamb yet they called it so because it did represent and continue the memorial of that and was used to the same purpose so in like manner He calls this his own Body who was the true Paschal Lamb because This Action doth signifie and remember it and by this Bread we are partakers thereof Secondly St. Paul the best interpreter of his Master expounds This is my Body and Blood by this is the Communion of my Body and Blood 1 Cor. 10.16 that is most plainly This blessed Bread is that which will make you partakers of Christs Body c. and 1 Cor. 11.26 he calls it no more but Bread even after the Consecration ver 24 25. And the same Apostle c Solet autem res quae significat ejus rei nomine quam significat nuncupari ut Petra erat Christus Hebraeis non signum Christi dicit Apostolus Aug. in Levit. Quaest 57. saith That Rock was Christ d 1 Cor. 10.4 not intending to make us believe the Rock was Transubstantiate but only that it was the figure and symbol of Christ and so might be called by his name Thirdly Nor did the most antient Fathers thus apprehend our Saviours meaning when they called this the Antitype of his Body the Type of a great Mystery the Figure of his Body and a Symbol called by the name of his Body e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nazianzen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Mys cat 5. Hoc est corpus meum i. e. figura corporis mei Tertul. in Marc. l. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viz. Ego sum panis vitae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viz. Hoc est corpus meum Theod. Dial. cap. 8. and much more to this purpose Fourthly Nor will this opinion of Transubstantiation agree with the most antient Liturgies for in the most genuine part of them the Prayer of Consecration all those forms called from St. James St. Clement St. Basil and St. Chrysostome do pray after they have pronounced the words of Christ This is my Body that the Holy Spirit may descend and make that Bread so they still call it the Body and that Cup the Blood of Christ Yea in the Roman Church it self one of the most authentick parts of the Canon of the Mass hath these words That this Oblation may be made Vnto us the body and blood of thy most beloved Son our Lord Jesus Christ Which doubtless may be done without any real change in the Elements themselves Yea and in the last part of the Canon long after the Priest hath said H●c est Corpus meum by which they suppose the substances to be changed they say Through Jesus Christ our Lord by whom thou dost always create sanctifie quicken bless and give us these good things Which words being only applicable to the Bread and Wine do shew f Haeretici hujus seculi rident hanc Canonis particulam eò quod post Consecrationem adjecta sit quasi ea verba intelligi nequeunt nisi de pane vino nam Corpus sanguinem Christi non
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
of the Fathers who disallow that practice and certainly it is a great presumption for an ordinary Person to invade the Ministerial Office without any Warrant and as to the pretence that a Child may be in danger I suppose the Salvation of the Child may be as safe upon the stock of Gods mercy without any Baptism as with a Baptism that is not commanded by God nor hath he made any promises unto it So that where God gives not opportunity of a Person who may do it aright it seems better to leave it undone 2. The Words I Baptize thee c. were always the form of the Western Church and cannot be pronounced Emphatically by Midwives or such as the Romanists sometimes permit to baptize but do suppose a lawful Priest one to whom Christ hath given Power to do this The Eastern Church use a little variation Let N. be Baptized c. but the sense is much the same howsoever in the next words In the Name of the Father c. all Orthodox Christians ever did agree because it is of Christs own appointment and unalterable wherefore when the Hereticks presumed to vary from this form they were censured by the Church and those Baptisms declared null which were not ministred in the Name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost I confess there were words put in to explain not to vary the sense x 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Constit l. 7. c. 23. fusiùs ap Justin Martyr Apol. 2. And the Orthodox took liberty to mingle a Paraphrase with them yet surely it is more prudently done of our Church to preserve the Words of our Lord intire without any Addition or Diminution Now by Baptizing in the Name of the Three Persons is not only meant we do it by the Commission and Authority of God the Father Son and Holy Ghost But that we do baptize them into the Faith of the Holy Trinity and do receive them into that Society of Men who are distinguished from Jews and Turks Heathens and all false Professions in the World by believing Three Persons and one God This is the great fundamental Article on which all the rest depend and to which they may be referred so that our very being Baptized into the Trinity is an Argument we are Christians and a Profession of the Religion which Jesus taught And the more to illustrate this St. Ambrose tells us that when Men come to full Age were Baptized they asked them three several times if they did believe in each of the three Persons and put them into the Water first when they professed their belief in the Father and again when they declared their Faith in the Son and a third time when they said they believed in the Holy Ghost Ambros de sacram l. 2. cap. 7. We may add that this solemn naming of the three Persons is a kind of calling them to Witness from Heaven that we may as it were profess before these three Witnesses our unfeigned Faith 1 John 5.7 And so we have the same for Witnesses of our Faith y obsignata in Patre Filio Spiritu Sancto nam si in tribus testibus stabit omne verbum quanto magis dum habemus per benedictionem eosdem arbitros Fidei quos sponsores salutis Tertul. de bapt c. 6. who make us the promises of Salvation and sure we shall never dare fall off who have sealed our Profession in the Presence of the Father Son and Holy Ghost wherefore let our words be established for ever 3. We are to consider the Sacred Actions in Baptism which are the Dipping or Sprinkling of the Party with Water It is indeed very probable that at the first Institution of Baptism in those hotter Regions where it was ordinary to bath daily the Rite might be performed commonly by Immersion but the Prudence and Charity of the Church knowing this not to be Essential to the Sacrament did even there appoint that Clinick Christians that is such who by weakness kept their Beds should only be sprinkled with Water which St. Cyprian determines to be a lawful Baptism z In sacramentis salutaribus necessitate cogente Deo largiente indulgentiam suam totum conferunt Divina● Compendia Cypr. ad Magn. ep 76. And therefore for the same reason it may very well be indulged to tender-infants in these Northern Countries For God will have mercy and not Sacrifice and the divine grace is not measured by the quantity of Water used in the Administration And yet because the way of immersion was the most antient our Church doth first prescribe that and only permits the other where it is certified the Child is weak although Custom have now prevailed to the laying the first wholly aside but it is not a matter worth contending for since sprinkling is sufficient As for the Custom of Dipping or sprinkling three times Once at the naming of the Father again at the naming of the Son and a third time at the naming of the Holy Ghost it is very likely a Non semel sed ter ad singula nomina in personas singulas tinguimur Tertul. advers Prax. cap. 26. Cyril catech 2. it was the general use of the Church of old and they supposed it did very well express the Mystery of the Trinity But our Church hath not enjoined it wherefore if it be used by any it must not be urged as necessary for when some in Spain began to press and strain this Trine Immersion too far it was Decreed in a Council b Caeutum est ne in Hispania fiat baptismus nisi una mersione Concil Tolet. 4. Can 5. That it was sufficient to do it once because this did as well set out the one God as the other did the Three Persons To conclude we ought not to be so much concerned for these outward and ritual parts as for the Devotion of our Hearts Wherefore let the Priest minister herein with all possible Humility Reverence and Sincerity remembring that God is doing his work within while he is exercised without and let the People behold the mystery with gravity and wonder thankfully remembring the like mercy once shewed to them And finally let the Priest and all the People heartily say Amen when the mystery is ended both to shew they believe the Child to be rightly baptized and to desire God may ratifie that in Heaven which we have done upon the Earth Amen so be it §. 5. The Reception of the Child into the Church We receive this Child into the Congregation of Christs flock and do sign him with the Sign of the Cross c. Baptism is by the appointment of Christ himself the Sacrament of our initiation and admission into his Church wherefore when any one is Baptized it is requisite they should be solemnly declared members of the visible Church and when God hath received them into his favour and sealed them with his Spirit as he ever doth in this mystery where
Fathers or our Brethren SECT III. The Close and Consequents after Baptism §. 1. The Exhortation to the Congregation SEeing now Dearly Beloved Brethren that this Child is regenerate c. We must not presently turn our backs upon God so soon as the Holy Rite is finished but compleat the Solemnity by Thanksgiving and Prayer and that we may do both not only with the Spirit but with Understanding the Minister doth here teach us what must be the Subjects of our Praises and Petitions 1. Our Praises must look back upon the Grace already shewed and the benefits which are already given to this Infant which are principally two 1. Internally it is regenerated 2. Externally it is grafted into Christs Church for which we must give hearty thanks to Almighty God To which we must add 2. Our Prayers which must look forward upon the grace which will be needful to enable it to live answerable to this Estate into which it is admitted and this we must beg of Almighty God also or else the former blessings will be altogether in vain Now all this is so plain that no more would need to be added but only that some with Nicodemus are apt to say How can these things be John 3.9 judging it impossible that so great a matter as regeneration can be effected so soon and by so mean an instrument b Simplicitas sacramenti quibusdam derogat effectûs fidem cum sumptu plurimo pompis idolorum arcana sibi authoritatem conciliant Tertul. de Bapt. as they account it whereas the effect is to be ascribed to the Divine Power of the Author not to the intrinsick efficacy of the outward means Yet in regard we can never bless God heartily for a mercy unless we believe he hath bestowed it we must labour to remove these scruples by a fuller Account of this Baptismal Regeneration that we may not withhold the divine praises by our doubting and unbelief The word Regeneration is but twice that I know of used in Scripture first Math. 19.28 Ye that have followed me in the Regeneration where though by altering the point followed me in the Regeneration when the Son of man c. it may signifie in the Resurrection yet as we read it signifies the renewing of men by the Gospel and Baptism Secondly Titus 3.5 he saved us by the Laver of Regeneration b Graec. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 per Lavacrum Regenerationis Vulg. Syr. Vatab. Beza and renewing of the Holy Ghost which is a Paraphrase upon that of our Saviour John 3. Except a man be born of Water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God ver 5. And because Persons come to Age before their Conversion are first taught and perswaded by the Word of God the Language of Holy Writ enlarges the Metaphor and saith such are Begotten by the Word of God 1 Cor. 4.15 and then Born again or Regenerated in Baptism In like manner speak the Fathers who do constantly and unanimously affirm that we are Regenerated in or by Baptism c In novam vitam lavacro aquae salutaris animatus Cyprian de seipso ep 2. ad Donat. Regeneratione coelesti Christo consurreximus lib. de zel livor Lavacrum inde Dionysius vocat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vide Ambr. de Sacram. l. 3. c. 1. So that we must next enquire wherein this Regeneration doth consist And first whereas both Children and those of riper years are by nature dead in Sin so that they lie under the guilt and power thereof our gracious Father doth here in Baptism Seal a Covenant with us wherein he promiseth to pardon them and when this deadly load is removed the Soul receives as it were a new life and takes new hopes and Courage being restored to the divine favour and being set free from the sad expectations of unavoidable condemnation for former sin Original in Infants and both it and Actual in those of riper years Before this Covenant we were dead in Law and by the Pardon of our Sins we are begotten again to a lively hope and herein stands the first particular of our Regeneration viz. in the Remission of Sins wherefore both Scripture and Antiquity d Luke 3.3 Acts 2.38 Chap. 22 16. Omnem autem enormitatem sceleris baptismi sacramenta diluunt teach us that Baptism is the means for Remission of Sin and hence they join Pardon and Regeneration commonly together e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Justin Martyr 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Catech 2. because this forgiveness puts us into a new Estate and an excellent condition in comparison of that which our natural Birth had left us in 2. But further by Baptism we gain new Relations and old things being done away all things become new Hence the Jews called their Proselytes New-born Children because they forsook all their Heathen Kindred so we although we do not renounce our Earthly Parents because they also are Christian yet we gain new Alliances for God hereby doth become our Father and Jesus our Master and all the Saints both in Heaven and Earth our Brethren so that it is as if we were born over again since Baptism doth intitle us to this Coelestial Kindred But this is not all For Thirdly Our corrupt nature is changed in Baptism and there is a renovation effected thereby both as to the mortification of the old affections and the quickning of the new by the Holy Spirit which is hereby given to all that put no bar or impediment unto it This was the Antient Doctrine who affirmed a real Change to be wrought f Da injustum insipientem peccatorem continuò aequus prudens innocens erit uno enim lavacro malitia omni● abolebitur Lact. Inst 3. 26. Vndae genitalis auxilio superioris aevi labe detersâ in expiatum pectus purum desuper lumen infudit Cypr. de seipso 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril catech 3. and believed the Spirit to be therein bestowed as God had promised Ezek. 36.25 26. That he would sprinkle clean Water upon them and they should be clean from all their filthiness and then a new heart would he give them and put a new Spirit within them And it is manifest that in the first Ages of the Church there was abundance of gifts and graces miraculously bestowed upon Christians in their Baptism and no doubt if the Catechumens of our days who are of Age would prepare themselves as strictly by Repentance Fasting and Prayer as they of old did they should find incomparable effects of this sacred Laver if not in as miraculous measures yet to as real purposes that is they should be truly regenerated and their hearts changed by the influence of the Divine Spirit But some may doubt whether Infants be regenerate in this sense because they are not capable of giving any Evidences of their receiving the Spirit nor doth there any immediate effects of their Regeneration appear hence the
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
Christ for its Author than that Divine Prayer which ows its Original to the same person The Lords Prayer must be the most proper Introduction to the Lords Supper It seems our Saviour intended it should be joined to all our Offices of Devotion because he ushers it in with this Injunction Luke 11.2 When ye pray Say Our Father c. In Compliance wherewith as the Church hath again placed it at the entrance into this Service so let us repeat with a fresh Devotion Considering that these being the Words of the Son of a Agnoscat Pater filii verba Cypr. God will if duly repeated make way for the Acceptance of all the rest of our Petitions and Services And as there is nothing can be more agreeably united to the Intercession of J●sus in Heaven in this our great rite of Supplication than that Prayer which himself hath indited So the form it self as the Ancients did explain it doth excellently agree b Oratio illa nihil terrenum habet sed omnia coelestia ad animum tendentia S. Germ. Theor. to this Mystery Wherefore passing by its Analysis and Discourse upon its several parts which we have done before Compan to the Temple We shall now as more pertinent to this Occasion by a brief Paraphrase direct the pious Soul how to apply it to the present duty The Paraphrase of the Lords Prayer § 2. We confess O Lord we are not worthy to be called thy Servants and yet desire so to be united to thy Son by Faith and to one another by Love that thou maist be Our Father in Jesus Christ by the visible remembrances of whose Death on Earth we set forth thy goodness which art in Heaven and not to be seen with mortal Eyes O let us so reverently celebrate this Mystery that Hallowed and adored by us and all the World may ●e thy Name for the Mercies of our Redemption And let us by this Manifestation of our Saviours love be won so fully to thy Obedience that thy Kingdom of Grace being set up in all our hearts we may be ready against thy Kingdom of Glory come where these outward signs shall cease and we shall see thee face to face In the mean time let this and every part of Thy will be done with the like sincerity and Devotion by us thy Servants in Earth as it is by thy holy Angels in Heaven who are now attending upon and desirous to look into these Mysteries But since we want that immediate fruition of thy glorious presence which those blessed Spirits do enjoy Give us at thy Holy Table which thou hast prepared for us ●his day that Bread of Life the Body of Christ c Et corpus ejus in pane censetur panem enim peti mandat quod solùm fidelibus est necessarium Tertul. de Orat. Ita Cypr. Hieron in Math. 6. c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophil in Math. 6. which is as necessary for our Souls as our daily Bread is for our bodily sustenance And since thou hast admitted us to Feast upon the remainders of the great Sin-offering Be pleased by virtue of that expiation to pardon And forgive us fully and freely all our trespasses against thy divine Majesty as we moved by the experience of a greater mercy in this holy Sacrament do heartily forgive those that now or at any time in word or deed trespass against us Finally when with the expence of thy Sons blood thou hast reconciled us to thy self and to one another Let not the Enemy renew the breach And lead us not into evil circumstances lest we forgetting our vows should comply and fall into temptation again and so provoke thy Spirit to forsake us We are thine O Lord leave us not but deliver us as Members of thy dear Son from all the snares of the wicked one that we may be preserved from evil spiritual temporal and eternal And as a pledg thereof do thou in this Sacrament to these Petitions set thy Amen SECT II. Of the Collect for Purity § 1. THis Ancient and Devout Collect was retained not without great Prudence as being a most exact and compendious expression of our desires of Purity Nor could it be more conveniently placed since it is not only an excellent entrance for the Communion Office as the Discourse will manifest But a very proper Preface even when there is no Sacrament to the rehearsing of and examining our lives by the Ten Commandments to which it is immediately prefixed For if we hear the Law with an impure heart Sin will take occasion by a Rom. 7.8 Admonent enim saepe dum interdicuntur Cypr. de Spect. the Commandment to cause thoughts of desire after or delight in the very iniquity which is forbidden And then how is it possible we should heartily say Lord have mercy c. Or Incline our hearts c. So that we are obliged upon both accounts earnestly to beg a pure heart And that we may do it with a more knowing Devotion We shall open the particular Form by the following plain Division Discourse and Paraphrase The Analysis of the Collect for Purity Sect. 2. This Collect hath 3. Parts 1. The Reason of the Request Gods Omniscience which is expressed 1 Affirmatively Almighty God unto whom all hearts be open all desires known 2. Negatively From whom no secrets are hid 2. The Request it self viz. 1. The Matter of it Cleanse the thoughts of our hearts 2. The Means By the inspiration of thy holy Spirit 3. The end 1. Internal That we may perfectly love thee 2. External and worthily magnify thy holy name 3. The Argument used to obtain it through Iesus Christ our Lord Amen A Practical Discourse upon the Collect for Purity § 3. Almighty God unto whom all hearts be open all desires known and from whom no secrets are hid Of all the Divine Attributes there are none so likely to make us afraid in this our nearest approach to God of coming with an unclean heart as his Omnipotence and Omniscience And these therefore are in Scripture phrase here set before us to mind us that we b Jerem. 17.9 Psal 38 9. Cui omnis voluntas loquitur Missal Rom. Psal 44.21 Job 42.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Petlaei versio Lit. ex Heb. 4.13 Allusio ad victimas excoriatas suspensas dum sacerdos exta scrutatur come before an Almighty and All-seeing Majesty So that if any wickedness be but imagined in the heart desired by the will or acted by the hand in the darkest night or most secret corner it is apparent to him and he will condemn us for it unless we first condemn our own selves Which Consideration we may improve two ways First To shew how necessary it is for us to labour for pure hearts since we are about to draw near to him who is so able to punish and so sure to discover the most secret sins To whose power all things are subject and to whose
have another opportunity but that thy next Inditement may be in another World And in the mean time that an All-seeing God will come in at this Feast to inquire how faithfully thou hast performed this Duty And then fifthly Set your self seriously to look over all the Records of your Memory and Conscience Call to mind all Places you have been in all Companies and Persons with which you have conversed Reflect upon your designs your business your pleasure and divertisements with all those circumstances which may represent unto you all your evil thoughts words and actions and may set before you all the good which you have omitted And if any seem dubious Quo praetergressus quid factum in tempore quid non Offensus pravis date palmam praemia rectis you must prove and try them Lam. 3.40 That you may condemn them in your judgment as well as recollect them by your memory And do this as impartially as is possible judging the same of your own Actions as you would if they were done by the worst of your Enemies For your better help wherein the following Table is contrived Sect. 6. Brief heads of Self-Examination upon every one of the Commandments I. Commandment § Though I have not Atheistically denied the Being of God or wickedly renounced him by Apostasie Yet § Have I not loved desired and delighted in other things more than God § Have I not feared Men more than God and sinned against him to avoid their displeasure or outward Sufferings § Have I not trusted in Man and relyed on outward means more than on God in my wants dangers and distresses § Have I neither neglected lawful means nor used unlawful means to bring me out of them § Have I not despaired of Gods mercy so as to neglect my duty or by presuming upon it incouraged my self to go on in Sin § Have I not been fearless of the divine threatnings And yet discontented with impatient under and unreformed by Gods Corrections § Have I not been unthankful for goods things or ascribed the praise of what I am have or can do to fortune my self or any other Creature Lord have mercy c. And encline c. II. Commandment Though I have not worshipped God by Images Yet § Have I not entertained gross and false Conceptions of God and worshipped him so as is unbecoming his Divine Nature § Have I not failed in any of the parts of Religious Worship § Have I not either omitted or sleightly performed Morning and Evening Prayer and reading the Holy Scriptures § Have I not been indifferent and customary as to my coming to the Publick Worship § Have I not behaved my self there without Reverence or Devotion forgetting the Presence of the Invisible God whom I serve § Have I not by design or carelesness neglected the Lords Supper or come to it ignorantly rashly and without preparation § Have I not received it irreverently and without spiritual affection or broken the vows and promises I then made Lord have mercy c. And encline c. III. Commandment If I have not openly blasphemed the Holy Name of God § Have I not sleightly or irreverently mentioned his Holy Name or Attributes § Have I not prophanely jested upon or abused his holy Word § Have I not violated holy Places Persons Ordinances or any thing peculiarly dedicated to God § Have I not taken Gods name in vain by common Swearing or by Cursing my self or others § Have I not taken false or unlawful Oaths Or broken my lawful Oaths or Vows Especially my Baptismal Vow Lord have mercy c. And encline c. IV. Commandment § Have I not neglected the publick worship of God on the Sabbath Day § Have I not mispent any part thereof in vain sports idle discourses complemental visits or unnecessary business § Have I not permitted those under my charge to prophane it § Have I not forgotten to praise God for the Creation and Resurrection especially on this Day § Or for his other Mercies in his Son or his Servants upon the Festivals of the Church § Have I not sleighted these solemnities or abused them by debauchery Lord have mercy c. And encline c. V. Commandment § Have I not omitted or acted contrary to my Duty in those Relations wherein I stand § Have I not censured envyed or railed against my Domestical Ecclesiastical or civil Governours instead of honouring imitating and praying for them § Have I not been undutiful to my Parents disloyal to my Prince stubborn or unfaithful to my Master fractory and unthankful to my Minister peevish and unkind to my Yokefellow § Have I been careful to instruct and incourage in well doing To reprove and chastise for ill doing those under my charge Lord have mercy c. And encline c. VI. Commandment If I have not actually taken away the life of any person Yet § Have I not made my Neighbours life grievous concealed designs against it or willingly hastned his death or wished it § Have I not by fighting or quarrelling wounded or maimed him or drawn him to any vice which might destroy his health or shorten his life § Have I not been rashly and immoderately angry or used reviling and quarrelsom speeches or harboured thoughts and purposes of Malice and Revenge § Have I not been intemperate in meat or drink or any other ways prejudiced my own health or indangered my life Lord have mercy c. And encline c. VII Commandment If I have escaped the grosser acts of Adultery and Fornication Yet § Have I not neglected to use the means to preserve my own and others Chastity § Have I not by gluttony and drunkenness pampered my body or by cherishing unclean thoughts purposes and desires defiled my Soul § Have I not run into any occasions or used any provocations of wantonness § Have I not used or listened to filthy talking or been guilty of immodest Garbs or unchast behaviour Lord have mercy c. And encline c. VIII Commandment If I have not been guilty of notorious Felony or Robbery Yet § Have I not by negligence in my particular Calling run into debt without hopes or purposes of repayment § Have I not wasted my own Estate and ruin'd my Family by idleness or prodigality § Have I not cheated my neighbour in buying or selling breaking my Covenants fraudulent writings or falsifying my word § Have I not by violence or oppression exacted of my inferiours or by unreasonable usury taken advantage of others necessity § Have I not wasted or imbezeled that which was committed to my trust refused to restore the pledge abused what was lent or denied that which was found by me Lord have mercy c. And encline c. IX Commandment If I have not before a Magistrate directly sworn falsly Yet § Have I not accustomed my self to lying in my common discourse § Have I not maliciously and uncharitably raised or spread abroad evil and false
reports of my Neighbour § Have I not incouraged such ill-reports nor published the faults of another to his disgrace § Have I not undervalued good or flattered bad men and given a false Character to please a friend § Have I not suffered an innocent persons good name to be traduced when I had opportunity or power to clear it § Have I not by pride conceived or by boasting uttered false things concerning my self § Have I neither sought unjustly to uphold or wilfully to blast my own Credit Lord have mercy c. And encline c. X. Commandment § Have I not secretly murmured at the Providence of God as if others had too much and my self too little § Have I not greedily coveted the Estate honours o● comforts of my neighbours nor sought by evil means to procure them to my self § Have I not envyed any so as to be grieved at their prosperity or to wish or rejoice in their losses and calamities § Have I not been apt to undervalue all my own things and neglected to give God thanks for them § Have I not too passionately pursued riches and honours so as to neglect my Soul and Religion upon these accounts § 7. Whosoever hath particularly and seriously asked his own Soul the foregoing Questions will be far from the vanity of the young Man in the Gospel nor is it likely that he will now have the confidence to say as he Matth. 19.20 All these have I kept from my youth For his own Conscience will tell him in most inquiries that He is the Man And accordingly the Church hath provided the Publican Confession Luke 18.12 Lord have mercy upon us Which now may be fitly used First As an humble and dolorous Confession that we are Guilty very Guilty For when the Prisoner falls down and craves Mercy It shews he is convinced of his fault and in that phrase is supposed to acknowledge it Secondly As a passionate and earnest Exclamation for Pardon which now appears infinitely needful when this black and dreadful Bill is set before us Yet lest all this should not be sufficient to produce that sorrow and shame which is necessary for this solemn Confession but our hearts remain still obdurate and unrelenting Let every one lay before himself these Considerations First Meditate of the nature of all these Sins of which thou art guilty They are the Actions of a poor helpless depending Creature done against the holy Will and most gentle and reasonable Commands of that Majesty who could destroy thee in a Moment and whom Angels and all the World besides exactly do obey And besides thou maist upbraid thy self with the folly of Anger the fury of Revenge the filthiness of Lust and the shame of Lying the beastliness of Drunkenness and the misery of Covetousness the unreasonableness of Pride and the vanity of seeking humane Praise the restlesness of Ambition and the vexation of a discontented mind Consider the malignity of all Sin and the baseness of every particular and surely it will appear it was impudence and ingratitude simplicity and madness in thee ever to commit them Secondly Meditate of the number of them And think that if there be so much evil in one Sin How deplorable is thy Case who hast offended in so many kinds Oh how often hast thou acted or designed the greater and more notorious wickednesses And for those which we account the lesser What is wanting in the odiousness of the single Acts thou hast supplyed by frequent repetitions Few days nay minutes passing in thy whole life in which thou dost not sin in these instances I doubt not but thy memory now presents a vast number to thee but alas those that were never observed are far more and those that are forgotten are much more numerous than both Yet these are all noted in the Records of Heaven So that if thou couldest apprehend this formidable Army it would lay thy confidence in the dust and strike thee with amazement to consider how many times thou hast deserved Condemnation Thirdly Meditate of the Desert of these Sins viz. that the wages of any the least unobserved or forgotten sin is death Rom. 6.23 And then how many times hast thou deserved to be cut off Consider how thou art by these transgressions exposed to the wrath of God and to suffer all those Temporal Spiritual and Eternal miseries which the Righteous Judge of all the World hath threatned in his holy word And if thy heart be apt to excuse its faults on pretence of a corrupt Nature a violent Temptation or a sudden surprize and will not believe or fear that God is so highly displeased then tell thy own Soul that for one offence the Angels were cast out of Heaven and Adam out of Paradise and He that is the lover of Men for lighter or fewer Crimes doth lay dreadful Plagues and Miseries upon thy Brethren And God is no respecter of Persons He spared not his own Son when he stood in the place of Sinners and shall He spare thee Oh look up to the Cross of Jesus and behold his Agonies and his Sorrow hear his groans and cryes observe his anguish and his pains Is not God highly displeased with Sin when he makes his own Son the Example of his wrath to his offending Servants In short know that if Repentance do not now procure thy Pardon thou shalt have God and all Creatures thy Enemies and maist justly expect Losses and Crosses Poverty and Reproach Diseases and an evil Death and which is more horrid to be deprived of the aids of Gods Spirit and the offers of Grace and to be left in thy own hardness and impenitency as one that refuseth to be reclaimed And if any or all these have not yet faln upon thee it is only because the Lord will try whether at this time thou wilt seriously Repent but thou art not acquitted though he do awhile forbear Fourthly Meditate of those Aggravations which make thy Sins worse than those of other Men and that will convince thee that thou deservest no less For First Have not many of them been committed against thy knowledge and reason and in despite of all the checks and reluctancies of thy Conscience Secondly And although thou hast made so many vows and taken so many resolutions never to act them more yea and engaged this upon the holy Sacrament of Christs body and blood Yet hast thou not entertained them again Thirdly Have not all those mercies and favours spiritual and temporal wherewith thy Heavenly Father hath courted thy Love been abused by thee and cast away upon thee when all this could not prevail to make thee leave one lust or perswade thee to give over piercing him that hath died for thee Fourthly Hast thou not proceeded in thy evil Courses after all those Examples of divine vengeance on others and all those Calamities which Sin hath brought upon thy own self Hast thou feared any longer than the smart remained Hast thou not made the
and the compliance of our affections being not only confident of their truth because God hath revealed them but delighted with their excellency because they tend to make us holy and happy and then we shall believe them with a perswasion stronger than can be built upon the Scholastical Demonstration we shall adhere to them closely and for ever because they are amiable and lead us to God and immortality Let us not think our Faith sufficient till we so believe in Jesus as our Lord and Saviour that we are moved thereby to repent of our sins and cast our Souls on him for Pardon and then we have spiritually communicated already we have obtained the benefits and perfected the designs of this Sacrament and done that internally and nakedly by Faith which is more solemnly effected in the Mysteries themselves To which there is no better preparation than such a repetition of our Holy Faith The Paraphrase of this Creed Sect. 4. I confess with my mouth and believe with my heart in one God a pure and infinite Spirit distinguished into three Persons the first of which is God the Father declared to be Almighty as he is the Maker of Heaven and Earth Creator of the whole World and all things contained in any part thereof both visible as all bodily substances on Earth and invisible as spiritual beings and Angels in Heaven And I also believe firmly in one Lord Iesus Christ the second Person of the glorious Trinity who is not as Angels or Men the adopted but the only begotten Son of God not created in time but begotten of his Father from all Eternity before all Ages of the Coelestial or Terrestrial Worlds Of the same nature with his Father God begotten of God after a mysterious and spiritual manner as Light is kindled of Light not diminishing his Fathers substance and yet being very God of very God derived not as the Creatures for he was begotten and not made and is equal to God being of one nature and substance with the Father and of the same dignity and power for he is that Eternal Word by whom all things were made out of nothing I believe also it was this very Son of God who passing by the fallen Angels for us Men and for the effecting of our Salvation and deliverance out of the state of sin and death in which we miserably lay came down unto this Earth from Heaven and left his glory for he took our nature and was incarnate by assuming a body of flesh like ours only without sin because it was conceived by the overshadowing of the Holy Ghost in the Womb of the Virgin Mary so though he was still very God yet he took the form of a servant And was made Man living holily and working Miracles till at last he was unjustly condemned and was crucified also with intolerable torments to satisfie Gods justice for us and all Mankind who were become liable to Damnation which cruel Death he endured under Pontius Pilate the Roman President by whose unjust sentence he suffered till he was really dead and was buried and yet when he had paid the full price of our Redemption The third day after his Crucifixion by his divine power he rose again to life according to all those Prophecies and Types of him before recorded in the Scriptures After which he conversed with his Disciples fourty days and ascended in their sight into Heaven where he is restored to all his glory and sitteth at the right hand of God the Father interceeding for us And he shall come again at the end of the World with glory and Millions of Saints and Angels to judge all men according to their works both the quick then living and the dead who departed never so long since whereupon the wicked shall be condemned to endless Torments and the righteous received to immortal joy by the same Jesus whose Kingdom shall then fully begin but shall have no end but remain for ever and ever And I believe most firmly in the Holy Ghost the third person of the glorious Trinity who is also very God the Lord and giver of grace and all spiritual Life who is not made nor begotten but proceedeth from the Father and the Son yet is not less in dignity as who with the Father and the Son in all Offices of the Church together and in the same manner is worshipped and glorified being the inditer of holy Scriptures and he who spake by the Prophets in the Old Testament and by the Apostles in the New And finally I believe that the whole body of Christian people holding the right Faith do make one Catholick and Universal True and Apostolick Church in which Society I acknowledge there are great priviledges viz. One Baptis● instituted by Christ not only as a sign of but a means for the remission of all those sins which we are guilty of when we enter into this Covenant Wherefore being my self baptized I hope for pardon and grace in this life And I look for and expect that my body though after Death corrupted and turned to dust shall be restored to life in the Resurrection of the Dead at the last day and I hope then for a Portion in glory and the life Everlasting and that I shall Reign in the blissful Kingdom of the World which is to come after this is utterly dissolved Amen Lord be it unto me according to my Faith Amen § 4. The Sermon which is here to follow comes not within the Method we have proposed so that we shall only note that it was appointed by Antiquity there should be Sermons i Concil 6. Constant can 19. Concil Mogunt can 25. or Homilies k Concil Vasense can 4. an Christi 460. every Lords Day especially when the Lords Supper was Administred l Acts 20.7 Post lectionem legis prophetarum Epistolarum c. Ordinatus-alloquatur populum verbis Exhortatoriis Const Apost c. 4. Leo. 1. Serm. 2. de Pasch Aug. confes l. 3. cap. 3. and surely this is the fittest place since the Sermon is either an explication of some Article of the Creed preceeding or an exhortation to the following duty of Charity But I do earnestly wish that when there is a Communion the Minister would sute his Discourse to that occasion for to treat of another subject then although otherwise never so good will too much divert the minds of those whose careful preparation hath composed their thoughts for this Ordinance whereas if the Sermon be chiefly tending to raise them still into a higher strain of Devotion for their communicating it will be a word spoken in due season Prov. 15.23 and rarely improve their Souls then made tender by Repentance and much more apt to receive impressions from all representations of the love of Christ and the means of our Union with him Yet withal the people must now hear with extraordinary attention and receive with great affection these holy Instructions and Exhortations drawn from the Word of
the Custom when any Persons brought their Offerings to the Altar for the Priest and the Pious By-standers to say The Lord accept thee Psal 20.3 4. 2 Sam. 24.23 in imitation whereof we do here beg the Divine acceptance both of our Charity and Devotion And that we may do it heartily let us consider how much they need to be accepted with favourable allowances for first If Alms and Prayers both be offered as it is pitty they should ever be parted though they do assist and recommend each other yet we do not think our gift hath obliged God to hear our Petitions nor our Petitions given such priviledge to our gift as that we may boldly challenge God upon the account of either wherefore we desire him with favourable and gracious acceptance to entertain them both Secondly If we respect the Alms alone which we have given though it be owned by Gods goodness to be offered to himself Prov. 19.17 and Math. 25.40 yet it were an arrogance not to be endured to think so Universal and excellent blessings were the purchase of our contemptible oblation which hath no proportion in its own value to them only if we present it humbly our gracious father will accept it as our acknowledgment of his goodness and a testimony of our Love Thus therefore we pray that he would accept our Alms viz. in mercy esteeming them not by their own worth but by the affection of the Givers Thirdly If we do only regard our Prayers we may soon discover how little they will avail unless the Lord accept them with grace As to those we have hitherto made if we look back upon the many wandrings and interruptions the coldness and indifferency the sin and infirmity that did mingle with them all we shall see we had need heartily to beseech God to accept them with benign interpretations and to excuse the imperfections of them But if these our Prayers be meant of those Petitions which we are now about to make in this Form let us remember how great a presumption it seems for us to ask for others nay for all people when as we are not worthy to pray for our selves yet let us humbly beg a candid acceptance of these Petitions which we offer not as if we were fit Advocates for all the World but in obedience to his Command who hath bid us thus to express our Charity § 5. Beseeching thee to inspire continually the Vniversal Church with the Spirit of Truth Vnity and Concord Among the several Prayers which were made at the Holy Table it was particularly enjoined that they should pray for The Holy Catholick Church extended from one end of the Earth to the other which the Lord had redeemed veith the precious blood of Christ saith the Author of the Apostolical Constitutions for the Sacrifice here commemorated was offered for the Church Acts 20.28 which is called the body of Christ Ephes 5.23 Colos 1.24 but because the body without the spirit is dead we therefore beg that as he once quickened the lump of Earth into a living Spirit by breathing into it the breath of Life so he will please to inspire his Holy Spirit into his mystical body according as he hath promised John 14.16 and that not only once John 20.22 but that it may continually be supplyed with vital influences by its Union with its Divine Head the Lord Jesus the blessed success whereof is noted in the three happy effects of this Heavenly Inspiration First That the Church will be directed into all Truth by the Spirit of Truth John 14.17 and 16.13 1 Epist 2.27 and so be preserved from Heresie Secondly That all the Members thereof shall agree in the same judgment and combine in the Unity of the Spirit Ephes 4.3 and so be secured from Schism 1 Cor. 1.10 Thirdly That the affections of all persons in this body shall be joined in perfect Concord and tied in the Bonds of Love and Peace Ephes 4.3 for the prevention of hatred wrath and emulation How passionately therefore is this blessed Spirit to be prayed for and how necessary are all and every one of these Truth without Unity is weak and troublesome Unity without Truth is dangerous and mischievous e Vnitas sine veritate proditio est D. Cypr. and both without Charity are insignifcant and cannot last long Let us consider the mischiefs which the Church hath endured by false Principles divided Judgments and opposite affections that in the apprehension of our want of this comprehensive Blessing we may most vigorously beg this continual inspiration which may make the Church happy by Unity in its Doctrine Harmony in its Discipline and Charity in the affections of all the parts and members thereof § 6. And grant that all they that do confess thy Holy Name may agree in the truth of thy holy Word and live in Vnity and godly Love This Petition is but a further confirmation of the former for when the several Members of the Church live in Unity Peace and Love it is the best demonstration that the whole body is acted by the Divine Spirit John 13.35 Josh 22.31 for these universal mercies are to be obtained by induction of particulars and rhe internal inspiration ought to be manifested by Acts of a visible Charity Now if we want affections wherewith to make this request let us but view the miferable effects which differences in opinions and affections have produced in the Christian World consider how thereby Religion hath been disgraced and God dishonoured and all outrages have been committed the Heathens are scandalized and kept out and the Christians who are within are hindred in their Piety and our differences are made wider by arguing the more we dispute f Disputando de sacris accenditur tantùm contentio Sisin in Eccl. Hist the less we agree and while we contend for the Faith we lose our Charity But this is the fault of the men and not of the Religion for Jesus hath left us an impartial judge which is his holy Word and is Truth it self John 17.17 by which if we would without prejudice or interest suffer our Opinions to be tryed g Expellentes igitur hostile certamen ex verbis divinitùs inspiratis solutionem quaestionum mente percipiamus Constan Mag. ad Patres Nicaenos Hist trip l. 2. c. 5. it would happily compose all our controversies or where a determination is needless teach several Churches to dissent with more moderation and direct particular persons to submit in such things to their proper spiritual guides and to live in godly and Religious love with their fellow Christians h Maneat moralis benevolentia inter discordes sententiâ Lemma Cardin. Rachel If any say that there is little hope that this still voice of Gods word should be heard in the hurry of our contentions or no likelyhood of so sweet a composure I answer That however it is highly desirable and therefore ought to be prayed for and which is considerable
pro Vener tit de Feudis so that Princes as Constantine doth exprese it are Bishops without and the Ecclesiasticks within the Church They guard and direct the Externals while these Order and Administer the Internals of Religion Wherefore since God hath joined them in his Providence we must not separate them in our Prayers nor by any means omit to pray for our spiritual guides in this spirirual Sacrifice where the Antients did particularly remember all the Orders of the Church But having spoken of this before Comp. to the Temp. Sect. 17. § 2. we shall only note the comprehensiveness of the Petition here made for them which takes in the main part of their office viz. First To set forth the holy Word of God both as it is the Truth Joh 17.17 for the direction and instruction of the ignorant and as it is the lively Power of God unto Salvation p Acts 7.38 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hellenis pro. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grotius Deut. 32.47.70 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ad Psal 19. ver 7 8. for the Conversion of those that are dead in sin which is to be done as is here intimated not only by plain and affectionate preaching but also by holy and unblamable living which doth better explain Gods will and more vigorously excite the People to observe it than the most learned Commentary or the molt eloquent Oration q Habent opera suam linguam habent suam facundiam etiam tacente linguâ Cypr. de dupl Mar. Hic est qui quale habet verbum talem habet vitam quoniam quae docet agit quae agit docet Christiani de Origene ap Euseb Ec. hist l. 5. c. 3. The second part of their Duty is rightly according to the Institution of Christ and duly as the necessities of the Church require to administer those two Sacraments which are of Divine Ordination viz. Baptism and the Lords Supper which no other Order of men can lawfully dispense so that if Ministers should neglect the Celebration of them or do it unduly it would be a great dammage and discomfort to the Church of Christ Let us therefore beg large measures of Grace for our Bishops and Pastors that their Preaching may convert us their lives invite us to imitation and their dispensing of the Sacraments may comfort and strengthen us in all goodness Let the Clergy pray heartily one for another for they understand the weight of this charge and let the people supplicate affectionately for their Ministers because the grace given to them is for their sakes and the benefit thereof finally descends upon the Congregation Especially let us all when this most holy Sacrament is to be Administred join our Petitions for those who officiate here or elsewbere that they may perform so grand a Mystery to the glory of God their own comfort and the benefit of all that partake thereof § 10. And to all thy People give thy Heavenly Grace especially to this Congregation here present that with meek hearts and due reverence they may hear ano receive thy holy Word truly serving thee in Holiness and Righteousness all the days of their life We have done well to pray for our spiritual Pastors but we must add this Petition also for the Sheep of their Pasture because the excellent gifts of Ministers do not profit unless the people also be indued with Heavenly Grace Hebrews 4.2 though all the Seed was good yet it prospered according to the condition of the ground on which it fell and where the soil was not prepared it came to no perfection though it were sowed by Jesus himself Math. 13. And sure it is a great pity that the Gifts and Graces the Time and Pains of so many learned and laborious Ministers should be all in vain and made ineffectual by the wickedness of those among whom they live which consideration makes the Priest here as Theophylact observes r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 stand up as a common Father of the whole Church and pray that all Congregations of Christian People may increase in true Piety in imitation of the God he serves who takes care of all And yet he doth intercede with particular affections and regard for his own Auditory praying that they may profit by the present duties and live holily ever after But see how rarely withal the means of improving by the Word of God is couched in this request viz. to receive it with a meek and lowly heart free from pride and self-conceit ſ James 1.21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ser. 1. Philosophus quaerenti quid primùm discipu is praecipere voluit Resp Fastum dep●nere ap Arrianum and to hear it with an awful Veneration as believing it to be the word of God For he that is meek will be guided by its directions and amended by its reproofs he that is reverent will tremble at its Summons and give respect to all its Laws Let us then devoutly beg for all our Congregations these necessary Graces of humility and godly fear that so our Preaching may make them holy and pure from all sin Righteous and abounding in all good works when they hear it with reverence and obey it with meekness And that not only now for our present comfort but all the days of their life to their own endless happiness And let us think how happy it were for the Christian Church if this Petition might prevail to the total removal of that pride and irreverence stubborness and contempt which make many Ministers preach and more people hear in vain § 11. And we most humbly beseech thee of thy goodness O Lord to comfort and succour all them who in this transitory life are in trouble sorrow need sickness or any other Adversity Besides the spiritual wants for which we have craved a supply in the former Petition we know that many of our Brethren are labouring under temporal Evils in this miserable World and therefore we must remember them as St. Paul teacheth H●b 13.3 as being our selves also in the body that is both by our nature and our sins liable to the same Calamities And where can we so properly commemorate the afflicted as at this Sacrament of Mercy wherein God is moved by the representation of his dear Sons sufferings to pitty all Mankind especially those who by suffering are made conformable to his Image and in which Mystery we must express more pity and Charity than our Alms can convey which is to be done by bringing in a greater Arm to their assistance for our gift may bring some present allay to the distressed but if we can obtain the divine favour for them they shall be constantly supported or speedily delivered if that be best for them At this Sacrament therefore our Church enjoins us to pray for all in misery and so do the best and most antient Liturgies t Vt infirmi convalescant Liturg. S. Jacob. Pro aegrotis pro afflictis in summâ
and Mountains of difficulties before he can reach that blissful Crown it is little less than Miracle that all men do not sooner or latter fall and fall from the faith and fear of God What prospect in the World can ravish us with greater pleasu●es or raise in us higher admirations of the divine goodness than to behold those that were once as frail and sinful as we are now advanced above Satans malice or Deaths Power and placed in the Regions of Joy and the Bosom of Jesus that we might not tremble or think it impossible to come thither also Doth not their felicity give life to our hopes and become a pledge of our own future glory why should we not then rejoice with them and delight our selves with the very news of our Brethrens happiness what other Communion is there between us and those blessed Spirits but that they in general pitty and wish well to us and we praise God with and for them And by thus meditating of their most desirable estate we shall learn to despise Death and long to be with such inviting Company nay languishing after the happy enjoyment of such noble Society for ever and ever Who can look up to these Mansions and not enquire for the path that leads thither and be strongly attracted to follow the steps of those who have so successfully trodden this way before This makes the pious Soul so passionately beg the divine grace that it may do as they have done live as they lived and die as they died so that what they are now it may be hereafter The Scythians as Lucian relates kept the memorials of their brave Men with great joy that so many might strive to become like unto them d Simus inter exempla quare deficimus quare desperamus quicquid fieri potuit potest Sen. ep 98. Magnorum virorum non minus quam praesentia utilis est memoria idem ep 102. And St. Augustine saith when any duty seemed difficult he was wont to think of the Saints of former times and he imagined they derided his sloath saying Tu non poteris c. Canst not thou do what those Men nay those Women once did that which hath been effected is not impossible Would we make this use of our faithful Brethren departed their memory and example would be as profitable as if we had their bodily presence with us and the remembrance of their glory would strongly excite us to follow their good example till we came with them to partake of that Heavenly Kingdom in the mean time we shall never want matter for to praise God in their behalf since his truth and mercy to them is the confirmation of our Faith the encouragement of our duty and gives us in contemplation an antepast of our happiness before we come to the full enjoyment of it § 13. Grant this O Father for Iesus Christ his sake our only Mediator and Advocate Amen This general Conclusion of all our Prayers we should not remark particularly here but that the Mass hath thrust in the names of the B. Virgin and other Saints e Et omnium Sanctorum tuorum quorum meritis precibusque concedas in Canone Missae Rom. into the Supplications through whose Merits and Prayers they intercede even in this place where there is a lively Commemoration of the Death of Christ our only Mediator which is not only the holding a Candle to the Sun but seems to intimate that to plead in the Virtue of our Lords Passion is not sufficient that that intercession by which the Holy Virgin and all other Saints became accepted by God was not alone forceable enough But we desire no other Mediator nor need no other Advocate 1 Tim. 2.5 but our Lord Jesus Christ who is here represented nor do we doubt to ask all these Mercies for all these Persons since we approach our Heavenly Father with his dear and only beloved Son in our Arms wherefore let us bless the name of God who hath chosen such a Master of Requests to present our Prayers and put such an Argument in our Mouths when we approach unto him Let us look to the holy Symbols and remember our great High Priest while we offer up the Intercessions with a great humility and a sprightly devotion because our God will not nay cannot deny those that thus come unto him The Paraphrase of the Prayer for the whole Church § 14. O Almighty and Everliving God who art able to help all Persons always and in all things We are unworthy to ask for our selves and yet we are incouraged to intercede for others since by thy holy Apostle Saint Paul thou hast taught us in our daily Assemblies to make Prayers to obtain good Intercessions and Supplications to remove evil in behalf of all the World And to give thanks for the Mercies received by all men Believing therefore thy willingness to grant these things which thou commandest us to ask We humbly disclaim our own Merits beseech thee for Jesus sake and by the Vertue of his Passion here set forth most mercifully ** This to be omitted when there is no Collection ** to accept this poor acknowledgment of thy bounty and testimony of our love in these our Alms to the Poor and Oblations to thy Ministers intreating thee also to hear and ** This to be omitted when there is no Collection ** to receive all our former Petitions especially these our Prayers for all People which we offer as the evidence of our Universal Charity most heartily to thy Divine Majesty who art all-sufficient to supply the whole World To thy goodness therefore we come Beseeching thee though miraculous gifts are ceased yet to inspire continually with such grace the whole body of the Vniversal Church spread over all the Earth that it may be quickened with the most holy Spirit which teacheth the Principles of truth and produceth Vnity in the Faith and Concord in the affections of thy people And grant that all the Members of thy Church that do profess thy true Religion and confess to believe in thy holy Name laying aside their animosities may agree all their differences and so fully rest in the infallible truth of thy Holy Word and its determinations of all necessary things that notwithstanding some lesser varieties they may have mutual peace And live as Children of the same Father in Vnity without Schism or Heresie in Charity and godly love without Malice or Envy among them And because thy Church cannot well subsist on Earth without temporal Guardians We beseech thee also in order to the common good to save the Souls and defend the Persons and Rights of all Christian Magistrates who in their several Dominions have or ought to have supream governance of the Church whether they be absolute Kings or free Princes or else Rulers and Governours in popular States But as our duty interest and affection do peculiarly oblige us We pray thee Especially to save and defend Him who
doth acknowledge himself to be thy Servant even CHARLES our King and Soveraign Liege Help him so to defend Religion execute Justice and subdue his Enemies that under him we and all his Subjects may be religiously and godly peaceably and quietly Governed and accordingly be obedient unto as well as happy in so gracious a Prince And that his excellent Laws may not be perverted in their Administration O Lord Grant such grace unto his whole Council with whom he adviseth in making Laws and to all Magistrates and Officers that are put in Authority to execute them under him That they may deliberately weigh every cause and truly and indifferently determine it so as to make it appear they do minister Iustice and imploy their Power To the punishment of wickedness and greater Crimes the correction of lesser enormities and Vice And the maintenanc● and defence of the Profession of thy true Religion together with the Practice of all Equity and Vertue which is the endeavour of all Righteous Magistrates But that Piety and Justice may be taught by the Ministers as well as outwardly incouraged ●i●e grace O Heavenly Father for the same thy Son Jesus Christs sake to all whom thou hast made Bishops and Governours or Pastors and Curates over thy Flock Assist them so in those sacred offices that they may both by the holiness of their life and the purity of their Doctrine declare and set forth the excellencies of thy true quickening and lively W●rd so that many may be won to live according to it And grant that they may also orderly and rightly frequently and duly Administer both Baptism and the Lords Supper which are thy Holy Sacraments And let them be particularly assisted in the Celebration of the present mystery And that all their labours be not in vain Do thou to all thy People throughout the Christian World ●ive thy Heavenly Grace to dispose their hearts rightly to receive divine things Especially grant to this Congregation and every person here present before thee that with meek hearts from a sense of their own ignorance and due reverence from the apprehension of thy Authority they may hear attentively and receive by Faith the directions of thy Holy Word O Lord let them be converted by it and become real Christians truly serving thee in all the duties of Piety and Holiness Charity and Righteousness and continue in this Obedience all the days of their life especially after this solemn renewing of their Covenant with thee And further reflecting upon thy pitty towards all afflicted persons for the sufferings-sake of thy dear Son We that yet are spared do most humbly beseech thee that though we and our Brethren deserve to suffer yet of thy goodness thou wilt be pleased O Lord effectually at present to comfort and speedily to deliver and succour not those distressed Creatures alone which we particularly love or know but all them who are capable of the benefit of our Prayers even all who in this transitory life the Scene of sorrows are in trouble and fear of some approaching Evil or in sorrow for some Calamity already sustained All that are in need and want as to their outward Estate or in pain and sickness as to their body Or who are visited with some or all of these or any other Adversity Oh pitty and relieve them all And Finally as we praise thee for all the Mercies which thou minglest with the Miseries of this life so we also bless and chiefly praise thy holy Name for those who have no mixtures of sin or sorrow in their Cup of pure and perfect joy even for all thy Saints and holy Servants who were once as frail as we but by thy grace are now departed out of this life but who did live in thy Faith and die in thy fear never forsaking Religion nor a good Conscience We rejoice in their happiness and though we need not pray for them yet we cannot forbear beseeching thee for our selves who are yet upon the Waves that thou wilt please to give us also the same grace which thou gavest them That we may be able so to follow their good Examples in all Piety and Charity while we live that with them and in that glorious Society we may when we die be Partakers by the like Mercy of thy Heavenly Kingdom and its unspeakable felicities Hear us we beseech thee and Grant this and all the rest O Father to thy poor Children who make not our Requests in our own Name or trusting in our own merits but for Iesus Christ his sake and through the most prevailing Sacrifice of his Death here Commemorated Nor do we need or desire to use any other name since he is Our only Mediator to make our peace and Advocate to plead our cause who also joins with us in these Petitions and therefore we hope thou wilt say to him and to us Amen and then it shall be so SECT VIII Of the warning before the Communion § 1. IT is fit that great Mysteries should be ushered in with the solemnities of a great preparation for which cause God gave the Israelites three days warning of his design to publish the Law Exod. 19.15 and ordered their Festivals to be proclaimed by the sound of a Trumpet some time before Levit. 25.9 Numb 10.2 The Paschal Lamb the Type of Christ in this Sacrament was to be chosen and kept by them four days to mind them to prepare for the Celebration of the Passover Exod. 12.3.6 And Christians having more and higher duties in order to this Holy Feast must not have less time or shorter warning whereupon as good Hezekiah published by particular expresses his intended Passover long before 2 Chron. 30. so hath our Church prudently ordered this timely notice to be given that none might pretend to stay away out of ignorance of the time or unfitness for the duty but that all might come and come prepared also It is needless to expect a President for this in the antient Church their daily or Weekly Communions made it known that there was then no solemn Assembly of Christians without it and every one not under censure was expected to Communicate But now when the time is somewhat uncertain and our long omissions have made some of us ignorant and others forgetful of this duty most of us unwilling and all of us more or less indisposed for it it was both prudent and necessary to provide these large Warnings and Exhortations Cautions and Instructions For the Composures themselves they are exact and rarely fitted to be the Harbingers to this blessed Sac●ament and if we duly weigh and carefully improve them they will exceedingly help towards our Preparation as will be evident enough without a Paraphrase in the succeeding Analysis and Discourse The Analysis of the Warning before the Communion § 2. This Warning consisteth of three principal Parts 1. Information concerning 1. The Time Dearly beloved on next I purpose c. 2. The Persons to administer to all
such as shall be religiously c. 3. The Matter to be done the most comfortable Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ 4. The manner how it is to be done 1. In Commmemoration to be by them received in remembrance of his c. 2. With thanksgiving both for 1. Christs death Wherefore it is our duty to render most humble c. 2. This Sacrament But also to be our spiritual food and sustenance c. 2. Exhortation in which note 1. The ground of this Exhortation viz. 1. The benefit of doing it well Which being so divine and comfortable a thing to them c. 2. The danger of doing it ill and so dangerous to them that will presume c. 2. The Pa●ts of it which are 1. To consider of 1. The Dignity of this Sacrament My duty is to exhort you in the mean season to consider c. 2. The danger of profaning it and the great peril of the unworthy receiving thereof 2. To examine directing 1. In what manner and so to search and examine your own c. 2. To what end 1. Purity but so that ye may come holy and clean c. 2. Acceptance and be received as worthy Partakers 3. Directions unto 1. The Penitent to come fitly who must 1. Examine himself The way and means thereto is first to examine your lives c. 2. Confess to God and whereinsoever there to bewail your own sinfulness and to confess c. 3. Satisfie the wronged And if ye shall perceive your offences but also against your Neighbour c. 4. Forgive his enemies and being likewise ready to forgive others that have offended c. 2 The Impenitent that they may not come so shewing 1. The reason of this Warning For otherwise the receiving of this holy Communion c. 2. The Persons warned Therefore if any of you be a blasphemer c. 3. The Warning it self Repent you of your sins or else come not c. 4. The danger of despising it Lest after the taking of that Holy Sacrament the Devil c. 3. The doubting that they may come with comfort 1. Why this Advice is given And because it is requisite that no Man should come but c. 2. To whom it is given Therefore if there be any of you who by this means cannot c. 3. The Cou●sel it self directing them 1. Whither to go Let him come to me or some other c. 2. What to do and open his grief 3. For what benefit 1. Absolution that by the Ministry of Gods holy Word c. 2. Direction together with ghostly counsel c. 3. Comfort to the quitting c. A Practical Discourse upon this Warning § 3. Dearly Beloved on next I purpose through Gods assistance to Administer to all such as shall be religiously and devoutly disposed the most comfortable Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ It is the manner of mighty Princes whose entertainment requires extraordinary preparation to give notice by their Harbingers to those places where they intend to lodge and thus our Lord Jesus when he came in the flesh had St. John Baptist for his Herald to bid the World prepare Math. 3. and sent his Disciples as his Harbingers before his face to every City whither he intended to come Luke 10.1 thus also his Messengers do now proclaim his approach in this Sacrament wherein he comes in the Spirit to Feast with us Revel 3.20 and to dwell in us John 6.56 And oh how should this awaken us to prepare a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philo lib. de Cherub for what provision is sufficient to make for the King of Kings who comes from Heaven in pure love to visit us and to do us good Why should we not receive the news with the same joy that Zachaeus expressed when he heard that Jesus purposed to be his Guest since wheresoever he is well received he brings Salvation to that House Luke 19.6 7 c. The Minister who hath appointed it in love to you seems by his courteous salutation to be well-pleased that he hath so good tidings to tell you and lest by ignorance or surprize you should lose the benefit of this blessed opportunity he gives you this timely intimation and fixes the very time as positively as Man can or ought to do we have not the time to come in our own power and so should always add if God please viz. that our life or health shall last so long b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Graeca Versio Liturg. Angl. James 4.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Socr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plato in Alcibiade and by his assistance viz. if he vouchsafe to afford us grace since we do but Administer the outward part Which short Parenthesis should also mind us how dangerous it is to neglect wilfully this next Sacrament because either we may not live to have another opportunity or not have the like grace and assistance from God if we despise this offer This warning is given to all but yet in the very first clause is signified that we would not willingly cast our Pearls before Swine c Sancta Sanctis ut Diac. clamat in Litur Graec. Math. 7.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex. nor give this Sacrament to any but such as are religiously and devoutly disposed and for those who are so they need not be pressed or urged to come to the Holy Table since this most comfortable Ordinance doth attract them sufficiently by its own sweetness it is most comfortable to pious Souls and they who have found it so long for it and this very warning is to them a great pleasure and a sufficient invitation But if filthly wretches who relish nothing but Swinish pleasures and are full of Earthly things loath this Honey-Comb or despise this Manna it is no wonder let it be no prejudice to the mystery nor no hindrance to our preparation for if we upon this Summons do immediately endeavour to procure religious and devout dispositions we shall taste the comfort of it more fully than any words can express § 4. To be by them received in remembrance of his meritorious Cross and Passion whereby alone we obtain remission of our Sins and are made Partakers of the Kingdom of Heaven The necessity of this early and serious Warning is here further shewed from the two great Duties which all Christians are here to perform First We are not to be idle Spectators of the Mystery as they are in the Roman Church where if the people Communicate but once a year it is thought sufficient by the Lateran Council and at other times they only look on while the Priest alone Communicates Conc. Trident. Sess 22. Can. 8. a practice unknown to all Antiquity But we are commanded to receive the Symbols our selves in Remembrance as St. Paul speaks 1 Cor. 11.24 25. of that one offering once for all Hebr. 9.26.28 whereby Jesus hath for ever perfected them that are sanctified
who by this means cannot quiet his own Conscience but requireth farther Comfort or Counsel The desperate stupidity of bold Sinners who will rush unprepared upon this Sacrament hath forced the Minister to speak like Boanerges in those thundering denunciations yet lest while he is rouzing those from security the humble Christian should be terrified into despair the Church sends him like Barnabas more gently to treat with those who tremble at Gods word To let such know that a lively Faith and quiet Conscience are as necessary preparatives for the Eucharist as either Charity or Repentance And that the poor Penitent may not come without these comfortable graces he is advised to call in the aid of a spiritual man when his own endeavours will not produce this happy Peace Contrition is the most natural way indeed to procure a well-grounded Faith and yet sometimes though we fast and pray examine and confess read and meditate yet our fears may expel the hopes of Mercy and then all our endeavours will end in a sad dejection of spirit upon the discovery of our own vileness In this Case our doubts and sad apprehensions though reasonable enough may proceed too far insomuch that they may hinder that gratitude and joy those praises and acts of Faith and Love which we ought to express at this Sacrifice of Thanksgiving and if so we must use some means to allay them or else the duty will begin with trembling go on without pleasure and end in scruple and greater dissatisfactions St. Paul hath told us that we ought to be fully perswaded in our minds before we do any indifferent thing h Benè praecipiunt qui vetant quicquam agere quod dubitant aequum sit an iniquum Cicer. off l. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plutar. Rom. 14.5 and if we may not eat common things with a doubting Conscience we shall much more be condemned in our selves if we do not remove these fears before we eat of this Celestial food Our own strength it may be is not sufficient but then we must not smother our trouble which is encreased by concealment but reveal it to our spiritual Counsellors who will joyfully serve any afflicted Penitent and neither God nor good Men will ever quench the smoaking Flax or break the bruised Reed § 13. Let him come to me or some other discreet and learned Minister of Gods Word and open his grief That by the Ministry of Gods holy Word he may receive the benefit of Absolution together with Ghostly Counsel and advice to the quieting of his Conscience and the avoiding of all scruple and doubtfulness It is neither prudent nor safe always to rely upon our own Judgment of our selves for another Eye sees more of us than is discerned by our own In the dangers of our body we consult the Physician in the intricacies of our estate we advise with the Lawyer and in the Case of our immortal Souls why do we not advise with our Spiritual Physicians i 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theodoret. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. 1. for they are appointed to direct the ignorant confirm the doubtful and comfort the disconsolate by Christ himself We must not be ashamed of so beneficial a duty since the Scripture commands it James 5.16 and we have Examples of those in Holy Writ who did confess their Sins to St. John Baptist Math. 3.16 and to the Apostles Acts 19.18 and in all the Primitive times the Christians did frequently repair to their Bishops and Ministers not only to confess their faults but to be satisfied in their doubts and assisted in order to a pious life and were it now more often practised we should soon perceive the great advantages thereof It is certain this Office hath been much abused by the Romanists among whom it is become formal slight and vendible an Engine to unlock secrets and a suppletory to excuse all other parts of Repentance so that Confession to a Priest is by most of the vulgar thought a sufficient preparation for this holy Sacrament but this ought not to cause us wholly to reject it since with us it is restored to its Primitive use for we direct all Men always to confess to God k Quidam Deo quidam sacerdotibus confitenda esse peccata dicunt quorum utrumque non sine magno fructu intra Sanctam Ecclesiam sit Concil Cabilon 2. c. 13. Anno 813. ita Gratian de poenit dist 1. cap. 89. but some also to confess their faults and reveal their doubts to the Priest especially in these three Cases First When we are disquieted with the guilt of some sin already committed or secondly When we cannot conquer some lust or passion or thirdly When we are afflicted with any intricate scruples particularly whether we may now be fit to receive this blessed Sacrament or no if any of these be our Case then First We must chuse prudently preferring our own Minister if he be tolerably fitted or else we may elect another that is Prudent and Pious Learned and Judicious l Facit enim justitia ut nulla sit fraudis metus facit etiam prudentia ut nulla erroris sit suspicio Ambros de off l. 2. c. 8. one who may mannage this weighty concern gravely and privately and dispatch it wisely and fully to our satisfaction Being thus provided of a guide secondly Let us deal sincerely and open our grief to him as fully and impartially as we would do a wound to the skilful Chirurgeon let not fear or shame stop our mouths for if the Minister be pious he will be secret and compassionate if he be discreet he will discover whether it be an heavy guilt or a slight repentance love of sin or a strong Temptation fear or scruple that hath occasioned this trouble And so thirdly He hath threatnings and promises instructions and directions out of Gods Holy Word which being dextrously applied and duly ministred may be a perfect Cure If the Conscience be wounded with guilt he hath power from Christ upon our Contrition to give us Absolution if it be the fury of a passion or the violence of a temptation his piety and experience hath store of Counsel for the effectual suppressing thereof if it be doubts and fears his learning and judgment affordeth sufficient comfort and satisfaction through the blessing of Almighty God Wherefore I do heartily wish we were more frequent in these applications to our Ministers it would argue that we were more concerned for a pardon and more sensible of our guilt nay it would shew we did perfectly hate sin when we could be content to suffer the shame of discovery so we might have the benefit of amendment Consider how comfortable and how profitable it may be to have the particular Prayers and Advice the Judgment and Experience of an holy Man of the sacred Function especially at this time No doubt it would make our receiving more sweet and more safe and gain us great comforts
1. ALthough it be a great satisfaction to him that Ministers to see Gods Table well furnished yet because he seeks the profit of the Communicants as well as his own pleasure he not only endeavours by the former Exhortation to encrease their numbers but by this to rectifie their dispositions that they may be not only many but good And howsoever this hath been done before they came to the Feast it will seem necessary to do it again now they are come if we consider either the danger of unworthy receiving or the dignity of this Ordinance which is made more reverend by being veiled with many Coverings The Aegyptians admitted none to converse with their Priests and to know the secrets of their mysteries till they had been initiated by abstinence patience and many labours a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Porphyr de abst l. 4. supposing they would learn to value them by the difficulty of access And so those who entred into the Persian Rites of Mithra b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Greg. Naz. Orat. 1. in Jul. were to be first approved by 80. degrees of Tryal to be unpassionate and holy Persons c Nonnus Synag hist c. 5. The like difficulty of acceptance was practised in the entertainment of Scholars into Pythagoras his School d Jamblic l. 1. c. 17. and in the admission of Novices into the Monastical Societies of old e Cassian instit l. 4. c. 3. And can we then think it too much to pass one Exhortation more before we eat of this Celestial Banquet We derive this necessary part of the Office from the Greek Church where the Guests being placed the Priest standing on the steps to be seen of all stretched out his hand and lifted up his voice in the midst of that profound silence inviting the worthy and warning the unworthy to forbear f 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost hom in 9. ad Heb. Ethic. Which if it were necessary in those blessed days how much more requisite is it in our looser Age wherein men have learnt to trample upon Church Discipline and to come out of Custom at set times whether they be prepared or no Every one hopes to pass in the Croud but knowing the terror of the Lord we do again and again beseech our people diligently to prepare themselves before he come to try them And that this Exhortation may be effectual to this purpose this following Account may assist our devout improvement thereof The Analysis of the Exhortation at the Communion § 2. In this Exhortation we are incited to Two general Duties 1. Self-examination by 1. Propounding it more largely and shewing 1. The Persons enjoyned Dearly beloved in the Lord ye that mind to come c. 2. The Authority enjoyning it must consider how S. Paul c. 3. The Duty to be done diligently to try and examine themselves 4. The Time of doing it before they presume to eat c. 2. Pressing it with reasons taken from 1. The Benefits ●f worthy Receiving viz. 1. Participation of Christ For as the benefit is great if- c for then we spiritually eat the fl●sh of Christ c. 2. Union with him then we dwell in Christ we are one with Christ and c. 2. The danger of unworthy Receiving as to 1. The Sin of it so is the danger great if we for then we are guilty of the body and c. 2. The Punishment following upon it we eat and drink our own damnation we kindle Gods wrath against us c. 3. Parting it by an Exhortation unto the special Duties of 1. Repentance Iudge therefore your selves Brethren Repent you truly for your sins c. 2. Faith Have a lively and stedfast faith c. 3. Reformation Amend your lives 4. Charity and be in perfect charity with all men So shall ye be meet c. 2. Giving of Thanks assisting us 1. By way of Consideration declaring 1. The Necessity of it And above all things ye must give most humble and hearty thanks 2. The Object of it to God the Father the Son c. 3. The Subject of it for the Redemption of the world by c. 4. The Particular Reasons as well 1. Why for this Redemption because of 1. The difficulty of the Work who did humble himself even unto the death c. 2. The Persons for whom for us miserable sinners who lay in darkness c. 3. The Ends for which it was wrought that he might make us the children of God and exalt us c. 2. Why in this Sacrament because of 1. The Reasons of its Institution And to the end that we should always remember 1. the exceeding great Love c. 2. and the innumerable Benefits which c. 2. The Author He hath instituted c. 3. His Design therein as pledges of his Love and for to our great and endless comfort 2. By way of Practice in a Form shewing 1. The Object of our Praise To him therefore with the Father and the Holy Ghost 2. The Manner how to offer it both 1. In Word let us give as we are most bounden continual thanks 2. In Deed by 1. Resignation submitting our selves wholly to his holy Will c. 2. Obedience and studying to serve him in true holiness all the days of our life Amen A Practical Discourse upon this Exhortation § 3. Dearly beloved in the Lord ye that mind to come to the holy Communion of the body and blood of our Lord and Saviour Christ must consider how St. Paul exhorteth all persons diligently to try and examine themselves before they presume to eat of that Bread and drink of that Cup. When the Guests of this blessed Feast are now drawing near and the King of Heaven is approaching to survey them The Minister out of a peculiar affection to those who have obeyed his Masters invitation salutes them in St. Pauls phrase Rom. 16.8 with Dearly beloved in the Lord and in the stile of the same Apostle minds them of the greatness of that work which they go about even to share in the Communion of Christs body and blood 1 Cor. 10.16 Their intentions are commendable and it is pitty but such pious purposes should have their desired success Wherefore he doth once more warn them to examine themselves before they eat a duty enjoined not by humane Authority nor prescribed meerly as the advice of a Friend but bound upon all by St. Paul himself and by the Spirit of God in him 1 Cor. 11.28 Let a man c. saith he that is every man examine himself and so let him eat c. intimating that none might eat without this renewed Examination and because the Discipline of the Corinthian Church was much impaired by the Schisms then within it the Apostle obligeth every man to do it to himself and that not with a slight inquiry but so throughly to search his own heart that he might be able to judge g Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
impudence fall to them till we have first worshipped and praised him that did invite us d Non debet quis quasi famelicus à cibo incipere sed antè à laudibus Dei Ambros de Sacram. l. 6. c. 5. for Christ himself blessed God before he eat Now if this hath perswaded us that it is our duty to praise the Lord just now this incomparable form will contribute very much to the elevating of our Devotion for it is a pure and genuine piece of Primitive Piety so antiently and so universally received in both the Eastern and Western Church differing in other things that we may justly deem it to have been of Apostolical Institution There is no antient Liturgy which hath not almost the very same words Let us lift up our minds and hearts c. say the Liturgies ascribed to St. James St. Basil and St. Chrysostom Lift up your hearts c. verbatim in the Apostolical Constitutions lib. 8. which are ascribed to St. Clement St. Cyprian also particularly expounds this Preface An. Christi 250. as will appear presently St. Chrysos divides the publick offices into three parts Prayers Supplications and Prefaces e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hom. 3. in 3. ad Colos and when private Spirits attempted to make new Prefaces of their own these were forbidden to be altered and the innovators censured by a Council f Concil Milevitan Canon 12. Not to mention how St. Ambrose proves the Divinity of the Holy Ghost from the following Hymn g Ambros de Spir. Sanc. l. 3. c. 18. But to shew that they deserve admiration as well for their intrinsick Excellencies as their antiquity we proceed to unfold the particulars The Analysis of the Prefaces and Trisagium Sect. 2. This Act of Praise hath four distinct Parts 1. The Resp nses in which a general Act of 1. Preparation is Propounded Lift up your hearts and Accepted We lift them up unto the Lord 2. Tha●k●giving is Offered Let us give thanks unto ●ur Lord God Embraced It s meet and right so to do 2. The gene●al Preface and Reason of this Duty shewing 1. Why we do it It is very meet right and our bounden duty 2. When. that we should at all times 3. Where and in all places 4. To whom give thanks unto thee O Lord holy Father Almighty Everlasting God 3. The Exercise of this duty containing 1. The Company with whom we join Therefo●e with Angels and Archangels a d w●th a l the Company of Heaven 2. The Act which we perform W●●●nd and magnifi● th● glorious name eve●m re praising thee 3. The manner of performing it by 1. Confessing God in his Holiness and saying Holy Holy Holy Power Lord God of Hosts Glory Heaven ●●d Earth art full of thy glory 2. Giving praise unto him Glory be to thee O Lord most High Amen 4. Particular Prefaces and Reasons why we must praise God especially on 1. The Feast of the Nativity 2. The Feast of Easter 3. Holy-Thu sday 4. The Fe●● of Whit-Sunday 5. Trinity-Sunday for 1. Christ Incarnation 2. His Resurre●tion 3. His Ascension 4. The gif● of he Holy Ghost 5. Revelation of the mystery of the Trinity A Practical Discourse on the Prefaces c. § 3. Priest Lift up your hearts Answ We lift them up unto the Lord. Having searched and tryed our ways by Repentance and by Faith turned again to the Lord we are next by the method of the Holy Ghost advised to Lift up our hearts Lament 3.40 41. They were oppressed with a load of guilt and fear before but as soon as that burden is removed there is all possible reason to lift them to praise our most gracious deliverer such was Davids practice Psal 25.1 such the Precept of the great Apostle Colos 3.1 and from these Divine Fountains this Pious form of Exhortation was derived into all the antient Liturgies It is capable of a twofold sence yet both do rarely agree to this place and to this Ordinance First As it requires a strict and intire attendance upon the duty in hand thus St. Cyprian expounds this Preface h Ideo sacerdos ante orationem praefatione praemissâ parat fratrum mentes dicendo Sursum corda ut dum Resp plebs Habemus ad Dominum admoneatur nihil aliud se quàm Dominum debere cogitare Cypr. de Orat. Dom. and St. Chrysostom i Hom. de encoeniis and St. Augustine k Aug. de vera rel c. 3 in like manner viz. That dismissing all Worldly thoughts we should wholly fix our minds upon the Mysteries and by Faith and Contemplation look into the Abyss of the Divine Mercy till we be even ravished and swallowed up with wonder and have forgotten all other things The very Heathens in all their Holy Rites saith Plutarch l 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plutar. Coriolan Ea v x hortabatur ut qui sacra adirent reverenter attentè id facerent Lil. Girald had a Cryer who with a loud voice Proclaimed these words Hoc Age. By which they were warned to mind nothing but the Mystery and that neither idleness nor business might interrupt them And is not this much more necessary in this Coelestial Feast where there are so many of the best objects in the World as will take up our whole man and imploy all our power if we do attend them Secondly As it more directly respects the duty of praise which immediately follows after and thus it admonisheth us to lift up our hearts to contemplate the infinite Majesty and greatness the admirable mercy and goodness of him whom we are to praise that when our Souls are transported with the divine glories no baser or mean thoughts may dare to approach or disturb the holy pleasure we are to praise God in the highest Laudate eum in Excelsis sed cum cogitamus quomodo illic laudetur cor ibi habeamus non sine causâ audimus Sursum corda Aug. in Psal 148. to sing the song of Angels Let us therefore elevate our thoughts to consider how that glorious Choir doth sing this Hymn that we may do it with a fervency and pleasure almost unison to them and rejoice as if we were among them we are now going to do the work of Angels and so must be above the World Answ Now the Church hath taught all her Children readily to obey this pious Exhortation and to answer We lift c. as Psal 27.9 For the people being now purifyed by Faith are admitted also to bear their part which they must do not by a bare repeating of the words but an actual performing of the duty for it is not only a Promise We will c. but a Declaration of what we are now doing Take heed saith St. Chrys ye that in the time of the dreadful mysteries are thinking or talking of Vanity O Man what dost thou hast thou not promised the Priest who said Lift up your mind and heart and thou didst
reply We lift them up n Chrysos homil de encoeniis c. The heart of holy men is daily directed to Heaven and therefore when the Priest admonisheth them to lift it up thither they may safely answer We lift c. p Corda fidelium coelum sunt quia in coelum quotidiè diriguntur dicente sacerdote Sursum corda securè Respondent Habemus ad Dominum Aug. de tempor ser 44. for where our Treasure is there will our heart be also And he that requires q Id. de ver Relig. c. 16. this duty of us will enable us to perform it O happy agreement when Priest and people are raised up above this sublunary World and ascended into the Holy Mount to converse with Jesus with whom it is good to dwell for ever § 4. Priest Let us give thanks unto our Lord God Answ It is meet and right so to do When the Soul is thus lifted up and enlarged by contemplating the glories of God it is then in right frame to celebrate his Praise wherefore the Priest improves the opportunity and invites us while we are thus disposed to give thanks c. Thus the Praecentor of the Jewish Choir was wont to call upon the rest to join with him in the divine Praises as appears by several of the Psalms Psal 34.3 81.1 95.1 96.1 And it may be from thence this excellent Exhortation was taken at first which hath been retained ever since Verbatim both in the Churches of the East and West as appears both from the Liturgies r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Liturg. Basilii ap Cyril Hieros Ad haec inter sacra mysteria ad gratiarum actiones convertitur Cypr. de coen In ipso verissimo singulari sacrificio gratias agere admonemur Aug. de spir lit 11. and the observations of the ancients upon these words The Priest saith Let us give thanks unto the Lord And surely saith St. Cyril ſ Cyril Hierosol catech mystag 5. We ought to give thanks unto him who hath admitted us that are so unworthy unto such mighty favours that being Enemies he hath reconciled us and honoured us with the Spirit of Adoption And then you answer It is meet and right for when we give thanks to God we verily do a work that is just and due But when he granted so great a benefit and gave us such good things it was not an Act of his Justice but infinitely more than of right belonged to us thus he St. Augustine applies it somewhat otherwise but very well in this manner In the Sacrament of the faithful it is said that we should Lift up our hearts which is done by the gift of God for which gift we are admonished by the Priest to give thanks to the Lord our God and the people answer It is just and right so to do ſ Aug. de bon perseverant l. 2. And elsewhere t Idem de bon Viduit cap. 16. We do not attribute unto our selves the glory of this great good viz. the lifting up of our hearts But we give thanks unto the Lord God as we are presently warned because it is just and right so to do Let us then give thanks now for that which is past the gracious promise of Absolution Let us praise him for that which is present the Grace that elevates our hearts And bless him for that which is at hand the Banquet of his Sons most precious Body and Blood for nothing is more agreeable to this Office more fit for us to give nor more due for him to receive And if you do from your heart confess that the Lord deserves all honour and glory the Priest may rejoice in the success of his Exhortation for that very acknowledgment is it self an Act of Praise in which both Priest and People are now agreed to join with all possible Devotion § 5. It is very meet right and our bounden duty that we should at all times and in all places give thanks unto thee O Lord holy Father Almighty and Everlasting God These are still the words of Pious Antiquity the dependence whereof we learn from St. Chrysostom for the Priest saith he u 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Hom. 18. in 2. ad Cor. having received their suffrage doth gather their Confessions together and then begin the Sacrifice of praise Most joyful it is to the Holy Man to hear such an acknowledgment from the Congregation and that he may promote it as much as possible he doth confirm the truth of so pious an Assertion with many words much of the same signification saith Florus x Repetitio sermonis est confirmatio veritatis Flor. Magister Or as others y Dignum est quantum ad Dominum quia ipse Dominus Deus noster Justum est quantum ad nos quia nos sumus populus ejus Innocent Mist miss l. 2. in general it is very meet that is most fit and reasonable to praise God And as to him who is the object of it it is Just and Right because he deserves it as to our selves who are the offerers thereof it is our bounden duty because we are so infinitely indebted to him If it were possible we should rejoice in him evermore 1 Thess 5.16 and bless him in all places in private as well as publick for he bestows mercy on us at all times and in all places night and day at home and abroad in retirement and Company in sickness and health we are indebted to him for our Creation and preservation for our Bodies and our Souls for our Redemption for the means of Grace and the hopes of Glory so that we ought to give him thanks every moment But at this great Solemnity we must unite all our Powers and as the Christians were wont of old Bless him here for all together If the most ordinary single mercy challenges ●n Act of praise how should we raise our gratitude to the highest pitch now when we survey them all at once § 6. Therefore with Angels and Archangels and all the Company of Heaven we laud and magnify thy glorious Name That the Angels were present at the performance of divine mysteries hath been the opinion of both Heathens and of Christians z 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 esse dicit Plutar. lib. de Orac. Angelo orationis adhuc adstante Tertul de orat but that they are especially present at the Lords Supper is generally received Flesh and blood saith St. Chrysost a Chrys in Math. hom 10. is here made a part of the Angelick Choir And again b Idem Homil. de non contem Eccles Consider O man near whom thou standest in these terrible mysteries with whom thou art about to worship God with Cherubins and Seraphins and all the Heavenly Powers And surely it will mightily exalt our affections and stir us up to the most vigorous devotion to consider with whom we are to bear a part not
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
forth the Death of Christ and that homage and service which thou commandest us to perform Wherefore Dear Lord be thou pleased with this so sincere though poor acknowledgment not weighing or considering our merits by which we cannot pretend any right to thy acceptance but pardoning our offences which might cause thee to reject us Oh do thou deal thus with us through the Merits and Intercession of Iesus Christ our Lord by whom as our Mediator and with whom as thy only Son in the unity of and together with the Holy Ghost we desire all honour and glory may be given unto thee O Father Almighty both now in this World and for ever in the World which is without end Amen SECT III. Of the second Prayer in the Post-Communion § 1. WHen we communicate often it may be very grateful and sometimes very helpful to our devotion to vary the form for which cause the Church hath supplyed us with an other Prayer that so according to the temper of our spirit we may make our choice This being more full of praises and acknowledgments will be most fit when our minds have a joyful sense of the benefits received in this Sacrament as the former consisting chiefly of Vows and resolutions is more proper when we would express our selves in love or duty And yet we may use either of them at any time because neither doth the former want Thanksgivings nor this Petitions for Grace The Composition of this also is regular and judicious pious and extracted out of antient forms and as the former Prayer it will not only serve to close our Devotions within the Temple a Non est vera Religio quae cum templo relinquitur Lactantius but it offers very useful Meditations for the Closet also after we return home as the ensuing method will demonstrate The Analysis of the Second Prayer in the Post-Communion § 2. This Second Prayer consists of Four Parts 1. A hearty Thanksgiving for the present Favour describing 1. The Object of our Praise Almighty and everlasting God we most heartily thank thee 2. The Subject thereof for that thou hast vouchsafed to feed us who have duly received these holy Mysteries with the spiritual Food of the most precious Body and Blood of thy Son our Saviour Iesus Christ 2. A free Confession of the Benefits assured thereby 1. In possession 1. The Love of God And dost assure us thereby of thy favour and goodness towards us 2. Union with the Saints and that we are very Members incorporate into the mystical Body of thy Son which is the blessed Company of all faithful People 2. In reversion Eternal Life And are also Heirs through hope of thy everlasting Kingdom by the Merits of the most precious Death and Passion of thy dear Son 3. An humble Petition that we may retain them shewing 1. The Thing requested And we most humbly beseech thee O heavenly Father so to assist us with thy Grace 2. The Ends why we do request it viz. for 1. Perseverance that we may continue in that holy Fellowship 2. Fruitfulness and do all such good works as thou hast prepared for us to walk in 3. The Motive to obtain it Through Iesus Christ our Lord 4. A concluding Doxologie to whom with thee and the Holy Ghost be all honour and glory world without end Amen A Practical Discourse upon the second Prayer with Meditations after the Communion § 3. Almighty and everliving God we most heartily thank thee for that thou hast vouchsafed to feed us who have duly received these holy Mysteries with the spiritual food of the most precious Body and Blood of thy Son our Saviour Iesus Christ This Act of Thanksgiving may be expressed in various words but it must not be omitted after the Communion and therefore it is put into both these forms We ought not at any time rudely to ask for blessings from God until we have prepared the way by Praises b Arrogans oratio si ab homine quid petiturus dicas statim da mihi hoc Peto Debet inchoari oratio à laude Dei ut sequatur supplicatio Ambr. de Sacr. l. 6. c. 5. But having so lately received so great mercy it would be unsufferable to pray for more till we have acknowledged that which is already bestowed on us And by confessing the former mercy in the very entrance of this Prayer we do both encourage our selves to ask and expect further blessings c Sequentium rerum certitudo est praeteritorum exhibitio Greg. in Evang. hom 1. and we do also by our gratitude engage the Almighty to give us more d Ascensus gratiarum descensus gratias Cassiod Efficacissimum genus est rogandi gratias agere Plin. Paneg. Indignus est dandis qui ingratus est pro datis Aug. de temp 112. Besides the very gift it self now imparted to us is the greatest and the best the most sweet and most necessary for us in the World we bless God for our daily Bread our common food how much more then ought we to praise him for this spiritual food which nourisheth our Souls unto life everlasting True it is that carnal and unworthy Receivers have little cause of joy e Sacrificia non sanctificant hominem non enim indiget Deus sacrificio sed conscientia ejus qui offert sanctificat hominem pura existens Irenae l. 4. c. 34. for they have eat the Bread and drank the Wine not discerning the Lords Body and Blood but those that prepared themselves by Repentance and received by Faith those I say have fed upon the spiritual part and therefore they have the most reason with all their powers to bless the Lord in this wise An Act of Thanksgiving It is a mighty favour to me O my God that thou hast made bread to grow out of the Earth to nourish my mortal body but O how far hast thou transcended that mercy in giving me the Bread of Life from Heaven to feed my immortal Soul Whom was there in Heaven or Earth that I could have wished for in comparison of Jesus Christ and now thou hast given him to me whom my Soul longed for and in him thou hast given me all for he is all in all He is the fairest of ten thousand for whose sake I will trample upon all that this World accounts desirable O my Soul bless thou the Lord I came not to gaze at or taste of the outward part but to satisfie the longings of my sin-sick Soul by laying hold of the merits of a Crucified Saviour yet I have received the Sacred Elements and thou hast made them to me that which I needed and desired even the Body and Blood of thy Son I have received his flesh in Sacrament but his grace in reality f Ideo in similitudine quidem accipis sacramentum sed verae naturae gratiam virtutemque conseque●is Ambr. de sacr l. 6. And O how it fills my Soul with joy to behold thy Majesty
stedfast and unmoveable always abounding in the work of the Lord. And I beseech thee give me constant and continual supplies of thy Grace that I may be able to perform whatsoever I have promised and let not forgetfulness or indevotion seize upon me hereafter Let me hold fast that which I have and daily strive to gain more and finally make me faithful to the Death so shall I receive the Crown of Life for he that endureth to the end shall be saved Amen § 8. Through Iesus Christ our Lord to whom with thee and the Holy Ghost be all honour and glory World without end Amen There is a mighty efficacy in the name of Jesus used by a devout Soul that hath lately beheld the Commemoration of his great Attonement Through him we beg this Grace therefore And to him together with the Father and the blessed Spirit we offer up all honour and glory for the favours imparted to us in this Communion which but just now we did acknowledge and these Prayers and Praises we have cause to sign with an unfeigned Amen For we need the grace desired and the blessed Trinity deserves the glory ascribed wherefore we say Amen So be it But of this we have spoken before The Paraphrase of the second Prayer O Lord who art ever able and always ready to help thy servants being an Almighty and everliving God whose power and mercy can never fail We thy poor Creatures according to our bounden duty do most heartily thank and most unfeignedly praise thee for that of thy infinite pitty and bounty thou dost vouchsafe at this thy holy Table to feed us who have with penitence and Faith devoutly and duly received these holy Mysteries For therein thou hast refreshed our Souls with the spiritual and most desirable food of life thou hast made us Partakers by Faith of the most precious Body and of the most holy blood of thy Son our Saviour Iesus Christ which was offered for the Redemption of the whole World We acknowledge O Lord that besides the present comfort of this inestimable gift thou hast convinced us And dost assure us thereby of that which though we do not deserve yet we esteem above all things even thy favour thy gracious designs and goodness towards us poor Sinners And further by this holy Rite thou hast declared us thy Children and that we are very certainly living Members incorporate in and united unto the mystical Body of thy Son even thy Holy Church which is the blessed Company which are redeemed reconciled and sanctifyed by Jesus consisting of all faithful People in whose Prayers Priviledges and hopes we have now a happy interest And are also together with those thy servants by this Seal of thy Covenant made Heirs through hope already of thy Everlasting Kingdom which was purchased by the Merits of the most precious Death and Passion of thy Dear Son whose sufferings are set forth and the benefits of them conveyed to us in this Sacrament And now lest we should lose these blessings again by relapsing to folly as we have formerly done We most humbly and earnestly beseech thee O Heavenly Father for thy mercy sake so constantly and powerfully to assist us with thy grace in all our endeavours to perform our Obligations and our Vows that we may continue for ever in that holy fellowship with thy Son and thy Saints to which thou hast admitted us And do all such good works of Mercy Piety and Vertue as thou hast by the direction of thy holy Word prepared for us to walk in who have professed our selves to be thy Servants All which we beg through the most powerful intercession of Iesus Christ our Lord by whom we have received these and all other Mercies To whom therefore with thee O Father Almighty and the Holy Ghost three Persons and one God let there be all honour and glory ascribed both now and World without end Amen Be it so SECT IV. Of the Gloria in Excelsis or the Angelick Hymn § 1. TO conclude this Office with an Hymn is so direct an imitation of our Saviours practice Math. 26.30 that it is observed in all Churches and hath been used in all Ages And although the forms may differ yet this is as Antient as any now Extant The former part of it is of an Heavenly Original and was sung by the Angels at our Lords Nativity Luke 2.14 and it seems from thence it was transcribed into the Oriental Liturgies for it is thrice repeated in that of St. James The latter part is by Hug. de S. Victor l. 2. said to be composed by St. Hilary Bishop of Poictiers but by Rabanus Maurus who lived 200. years before the said Hugo it is ascribed to Telesphorus about the year of Christ 139. Certain it is that it was added by the Ecclesiastical Doctors as we are informed by the fourth Council of Toledo a Concil Tolet. IV. Can. XII celebrated about 1000. years ago and yet those are accursed by that Council who shall reject this or the Gloria Patri or other Hymns because they are not verbatim in the Scripture for as is there well noted upon that pretence we might reject the most part of the Church Offices It is also to be noted that with very little difference we find this Hymn in Clement's Constitutions l. 17. cap. 48. so that it is likely to have been of very antient use in the Western Church And whereas in the present Roman Missal it stands in the beginning of this Office it is much more properly placed by our Liturgy here in the end of the Communion for every devout Communicant is now even full of gratitude and longeth for an opportunity to pour out his Soul in the praises of God and how fit this Hymn is for that purpose the Analysis and following discourse will shew The Analysis of the Angelick Hymn or Gloria in Excelsis § 2. The Angelick Hymn hath Two Parts 1. The Angels Song acknowledging 1. The Effect of Christs Death 1. Above Glory be to God on High and 2. Below in Earth Peace 2. The moving Cause of it good will towards Men. 2. A Descant upon it by 1. A Glorification of the Father expressing 1. The Manner how we offer this Praise We praise thee we bless thee we worship thee we glorifie thee we give thanks unto thee 2. The Reason why for thy great Glory 3. The Person to whom O Lord God Heavenly King God the Father Almighty 2. A Supplication to the Son who is 1. Confessed in his Titles O Lord the only begotten Son Iesu Christ O Lord God Lamb of God Son of the Father 2. Invocated by his 1. Office to 1. Pardon that takest away the sins of the World have mercy upon us Thou that takest away c. have mercy c. 2. Hear us Thou that takest away the sins of the World receive our Prayer 2. By his Glory also to pardon us Thou that sittest at the right hand of the Father
a Vide Rom. 8.26 Wherefore We beseech thee O merciful Father to have Compas●ion upon us because of these our infirmities excusing the failings and supplying the defects of these our Prayers And those things which we have left out being checked by our Consciences for our unworthiness which made us that we dare not pray for them As also those things which for our ignorance and for our spiritual blindness we cannot ask not knowing they were good for us vouchsafe to give them all unto us of thy bounty which is wont to go beyond b Vberior semper est Dei gratia quam nostra precatio Ambr. in Luc. Fides aliquando recipit quod Oratio non praesumit Bernard de grad humil Ex gratiâ 1 Reg. 3.13 Psal 21.4 Luc. 23.42 43. all our Petitions Withold not any good thing because we are unworthy but give us all that we need for the worthiness and merits of thy Son Iesus Christ our Lord who hath deserved this grace for us Amen VI. A Concluding Prayer for the acceptance of the rest § 7. There are three Qualifications of an acceptable Prayer 1. That it be made in Christs name c John 14.13 16.23 2. That it be agreeable to Gods will d 1 Ep. S. John 5.14 3. That it be asked in Faith e Math. 21.22 James 5.15 Now because it were impudent to expect to be heard upon other Terms the Church hath here put them all together in this finishing Prayer which is very properly used after any of our Prayers especially the Common Prayers which if we have said in Faith we are sure the Petitions are according to Gods will and made in the name of Christ The Paraphrase of the sixth Prayer Almighty God who in thy holy Word hast promised graciously to hear and readily to answer the Petitions of them that according to thy direction do ask in thy Sons name the only Mediator and Advocate of his Church Relying on this thy Promise We beseech thee most mercifully to incline thy Ears and most speedily to return an answer to us that have made now in our great necessity these our Prayers and Supplications and presented them unto thee in the name of Jesus Christ And grant us this last request even that those great and excellent things which trusting in thy mercy we have faithfully asked Provided they be according to thy will and such things as thou seest to be good for us that they may effectually be obtained by our Petitions and speedily bestowed on us And this thy mercy in granting our requests will both tend to the relief of us thy servants in all our Necessities And also to the setting forth of thy own infinite glory before all the World who will perceive thy goodness towards us thy unworthy Creatures through Iesus Christ our Lord In whose Name we ask and for whose sake thou givest every good thing by whom therefore all glory be to thee for ever Amen The End of the Communion Office A BRIEF DISCOURSE UPON THE OFFICES OF BAPTISM AND CONFIRMATION LONDON Printed by J. M. for John Martyn at the Bell in St. Pauls Church-Yard MDCLXXIV TO THE REVEREND and WORTHY JOHN TILLOTSON Doctor of DIVINITY DEAN OF CANTERBURY c. SIR I Do not imagine I shall discharge those Obligations which your Goodness hath laid upon me but rather encrease them by the Presenting these little Tracts unto you for it will contribute to their Reputation to be ushered in with so worthy a Name Place this before Page 357. and add to their Authors Character to be reckoned among the number of your Friends So that if this Tender be accepted but as the Testimony of my Gratitude I shall confess my self to be your Debtor still The Discourses are brief that they may be of as general use as they are of Vniversal Concernment The first upon the Office of Baptism shewing as well the Consent of this Church with the best Antiquity therein as the several duties of Parents Sureties and younger Christians in order to the making and keeping the Baptismal Vow The Second being a like Account of the necessary though neglected Office of Confirmation containing the Motives to perswade to it the Method of its Administration and the means to profit by it And I hope they are so done that they may be honoured with your approbation as well as your Name for then they will be effectually recommended to all the judicious and raised above the censures of the less discerning I shall only add That as I wish no others may measure the worth of these Papers barely by their Proportion a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Demosthenes so I will particularly request from your self not to estimate the Respects of the Presenter by the Quantity of the Present b In quo censendum nil nisi Dantis amor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 S. Chrysost hom in Johan for though the Treatises are small yet they are tendered with a great affection by Reverend Sir Your most obliged and most faithful Servant Tho. Comber THE INTRODVCTION Of Baptism in general § 1. WAter hath so naturally a property of cleansing that it hath been made the Symbol of Purification by all Nations and used with that signification a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plut. quaest Roman in the Rites of all Religions The Gentiles washed before their Sacrifices b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 idem Lavabo ut rem divinam faciam Plautus and for the Expiation of their offences c Aquae vero adspersione corporis labem tolli castimoniam praestari putabant Alex. ab Alexandr de Aegyptiis sacerd gen di l. 4. c. 17. yea Satan who delights to counterfeit divine Institutions had taught the Heathens divers kinds of Baptisms as means of remission of their sins d Nationes extraneae viduis aquis sibi mentiuntur nam sacris quibusdam per lavacrum initiantur Isidis alicujus aut Mithrae certè ludis Apollinaribus Pelusiis tinguntur idque se in regenerationem ut impunitatem perjuriorum suorum agere praesumunt Tert. de Bapt. Aug. de Bapt. in Donatist The frequent washings of the Jews are known to all and Baptism is no stranger to them for they Baptize such as are admitted Proselytes at large and when any of those Nations turn Jews who are already Circumcised they receive them by Baptism only with which Ceremony also they purified Heathen Women which were to be married to Jewish Husbands And some of their own Rabbins had said of old That in the days of the Messiah there should be so many Converts that they should be forced to baptize them because it would be impossible to Circumcise them all And this is that universal plain and easie Rite which our Lord Jesus adopted to be a mystery in his Religion and the Sacrament of admission into his Church enjoining his Disciples and all their Successors to use it to this end in all parts
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
in vitam aeternam liberamur Tert. de bap cap. 1. It s natural life is a miserable mortal life a state of Bondage But we pray it may here be adopted to an Eternal life and a glorious Kingdom through Christ his Merits Amen §. 5. The Gospel and Exhortation deduced from it Hear the words of the Gospel Mark 10.13 They brought young Children to Christ c. This portion of Scripture hath been censured by some as improper for this place because the Children here mentioned were not brought to be Baptized but whosoever makes this Objection doth not well understand upon what account this Gospel is placed here and if they would take their measures by the end for which it is made use of they would retract so impertinent a charge Let it be considered therefore that in the making of a Covenant the express Consent of both Parties is required u Pactio est enim duorum pluriumv● idem placitum seu consensus L. 1. ff de pactis And this Covenant of Baptism being now to be made between Almighty God and this Child it is requisite that before the Sureties engage in behalf of the Infant they should have some Comfortable assurances that God on his part will be pleased to consent to and make good the Agreement Now though he be in Heaven yet his Ambassador the Priest in his Name doth produce this place out of his Holy Word the Declaration of his Will whereby it doth appear that God is willing to receive Infants into his favour and hath by Jesus Christ declared them capable of that Grace and that Glory which on Gods part are promised in this Baptismal Covenant wherefore the Sureties need not fear to make the stipulations on their side since they have Gods Royal Word his teste meipso and as great assurances as Majesty uses to give that there is no impediment in Children to make them incapable of receiving that which he hath promised and will most surely perform It is very likely it might be a Custom among the Jews to bring their Children to Persons of Eminent Sanctity to obtain their Blessing for St. Hierom relates that when St. Hilarion passed through Syria the Men Women and Children came flocking to him and kneeling before him they cryed Barac i. e Bless us x Hieron in vitâ S. Hilarionis which also is the manner of the East to this day y Drusius quaest Hebr. l. 2. But doubtless those who brought these Infants z Luke 18.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Marc. 10.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vers 16. cum accepisset eos in ulnas in their Arms did conceive some hope our Saviour was the Messiah and because the Promises belonged to them and to their Children Acts 2.39 they came to Jesus to desire he would pray for them and bless them and thereby own them as Members of the Covenant of Abraham But his Disciples either because they heard their Master require Faith and Repentance from all that he did receive or else esteeming it below their Masters dignity reproved those that brought them Whereupon our Lord checks their folly and taketh this occasion to shew that Children have a right to his Kingdom The Kingdom of Grace the Church consisteth of Children in Age or in Manners of them and such as they are and the Kingdom of Glory or Heaven shall be filled with Infants blessed by Christ and with Men become as little Children He begins saith Epiphanius with Infants but lest the Kingdom of Heaven should be thought only belonging to them be grants to those of every age provided they be like unto them that they shall inherit it together with them But if these that are such as they be admitted to the Kingdom how much more Infants themselves who are the Patterns of those that be compared to them Epiph. Panar L. 2. Tom. 2. haer 67. in Hieracitas Another Antient Author a little otherwise but appositely enough to this Case saith that Christ would not allow Jewish Children to be kept from coming to him because of such i. e. of Christian Children brought by their Sureties to Baptism the Kingdom of Heaven was Author libri Hypognosticon l. 5. And when Jesus hath thus pleaded their Cause who could not speak for themselves and declared that they are capable of the Kingdom of Heaven he establisheth a perpetual Decree that none do presume ever after to keep them from his Grace since they are capacitated for his Glory And then he doth bless them according to the desire of those that brought them and we are to believe that the laying on of our Saviours hands was no empty Ceremony but did effectually convey a Blessing unto them a Deus cum benedicit facit quod dicit Augustinus so that this also testifies they are capable of receiving Grace From all which Premises the Church in the Exhortation doth conclude that the Sureties may chearfully promise that which belongs to their Part since God by his Son Jesus Christ hath given such satisfaction that his Part shall be accomplished It appears both by the Words and Deeds of our Lord in this Case that Infants are beloved by him and by his Father that he will receive them kindly when they are brought to him that he will give them all the Grace and Blessing which is needed by them or desired for them it is evident that they are capable of being adopted into the Church and that the Kingdom of Heaven may be estated on them yea if they die after they have received Christs Blessing and have done nothing to evacuate it there is none more fit or likely to enter into Everlasting Glory whither we our selves cannot come unless we be like unto them b Tantum contingat nos virtutis puritate eidem similes fieri ut integritate morûm eandem cum infantibus in Christo requiem consequamur Basil Ep ●d Nectar 44. de filiolo mortuo ejusdem Nectarii Wherefore since Baptism is the only way now for Infants to be brought to Christ the Godfathers may be assured that God is well pleased with their Charity in bringing so fit an object for his Mercy and they may perceive now how ready our Heavenly Father is on his Part which Mercy they must acknowledge in the following Thanksgiving and so proceed to seal their Part of the Covenant in the Name of the Child as hereafter is directed §. 6. The Thanksgiving Almighty and Everlasting God Heavenly Father we give thee humble thanks The good News which is every where imparted by the Gospel requires that it should always be concluded with Thanksgiving And this foregoing Portion doth peculiarly deserve it for it declares the Humility Mercy and Condescension of Jesus in admitting Infants into a state of Grace and because we our selves were once received in this manner it doth admonish us to renew our acknowledgments for the mercy of our Christianity upon this fresh occasion Plato is said to have
if the holy Dove did descend in the Baptism of Jesus who had no need of cleansing we hope by the devout Prayers of the Church it will be sent to these Waters which are to be used for the purifying of a Soul most miserably defiled Secondly We pray for suitable dispositions in the suscipient as well as spiritual efficacy in the instrument that not only this Water may be hallowed to convey but this Child fitted to receive abundance of Grace at present and may keep the blessings for ever which are now bestowed on it There are too many whose names are written in the Catalogue of Christians yea and their names written it seems in the Book of Life who yet are blotted out again because of their Apostasie Revel 22.19 Chap. 3.5 m A sanctitate ad immunditiam à justitiâ ad iniquitatem à fide ad impietatem multos transire dubium non est Prosper resp ad objec 3. and lose their Crown n Revel 3.2 Dominus non minaretur auferri posse coronam justitiae nisi quia recedente justitiâ recessit corona Cyprian de un Eccles Wherefore we pray that this Child may not only be admitted into the number of Gods chosen ones but may make its calling and election sure by adorning this Faith into which it is baptized with Virtue and all holy Conversation 2 Peter 1.5.10 Many have received abundance of Grace in this holy Laver here they have been adopted and have persevered in that blessed estate to their lives end and we wish this Child may receive as much as any ever received use it as well as ever any used it and keep it as long as ever any kept it Amen § 3 4. The Naming and Baptizing of the Child Name the Child N. All things being thus Prepared when we see the Minister take the Infant in his Arms it should mind us of the mercy of Jesus who in like manner embraced those that were brought unto him and we are to hope that he will as lovingly receive the Soul thereof as his Minister doth the body And now the time is come to give it a new name Nature hath taught the most barbarous Nations to impose Names on their Children for distinction and among the Civilized part of the Heathen World the Name was given upon a certain day o Alexander ab Alexand genial Dier l. 2. c. 25. Varro l. 17. Nominalia Romanis dicuntur either the Seventh Eighth Ninth or Tenth according to custom of several places But always with great solemnity and among the Grecians not without a Sacrifice The Jews it is well known named the Child at Circumcision Gen. 21.2 3. Luke 1.59 60. Chap. 2.21 and therefore the Christians named theirs at Baptism Alluding to that new name which Jesus promiseth to give to his Servants Revel 2.17 Yea even Persons of riper Years did commonly change their Names as St. Ambrose saith Saul did in Baptism change his name to Paul Acts 13.9 p At ubi pluvia super eum lavacri coelestis influxit necatur persecutor necatur Saulus vivificatur Apostolus vivificatur Paulus usque adeo autem perdidit veterem hominem ut cum moribus mutaret nomen Ambros Dom. 1. Quadrag ser 2. Ordine 31. The like might be shewed in many others especially where they had names before taken from any Idol or relating to false Gods For it was forbid by Christian Councils q Concil Nicaen can 30. to give Heathen Names to Children or others but rather to give them the Name of some Apostle or Saint not that there is any fortune or merit in the name it self but that so the party may be stirred up to imitate the Example of that holy Person whose name he bears Now this Name though it may be privately resolved upon by the Relations Gen. 28.29 Ruth 4.18 yet it must be dictated by the Godfather the Witness of this new birth the Surety who engageth it shall lead a new life and then solemnly given by the Minister because he is in Gods stead who we hope will give it a new nature also We derive one name together with our original guilt from our Parents which ought to humble us and mind us of our being born in Sin But this new name we receive at the time of our Regeneration to admonish us of our new Birth and our Heavenly Kindred This Christian Name was given us when we were listed under Christs Banner and it is a badge that we belong to God so that as often as we hear it we should remember the Vow then made in our behalf The Custom of old was to write the Souldiers name upon his Shield r Inde prodiit jus imaginum nomina militum clypeis inscripta Forerius in leg 95. Vide Veget. de re militari l. 2. c. 28. by which he was engaged in honour not to lose that Shield unless he lost his life Even so hath God given us our Name and our Faith together so that if we Apostatize our Name will be our Eternal Infamy We have a new Name let us walk worthy of it and lead a new life ſ Reatus impii est pium nomen Salvian de Prov. l. 4. Cura esse quod audis Horat. Epist 16. Nomen tuum attende esto quod diceris Hieron ad Paul either striving to make our name Exemplary if there have been no Saint of it or else labouring to be like those of our Ancestors Luke 1.59 Vide Grot. in locum or of Gods Saints who have worn it worthily before us so shall it be recorded not only in the Churches Register but in the Book of Life and stand there for ever Amen §. 4. The form of Baptism N. I Baptize thee In the name of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Amen After the Name is given there are three things considerable in the performance of this Holy Ministration 1. The Person who baptizeth 2. The Words 3. The Actions used in Baptizing 1. He that doth Baptize ought to be a lawful Minister for Christ gave this Commission only to the Apostles joining the Office of Preaching together with it so that unordained Persons may as well presume to preach as to Baptize t Petulantia autem mulieris quae usurpavit docere non etiam tinguendi jus sibi pariet Tert. de bapt c. 17. And therefore the Church of old forbad Women to baptize u Mulier baptizare non praesumat Conc Carthag 4. Can. 100. quibu● Gratian P. Lomb. de suo addunt nisi cogente necessitate and Epiphanius accounts it ridiculous in Marcion and his followers to permit Women to do this Office w Epiphan Panar lib. 1. tom 3. haeres 42. So that our Church requires it be done by a lawful Minister I know there are some allegations out of Antiquity which seem to allow of a Lay-Man to Baptize in Cases of great necessity But there are others
this our gracious Lord to Have mercy upon you and to pity your misery as also to Pardon the guilt and deliver you from the punishment temporal spiritual and Eternal due unto you for all your Sins And when he hath acquitted you and so engaged you to live more holily hereafter Let him confirm you in the purposes and strengthen you in the performance of all goodness and virtue so that finally he for his mercy may save your Souls and bring you safely through all the dangers of this World to everlasting life Let all this be granted and made good unto you every one through the Merits and the Intercession of Iesus Christ our Lord who hath purchased all these benefits for repentant Sinners Amen Be it so SECT V. Of the Sentences of Scripture § WHosoever hath been truly sensible of his sins and deeply humbled for them will find it no easie matter to believe that God hath yet any favour for him for although it be most desirable yet it is a happiness so strange and undeserved that it is often too big for the hope of a poor Penitent a Proprium hoc miseros sequitur vitium Rebus nunquam credere laetis Redeat foelix fortuna licèt Tamen afflictos gaudere piget Sen. Thyeste Wherefore we must now labour by all means to beget in those that come hither a firm perswasion of Gods mercy for Faith is as necessary in a Communicant as Repentance the Antient Church calling those properly the faithful b Is igitur vocabatur fidelis non qui baptizarus aut confirmatus est sed qui Eucharistiae sacris participasset Albaspin obs l. 1. who had received the Lords Supper The Germans allowed none to come unto their Sacrifices who had lost their Shield c Tacitus de mor. Germ. nor do we approve that any should come to this Christian Sacrifice who wants the Shield of Faith for how can they repent kindly whose hearts are not softned with the hopes of mercy d Nemo enim potest bene agere poenitentiam nisi qui speraverit indulgentiam Ambros de poen l. 1. or how can they delight in Jesus or give him thanks who doubt whether they shall receive any benefit by his Death or no Fears and misgiving thoughts trembling and despair must by all means be removed before we feast at this Holy Table And for this reason our Church hath subjoined these Sentences to the Absolution Some may be so scrupulous or so fearful as to question the power or the fidelity of the Servant but who can or dare doubt of the Authority of the Truth of God e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Al. strom 5. Can any deny what he affirms in his own word or shall any suspect that which he promiseth with his own mouth Be the Sinner never so much disconsolate surely it will revive him to hear the Majesty against whom he hath sinned so kindly speaking peace unto him Yet these Sentences are not to be thought a different kind of comfort from what we had before in the Absolution for these are those Promises there mentioned and are in pursuance of it and a further Confirmation to it There is but one thing in that Act of Grace which the most timorous person can doubt viz. Whether it be certain that Almighty God hath promised forgiveness to such as they are Now to satisfie this enquiry here are selected four of the most full and proper Sentences in all the New Testament containing in them the very marrow of the Gospel so overflowing with sweet and powerful comforts that if duly considered they will satisfie the most jealous Souls and chear the most broken heart if believed and embraced they will utterly banish all the Clouds of sorrow and despair There are it is true Sentences also in the Roman Missal but those generally taken out of the Psalms f Deus tu conversus laetificabis nos Et plebs tua laetabitur in te Ostende nobis c. Psal 85.6 7. Sacerdotes tui c. Psal 132.9 Miss secund usum Ebor. Adjutorium nostrum in nomine Domini c. Psal 121.2 Benedictum fit nomen Domini Psal 113.2 sec usum Sarum for as their form of Absolution hath no mention of the Evangelical promise of forgiveness so their Sentences are out of the Old-Testament and seem too much to forget the Redeemer by whom this Pardon is obtained As for these Sentences before us they have nor need no other method than that order in which they lie in the New-Testament the words of the Master first and those of his two principal Apostles following them only that we may derive seasonable comfort from them we will briefly discourse upon them severally § 2. Come unto me all that travel and are heavy laden and I will refresh you St. Math. 11.28 This gracious invitation is the proof of the first assertion in the Absolution viz. that our Lord doth promise forgiveness to all them that with hearty Repentance turn to him For whereas all Sinners do lie under a heavy burden yet the impenitent do not perceive it g 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Only those that discern the baseness and foresee the punishment of their iniquity these travel that is in the antient English labour with great pains these are heavy laden therewith and cry out that their sins are a burden too heavy for them to bear Psal 38.4 these therefore are they that truly repent who are oppressed with trouble and sorrow shame and fear And Jesus though he be the offended party doth most courteously call all such to come unto him that is to believe that he is able and willing to help them John 6.37 Heb. 11.6 and saith he will refresh them by taking this burden off from them for he hath born it upon the Cross Isai 53.4 6. nay taken it away for ever by satisfying the Divine Justice to which we were obnoxious nor doth he require any merit in us to deserve thus to be eased or expect any other qualification than only that we be sensible of our own Sin and Misery and find our need of his Mercy Sweetest Saviour how excellent is thy goodness we cannot doubt thy power to ease us because thou hast born the sins of the whole World we may not question thy willingness who callest us to thee of thy own accord nor dare we suspect thy sincerity who art Truth it self and always in earnest with poor Sinners Our guilt made us think to fly from thee but thy melting voice hath encouraged us to turn to thee and laid us prostrate at thy feet groaning under the offences we have done against thee and now if thou dost pity us we are safe if thou art pleased we are eased if thou dost pardon us the burden is gone And if thou wilt take away this intolerable load we shall then venture to come nearer even to thy holy Table there to receive still more refreshment from
thy mercy These are thy words O Christ for thou hast spoken them and they are mine because thou hast spoken them for my Salvation O sweet and amiable words in the Ears of a poor Sinner by which thou invitest an indigent starved wretch to partake of thy holy body But who am I O Lord that I should dare to come the Angels and Archangels reverence thee thy Saints and holy ones fear before thee and yet thou sayst unto me Come c. unless thou hadst said it who could have believed it to be true unless thou hadst commanded it who durst have attempted this approach T. à Kempis de imitat Chris l. 4. c. 1. The Paraphrase O ye of contrite hearts Hear with joy and wonder what comfortable words he whose love you so much long for even our Saviour Christ himself saith to all such as you that truly grieving for your sins do turn to him to find mercy Lo he pities you and most affectionately calls upon you saying Come unto me with a perswasion that I am able and desirous to help you O all ye that travel with much grief and pains for your sins and are heavy laden with the apprehensions of my anger against you for them be not discouraged for I will bear this burden my self and I will by my sufferings make your peace with my Father and so refresh you according to your hearts desire § 3. So God loved the World that he gave his only-begotten Son to the end that all that believe in him should not perish but have Everlasting Life S. John 3.16 The second Assertion in the Absolution is confirmed by this Sentence viz. that Almighty God will forgive all that with true Faith turn unto him If he were willing to grant pardon on easier terms yet a man void of Faith could not receive it It was an absurd practice in some places of old to give the Sacrament to the Dead who had been surprized by mortal sickness and prevented to receive it living but an antient Council condemned this h Placuit ut corporibus defunctorum Eucharistia non detur Dictum est enim à Domino Accipite c. Conc. 3. Carthag Can. 6. because the Dead could not as Christ commands Take and eat it And for the same reason a Man without Faith cannot receive Absolution because he is dead i Vnde mors in animâ quia non est fides unde mors in corpore quia non est anima ergo animae tuae anima fides est Aug. in Johan void of all spiritual life and power to apprehend the benefit thereof Therefore if our sins and sorrows have wrapt us in such mists that we can scarce discern the light of Gods countenance let us throughly meditate of this one Sentence and the glories of it will dispel them all For here it doth appear that he first loved us and gave the noblest testimony of the biggest affection to us for he gave not a Creature nor a Servant a Prophet nor an Angel for us but he gave up his Son his only Son to a cruel Death for the World his Enemies and liable to his justice and all this for no other end but that we and the rest of this miserable World might be freed from the Damnation which we had deserved and be advanced to that glory which we could never have expected And do we still question his willingness to save us Did he give such a price to purchase our Salvation when we were Enemies and shall we think he will cast us into those flames out of which we were so dearly rescued now when we beg his mercy Did he send his Son on purpose to preserve us and will he lose his end in so glorious a work Away ye misgiving thoughts dishonour not the incomparable goodness of God hath he not given more when he gave his own Son for all than to grant life to a few for his sake Oh do not question that Love which is sealed with such an Evidence but believe admire embrace it and be thankful The Paraphrase Dost thou fear O my Soul that God will not have mercy on thee behold he that best knew his Fathers mind affirms that So wonderfully God loved his miserable Enemies even all the Sinners in the World that he when none else could help them freely gave up not some of his noblest Servants but his only-begotten and intirely beloved Son to die for them And this he did to the end that we and such like poor Sinners even all that believe this Jesus is able and willing to save them and so trust in him might be delivered from the wrath to come for all this was done on purpose that we should not perish in endless Torments but have everlasting life in his Heavenly Kingdom Doubt not then but this design shall be accomplished in thy Salvation § 4. This is a true saying and worthy of all men to be received that Iesus Christ came into the World to save Sinners 1 Timoth. 1.15 Although there needs nothing to confirm what Jesus saith yet since he himself was pleased to take his Apostles for his Witnesses we have here brought in two of the principal of them to avouch this excellent truth viz. That there is mercy for Penitent Sinners And first the certainty thereof is averred by Saint Paul who had found the experience of it and was himself so great an instance thereof that he thinks ver 16. no sinner will ever despair that can but consider how great an offender he was and yet that he found mercy whereupon he doth with great confidence assert this as a tried and infallible Maxim and because all men have sinned he propounds it as a Truth which every man is concerned to receive as unquestionably and believe as firmly as the Cabala l Cabala fig. receptam doctrinam qui docet enim apud Judaeos tradere dicitur qui discit recipere Vid. Ham. annot in 1 Tim. 1. Drus praeterit l. 8. was amongst the Scholars of Jewish Rabbins And he urgeth this the more vigorously because we are so apt to object what such as we shall we ever partake of such a happiness Yes such as you for our Lord Jesus had no other errand into this World no other design in putting on our nature no other end in dying than to save Sinners He came not to call the Righteous Math. 9.13 but to seek and save those which were lost Chap. 18.11 and he assures us there is more joy in Heaven at the difficult and unexpected Salvation of a Sinner than at the more likely and more looked for glorification of many righteous Luke 15.7 But you say you are grievous Sinners Are not all the World so if there had been no Sinners there had needed no Saviour if Sinners cannot be saved no man did ever enter Heaven if sin be unpardonable Jesus hath died in vain Do not argue against your own felicity but be assured if you