Cracts of t&e Anglican jfatfcers.
PART L
ORANMER.
" Ask for the Old Paths."
PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY W.E. PAINTER, STRAND, LONDON.
1R39.
PREFACE.
In reprinting, for popular distribution, these Sermons,
set forth by the authority of Archbishop Cranmer, it
is very far from the wish of the Editors to sanction the
notion, that Christian Truth — or that view of it which
The Church of England has taken — is dependent on
the personal opinions, or private judgment, of any man, or
men, of station or influence however high. Happily, there
is no question among us of the English Communion,
that " Holy Scripture containeth all things necessary to
salvation, so that whatsoever is not read therein, nor
may be proved thereby, is not to be required of any man
that it should be believed as an Article of The Faith, or
be thought requisite, or necessary to salvation." But
there are among us many questions and debates, as to
what really is the Scriptural Truth, as recognised and
set forth by the Prayer-book of our Church. And
for the express purpose of throwing some popular light
on such questions, these Tracts are reprinted ; as well
as on account of their further tendency, (in the judgment
of the Editors), to promote the general edification of
Christians.
Every one knows that there are, at present, within the
pale of our Church, two very different classes of interpre-
tation of Divine Truth, and that the Church's authority
is challenged with some boldness, by both the opposing
parties, as clearly and expressly in their favour. How
IV.
much fairness there is in some of these appeals, it would
be melancholy to have to say. The one party refers to
the Liturgy and Services, chiefly ; the other, to some of
the Articles ; while neither seems willing to concede to
the other what candour demands. The old charges are
constantly revived, of Puritanism on the one side, and
Popery on the other, and thrown back, from this to that,
with a puerile animosity and zeal, which, were the sub-
ject less serious and sacred, would place the combatants
beneath notice. The most obsolete and worn out mistakes
of the last two centuries, have teemed forth in pamphlets,
of which, the ink and the paper, and a somewhat perter
and more assured look of ignorance, are the only new
points. Surely all this is unworthy of us. Lookers on,
Dissenters, for instance, see very plainly how the case
stands between us. How long are we determined to blind
ourselves to the truth ? It certainly is not so difficult to
fix the meaning of an English sentence, as controver-
sialists would have us believe. In coming, and, we trust,
better times, it will, we think, be quoted as a curious and
remarkable fact, that there once existed a considerable
number of the English Clergy, who succeeded in per-
suading themselves that their Church did not consider
the Grace of Regeneration to be conveyed in Baptism.
Let not this be taken, however, as insinuating that the
<li>ingenuousness which we complain of, has been all on
one side. The case may perhaps be fairly represented by
a few remarks on two of our Articles, the 16th and 17th ;
the former is concerning " Sin after Baptism :" the lat-
ter, DOOttfnirig " Predestination and Election." Now,
let it be Imnotly asked, as to the first, whether it would
have occurred for a moment to a maintainor of the Modern
Theology to draw up an Article on any such point as " Sin
after Baptism ?" Whether he would have thought of re-
cognizing any such distinction as this, between Sin before
and after Baptism ; and between " deadly" sin and other
sins ? We do not enquire, whether this Article may or
may not be believed by the receivers of modern opinions ;
(probably it would seem, to most of them, to announce a
mere truism) — but, whether the having an Article on such
a subject, and so phrased, does not indicate the existence,
among our Reformers, of opinions very different from those
which are common at the present day ? The existence of
the Article, and not the wording of it, is the difficulty. No
one, surely, who understands the point in question, what-
ever his own sentimeuts may be, will fail to acknowledge if
he be an impartial thinker, that the 16th Article of our
Church implies an admission of much which many would now
call "Popish." It is evidently in harmony with all the feel-
ings and thoughts of the old Divinity. It is, to a certain
extent, then decisive on the question as to the spirit of
our first Reformed Theology. Granting even that the
words of the Article do not contradict the modern religious
tenets — siill they are such as the modern teachers do not,
and could not think of using, and so it is that certain there
were elements in the Divinity of the Anglican Fathers,
which peculiarly distinguished it from that of their sons in
this generation.
But, on the other hand, it is by far too common with
those who defend the ancient Christianity, to allow too little
to those who think that they must interpret Calvinistically
the 17th Article. This is unwise, as well as unfair. Here
the wording of the Article, and not the having such an
Article, is the difficulty. The wording of it is certainly such
VI.
as the generality will always be apt to consider Calvinian,
while it remains as it is ; and the prejudice in favour of the
modern opinion generally, is often created by our seem-
ing reluctance to do justice to those who think this 17th
Article to be in their favour. Surely we can well afford
them the solitary admission that the wording of this one
Article seems now more suitable to them than to us. Why
should we imitate, in any measure, that sort of unfairness
which we charge on them throughout ? The 17th Article
is not inspired : and there can be no necessity for main-
taining that every one of its phrases is precisely the fittest
that could have been employed. And yet from our mode
of defending it, sometimes amounting to this seems to be
practically assumed. It is not enough for us to show
(what no one now doubts) that our Articles preceded, rather
than followed, the Genevan doctrine. Ordinary readers
will still feel that the words of this 17th Article, at least,
appear to recognize a theology very similar at all events,
to the Calvinian, and they require to have it shown, that,
in point of fact, our Reformers did not admit any such
system. This should be made to appear as far as possible
from their contemporary writings. And it should further
be shewn, how the language of the Reformers has often
acquired a new meaning by being taken up, and adopted
by the controversialists of later times.i
1. At all events, What the different Reformers of our Church— who
certainly were no Calvinists — were all able to subscribe, we their descen-
dants, may well be allowed to sign as they did — in no Calvinistic sense.
— By the way ; we never heard that the Council of Trent was ever charged
with Calvini-m — yet the Tridentine Fathers certainly go further than
the ErudishChurch on this point — even recognizing in some sort Personal
MM Ehciion. The words of the Council are : "Nemo quoquc
"qaradiu in hac mortalitntc vivitur de arcano Divine Pradestinationii
"wwjur ad<u presiuiHir debet, fcc* (which is similar to the cautionary
"part of our own Article. ) N;im nisi ex spcciali Kevelationc seiri
"non potest quos Deus sibieleycrit." — Scss. vi. Dtp. xii.
VII.
But it may perhaps be urged, that there might be no
end to the disputes as to the scope and spirit of our Ser-
vice-book, if, according to this recommendation, we are
to judge thereof by the extant opinions of its compilers ;
seeing that there is very great diversity of opinion among
them, and that not unfrequently they differ from themselves
at different times. There is truth in this : they did so
differ — but that fact does not affect our enquiry so far as
seems to be imagined. We are not, in this publication,
proposing to examine the opinions of any individual Re-
formers, at any stage of the changes which they certainly
passed through. Any one might thus select passages to
suit himself. Our enquiry is, simply, as to those autho-
ritative documents, or contemporary publications, which
they put forth. The spirit and scope of such documents
cannot but furnish very valuable assistance for the settle-
ment of the debated question, of the meaning, which at the
time, our English Formularies were supposed and intended
to have. Archbishop Cranmer's opinions, for example,
varied at different times, from Romanism to Erastianism.
Of his individual sentiments, however, we make no en-
quiry; but what opinions he authoritatively sanctioned
concerning the essential truths of Christianity — (the
Church and her Sacraments,) — at the time of the com-
piling of our Service-book, the Sermons printed in
these four Tracts undeniably shew. Perhaps sufficient
justice has never yet been done to the character of that
singularly candid-minded and well-learned Prelate, who
first forwarded, under God, the great work of our Refor-
mation ; but it is not for us to enter here upon any such
tophic. We wish to keep, as clear as possible, from even
seeming to rest on the opinion or character of an indi-
Vlll.
vidual. We will remark, however, that if we had to
chose a master from among our Reformers, we certainly
should not select Cranmer, wrhile we might listen to the
more consistent, and flexible, and catholic, though not
more honest Ridley. Viewed in this respect, indeed, it
is fortunate that the Sermons, now reprinted, were not
originally composed by the Archbishop himself, but merely
translated, under his direction, (from the Latin of Justus
Jonas,) and " set forth by his authority," for the special
instruction of the people. This was done at the very
time, however, when the English Prayer-book was in pre-
paration.2 The " Catechismus" was set forth in 1548
and the Book of Common Prayer was sanctioned by
authority in the same year, and published early in 1549,
and the Consecration and Ordination Service was added
a few month afterwards. So that it will follow, either
that the English Archbishop sent forth, at the same
time, two totally different sets of doctrines, and put his
Archiepiscopal sanction to both at once ; or else, the
plain and unequivocal teaching of these Sermons from the
Catechismus, will afford, we think, a striking exposition
of the Church's meaning, and a most satisfactory refuta-
tion of the modern attempts to explain away the strong
catholic lauguage in our Reformed Offices.
Oxford,
The Feast of St. James.
2 Ridley's words, on the Reformed doctrine and practice of some
Churches, made use of towards the close of his life, are sufficiently
rkable to deserve a place here — and in the memory of every English
Churchman : " Sudden Changes, and the heady setting forth 01 extreini-
I did never love." To Ridley (under providence), we may attribute,
among other blessings, the primitive integrity of our Service for the
Holy Communion. He calls the consecration of the Elements — "A
chiagc such as no mortal man can make, but only the omnipotency of
Christ's word !"— See his Life, p. 20.
Cratts of ti)e Anglican dfatf^ers.
No. I.
HOLY BAPTISM,
A SERMON,
SET FORTH BY THE MOST REVEREND FATHER IN GOD,
THOMAS CRANMER,
ARCHBISHOP AND MARTYR,
Reprinted from tho First Edition of his " Catechismus " of 1548.
ADVERTISEMENT.
The following is a plain reprint of a .Sermon, set forth at the time
of our English Reformation, by the chief of our Fathers, Cranmer,
Archbishop of Canterbury. It will be observed that this Sermon was
originally published a short time after dimmer's Sermons of Salvation,
Faith, and Good Works (in the Homilies), and in the same year as the
first Prayer Book of Edward the Sixth ; and in that book the Office for
the Public Baptism of Infants is essentially the same as at present.
R.
Cambridge,
The Feast of the licsurreciion.
A SERMON OF BAPTISM.
Our Lord Jesus Christ, good children, in the Gospel of
Saint John, saith thus : " Except a man be born again of the
water and the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of
God." Now we ought to direct our whole life to come to the
kingdom of heaven. For the Lord saith, " First seek the king-
dom of God." And you have heard heretofore, that we daily
make this petition to God, " Thy kingdom come." Wherefore
it is very necessary for us to know how we must be born again,
and what this second birth is, without the which we cannot
enter into the kingdom God. But when we speak of a second
birth, you shall not so grossly understand this saying, as though
a man which is once born, should enter again into his mother's
womb, and so be born again as he was before. (For it were
great foolishness so to think.) But here we mean of a second
birth, which is spiritual, whereby our inward man and mind is
renewed by the Holy Ghost, so that our hearts and minds
receive new desires, which they had not of their first birth or
nativity.
And the second birth is by the water of Baptism, which Paul
calleth the bath of regeneration,1 because our sins be forgiven
us in Baptism, and the Holy GhosT is poured into us as into
God's beloved children, so that by the power and working of
the Holy Ghost we be born again spiritually, and made new
creatures. And so by Baptism we enter into the kingdom of
1 " The fountain of our regeneration [$ there [in the Church] presented
tmto us." — The Homily for repairing and keeping clean of Churches*
Homilies, edit. 1587. See also The Homily of Fasting
A3
God, and shall be saved for ever, if we continue to our lives
end in the faith of Christ.
Wherefore, good children, consider diligently the strength of
Baptism, and mark well, how great treasures and how excellent
benefits you received in your Baptism, that you may thank God
for the same, and comfort yourselves by them in all your temp-
tations, and endeavour yourselves faithfully to perform all things,
which you promised in your Baptism. And that you may do
this the better, hear and learn the words of our Master Christ,
by the which He did ordain and institute Baptism, and often-
times repeat the same, that you may learn them word for word
without the book. These be the words of our Lord Jesus
Christ spoken to His disciples : — " Go into the whole world,
AND TEACH ALL NATIONS, AND BAPTIZE THEM IN THE NAME OF
the FATHER and the SON and the HOLY GHOST. He
THAT WILL BELIEVE AND BE BAPTIZED SHALL BE SAVED ; BUT
.HE THAT WILL NOT BELIEVE SHALL BE DAMNED."
By these words our Lord Jesus Christ did institute Baptism,
whereby we be born again to the kingdom of God. And you,
good children, shall give diligence not only to rehearse these
words, but also to understand what Christ meant by the same;
that when you be demanded any question herein, you may both
make a direct answer, and also in time to come be able to
teach your children, as you yourselves are now instructed. For
what greater shame can there be than a man to profess himself
to be a Christian man, because he is baptized, and yet he
knowcth not what Baptism is, nor what strength the same hath,
nor what the dipping in the water doth betoken ? Whereas
all our lifetime we ought to keep those promises, which there
we solemnly made before God and man ; and all our profession
and life ought to agree to our Baptism. Wherefore, good chil-
dren, to the intent you may the better know the strength and
power of Baptism, you shall first understand that our Lord
Jesus Christ hath instituted and annexed to the Gospel three
Sacraments,1 or holy seals, of His covenant and league made
with us. And hy these three, God's Ministers do work with
us in the name and place of God (yea, God Himself worketh
with us,) to confirm us in our faith, to asserten [[assure] us
that we are the lively members of God's true Church, and the
chosen people of God, to whom the Gospel is sent, and that all
those things belong to us whereof the promises of the Gospel
make mention. The first of these Sacraments is Baptism, by
the which we he horn again to a new and heavenly life, and be
received into God's Church and Congregation which is the
foundation and pillar of the truth. The second is Absolution or
the authority of the keys, whereby we be absolved from such
sins as we be fallen into after our Baptism. The third Sacra-
ment is the Communion or the Lord's Supper, by the which we
be fed, and nourished, and fortified in the faith of the Gospel
and knowledge of Christ, that by this food we may grow more
and more in newness of life, so that we may be no longer chil-
dren, but may wax perfect men, and full grown in Christ.
For I would that ye should well know this, good children,
that a Christian man's knowledge and life is a more excellent
thing than unlearned people can judge. For a Christian man
hath the certain Word of God whereupon he may ground his
conscience that he is made a Christian man, and is one of
Christ's members which he is assured of by Baptism. For he
that is baptized may assuredly say thus, I am not now in this
wavering opinion that I only suppose myself to be a Christian
man, but I am in a sure belief that I am made a Christian man.
1 Albeit the learned author here speaketh of three Sacraments of the
New Law, he is not to be so understood as to sanction any corrupt doc-
trine of the Church of Rome touching the Sacraments, or to interfere
with that truth which the English Church teacheth in her Catechism,
namely, that there are but two proper Sacraments generally necessary
to salvation. That which is here expressed as the Sacrament of abso-
lution, is no more than what the later divines, as Hooker, Taylor, and
others, more accurately signified by the name " Sacramental." — See The
Homily of Common Prayer and the Sacraments,
For I know for a surety that I am baptized, and I am sure also
that Baptism was ordained of God, and that he which baptized
me did it by God's commission and commandment. And tho
Holy Ghost doth witness that he which is baptized hath put
upon him Christ. Wherefore the Holy Ghost in my Baptism
pAsureth me, that I am a Christian man. And this is a true
and sincere faith which is able to stand against the gates of hell,
foragmuch as it hath for it the evidence of God's Word, and
leaneth not to any man's saying or opiuion. Furthermore, good
children, you shall diligently learn the cause wherefore we are
baptized. You have already heard that by Baptism we be born
again.
The cause of this our second birth is the sinfulness and
filthiness of our first birth. For by our first nativity (when we
were born of our fathers and mothers) all we were born in sin,
and when we issued out of our mothers womb we were laden
with sin and God's anger, as it was at large declared unto you
in the exposition of the ten commandments, and specially in
the last commandment. For as Adam did sin, and by sin was
so corrupted both in his body and soul, that by his own power or
strength he was not able to do any good thing ; even so, all the
children and offspring of Adam be born sinners, so that they
cannot be justified by themselves or by their own strength, but
are inclined and bent to sin at all times. And as Saint Paul
saith, " by nature they be the children of God's wrath."
That is to say, God is angry with us for those sins which by
nature be, as it were, akin to us, and we be born with them into
this world. But when we be born again by Baptism, then
our sins be forgiven us,1 and the Holy Ghost is given us,
1 " We must trust only in God's mercy, and that sacrifice which our
High Priest and Saviour Jksus the Son of God once ofFered for us on
the cross, to obtain thereby God's grace and remission, «.s tcell of our
original sin in Baptism, as of all actual -in committed by us after our
Baptism, if we truly repent and turn unfeignedly to Him again." — The
second part of the Sermon of [Salvation, See also Tlie first Homily of
the Passion.
which doth make us also holy, and doth move us to all good-
ness. Wherefore, good children, when a man is baptized, it is
as much [as] to say, as he doth there confess, that he is a sinner,
and that he is under the rule and governance of sin, so that of
himself he cannot he good or righteous. And therefore he
cometh to Baptism, and there seeketh for help and remedy, and
desireth God first to forgive him his sins, and at length to deliver
him clearly from all sin, and perfectly to heal his soul from the
sickness of sin, as the physician doth perfectly heal his patient
from bodily diseases. And for his part he promiseth to Goi>
again, and solemnly voweth that he will fight against sin with
all his strength and power, and that he will gladly bear the
cross and all such afflictions as it shall please God to lay upon
him, and that also he will be content to die, that he may be
perfectly healed and delivered from sin. For God doth forgive
us our sins by faith, but by afflictions and death he doth take
them clean away, as Saint Peter witnesseth, saying, " He that
suffereth or is afflicted in the flesh doth cease from sin." And
Saint Paul saith, " He that is dead, is justified or delivered
from sin." These be the promises which we make when we
are baptized ; and of this mind must all they be, which shall
have any fruit by Baptism. Wherefore seeing all you, that bG
here, are already baptize d, continue, I pray you, in this good
mind and purpose, [acknowledge in your hearts before God that
you be sinners, be sorry for the same, and pray to God to heal
and deliver you from your sin. Beware you fall not to sin
again ; have no delight in sin, nor sin not willingly. But be
godly and holy, and suffer gladly such afflictions, as God shall
lay upon your backs. And if you do thus, then your Baptism
shall be available unto you, and God shall work in you by His
Holy Spirit, and shall finish in you all those things which by
Baptism He hath begun.
Hitherto you have heard what we promise to God when we
are baptized; now learn also, I pray you, what God worketli
in us by Baptism, and what benefits He giveth us in the same.
For Baptism is not water alone, and nothing else besides, but it
is the water of God, and hath His strength by the word of God,
and is a seal of God's promise. Wherefore, it doth work in us
all those things whereunto God hath ordained it. For our Lord
Jesus Christ saith, ei Go and teach all nations, and baptize them
in the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost.
This God commanded His disciples to do. Wherefore, by the
virtue of this commandment, which came from heaven, even
from the bosom of God, Baptism doth work in us, as the work
of God. For when we be baptized in the name of God, that is
as much fas] to say, as God Himself should baptize us. Where-
fore we ought not to have an eye only to the water, but to God
rather, which did ordain the Baptism of water, and commanded
it to be done in His name. For He is almighty, and able to
work in us by Baptism forgiveness of our sins, and all those
wonderful effects and operations for the which He hath ordained
the same, although man's reason is not able to conceive the
same. Therefore, consider, good children, the great treasures
and benefits whereof God maketh us partakers when we are
baptized, which be these. The first is, that in Baptism our sins
be forgiven us, as Saint Peter witnesseth, saying, " Let every
one of you be baptized for the forgiveness of his sins." The
second is, that the Holy Ghost is given us, the which doth
spread abroad the love of God in our hearts, whereby we may
keep God's commandments according to this saying of Saint
Peter, " Let every one of you be baptized in the name of Christ,
and then you shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost."
The third is, that by Baptism the whole righteousness of
Christ is given unto us that we may claim the same as our own.
For so Saint Paul tcacheth, saying, u As many of ye as are bap-
tized in Christ have put upon you Christ."
Fourthly, by Baptism wo die with Christ, and are buried (as
it were) in His blood and death, that we should suffer afflictions
unto death, as Christ Himself hath suffered. And as that man
which is baptized doth promise to God that he will die with
Christ, that he may be dead to sin and to the old Adam ; so on
the other part, God doth promise again to him, that he shall be
partaker of Christ's death and passion.
And also, God maketli all afflictions which he suffereth to be
good and profitable unto him, as was the passion of Christ, and
not damnable, as it was to Judas and divers other ungodly
persons.
By this which I have hitherto spoken, I trust you under-
stand, good children, wherefore Baptism is called the bath of
regeneration, and how in Baptism we be born again, and be
made new creatures in Christ. The which doctrine you shall
the better understand, if you consider in what condition you were
before you were baptized, and in what state you stand in, after
your Baptism.
First, before we were baptized, it is evident that we were
sinners, and he that is a sinner can have no peace nor quiet-
ness of conscience before he come to Christ, so much he feareth
God's wrath and everlasting damnation. But after that our sins
in Baptism be forgiven us, and we believe the promise of God, and
so by our faith be justified,1 then our consciences be quieted,
and we be glad and merry, trusting assuredly that God is no
more angry with us for our former offences, and that we shall
not be damned for the same. And this is a marvellous altera-
tion and renewing of the inward man, the which could be
wrought by the power of no creature, but by God alone. Also,
before we were baptized, we were slaves and bondmen to sin,
so that we neither could do that good which we would have
done, nor could keep us from that evil which we would not
have done, as Saint Paul complaineth of himself. But when by
Baptism the Holy Ghost was given us, the which did spread
1 " After that we are baptized or justified."
Third part of the Homily of Salvatim,
10
abroad the love of God in our hearts, and did also deliver us
from the bondage and tyranny of sin, and gave us new strength
and power to wrestle against sin, and manfully to withstand our
ghostly enemy, the devil, then after a certain manner we were
able to fulfil God's commandments. And this is a great change
and renewing of the inward man. And this I would you should
know for a surety, good children, and stedfastly believe the
game, that no child of the Jews or Turks which is not baptized,
hath the Holy Ghost, neither that any such can understand
the Word of God, neither that any such is holy or righteous be-
fore God.
Wherefore you shall thank God with all your heart which
hath brought you to Baptism. And when you believe in the
Name of Christ, and love the Gospel, and are glad and diligent
to hear the same, then this is a sure token that by the Gospel
you have received the Holy Ghost.
Furthermore, he that is a sinner, and not baptized, although
he had the Holy Ghost to this effect, to help him to fight
against sin, yet oftentimes he is overcome and falleth to sin.
And although he doth oftentimes overcome sin, yet this is a
great imperfectness that he doth it not willingly, but that this
fight against sin is tedious and grievous unto him. Wherefore
he is ever in peril, lest he be overcome of sin. And in case he
doth manfully withstand sin, yet he seeth that his justice and
obedience be too weak and imperfect to stand before the judg-
ment of God (as indeed no man, not the holiest, is able to stand
before the judgment of God by his own righteousness). But
when in Baptism, the righteousness of Christ isfffotffl and im-
puted to him, then he is delivered from :ill those perils. For he
knoweth for a surety, that he hath put upon him Christ, and
that his weakness and imperfection is covered and hid with the
porfectri'_'liU-oiisiH-s and holiness of Christ.
Wherefore after Baptism lie doth not tru>i in his own righte-
ou*ut*h, but in Cutan only. And lie is no more pensive or
11
doubtful considering his own weaknegs, but he is joyful because
he considereth that he is made partaker of Christ's righteous-
ness. And this again is a great alteration and renewing of the
inward man.
These new affections and spiritual motions are in the souls of
such as are born again by Baptism, but they be unknown to
worldly men, and such as be not led by the Spirit of God. And
when they, that believe and be baptized, do continue in this their
faith to the end of their lives, then God shall raise them up from
death to life that they may be immortal and live everlastingly
with Christ : and then when sin and the kingdom of death is
utterly abolished and destroyed, we shall be perfectly holy and
righteous both in body and soul. And for this cause our Saviour
Christ doth call in the Gospel the rising again from death a re-
generation or a second begetting. All these things doth Baptism
work in us when we believe in Christ. And therefore, Christ
saith, w He that will believe and be baptized shall be saved, but
he that will not believe shall be damned." Wherefore, good
children, learn diligently, I pray you, the fruit and operation of
Baptism ; for it worketh forgiveness of sin, it delivereth from
death and power of the devil, it giveth salvation and everlasting
life to all them that believe, as the words of Christ's promise doth
evidently witness.
But peradventure some will say, how can water work such
great things ? To whom I answer, that it is not the water that
doth these things, but the almighty word of God (which is knit
and joined to the water,) and Faith which receiveth God's word
and promise. For without the word of God, water is water, and
not Baptism. But when the word of the living God is added
and joined to the water, then it is the bath of regeneration, and
baptism water, and the lively spring of eternal salvation, and a
bath that washeth our souls by the Holy Ghost, as Saint Paul
calleth it, saying, H God hath saved us through His mercy, by the
bath of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost, whom He
12
hath poured upon us plenteously by Jbsus Christ our Saviour,
that we being made righteous by His grace may be heirs of
everlasting life." This is a sure and true word. Ye shall also
diligently labour, good children, to keep and perform those pro-
mises which you made to God in your Baptism, and which Bap-
tism doth betoken. For Baptism, and the dipping into the water
doth betoken, that the old Adam, with all his sin and evil lusts
ought to be drowned and killed by daily contrition and repent-
ance, and that by renewing of the Holy Ghost we ought to rise
with Christ from 'the death of sin, and to walk in a new life,
that our new man may live everlastingly in righteousness and
truth before God, as Saint Paul teacheth, saying, " All we that
are baptized in Christ Jesu, are baptized in His death. For
we are buried with Him by_ Baptism into death, that as Christ
hath risen from death by the glory of His Father, so we also
should walk in newness of life." And this is the plain exposition
of the words of holy Baptism ; that is to say, that we should ac-
knowledge ourselves to be sinners, desire pardon and forgiveness
of our sins, be obedient and willing to bear Christ's cross, and
all kinds of affliction, and at the last to die, that by death we may
be perfectly delivered from sin. And therefore we ought to hate
sin, and with all our power to fight against sin. For God in
Baptism hath forgiven us our sins, and given us the Holy Ghost,
and made us partakers of the righteousness of His well -beloved
Son Jesus Christ. Now consider deeply, I pray you, how great
benefits these be, that you may not be unkind to Him that hath
done so much for you, but stedfastly believe these things, mortify
sin, patiently suffer all diseases and adversities which it shall
please God to send you, and then without doubt you shall be
saved.
Wherefore, good children, learn these things diligently, ;ind
when you be demanded, what is Baptism \ then you shall answer,
Baptism is not water alone, but it is water inclosed and joined to
the word of God, and to the covenant of God's promise. And
13
these be the words whereby our Lord Jesus Christ did ordain
Baptism, which be written in the last chapter of Saint Matthew,
* Go and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the
Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost."
And when you shall be asked, What availeth Baptism ? you
shall answer, Baptism worketh forgiveness of sin, it delivereth
from the kingdom of the devil and from death, and giveth life
and everlasting salvation to all them that believe these words of
Christ, and promise of God, which are written in the last Chapter
of Saint Mark, his Gospel, " He that will believe and be baptized
shall be saved, but he that will not believe shall be damned."
Thirdly, if a man ask you how can water bring to pass so great
things ? ye shall answer, Verily the water worketh not these
things, but the word of God which is joined to the water, and
Faith which doth believe the word of God. For without the
word of God, water is water, and not Baptism, but when the
word of the living God is joined to the water, then it is Baptism
and water of wonderful wholesomeness, and the bath of regene-
ration through the Holy Ghost, as Saint Paul writeth, " God
saved us by the bath of regeneration and renewing of the Holy
Ghost, whom He poured upon us plenteously by Jesus Christ
our Saviour, that we being made righteous by His grace, may
be heirs of everlasting life." Fourthly, if a man ask you, What
doth the baptizing in the water betoken ? answer ye, it betokeneth
that old Adam, with all sins and evil desires, ought daily to be
killed in us by true contrition and repentance ; that he may rise
again from death, and after he is risen with Christ may be a
new man, a new creature, and may live everlastingly in God, and
before God, in righteousness and holiness. As Saint Paul
writeth, saying, " All we that are baptized are buried with
Christ into death, that as Christ rose again by the glory of His
Father, so we also should walk in newness of life." Thus ye
have heard, good children, what is meant by the words of Bap-
tism, by the which we are born again and made new to ever-
14
lasting life. Learn these things diligently, and thank God who
in Christ hath called you to be partakers of so large and ample
benefits. And express Baptism in your life, and Baptism shall
be the greatest comfort to you, both in your life time, and also in
your death bed. For by Baptism we be grafted into the death of
Christ, wherefore sin, death, or hell, cannot hurt us, but we
shall overcome all these things by faith, as Christ Himself over-
came them. And so by this new birth wo shall enter into the
Kingdom of God and life everlasting.
The which God grant us all. AMEN.
NOTE.
Some moderns, in the heat of controversy, have affirmed that Cran-
mer's doctrine, touching Baptismal Regeneration, underwent a change
before his martyrdom. This statement, however, is not grounded in
truth; for, in his last work, his * Answer to Gardiner," he says : —
" For this cause Christ ordained Baptism in water, that, as surely as
we see, feei, and touch water with our bodies, and be washed with water,
so assuredly ought we to believe, when we be baptized that Christ is
verily present with us, and that by Him we be newly bom again spiri-
tually, and washed from our sins, and grafted in the 'stock of Christ's
own body, and be appareled, clothed, and harnessed with Him in such
wise, that as the devil hath no power against Christ, so hath he none
against us, so long as we remain grafted in that stock, and be clothed
with that apparel, and be harnessed with that armour." Fol. edit. 1551,
p. 42.
Again :— " Tlw wonderful work of God is not in the water which
only washeth the body, but God by His omnipotent power worketh
wonderfully in the receivers thereof, scouring, washing, and making
them clean inwardly, and as it were, new men and celestial ereatores.
This have all old authors wondered at; this wonder passeth the capa-
cities of all men'* wits, how damnation is turned into salvation, and of
the sou of the devil condemned into hell is made the son of (Jon and
inheritor of heaven. This wonderful work of (Jon all men may marrel
and wonder at : but no cieature is atde sufficiently to Comprehend it.
And as this u wondered at in tin- Sacrament of Baptism, how he that
ws* subject unto dmth reeeivefh life by Christ, and His Holy Spirit:
so is this wondered at in the tfacrament of Christ's Holy Table, how the
15
same life is continued and endureth for ever, by continual feeding upon
Christ's Flesh and His Blood." p. 74.
Again: — " As in Baptism we must think that, as the Priest putteth
his hand to the child outwardly, and washeth him with water, so must
we think that God putteth to His hand inwardly and washeth the in-
fant with His Holy Spirit: and moreover that Christ Himself cometh
down upon the child and apparelleth him with His own self." p. 444.
It may be some satisfaction to the reader to see how nearly the
Archbishop agreed with his brother Reformers in the aforesaid doctrine.
Bishop Ridley calls Baptism regeneration, and the water in Baptism,
" the fountain of regeneration." Thus,
" And, likewise, when I consider that all that man doth profess in his
regeneration, when he is received into the holy Catholic Church of
Christ, and is now to be accounted for one of the lively members of
Christ's own body,"&c. — Lamentation for the Change of Religion in
England, in Legh Richmond's Selection from the Writings of the Re-
formers, p. 142.
* The bread indeed is sacramentally changed into the Body'of Christ,
as the water in Baptism is sacramentally changed into the fountain of
regeneration, and yet the natural substance remaineth all one, as was
before." — Treatise on the Lord's Supper. Ibid. p. 183.
Bishop Hooper says,
* I believe, also, the holy Sacraments (which are the second mark or
badge of the true Church) to be the signs of the reconciliation and
great atonement made between God and us, through Jesus Christ.
They are seals of the Lord's promises, and are outward and visible
pledges and gages of the inward faith, and are in number only twain;
that is to say, Baptism, and the Holy Supper of the Lord. The which
two are not void and empty signs, but full ; that is to say, they are
not only signs whereby something is signified, but also they are such signs
as do exhibit and give the thing that they signify indeed.
" I believe that Baptism is the sign of the new league and friendship
between God and us, made by Jesus Christ ; and it is the mark of the
Christians now in the time of the Gospel, as in time past circumcision
was a mark unto the Jews, which were under the law. Yea, Baptism
is an outward washing done with water, thereby signifying an inward
washing of the Holy Ghost wrought through the blood of Christ.
The which Baptism oughtas well to be given and communicated to little
children as to those that be great, according to Jesus Christ His ordi-
nance, once for all, without any rebaptizing. This Baptism is the Red
Sea, wherein Pharaoh, that is to say, the devil, with his army of sins,
are altogether drowned
" I believe, also, that Baptism is the entry of the Church ; a washing
into a new birth, and a renewing of the Holy Ghost, whereby we do for-
sake ourselves, the devil, the flesh, sin, and the world. For being once
rid of the old man with all his concupiscences, we are clothed with the
new man which is in Jesus Christ, hi righteousness and holiness, and
with Him we die and are buried in His death, to the end that with Christ
we may rise from death to the glory of the Father. And eveji likewise,
16
being thus new born, we should walk in newness of life,* always mor-
tifying in us that which is of us, that thereby the body of sin may be
utterly destroyed and plucked up by the root
" By this Baptism we are changed and altered from children of wrath,
of sin, of the devil, and of destruction, into the children of God, of
grace and salvation, thereby to be made the Lord's, heirs and coheirs
with Christ of eternal life, and for that cause the same ought to be
given and communicated only to reasonable creatures, which are apt and
meet to receive such things, and not unto bells and such like, which
neither can receive, nor use the thing signified by Baptism."
Articles upon the Creed, lviii., lix. edit. 1583.
Dr. Lancelot Ridley says, —
" Here [Ephes. v. 26,] is shewed, how Christ hath purged His Church
truly in the fountain of water, by His word. Although God of His mere
mercy and goodness, without all man's deserts or merits, only for
Christ's sake, hath washed and purged man from sin ; yet He useth a
mean, by the which He cleartseth men from sin, which is Baptism in
water, by the word of God ; and so in Baptism are our sins taken away,
and we from sins purged, cleansed, and regenerated in a new man, to
live an holy life, according to the Spirit and will of God. It is not the
water that washes us from sin, but Christ by His word and His Spirit,
given to us in Baptism, that washeth away our sins, that we have of
Adam by carnal nature.
" In that the apostle saith, that Christ ' hath cleansed His Church in
the fountain of water by the word;' he showcth plainly, that Baptism
is a mean, whereby Christ taketh away original sin, and maketh all them
that be baptized in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy
Ghost, according to Christ's institution (Matt, xxviii.,) to be cleansed
from all the sin of Adam
" ' Except a man be born again of the Holy Ghost and of water,
he cannot enter into the kingdom of heaven." To be born again of the
Holy Ghost and of water, it is to be christened, as Paul showeth to Titus,
(Tit. iii.), where Baptism is called the fountain of regeneration, and of
renewing of the Holy Ghost. Children, therefore, must be christened,
if they shall enter into the kingdom of heaven, and be partakers of life
celestial." — Commentary on the Ephesians, L. Richmond's Fathers of the
English Church, vol. ii. pp. 135 — 137.
These Reprints are published Monthly, and sold at the price of 3d. for each sheet,
or 2s. Gd. per dozen, and 20s.j>cr hundred.
LONDON: PRINTED FOR W. E. PAINTER, 342, STRAND; J.COCHRAN, 108,
STRAND \ J. H. PARKER, OXFORD; AND T. STEVENSON, CAMBRIDGE.
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W. E. Painter, Printer, at the Office of the Churchman, 342, Strand.
Cratts of fyt Anglican jfatfjers.
No. II.
THE APOSTOLICAL SUCCESSION
AND THE
POWER OF THE KEYS.
A SERMON,
SET FORTH BY THE MOST REVEREND FATHER IN GOD,
THOMAS QRANMER,
ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY AND MARTYR.
Reprinted from the Firat Edition of his " Catechismus" of 1548.
ADVERTISEMENT.
This •• Pennon" contains the deliberate and mature judgment of
Archbishop Cranmer touching the Apostolical Succession and the
Power 01 the Kr.vs : and will afford the true interpretation of the fol-
lowing and similar passages in the Office Book of the Church.
I. It is not lawful for any man to take upon him the office of public
preaching, or ministering the Sacraments in the Congregation, before
he be lawfully called, and sent to execute the same. And those we
ought to judge lawfully called and sent, which be chosen and called to
this work by men who have public authority given unto them in the
Congregation, to call and send Ministers into the Lord's vineyard.
Article xxiii.
II. It is evid.uit unto all men, diligently reading the Holy Scripture,
and ancient authors, that from the Apostles' time there hath been these
orders of Ministers in Christ's Church ; Bishops, Priests, and Deacons:
which offices were evermore had in such reverend estimation, that no
man might presume to execute any of them, except he were first called,
tried, examined, and known to have such qualities as were requisite for
the same; and also by public prayer, with imposition of hands, ap-
proved and admitted thereunto by lawful authority, &c. — Preface to the
Ordination Service Book:
III Receive the Holy Ghost for the office and woik of a Priest in
the Church of God, now committed unto thee by the imposition of our
hands. Whose sins thou dost forgive, they are forgiven ; and whose sins
thou dost retain, they are retained. — Ordination Service.
IV. If there be any of you who cannot quiet his conscience herein, but
requireth further comfort let him come to me, or to some other
discreet and learned Minister of God's Word, and open his grief; that
by the ministry of God's holy Word he may receive the benefit of Abso-
lution— Exhortation before the Holy Communion.
V. Our Lord Jesis Christ, who hath left pow^r to Mis Church to
absolve all siimers who truly repent and believe in Him, of His great
mercy forgive thee thine offences : And by his authority committed to
me, I ahsolve THEE FROM all thy sins, in the Name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen. — Office for the Visita-
tion of the Sick.
VI. Brethren, in the Primitive Church there was a godly discipline,
that, at the beginning of Lent, such persons as stood convicted of noto-
rious in were put to open pi nance, and punished in this world, that
their aoabl might be saved in the day of the Lord; and that others,
admonished by their example, might be more afraid to offend. Instead
whereof ( until the said discipline may be restored again, which is much
.•. I it is thought good, &Ct — Comminat'- s
I.
Oxiori),
The Feast of St. Mark.
A SERMON OF THE AUTHORITY OF
THE KEYS.
The holy Apostle SaintPaul, good children, in the tenth chapter
of his epistle to the Romans, writeth on this fashion, ff Whosoever
shall call upon the Name of the Lord shall be saved. But how-
shall they call on Him on whom they believe not ? How shall
thev believe on Him of whom they have not heard ? How shall
they hear without a preacher ? How shall they preach except
they be sent?" By the which words Saint Paul doth evidently
declare unto us two lessons.
The first is, that it is necessary to our salvation to have
preachers and Ministers of God's most holy Word, to instruct us
in the true faith and knowledge of God.
The second is, that preachers must not run to this high honour
before they be called thereto, but they must be ordained and
appointed to this office, and sent to us by God.1 For it is not
possible to be saved, or to please God, without faith ; and no
man can truly believe in God by his own wit (for of ourselves
we know not what we should believe), but we must needs hear
God's Word taught us by other.
Again, the teachers, except they be called and sent, cannot
fruitfully teach. For the seed of God's Word doth never bring
forth fruit, unless the Lord of the harvest do give increase, and
by His Holy Spirit do work with the sower. But God doth not
1 See Note I.
B 2
20
work with the preacher whom He hath not sent, as Saint Paul
saith.
" How shall they preach if they he not sent ?" "Wherefore it
is requisite that preachers should be called and sent of God ; and
they must preach according to the authority and commission of
God, granted unto them, whereby they may strengthen men's
belief, and assure their consciences that God hath commanded
them to preach after this or that fashion. For else every man
should still be in doubt and think after this sort ; who knoweth
whether this be true which I hear the preacher say ? who can
tell whether God hath commanded him to preach these things or
no ? and in case he teaclieth nothing but truth, yet I am not sure
that God will work with me, as the preacher promiseth ? per-
chance these promises pertain to other, and not to me ? These
doubts, in the time of temptation, might trouble men's minds,
if we were not assured that our Lord Jesus Christ Himself, hath
both ordained and appointed Ministers and preachers to teach
His holy Word, and to minister His Sacraments; and also hath
appointed them what they shall teach in His Name, and what
they shall do unto us. Therefore He called them and sent tlicm,
and gave them instructions what they should do, and speak to
us in His Name, to the intent that we should give sure credence
unto their words, and believe that God will work with us ac-
cording to His words by them spoken. And He hath promised
therefore, that whatsoever they should hind upon earth should
be bound in heaven ; and whatsoever they should loose upon
earth, should be loosed in heaven. Wherefore, good children, to
the intent you may Stedfastiy believe all things which Gon by
His Ministers doth teach, and promise unto yoo, and so be saved
by your faith; learn diligently, r:pray you, by what words our
Lord -lis; I . this eomniiesion md commandment to
His Ministers, and rehearse them here word for word, that so
you may print them in your immune*, and recite them the better
when you come home. The words of Chbim be these: —
21
" Our LORD JESUS CHRIST breathed on His Apostles,
and said, Receive the HOLY GHOST : whose sins ye for-
give, THEY ARE FORGIVEN UNTO THEM J AND WHOSE SINS YOU
RESERVE, THEY ARE RESERVED."
Now, good children, you shall employ yourselves not only to
rehearse these words without hook, hut also to understand what
our Lord Jesus Christ meant by them; that when you shall he
asked any question herein, you may make a direct answer, and
that also in time to come you may he able to instruct your children
in the same. For what greater shame can there be, either in
the sight of God or of man, than to profess thyself to be a
Christian man, and yet to he ignorant in what place of Scripture,
and by what words, Christ commanded faith and forgiveness of
sins to he preached ? seeing that a Christian man ought to be-
lieve nothing as an article of his Faith, except he be assured, that
either it is God's commandment, rr His Word.
Now, good children, that you may the better understand these
words of our Saviour Christ, you shall know that our Lord
Jesus Christ, when He began to preach, He did call and choose
His twelve Apostles ; and afterwards, besides those twelve, he
sent forth three score and ten disciples, and gave them authority
to preach the Gospel. And a little before His death and passion
He made His prayer to His heavenly Father for them, and for
all those that should believe through their preaching as it is
declared in the Gospel of Saint John. Now it is not to be
doubted but that Christ's prayer was heard of His Heavenlv
Father ; wherefore it followeth, that as many as believed the
preaching of Christ's disciples, were as surely saved as if they had
heard and believed Christ Himself. And after Christ's ascen-
sion the Apostles gave authority to other godly and holy men to
minister God's Word, and chiefly in those places where there
were Christian men already, which lacked preachers, and the
Apostles themselves could no longer abide with them : for the
Apostles did walk abroad into divers parts of the world, and did
22
study to plant the Gospel in many places. Wherefore where
thev found godly men, and meet to preach God's Word, they
laid their hands upon them, and gave them the Holy Ghost, as
they themselves received of Cfrist the same Holy Ghost, to
execute this office.
And they, that were so ordained, were indeed, and also were
called, the Ministers of God, as the Apostles themselves were,
as Paul saith unto Timothy. And so the ministration of God's
Word (which our Loud Jesus Christ Himself did first institute)
was derived from the Apostles unto others after them, by im-
position of hands and giving the Holy Ghost, from the Apostles'
time to our days.1 And this was the consecration, orders, and
unction of the Apostles whereby they, at the beginning, made
Bishops and Priests, and this shall continue in the Church, even
to the world's end.2 And whatsoever rite or ceremony hath been
added more than this, cometh of man's ordinance and policy, and
is not commanded by God's Word.
Wherefore, good children, you shall give due reverence and
honour to the Ministers of the Church, and shall not meanly or
lightly esteem them in the execution of their office, but you shall
take them for God's Ministers and the Messengers of our Lord
Jesus Christ. For Christ Himself saith in the Gospel, " He
that heareth you, heareth Me; and he that despiseth you, despise th
Me." Wherefore, good children, you shall stedfastly believe all
those things, which such Ministers shall speak unto you from the
mouth and by the commandment of our Lord Jesus Christ.
And whatsoever they do to you, as when they baptize you, when
they give you absolution, and distribute to you the Body and
Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, these you shall so esteem as
if Christ Himself, in His own Person, did speak and minister
unto you. For Christ hath commanded His Ministers to do
ihi- unto y.»u. and He Himself (although you see Jl/ni not with
' scox.-nii.
? See Note IJI,
23
your bodily eyes) is present with His Ministers, and workcth by
the Holy Ghost in the administration of His Sacraments.
And on the other side, you shall takq good heed and beware
of false and privy preachers, which privily creep into cities, and
preach in corners having none authority, nor being called to this
office. For Christ is not present with such preachers, and
therefore doth not the Holy Ghost work by their preaching : but
their word is without fruit or profit, and they do great hurt in
Commonwealths. For such as be not called of God, they, no doubt
of it, do err, and sow abroad heresy and naughty doctrine. And
yet, you shall not think, good children, that preachers which be
lawfully called, have authority to do or teach whatsoever shall
please them. But our Lord Jesus Christ hath given them plain
instructions, what they ought to teach and do. And if they
preach or do any other thing than is contained in their commis-
sion, then it is of no force, nor we ought not to regard it ["nor
ought we to regard it."] And for this cause our Saviour Christ
did breathe into His disciples, and gave them the Holy Ghost
For where the Holy Ghost is, there He so worketh that He
causeth us to do those things which Christ hath commanded.
And when that is not done, then the Holy Ghost is not there.
Wherefore all things which we shall so speak or do can take
none effect.
Now the sum of the commission which Christ gave to His dis-
ciples, was this, that they should preach repentance and forgive-
ness of sins in His Name. And He added thereto both a pro-
mise and a threatening, saying, " He that will believe and be
baptized shall be saved, but he that will not believe shall be
damned." Wherefore all things which the Ministers of the Church
do say or do to us, ought to be directed to this end, that they may
loose us, and declare unto us the forgiveness of our sins, when
we truly repent and believe in Christ. But when we do not
repent us of our sin, and forsake the same, or do not believe the
Gospel, then they ought to bind or reserve sin, and to declare
24
unto us, that if we still continue in sin, we shall be damned for
ever. And when the Ministers do thus execute their commission,
then thev obey God, and whose sins soever they forgive in earth,
their sins be forgiven in heaven also : and contrary wise, whom-
soever thev hind in earth, their sins be bound also in heaven."
But if the Ministers would enterprise to do contrary to their
commission, that is to say, to forgive sins to unrepentant sinners
and unbelievers ; or to bind their sins, and deny them absolution
that be repentant and trust in the mercy of God ; then they
should not do well, nor their act should be of any force, but they
should deceive themselves and other also : and then should that
be true that Christ speaketh in the Gospel, "When the blind
leadeth the blind both fall into the ditch." But when the Minis-
ters do truly execute their office, you ought, good children, to
take great comfort, and to confirm your faith thereby, that you
may stedfastly believe, and in all temptations answer your adver-
sary the devil after this manner : God hath sent me to one of His
Ministers; he in the name and place of God hath declared
to me the forgiveness of my sins, and hath baptized me in the
assurance of the same : wherefore I doubt not but that my sins
l>e forgiven, and that I am made the son and heir of God.1 Thus,
good children, you ought generally in all temptations, to fortify
your faith, and to comfort yourselves with the authority of God's
Word ; but especially you shall learn this also, that our Lord
Jesus Christ did intend by this authority of the keys, to comfort
the troubled consciences of them, that after their Baptism, do fall
into heinous offences.
For it is not so easy a thing to rise again from sin, as the mad
and blind .world doth think; but when the devil and our faith
shall skirmish together, then, in those straits and troubles of
conscience, we have need of the help of some true Minister of
the Church, which (as it were in our swooning) may lift us up with
the word of (ion, comfort and refresh us. As the wise King
' Sec Craniner*b StJMMI 0/ Baptism. Tracts of iht Aiujlkati Falhns. Xo. I,
25
Solomon doth declare by tins sentence :" Woe to that man which
is alone, for when he fallcth, he hath no man to lift him up
again." And our Lord Jesus Christ doth speak so oftentimes
in the Gospel of the authority of the keys, and hath added so
great promises to the same, that it may well appear, by the
earnestness of Christ's words, how careful He was for troubled
consciences, and how fatherly an affection He had to comfort
the same. Wherefore it undoubtedly followeth, that we have
sreat need of this comfort, and that it is much to be esteemed
and set by. For first of all, our Saviour Christ, before He gave
these keys indeed, He promised to Peter that He would give
them, saying, " I will give to thee the keys of the kingdom of
heaven : whatsoever thou shalt bind upon earth shall be bound
in heaven, and whatsoever thou shalt loose upon earth shall also
be loosed in heaven."
Secondarily, Christ doth teach us how we shall use these
keys, both in open and in secret sins. Of the use of the keys
iu open sins, Christ speaketh these words : " If thy brother
trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault between him and
thee alone. If he hear thee, thou hast won thy brother : but if
he hear thee not, then take yet with thee one or two, that upon
the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may stand.
If he hear not them, tell it unto the congregation : if he hear not
the congregation, let him be unto thee as a heathen and a pub-
lican. Verily I say unto you, whatsoever ye bind on earth shall
be bound in heaven : and whatsoever ye loose on earth shall be
loosed in heaven." And of the use of the kevs in privy and
secret sins, our Saviour Christ hath taught us by His own deed
and example. For [jxf] the man that was sick of the palsy,
Christ said thus : " Son, conceive a stedfast faith, thy sins be
forgiven thee." And as touching binding of sins, He said to
the hard-hearted and stubborn Jews, " If you were blind, you
should have no sin : but now because you sav vou see, vour sin
abideth still," that is to sav, it is not forgiven.
26
Thirdly, our Saviour Christ, after His resurrection, gave tlie
keys to His Apostles (as before He had promised,) breathing
upon them and saying, " Receive the Holy Ghost ; whose sins
ye shall forgive, they are forgiven." Now, forasmuch as our Sa-
viour Christ, in giving the keys, did promise us so great comfort,
did so diligently teach the use of them, and did so faithfully
and lovingly ordain and command them, and put them (as it
were) into the hands of His Apostles and their Successors, we
ought in no wise to despise this great authority which God hath
given unto men,1 but thankfully to use it. For know this for
a surety, good children, that it is a very great offence against
God, little to care for His great gifts and benefits. Therefore
when we fall again to great sins after that we are once bap-
tized, we ought not to walk in a certain retchlessness, £ care-
lessness] thinking that our sins be forgiven us, only because God
is merciful. (For this opinion or wavering imagination is more
weak and feeble, than that in the fear and battle of the con-
science, it is able to stand against the violent force and crafty
assaults of the devil.) But in this fight between our conscience
and the devil, our great trust and comfort is the sure word and
work of God, which may ascertain us that our sins are for-
given, that is to say, when we obtain forgiveness of our sins
and absolution of the Ministers of the Church, to whom Christ
hath delivered the keys, and hath promised, saying, " Whose sins
ye shall forgive in earth, their sins be forgiven in heaven also."2
And this also is to be reproved, that some men, which con-
tinue in manifest and open sin, and go not about to amend their
lives, yet they will be counted Christian men, and enterprise to
receive the same Sacraments that other do, to come to the
Church, to worship God, and to pray with other. Such must be
warned of their faults, and if they refuse to hear and amend,
1 m. Mutt. ix. 8. gM Note IV.
2 ** Absolution hath the promise of forgiveness of sin."-- -Humihi of (\,mm»n
Prayer a tut Sacra w-
27
then they ought to he excommunicated and put out of the
Christian Congregation, until they repent and amend their lives ;
lest by such manifest sin and evil examples other men might be
provoked to do the like, and so at length many might be in-
fected, and the Christian Religion despised and evil spoken of,
as though it were the worst Religion, forasmuch as Christian men
should then lead a shameful and ungodly life ; and so by this
means, the name of God, and God Himself, might be blasphemed
among the heathen people. And although those canons, ordi-
nances, and rites, which be agreeable to the Gospel, (and were
ordained in time past to punish such open transgressors and
malefactors,) are now in our time almost utterly abolished and
taken away, yet for this cause we ought not to despise or cast
away the authority and use of the keys. For they, which pre-
sumptuously do cast away all yokes of ecclesiastical discipline
or chastisement, and do let that such kind of correction which
is agreeable to the Gospel may not be restored again, shall have
without doubt God for their Judge. But let us pray our Lord
Jesus Christ, that, as it hath pleased Him to restore unto us His
most blessed Word, and the true understanding of the same, so
also He will vouchsafe to render and send again to us these and
such-like good and wholesome ordinances agreeable to His
Word.1
Now, when a man after Baptism hath grievously sinned, and
doubted in his conscience whether he be in the favour of God
or no (as oftentimes it happeneth), then it is hard for him to
trust to his own bare imaginations, thinking on this fashion ; I
know that I have sinned, but yet I am in this opinion, that God
is not so cruel a revenger, but that He hath forgiven me. For
such an opinion without God's Word is not a true faith, nor is
able to stand in the dangerous skirmishes of temptation. But
true faith must ever be stayed upon the certain word and work of
God. Now God doth not speak to us with a voice sounding
1 See Note V.
28
out of liea ven ; but He hath given the keys of the kingdom of
heaven and the authority to forgive sin to the Ministers of the
Church. Wherefore let him, that is a sinner, go to one of them.
Let him [[acknowledge and confess his sin, and pray him, that
according to God's commandment, lie will give him absolution,
and comfort him with the word of grace and forgiveness of his
sins. And when the Minister doth so, then I ought stedfastly
to believe that my sins are truly forgiven me in heaven. And
such a faith is able to stand strong in all skirmishes and assaults
of our mortal enemy, the devil ; forasmuch as it builded upon a
sure rock, that is to say, upon the certain word and work of
God. For he that is absolved, knoweth for a surety that his
sins be forgiven him by the Minister. And he knoweth as-
suredly also that the Minister hath authority from God Himself
so to do. And, thirdly, he knoweth that God hath made this
promise to His Ministers, and said to them, " To whom ye for-
give sins upon earth, to him also they shall be forgiven in
heaven."
Wherefore, good children, give good ear to this doctrine ; and
when your sins do make you afraid and sad, then seek and de-
sire absolution and forgiveness of your sins of the Ministers
which have received a commission and commandment from
Christ Himself to forgive men their sins, and then your con-
sciences shall have peace, tranquillity, and quietness. But he
that doth not obey this counsel, but being either blind or proud,
doth despise the same, he shall not find forgiveness of his sins,
neither in his own good works, nor yet in painful chastisements
of his body, or any other thing whereto God hath not promised
remission of sins. Wherefore despise not absolution, for it is
the commandment and ordinance of God, and the Holy Spirit
of God is present, and causcth these things to take effect in us.
and to work our salvation.
And this is the meaning and plain understanding of these
words of Christ which you heard heretofore rehearsed, which
29
are written to the intent that we should believe, that whatso-
ever God's Ministers do to us by God's commandment are as
much available, as if God Himself should do the same. For
whether the Ministers do excommunicate open malefactors and
unrepentant persons, or do give absolution to those which be
truly repentant for their sins, and amend their lives, these acts
of the Ministers have as great power and authority, and be con-
firmed and ratified in heaven as though our Lord Jesus Christ
Himself had done the same. Wherefore, good children, learn
these things diligently ; and when you be asked, How under-
stand you the words before rehearsed ? Ye shall answer, I do
believe that whatsoever the Ministers of Christ do to us by God's
commandment, either in excommunicating open and unrepentant
sinners, or in absolving repentant persons, all these their acts be
of as great authority, and as surely confirmed in heaven, as if
Christ should speak the words out of heaven.
So ye have, good children, the beginning and foundation of
the Ministers of God's Word and of the authority of the keys, as
our Lord Jesus Christ did first ordain and institute the same.
The which our Saviour Christ did institute and appoint for this
purpose, that our consciences might thereby be comforted, and
assured of the forgiveness of sins, and to have the inestimable
treasures of the Gospel, as often as we have need thereof. That
we thereby being made strong in our faith, might so continue to
the end of our life. And " he that continueth to the end shall
be saved."
The which grant us most merciful God. Amen.
to
X 0 T E S.
1.
" Tjtt ministry of things divine is a function which us Goo did
Himself first institute, so neither may men undertake the same but by
authority and power r/u'cn them in lawful manner. That Goi>, which
is no way deficient or wanting unto man in necessaries, and bath there-
fore given us the light of His heavenly truth, because without that in-
estimable oeneiit we must needs have wandered in darkness to our end-
less perdition and woe, hath in the like abundance of mercies ordained
certain to attend upon the due execution of requisite parts and offices
therein prescribed for the good of the whole world, which men there-
unto assigned do hold their authority from Him, whether they be such
as Himself immediately or a- the Church in His name investeth, it
being neither possible for all nor for every man without distinction
convenient to take upon him a charge of such great importance. They
are therefore .Ministers of Goo, not only by way of subordination as
princes and civil magistrates whose execution of judgment and justice
the supreme hand of Divine Providence doth uphold, but Ministers of
God as from whom their authority is derived, and not from men. For
in that they are Chkist 8 ambassadors and His labourers, who should
give them their commission but He whose most inward affairs they
manage? Is not Goo alone the Father of spirits? Are not souls the
purchase of Jkslts Christ? What angel in heaven could have said to
man as our Lord did unto Peter, ' Feed my sheep : preach : baptize.
Do this in remembrance of Me : whose sins ye retain they are retained :
and their offences in heaven pardoned whose faults you shall on earth
forgive?' What think we ? Are these terrestrial sounds, or else are
they voices uttered out of the clouds above? The power of the Ministry
of Gon translateth out of darkness into glory; it raiseth men from the
earth and bringeth Goo Himself down from heaven: by blessing visible
elements it makcth them invisible grace : it giveth daily the Hoi.y
(iiiosr; it hath to dispose of that Flesh which w;.s given for the life of
the world, and that Hlood which was poured out to redeem souls : when
it poureth malediction upon thr heads of the wicked they perish, when
it rtvoketh the same they revive. 0 wretched blinducs> if we admire
not so great power, more wretched if we consider it aright, and, not-
withstanding, imagine that any but (ion can bo tow it !"
Hookku's Ecvl. Pol. book v. eh. lxxvii. 1.
it.
" The Hoi.y GHOST which He then gave was a holy and ghostly
authority, authority over the souls of men, authority a part w hereof
con.-istcth in power to remit and retain sins: 'Receive the Hoi.y
GflORj whose sins soever ye remit they arc remitted; whose Bins ye
retain they are retained' Seeing thrrcfoic that the same potter
iv now fjiecn, why should the same form of words expressing it be-
thought foolish? Besides that the power and authority deli-
vered with those Word* i- itself \6pi9pat% gracious donation which the
SrUUJI or GoO doth beatOW, we may most asstucdly peiMi.ide ourselves
that the hand which imposclh upon u> the function of our Ministry doth
under the same form of word- so tie itself thereunto, that he which
receiveth the burden is thereby for ever warranted to have the SHUT
31
with him and in him for his. assistance, aid, countenance and support in
whatsoever he faithfully doth to discharge duty When we take
ordination, we also receive the presence of the Holy Ghost, partly to
guide, direct and strengthen us in all our ways, and partly to assume
unto itself, for the more authority, those actions that appertain to our
place and calling We have that for the least and meanest duties
performed by virtue of ministerial power, that to dignity, grace, and
authorize then, which no other offices on earth can challenge. Whe-
ther we preach, pray, baptize, communicate, condemn, give absolution,
or whatever, as disposers of God's mysteries, our words, judgments,
acts and deeds, are not ours but the Holy Ghost's."
Hookeu's Eccl. Pol., book v., lxxvii. 7,8.
in.
" We believe that this [Catholic] Church is the kingdom, body
and spom e of CuiusT ; that of this kingdom, Christ is the sole
Monarch; of this body, the sole Head; of this spouse, the sole Bride-
groom 5 that there are various orders of Ministers in thf. Chuhch, that
some are Deacons, others Priests, others Bishops, to whom the instruc-
tion of the people, and the care and management of religious concerns,
are entrusted." — Bishop Jewell's Apology, p. 28, edit. 1829.
IV.
" If man or angel shall challenge to himself this absolute power
to forgive sin, let him be accursed; yet, withal, it must be yielded, that
the blessed Son of God spake not those words of His last commission
in vain, ' Whosesoever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them ;
and whosesoever sins ye retain, they are retained;' John xx. 23. Neither
were they spoken to the then present Apostles only, but, in them, to
all their faithful Successors to the end of the world. It cannot, there-
fore, but be granted, that there is some kind of power left in the hand
of Christ's Minister s, both to remit and retain sin. Neither is this
power given only to the Governors of the Church, in respect of the
censures to be inflicted or relaxed by them ; but to all God's faithful
Ministers, in relation to the sins of men : a power, not sovereign and
absolute, but limited and ministerial ; for either quieting the conscience
of the penitent, or further aggravating the conscience of sin and terror
of judgment to the obstinate and rebellious. Neither is this only by
way of a bare verbal declaration (which might proceed from any other
lips : ) but in the way of an operative and effectual application ; by virtue
of that delegate or commissionary authority, which is by Christ in-
trusted with them. For, certainly, our Saviour meant, in these words,
to confer somewhat upon His Ministers, more than the rest of the world
should be capable to receive or perform. The Absolution, therefore, of
asi authorized person, must needs be of greater force and efficacy, than
of any private man, how learned or holy soever : since it is grounded
upon the institution and commission of the Son of God, from which all
power and virtue is derived to all His ordinances : and we may well say,
That, whatsoever is in this case done by God's Minister, (the Key not
erring,) is ratified in heaven. It cannot, therefore, but be a great com-
fort and cordial assurance to the penitent soul, to hear the Messenger
of God, (after a careful inquisition into his spiritual state, and true
sight of his repentance,) in the Name of the Lord Jesus pronouncing
to him the full remission of all his sins. And, if either the blessing or
32
curse of a father go deeper with us, than of any other whatsoever,
although proceeding from his own private affection, without any war-
rant from above; how forcibly should we esteem the (not so much
apprecatory as declaratory) benedictions of our spiritual fathers, sent
to us out of heaven !" — Bishop Hall's Cases of Conscience. The third
Decade, Case ix., works, vol. viii. pp. 446 — 449, 8vo. edit. 1808. See
also Bishop Andrewls's Sermon on John xx. 23, fol. edit. lo"29, p. 49.
v.
u Behold your armoury ! — sword, and lightning shaft,
Culled from the stores of God's all-judging ire,
And in your wielding left ! The words, that Waft
Power to your voice absolving, point with fire
Your awful curse. O grief! should heaven's dread Siie
Have stayed, for you, the mercy-dews of old
Vouchsafed, when pastor's arms in deep desire
Were spread on high to bless the kneeling fold!
If CENSURE BLEEP, WILL ABSOLUTION HOLD?
Will the great King affirm their act> of grace
Who careless leave to cankering rust and mould
The fl iming sword that should the unworthy chase
From His pure Eden ? O beware ! lest vain
Their sentence to remit, who never dare retain."
Lyra Apostolica, Commune Ponlificum.
t
I
these Reprints are published Monthhi, awl sold at the price of 3d. fur each sheet,
or Js. M. per dozen, mt<l 90$, per h'i wired.
LONDON: PUNTED lOR W. 1. PAINTER, 842, sTRAND; .1. ( ()( IIHAN. 108,
STRAND; I. II. IWKkl.K, IIMOIII); AM) T. Ml VINSON, CAMBRIDGE.
1838.
&. L. l'.iinter, Printer, at the Office of the Cliunliniun, 342, Strand*
Cracts of tbt Anglican jfatjjers*
No. III.
THE BLESSED SACRAMENT
THE ALTAR
A SERMON,
SET FORTH BY THE MOST REVEREND FATHER IN GOD,
THOMAS CRANMER,
ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY AND MARTYR.
Reprinted from the First Edition of his " Catechismus" of 1548.
ADVERTISEMENT.
In this " Sermon" is contained the Catholic Doctrine of the real
presence of Christ in the Sacrament of the Altar, as " set forth "
by Archbishop Cranmer, A.D. 1548.
Oxford,
The Feast of the Holy Trinitv.
A SERMON
COMMUNION OF THE LORD'S SUPPER.
Our Lord Jesus Christ, good children, in the xv. chapter of
John, speaketh these words :—
u I AM THE TRUE VINE, AND My FATHER IS THE HuSBAND-
man. Every branch that beareth not fruit in Me He
will take away. and every branch that beareth fruit
He will prune, that it may bring forth more fruit. Now
are ye clean through the words which i have spoken to
you. Dwell in Me, and I will dwell in you. As the
BRANCH CANNOT BEAR FRUIT OF ITSELF, EXCEPT IT GROW IN THE
VINE, NO MORE CAN YE, EXCEPT YE ABIDE IN Me. I AM THE
VINE, YE ARE THE BRANCHES. He THAT ABIDETH IN Me, AND
I IN HIM, BRINGETH FORTH MUCH FRUIT. FOR WITHOUT Me YE
CAN DO NOTHING."
By these words our Lord Jesus Christ doth teach us very
plainly how we be justified and saved before God. For as the
branch of a vine bringeth forth no fruit, except it abide in the
vine, so we cannot be righteous except we abide in Christ.
And as the branch of a vine doth not nourish, nor keep long his
sap, but withereth away, and is cast into the fire when it is cut
from the vine, even so be we damned and cannot be saved
when we forsake our Master Christ.
c 2
3G
Now ye have beard, good children, how by Baptism we are
so planted in Christ that by Him we have forgiveness of our
sins, and are grafted in Him as the branch is in the vine. And
as the branches have sap and life of the vine, that they may
bring forth fruit, so we also (which believe in Christ and are
baptized) have received of Him the Holy Ghost, that we may
be justified, And if it chance us to fall from Christ through
sin or unbelief, or to be put out of the Christian Congregation
for our open and manifest sins, yet ye have heard how we are
received again into the bosom of the Church, and joined to
Christ's Body by the authority of the keys and Absolution.
But if we will be justified and saved, it is not enough to be
planted in Christ, but we must also abide and continue in Him.
Wherefore now followeth that doctrine which teacheth us how
we ought to order ourselves, that we may still abide and grow
in Christ, after that we are grafted in Him. And this doctrine
is contained in the institution and receiving of the Supper of our
Lord Jesus Christ, For as by Baptism we are born again, and
as by the authority of the keys and Penance we are lifted up
again, when we are fallen into sin after Baptism, so by the
communion of the Holy Supper of the Lord we are preserved
and strengthened, that we may be able stedfastly to stand and
fight against the violent invasions of sin and the power of the
devil. Wherefore, good children, forasmuch as ye be already
planted in Christ by Baptism, learn also, I pray you, how ye
may continually abide and grow in Christ, the which thing is
taught you in the use of the Lord's Supper. Ye shall, there-
fore, diligently learn the words by the which our Lord Jesus
Christ did institute and ordain His Supper, that ye may repeat
them word for word, and so print them in your memories, that
you may bear them alway with you home to your fathers' houses,
and there oftentimes rehearse them. And these be the words
of our Saviour Christ.
Our Lord Jesus Christ, the same night that He was be-
37
TRAYED, TOOK BREAD, AND GIVING THANKS, BRAKE IT, AND GAVE
it to His Disciples, and said, Take, eat, this is My Body,
WHICH IS GIVEN FOR YOU. Do THIS IN REMEMBRANCE OF Me
Likewise He took the cup also, after He had supped,
and giving thanks, gave it to them, and said, drink of this
all ye. This is Mr Blood of the New Testament, which
is shed for you and for many, for the forgiveness of sins.
Do this as often as ye drink, in rememberance of Me.
Now, ye shall diligently labour, not only to say without book
these words of our Saviour Christ, but also to understand
what our Lord Jesus Christ meant by the same, that ye may
make answer, when ye be asked any question herein, and that
also in time to come ye may be able to teach your children, as
ye yourselves are now instructed. For what greater dishonesty
can there be, either in the sight of God or man, than to profess
yourselves to be Christian people, and to receive the Sacraments,
and yet not to know what Christ's Sacraments be, and where-
fore they were ordained ? For Saint Paul saith, " That he
which eateth and drinketh the Supper of the Lord unworthily,
doth eat and drink his own damnation,"
Now, therefore, good children, that ye may truly understand
the words of the Lord's Holy Supper, and that ye receive not
this Sacrament to your own damnation, learn here diligently
that the true understanding and use of the Lord's Supper standeth
in two things. The first is to do that which our Lord Himself
hath commanded. The second is, to believe that which He
hath promised. Of these two I will speak in order, whereto,
I pray you, give good car.
First, our Saviour Christ taketh bread in His hand, He
giveth thanks, He breaketh it, and giveth it to His disciples, and
saith, ic Take, eat." Likewise He taketh the cup, and saith,
" Take, drink." Wherefore we ought to obey those words, and
do that which our Lord commandeth us. For although Christ
prescribeth no certain time when we ought to come together to
38
His Supper ; although also He appoint no certain number of
days how often in the year we ought to receive this Supper, yet
this is His holy and godly will, that at sometime we should re-
ceive this Sacrament. And this to do is for our great commo-
dity [ad vantage] and profit, for else our Lord would not have
commanded us so to do, who knoweth better than we what help
and comfort we have need of. Wherefore if we will be Christ's
rue disciples, then we must do as He Himself commanded His
disciples to do. Let us, therefore, go to this godly Supper ; let
us eat and drink thereof; and let us not abstain from the same
without a great cause.
Secondarily, Christ saith of the bread, " This is My Body ;"
and*of the cup He saith, " This is My Blood." Wherefore we
ought to believe that in the Sacrament we receive truly the Body
nd Blood of Christ. For God is Almighty (as ye heard in
the Creed). He is able, therefore, to do all things what He
will. And as Saint Paul writeth, He calleth those things which
be not as if they were. Wherefore, when Christ taketh bread
and saith, " Take, eat, this is my Body," we ought not to doubt
but we eat His very Body. And when He taketh the cup and
saith, " Take, drink, this is My Blood," we ought to think as-
suredly that we drink His very Blood.1 And this we must
believe, if we will be counted Christian men.
And whereas in this perilous time certain deceitful persons be
found in many places, who of very frowardness will not grant
that there is the Body and Blood of Christ, but deny the same,
for none other cause but that they cannot compass, by man's
blind reason, how this thing should be brought to pass ; ye, good
children, shall with all diligence beware of such persons, that
ye suffer not yourselves to be deceived by them. For such
men surely are not true Christians, neither as yet have they
learned the first article of the Creed, which teacheth that God
is Almighty, which ye, good children, have already perfectly
1 "The nody and Blood of Chribt which are verilv and indeed taken and
received by the faithful in the Lord's Supper. "—Church Catechism
learned. Wherefore eschew such erroneous opinions, and be-
lieve the words of our Lord Jbsus that you eat and drink His
very Body and Blood, although man's reason cannot compre-
hend how and after what manners the same ] is there present.
For the wisdom of reason must be subdued to the obedience of
Christ, as the Apostle Paul teacheth.
Thirdly, He saith, that His Body was given to death for us
and that His Blood was shed for us. Wherefore we must be-
jieve and confess this thing, that all we are conceived and born
in sin, as we have learned in the ten commandments, and chiefly
in the two last. We are, therefore, by nature, the children of
God's wrath, and should be damned for ever, if Christ had not
redeemed us by His holy passion. For He was made man for
us, and did all things for us, which we were bound to do and
could not do : that is to say, He fulfilled the law for us, and
took upon Him all that cross which we most righteously had
deserved for our iniquities and offences, and He shed His blood
for us that our sins might be fogiven us. All these things we
ought stedfastly to believe. Wherefore, they be in a great error
which will make satisfaction for their sins with fasting, prayer,
alms-deeds, and such-like good works. For although we are
bound to do these good works, yet they be not a sufficient price,
ransom, or satisfaction for our sins, but only the death and blood
of our Saviour Christ was a sufficient and worthy sacrifice to
take away our sins, and to obtain for us forgiveness of our
offences, as it is written in the second chapter of Saint John, his
first epistle. Christ is that sacrifice that pacifieth God's dis-
pleasure, and obtaineth pardon for our sins, and not for our sins
only, but also for the sins of all the world.
Fourthly, Christ saith, do this in the remembrance of Me.
Here also it is our duty to obey the word of Christ, and to do
the thing which He hath commanded us to do. Wherefore,
good children, doubt not but there is the Body and Blood of our
2. See Note.
40
Lord, which we receive in the Lord's Supper. For He hath
said so, and by the power of His word hath caused it so to be.
Wherefore, seeing Christ saith, Ce Do this as often as ye do it
in remembrance of Me;" it is evident hereby that Christ causeth,
even at this time, His Body and Blood to be in the Sacrament
after that manner and fashion as it was at that time when He
made His Maundy 3 with His disciples. For else we could
not do that thing which His disciples did. But Christ hath
commanded us to do the self-same thing that His disciples did,
and to do it in the remembrance of Him, that is to say, to re-
ceive His Body and Blood even so as He Himself did give it
to His disciples. And let not the foolish talk of unbelievers
move you, who are wont to ask this question, How can the Priest
or Minister make the Body and Blood of Christ ? To the
which I answer, that the Minister doth not this thing of him-
self Qalone] ; but Christ Himself doth give unto us His Flesh
and Blood, as His words doth evidently declare. Neither let
their arguments or reasons persuade you which say that the
Sacrament ought not to be received under both kinds, but under
one kind only. For Christ gave to His disciples both kinds,
and hath bid us that we also should do the same. And when
He gave the cup to His disciples, He added thereto this com-
mandment in these express and plain words, saying, rt Drink ye
all of this." Now we ought to obey God more than men ; we
ought, therefore, to receive the Sacrament under both kinds, as
Christ commanded us ; and regard not the gaggling of them that
speak against the use of the Sacrament under both kinds, say-r
ing, it maketh no great matter whether ye receive it under both
kinds, or one alone, and that it pertaineth not the salvation to
receive it under both kinds. But what shall I dispute long in
this matter ? Take this for a conclusion, that it is only laudable
and good to do that thing which Christ hath commanded, and
not to swerve from the same.
3 The Thnrbday before Good Friday.
41
So we ought to receive this blessed Sacrament in the remem-
brance of Christ, as Saint Paul saith, that is to say, we ought to
preach His death until He come again. For He will surely
come again and judge both the quick and the dead, as ye have
learned in your Creed. In the mean season we ought to re-
member and preach His death, that He hath redeemed us with
His death and shedding of His most precious blood, and pur-
chased for us forgiveness of our sins. And this we ought ever
to have in our remembrance, that in nowise we forget this His
exceeding great benefit, and that we seek not for remission of
sins by any other ways or means than by faith in Christ.
Now when we preach the death of the Lord, and shew that
He hath redeemed us thereby, we ought also to call this to our
remembrance, that He died not for us only, but for all men that
believe in Him. And, forasmuch as Christ loved all m en so
entirely that He died for them, we ought, for Christ's sake, to
love our neighbours, for whom Christ hath died. For Christ
saith, ** All men shall know by this token that ye be My dis-
ciples, if one of you love another." And this is it what Saint
Paul saith, " All we that be partakers of one Bread are one Body
and one Bread."
As' often, therefore, good children, as you shall come to the
Lord's table (which ye shall use to do when ye shall come to
further years of discretion), you shall seek the comfort of your
consciences, and do as Saint Paul saith in these words, " Let a
man examine himself, and so let him eat of the bread and drink
of the cup. For he that eateth or drinketh unworthily, eateth
and drinketh his own damnation, because he maketh no dif-
ference of the Lord's Body." And when ye shall have examined
yourselves ye shall find that ye are sinners, and that ye have
need that Christ should give His Body for you, and shed His
Blood for you. And this to do is to examine and try yourselves,
for Saint Paul saith, " If we would judge ourselves, we should
not be judged of the Lord ; but when we are judged of the
42
Lord we are chastised, that we should not be damned with the
world." For him that doth not acknowledge his faults God
doth judge and chastise with divers afflictions, that at the length
He may cause him thereby to confess his faults, and repent him,
that his sins may be forgiven him. Ye shall also examine your-
selves whether ye be able to do that Christ commanded, and to
believe that Christ saith; furthermore, ye shall make an inquiry
in your consciences, whether you be glad in your heart to for-
give your neighbour his offences against you, and to love him
heartily and unfeignedly for Christ's sake.
For when ye do thus, then ye worthily receive the Body and
Blood of Christ. And he that so receiveth it, receiveth ever-
lasting life; for he doth not only with his bodily mouth re-
ceive the Body and Blood of Christ, but he doth also believe
the words of Christ, whereby he is assured that Christ's Body
was given to death for us, and that His Blood was shed for us.
And he that thus believeth, eateth and drinketh the Body and
Blood of Christ spiritually : of this Christ speaketh when He
saith, "He that eateth My Flesh and drinketh My Blood
abideth in Me, and I in him." And when we be planted in
Christ, then we may come to this Holy Supper as often as we
will, that by this ghostly food we may daily, more and more,
wax stronger in our faith that Christ was given to be the ran-
som for our sins, and that He dwelleth in us and we in Him.
For seeing that we are planted in Christ by Baptism, and are
bound to grow and increase in Him, and be made like unto
Him, it is not convenient that we should only have a wavering
opinion that we dwell in Christ, and grow in faith and charity,
but we must have a sure word and work of God, to the which
we may lean in all temptations, and thereby be assured that we
do spiritually grow and increase in Christ. And this word and
work of God is set before our eyes in the Lord's Supper.
For seeing our Saviour Christ doth give us His Body to be
our meat, and His Blood to be our drink, and thereby doth
43
declare that He will effectually dwell in us, strengthen, and pre-
serve us to everlasting life, we may stedfastly believe that
Christ doth work in us, and that He will give us ghostly
strength and stedfastness, that we, like green branches, may
continue in the vine, and so be full of sap and bring forth good
fruit. And this is the meaning and plain understanding of the
words of the Lord's Supper. Wherefore, learn them diligently,
I pray you, that when ye be asked, What is the Communion, or
the Lord's Supper ? ye may answer, It is the true Body and true
Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, which was ordained by Christ
Himself to be eaten and drunken of us Christian people, under
the form of bread and wine.
Furthermore, if any man will ask ye, Where is this written ?
ye shall answer, these be the words which the Holy Evange-
lists Matthew, Mark, Luke, and the Apostle Paul do write :
" Our Lord Jesus Christ, the same night that He was betrayed,
took bread, and giving thanks, brake it and gave to His disciples,
and said, Take, eat, this is My Body which is given for you. Do
this in remembrance of Me. Likewise, He took the cup, after He
had supped, and giving thanks gave it to them, and said, Drink
of this all ye. This is My Blood of the New Testament which
is shed for you and for many, for the forgiveness of sins. Do
this as oft as you drink, in rememberance of Me."
Furthermore, if an yman ask ye, What availeth it thus to eat
and drink ? ye shall answer, These words do declare what profit
we receive thereby, u My Body which is given for you" — " My
Blood which is shed for you, for the forgiveness of sins." By
the which words Christ declareth that by this Sacrament and
words of promise are given to us remission of sins, life and salva-
tion ; for where forgiveness of sin is, there is also life and salva-
tion. Again, if a man will go further with you and ask you,
How can bodily eating and drinking have so great strength and
operation ? Ye shall answer, To eat and to drink doth not work
so great things, but this word and promise of God, a My Body
44
which was given for you," — " My Blood which was shed for
you, for the remission of sins." This word of God is added to
the outward signs, as the chief thing in the Sacrament. He that
believeth these words, he hath that thing which the words
promise, that is to say, forgivness of his sins.
Besides this, if a man ask of you, Who be they who do
worthily receive this Sacrament ? ye shall answer, That fasting,
abstinence, and such other like, are profitable for an outward
discipline and chastisement of the body : but he receiveth the
Sacrament worthily that hath faith to believe these words, " My
Body which was given for you :" — " My Blood which was shed
for you, for the remission of sins." But he that beleiveth not
these words, or doubteth of them? he receiveth the Lord's Supper
unworthily. For this word, rt given for you," doth require a
faithful and believing heart.
So, good children, ye have the true understanding of the
words of Christ, and the true use of the Holy Supper of the
Lord. Learn all these lessons diligently, I pray you, that ye
also in time to come may worthily receive this Sacrament, and
from day to day stick and cleave more stedfastly to the words
of our Lord Jesus Christ, and so continuing in Christ, may
bring forth good fruit. And if you do so, then your heavenly
Father will purge and prune you (as the husbandman doth the
branches of his vine;, that ye may daily flourish more and more,
and bring forth fruit more plenteously ; that God may be glorified
by you, and your fruit may abide continually ; and so, at the
length, ye shall receive life and everlasting salvation and glory,
with our Saviour Jesus Christ.
To which God grant us all. Amen.
45
NOTES.
The following extracts will be found to illustrate the sentiment of
Cranmer in the text.
" Thou oughtest to beware of curious and unprofitable searching into
this most profound Sacrament, if thou wilt not be plunged in the depth
of doubts. He that is a Searcher of Majesty, shall be oppressed by
Thy glory. God is able to work more than man can understand. A
pious and humble inquiry of Truth is tolerable, so it be always ready to
be taught, and to endeavour to walk in the sound doctrines of the
Fathers. 2. Blessed is that simplicity that forsaketh the difficult ways
of questions, and goeth on in the plain and assured path of God's Com-
mandments : many have lost devotion whilst they would search after
high things. Faith and a sincere life is required at thy hands, not
height of understanding, nor a diving deep into the Mysteries of God.
If thou dost not understand, nor conceive those things that are under
thee, how shalt thou be able to comprehend those that are above thee?
Submit thyself to God, and let thy sense be subject to Faith ; and the
light of knowledge shall be given thee in that degree, as shall be pro-
fitable and necessary for thee. * * * 4. Go forward, therefore,
with a sincere and undoubted faith, and come to the Sacrament with
unfeigned reverence. And whatsoever thou art not able to compre-
hend, commit securely to Almighty God. God deceiveth thee not :
he is deceived that trusteth too much to himself. God walketh with
the simple, revealeth Himself to the humble, giveth understanding to*
the little ones, openeth the sense to the pure minds, and hideth grace
46
from the curious and proud. Human reason is weak and may be
deceived ; but true Faith cannot be deceived. 5. All reason and natural
search ought to follow faith, not to go before it, nor infringe] it. For
faith and love do here chiefly excel, and work in a sudden manner in
this most Holy and Excellent Sacrament. God, who is everlasting and
of infinite power, doth great and inscrutable things in heaven and in
earth, and there is no searching out of His wonderful works. If the
works of God were such as might be easily comprehended by human
reason, they were not to be called wonderful and unspeakable." — The
Imitation of Jesus Christ, by S. Thomas a Kempis, book 4, c. xviii.
n.
■ I wish that men would more give themselves to meditate in silence
what we have by the Sacrament [of the Holy Eucharist] and less to
dispute of the manner how. ***** This is My Body,' and ' this is
My Blood,' being words of promise, which we all agree that by the
Sacrament Christ doth really and truly in us perform His promise,
why do we vainly trouble ourselves with so fierce contentions, whether
by consubstantiation, or else by transubstantiation, the Sacrament itself
be first possessed with Christ or no ? A thing which no way can
either further or hinder us howsoever it stand ; because our participation
of Christ [in this Sacrament dependeth on the co-operation of His
omnipotent power, which maketh it His Body and Blood to us, whether
with change or without alteration of th'e element, such as they imagine,
we need not greatly to care or inquire."
Hooker's Eccl Pol. book v. ch. lxvii. 3 and 6.
in.
" As to the manner of the presence of the Body of our Lord in the
blessed Sacrament, we that are Protestant and Reformed according to
the ancient Catholic Church, do not search into the manner of it with
perplexing inquiries ; but after the example of the Primitive and purest
Church of Christ, we leave it to the power and wisdom of our Lord,
yielding a full and unfeigned assent to His words. Had the Romish
inaintainers of transubstantiation done the same, they would not have
determined and decreed, and then imposed, as an article of faith abso-
47
hitely necessary to salvation, a manner of presence, newly by them in-
vented, under pain of the most direful curse, and there would have been
in the Church less wrangling, and more peace and unity than now is. "
— Bishop Cosin's History of Transubstantiation in Tracts for the Times.
No. 27. p. 2.
Whene'er I seek the Holy Altar's rail,
And kneel to take the grace there offered me,
It is no time to task my reason frail
To try Christ's words, and search how they may be ;
Enough, I eat His Flesh and drink His Blood,
More is not told — to ask it is not good.
1 will not say with these, that bread and wine
Have vanished at the consecration prayer;
Far less with those deny that aught divine
And of immortal seed is hidden there.
Hence, disputants ! The din which ye admire,
Keep's but ill measure with the Church's choir."
Lyra ApostoKca, Life Immortal.
These Reprints are published Monthly, and sold at the price of M. for each sheet.
LONDON; PRINTED FOR W. E. PAINTER, 342, STRAND; J.COCHRAN, 108,
STRAND ; J. H. PARKER, OXFORD; AND T. STEVENSON, CAMBRIDGE.
1839.
W. E. Painter, Printer, at the Office of the Churchman, 342, Strand.
Cracts of tfje Anglican tfzfym.
No. IV.
THE GIFTS OF THE HOLY GHOST,
IN THE
HOLY CATHOLIC CHURCH.
A SERMON,
SET FORTH BY THE MOST REVEREND FATHER IN GOD,
THOMAS CRANMER,
ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY AND MARTYR.
Reprinted from tho First Edition of his "Catechismus" of 1548.
ADVERTISEMENT.
The Catechism of 1548 contains three Sermons on The Creed.
The first, — " of the Creation," — is remarkable for little else than its
testimony to the Catholic doctrine of the real presence of Christ in
the blessed Eucharist. The substance of the second Sermon, — " of
our Redemption,'\^_is comprised in Cranmers well-known Homily
of the Salvation of Man. The third Sermon, which is literally re-
printed in the following pages, will be found to contain a summary of
the doctrine of the Archbishop concerning The Church und her
Institutes ; and when read in connexion with the Sermons on Bap-
tism, the Apostolical Succession, and the Sacrament of the Altar, will
faithfully exhibit the great Ecclesiastical principles upon which the
Reformation was professedly conducted.
R.
Cambridge,
The Feast of S. Peter the Apostle*
A SERMON OF OUR SANCTIFICATION.
Now remaineth the third part of the Creed to be declared,
which entreateth of our Sanctification, how we be made holy.
And it is spoken in these words :
i believe in the holy ghost, the holy catholic church,
the Communion of Saints, the forgiveness of sins, the re-
surrection OF THE BODY, AND LIFE EVERLASTING. AMEN.
In the second part of the Creed (which treateth of our Re-
demption and price given for us) you have been taught, good
children, to know the second Person in Trinity, Jesus Christ,
what He is, and what He hath done for us, that He was made
man for our sakes, that He took upon Him our sins, and suf-
fered for us the fear and pangs of death and hell, and had vic-
tory over them by His passion and death. And after, by His
godly and victorious power, He arose again from death to life.
And after this most glorious conquest, He ascended into heaven,
where He sitteth at the right hand of His Father, and is our
Lord, and we His servants, dearly bought. All this you have
learned in the last Sermon ; 1 but now, good children, in this
third part of the Creed you shall learn to know the third Per-
son in Trinity, the Holy Ghost, and also His benefits and
gifts, that we may know what we have received of God after
our redemption, whereby we may be made meet to come to
1 «< Of our. Redemption," concerning vrhicn, see the Advertisement to this Tract.
52
everlasting life through the merits of Christ. For although
our Lord Jesus Christ hath redeemed us from the captivity of
sin, death, and hell, and hath set us again in the favour of God,
yet we should have no knowledge of these great benefits, we
should feel in our consciences no comfort, joy, or peace, by the
same, if they were not declared unto us by the preaching of
God's most holy Word. And our consciences should still remain
troubled, and the fear of eternal death, and all naughty desires
and concupiscences of the frail flesh, should ever remain in us
(even as from Adam's time they be in us as soon as we be born),
and so we should be utterly unapt to the kingdom of God and
life everlasting, if we should still remain as we be born.
For if we will be the heirs of God and everlasting life, we
must be born again, and sanctified or made holy, as appertaineth
to the children of the most holy God. Now this new birth and
sanctification the Holy Ghost worketh in us; and, therefore,
He is called the Holy Ghost, because all [every] thing that is
sanctified or hallowed, is sanctified or made holy by Him.
Wherefore when the Holy Ghost is not in man, then it is not
possible that he should be holy, although he did all the good
works under the sun. And for this cause Saint Paul, writing to
the Romans, doth call the Holy Ghost the Spirit of sanctifica-
tion, that is to say, the Spirit that maketh holiness. Learn,
therefore, good children, that all we must be made holy and
new men by the virtue of the Holy Ghost, and that we cannot
attain this holiness by our own strength or works, and therefore
we must believe in the Holy Ghost, that He will sanctify us at
such time and place, and after that sort and manner, as it shall
please Him. And it is our part to give place to His working,
and not to withstand the same. And, therefore, we say in this
Creed, " I believe in the Holy Ghost." But it is necessary
some things here to speak of the manner of Sanctification, how
and after what manner the Holy Ghost doth hallow us, that
we may so prepare ourselves, or rather give place to the Holy
53
Ghost which preventeth us, that He with His light and almighty
strength and power may work His will in us.
Now I desire you to mark diligently by what means and
fashion the Holy Ghost doth work the sanctification or hal-
lowing in us. After that our Lord Jesus Christ, by His death,
passion, and resurrection had redeemed us, and obtained for us
that our sins should be forgiven, and we be made the children
of God, shortly after, in the feast of Pentecost, He sent down upon
His Apostles the Holy Ghost in the likeness of fiery tongues.'
The which Holy Ghost gave them wisdom, cunning £skill, know-
ledge], audacity [^confidence], and constancy, to teach boldly this
Holy Gospel of Christ, that is to say, this Christian Faith, whereof
we do speak. And where they could not be present themselves, or
long abide and continue in their own persons, thither they sent
their disciples and other godly and learned men, and to them
they gave the Holy Ghost by laying their hands upon their heads.
And this rite or ceremony to ordain preachers and ministers of
God's word hath continued in the Church, even from the Apos-
tles' time unto this day, and shall endure unto the world's end.
For Saint Paul saith, "How shall men believe without a preacher?
and how shall men preach except they be sent ?" 2 And
here you may learn that this holy Gospel which we preach, and
the doctrine of the grace of Christ taught in the holy Church,
cometh not of the will of man, but by the commandment of God
and by the motion of the Holy Ghost, which doth stir up mens
niinds to publish God's most holy Word, and doth work by His
secret inspiration in the preachers and ministers of the same.
For they were not able so much as to open their mouths to teach
so high mysteries and heavenly wisdom, if the Holy Ghost did
not move them thereto, and work in them. Neither would the
hearers so greatly esteem the preacher's word, and give so good
heed unto it, except the Holy Ghost did persuade them that
the doctrine of the Gospel were of God and came from heaven
2, see tracts of the Anglican Fathers, No.il
54
Now the Holy Ghost worketh by this word on this fashion.
First, he that believeth the Gospel, and receiveth the doctrine
of Christ, is made the son of God, as Saint John witnesseth in
his Gospel, saying, "As many as receive Him, He hath given
them power to be made the children of God.'' For when we
believe in Christ, and are baptized, then we be born again, and
are made the children of G0D.3 And when we be His children,
then He giveth the Holy Ghost into our hearts, as Saint Paul
testifieth writing thus : * Forasmuch as you be now the children
of God, therefore God hath sent the Spirit of His Son into your
hearts, which crieth, Abba, Father." And when we have re-
ceived the Holy Ghost, He doth kindle in our hearts true love
toward God, as Saint Paul writeth in the epistle to the Romans
in the fifth chapter. " The love of God (saith he) is poured
abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost, which is given unto us."
And where the true love of God reigneth, there are God's com-
mandments kept, and there beginneth a certain obedience to
His will and pleasure.
Furthermore, the Holy Ghost doth slay the flesh and the
lusts of the same, and helpeth us to overcome them, that we be
not carried away by them, but may continue in cleanness and
holiness of life. These be the benefits and works of the Holy
Ghost in us. And to the intent you may the more easily bear
them away, I will (as briefly as I can ) repeat them again unto
you.
First of all, the Holy Ghost provoketh and stirreth up men
to preach God's Word : then He moveth mens' minds to faith
and calleth them to Baptism, and then by faith and Baptism Ho
worketh so, that He maketh us new men again. And when wo
be thus newly born and made again, and become the children of
God, then the Holy Ghost doth dwell in us, and make us holy
and godly, that we may be the temples of God, in whom God
may dwell and inhabit. Also this Holy Ghost doth daily more
3. Sec Tracts of the Anglican Falncrs, No I.
55
and more increase and establish our faith, that we, like most loving
children, may call and embrace our heavenly Father and hang
fast about His neck. The same Holy Ghost doth also assure
and warrant us that our sins be forgiven, and that our pardon is
signed with God's seal. He doth also kindle in us a fervent love
towards God, and maketh us willing to keep God's law and com-
mandments, and helpeth us also to fight against sin, and to with-
stand our ill appetites and desires. Furthermore, with the cross
of sickness, and divers other kinds of afflictions and adversities,
the Holy Ghost doth, as it were, crucify us and mortify us to the
world, that we may live to Christ. And this work He worketh
continually in us, and ceaseth not until He hath wrought in our
hearts a perfect faith and a perfect charity, and until sin and all
evil desires be clean at length purged out of us by the death of
our bodies, and then we shall be perfect in all holiness, and clean
delivered from all sin and adversity, and be heirs of our Father's
kingdom and His true and most dearly-beloved children.
Wherefore, good children, as heretofore you have been taught
that we ought to believe in God the Father that made us, and
in God the Son that redeemed or bought us, so you must now
learn to believe in the Holy Ghost that hath hallowed us, and
doth continually more and more renew and make holy all those
that believe the Gospel. For he that believeth in Jesus Christ
that He is our Lord and our Redeemer, to him God giveth the
Holy Ghost to make him holy and righteous. As Saint Paul
witnesseth, saying, " No man can call Jesus Lord, but by the
Holy Ghost." And forasmuch as now it hath been plainly de-
clared unto you, after what sort and manner the Holy Ghost
doth sanctify us, it is your part not only to imprint this lesson
diligently in your minds, but also to desire God, with continual
and earnest prayers, that He will vouchsafe more and more to
sanctify you. And as much as lieth in you apply yourselves to
hear godly sermons, and give your hearts to God, like wax, apt
and meet to receive what thing soever it shall please Him to print
56
in you. For he that is willing and glad to listen to godly ser-
mons, he that is studious to learn the will of God, wherein Christ
is preached, and with a stedfast faith cleaveth to the promise of
the Gospel, he is made partaker of this sanctification and holi-
ness, and of this so great comfort and everlasting . salvation.
For God saith by His prophet Isaiah, "My word shall not
return to me in vain." And Saint Paul saith, that " The
Gospel is the power of God wherewith He worketh the salvation
of all them that believe."
Now the rest that followeth in the Creed is a short declaration
of these things before rehearsed. For it followeth in the Creed,
u I believe in the Holy Catholic Church;" that is to say,
all godly and Christian men must believe that the Gospel or
doctrine of God's grace through the merits of our Saviour Jesus
Christ, is never in vain published in the world, or sowed abroad
without fruit, but ever there is found some company of men, or
some congregation of good people, which believe the Gospel and
be saved. And tins company of men which belie veth the Gospel,
although here upon earth they be severed in sundry places, yet
are they called One Holy Catholic or Universal Church of
Christ, that is to say, a multitude, congregation, or company of
Christian people. For this word, Church, doth not here betoken a
temple or church builded of timber and stone, but it signifieth a
company of men lightened with the Spirit of Christ, which do
receive the Gospel and come together to hear God's Word and
to pray. And this Christian Church is a Communion of Saints,
that is to say, all that be of this Communion or Company be
holy, and be One Holy Body under Christ their Head : they be
One Holy Congregation or Assembly. And this Congregation
recciveth of their Head and Lord, Jesus Christ, all spiritual
riches and gifts that pertaineth to the sanctification and making
holy of the same Body. And these ghostly treasures be common
to the whole Body, and to every member of the same. For he
that is unfeigucdly a faithful and godly man, is made partaker
57
of these benefits ; and these are the said gifts which be come to
the Holy Church of Christ, and to every member of the same.
The first is, that God the Father (that everlasting and end-
less Majesty) is our most gentle and merciful Father. That
God the Son is our Redeemer and Mediator between the Father
and us. And that God the Holy Ghost is the common Sancti-
fier or Hallo wer of all them that have a true faith in God. The
second is the preaching of the Gospel, the administration of
Baptism, and the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of our Lord
Jesus Christ, by the which we are made partakers of all the
inheritance of heaven, and of all the benefits of Christ. The
third is prayer. The fourth is the cross of affliction and adver-
sity which God sendeth to all godly men to make them to know
Him, to prove thereby and try their faith, to mortify their flesh,
and to make clean the corruption of the same. And here I
speak only of the cross which good men suffer. For the afflic-
tions of the unfaithful and ungodly do rather hurt them than
make them holy. Forasmuch as their impatientness is increased
by such adversity, they be brought to more desperation and
damnation.
Now it is very good for you to know these things, that you
may also know that there is nothing in heaven or earth better for
us than is the true knowledge of God, and that these excellent
gifts and benefits cannot be had but only in the aforesaid Church
or Congregation, and nowhere else. 4 But when the true
Church (which is ruled by the Holy Ghost and the Word of
God) doth promise us these so great riches and benefits, we
ought not to doubt but that we have already received them.
And when the Church doth appoint and ordain us to be preachers
and ministers of these most precious treasures, we must stedfastly
believe that God eftectuously worketh with us, that He is
present with us, and that He at all times doth strengthen us
against the world and the devil, and that He doth help us to do
4. Sec Note I.
53
all things according to our calling prosperously and with good
success. Secondly, we must believe the remission of sins.
Therefore next unto this article, "I believe the Holy Catholic
Church," is added, a The forgiveness of sins." For wheresoever
the Church of Christ is, there is freely offered that eternal
comfort above all measure, that is to say, the favour of God and
remission of sins. And without that Church is no remission of
sin. Wherefore we must seek remission of sins in the Church
of Christ, and desire Absolution, that when the true Church by
their ministers doth promise us remission of our sins, and here
in earth doth absolve us, we may surely trust that in heaven
also before God we be absolved and pardoned.
Thirdly, we must believe the resurrection of the flesh ; where-
fore, after the article of the remission of sin followeth next this
article, " I believe the rising again of the flesh." For among
other punishments for original sin, laid upon Adam and his pos-
terity, we daily see this horrible pain that the goodly beautiful
body of man, created to immortality, must needs once be dis-
solved by death, and brought to a filthy and stinking corpse
and grave ; that the tyranny of sin (which so long as we live
rageth in our flesh) by our death may cease and have an end, as
Saint Paul saith unto the Romans : for by death of the body
cease all the desires, concupiscences, and rages of the mind,
against the will and commandments of God. There ceaseth also
all sins against our neighbours, as ire, envy, lechery, covetous-
ness, pride, and all ill affections, and at the last day God shall
raise us again from death, so that such infirmities and sins shall
no more be found in us, but we shall be pure, spiritual, and im-
mortal, and like to the bright and clear body of Christ. And
that we may the more assuredly believe this, both Christ Himself
rose from death and many saints also with Him. Fourthly, wo
must believe everlasting life. Wherefore it followeth in tho
Creed, " I believe everlasting life ;" that is to say, I believe that
3. Soo Tracts of the Anglican Fathers, No. II.
69
when Ave shall rise from death, then 'we shall life evef with
Christ in perfect holiness and justice, and in such a glorious joy
as no tongue can tell nor heart think. And this treatise of the
Creed we must end with this word, " Amen f which is as much
to say, as I helieve that all the articles of our Belief, before
rehearsed, be very true, and therefore I have a sure faith, trust,
and confidence. Therefore, good children, from the bottom of
your hearts, you must believe in the Holy Ghost, which doth
promise unto us remission of our sins, by all the] true preachers
and ministers of God's Word. And he doth also give light in
our hearts and minds, and moveth us to believe God's Word,
and to put our faith and trust in Him. And the same Holy
Ghost dolh daily purify and sanctify us, purge aud cleanse us
from sin, and after this bodily death shall raise us again to ever-
lasting life. And take this for a sure conclusion, and doubt
nothing thereof, that the Holy Ghost, as He hath begun these
things in us, so He will finish the same in us, if we obey Him,
and continue in faith unto the end of our lives : for he that con-
tinueth unto the end shall be saved.6 And this is the sum,
and also the most plain understanding, of this third part of the
Creed, entreating of our sanctification or hallowing. Wherefore,
good children, mark well this lesson, that when ye be demanded,
How understand you the third part of the Creed ? ye may answer
thus, I believe that neither by man's strength, power, or wisdom,
neither by mine own endeavour, nor compass of mine own reason,
I am able to believe in Jesus Christ, or to come unto Him.
But the Holy Ghost did call me by the Word of the Gospel, and
with the gifts of His grace He hath hitherto endowed me and
hallowed me, and in the true Faith He hath hitherto preserved
and confirmed me : and this he hath not done only to me, but
also He calleth and gathereth together in the unity of one Faith
and one Baptism, all the Universal Church that is here in earth,
and He hallo weth, keepeth, and preserveth the same in the true
6. See Note II.
60
knowledge of Chbist,7 and faith in His promises. And in
this Church He giveth free and general pardon fa me, and to all
that believe in Him, of. all our sins, offences, and trespasses ; and
at the last day He shall raise me and all others that he dead ;
and all that died in the true Faith of Jesus Christ He shall
glorify in the life everlasting. Therefore, to the said Holy
Ghost that sanctifieth us, with the Father that made and
created us, and the Son that redeemed us, he "given all honour
and glory, world without end.
Amen.
7. See Note III.
61
NOTES.
* The necessity of believing the holy Catholic Church appeareth first
in this, that Christ hath appointed it as the only way unto eternal life.
We read at the first, that ' the Lord added to the Church daily such as
should be saved ;' (Acts ii. 47.) and what was then daily done, hath been
done since continually. Christ never appointed two ways to heaven ;
nor did He build a Church to save some, and make another institution
for other men's salvation. ' There is no other name under heaven given
among men whereby we must be saved,' but the name of Jesus, (Acts :
iv. 12) ; and that Name is no otherwise given under heaven than in the
Church. As none were saved from the deluge but such as were within
the ark of Noah, framed for their reception by the command of God ;
as none of the first-born of Egypt lived, but such as were within those
habitations whose door-posts were sprinkled with blood by the appoint-
ment of God, for their preservation ; as none of the inhabitants of
Jericho could escape the fire or sword, but such as were within the house
of Rahab, for whose protection a covenant was made : so none shall
ever escape the eternal wrath of God, which belong not to the Church
of God." Bishop Pearson on the Creed, vol I. pp. 584, 585, Oxford
Edit. 1833.
" Whosoever shall hereafter affirm or maintain, that there are within
this Realm other meetings, assemblies, or congregations of the king's
born subjects, than such as by the laws of this land are held and allowed,
which may rightly challenge to themselves the name of true and lawful
churches, let him be excommunicated."-- .Canons of 1603. XI.
n.
Cranmer was a stranger to the modern heresy of final perseverance.
The same may be said of Latimer, whose sentiments on the defectibility
of grace are clearly stated in the following extracts from his sermons :
" I will you to pray that God will continue His Spirit in you. I do
not put you in comfort, that if ye have once the Spirit ye cannot lose
it. There be new spirits start up now of late that say after we have
received the Spirit we cannot sin. I will make but one argument.
Saint Paul had brought the Galatians to the profession of the Faith and
left them in that state, they had received the Spirit once, but they
62
sinned again, as he testifieth of them himself. * * * If this be true, we
may lose the Spirit that we have once possessed. It is a fond thing.
I will not tarry in it."— p. 83. Sermons, Edit. ; 1584.
Again : — " The right faith abideth not in that man that is disposed
purposely to sin. • • * • for whosoever purposely sinneth, contra con-
scientiam, against his conscience, he hath lost the Holy Ghost, the
remission of sins, and finally Christ Himself." — p. 169. Ibid.
Again : — " Any act that is done against the law of God willingly is a
deadly sin. And that man or woman that committeth such an act,
loseth the Holy Ghost and the remission of sins, and so becometh the
child of the devil, being before the child of God. For a regenerate man
or woman that believeth ought to have dominion over sin, but as soon
as sin hath rule over him, he is gone ; for she leadeth him to delectation
of it, and from delectation to consenting, and so from consenting to the
act itself. And he that is led so with sin, is in the state of damnation
and sinneth damnably." — p. 226. Ibid.
in.
The belief in the indefectibility of the Catholic Church in all matters
of saving Faith was entertained by all the leading Anglican Reformers.
Thus Cranmer, on another occasion, writes u that the whole Church
cannot make tone article of faith, although it may be taken as a neces-
sary witness for the receiving and establishing of the same with these
three conditions, that the thing which we would establish thereby, hath
been believed in all places, ever, and of all men. "— Answer to Richard
Smith concerning " the Catholic Doctrine of the Body and Blood of our
Saviour Christ."— p. 459. Fol. 1551.
Again he says : — " When all the Fathers agreed in the exposition of
any place in Scripture, he acknowledged he looked on that as flowing
from the Spirit of God ; and it was a most dangerous thing to be wise
in our own conceit: therefore he thought Councils ought to found
their decisions on the Word of God, and those expositions which had
been agreed on by the Doctors of the Church." — Speech on General
Councils. Works, Oxf. 1833. Vol. ii. p. 14.
Again: — " Touching my doctrine of the Sacrament, and other my
doctrine, of what kind soever it be, I protest that it was never my mind
to 3peak, write, or understand any tiling contrary to the moat holy Word
of God, or else against the holy Catholic Church of Christ, but purely
and simply to imitate and teach those things only which I had learned
of the sacred Scripture, and of the holy Catholic Church of Christ from
tike beginning, and also according to the exposition of the most holy and
learned Fathers and Martyrs of the Church, And if any thing hath
peradventure chanced otherwise than I thought, I may err ; but heretic
I cannot be, forasmuch as I am ready in all things to follow the judg-
ment of the most sacred Word of God, and of the holy Catholic Church,
desiring none other thing, than meekly and gently to be taught, if any-
where (which God forbid) I have swerved from the truth.
"And I profess and openly confess,that in all my doctrine and preaching
both of the Sacrament, and of other my doctrine whatsoever it be, not
only I mean and judge those things, as the Catholic Church and most
holy Fathers of old with one accord have meant and judged, but also I
would gladly use the same words they used, and not any other words;
but to set my hand to all and singular their speeches, phrases, ways,
and forms of speech, which they do use in their treatises upon the
Sacrament, and to keep still their interpretation." — Appeal from the
Pope to the next General Council Works, vol. iv. pp, 126, 127.
Bishop Ridley says,
" I acknowledge an unspotted Church of Christ, in the which no man
can err, without which no man can be saved. * * * And in that the
Church of God is in doubt, I use herein the wise counsel of Vincentius
Lirinensis, whom I am sure you will allow, who, giving precepts how
the Catholic Church may be in all schisms and heresies known, writeth
in this manner ; ' When,' saith he, ' one part is corrupted with heresies,
then prefer the whole world before that one part ; but if the greatest
part be infected, then prefer antiquity. ' In like sort now, when I per-
ceive the greatest part of Christianity to be infected with the poison of
the see of Rome, I repair to the usage of the Primitive Church." See
Life, by Gloucester Ridley, pp. 613, 614. 4to. 1763.
! Farrar, Hooper, Coverdale, Rowland Taylor, Philpot, and Brad-
ford, in their famous Confession, made at Oxford, May 8, 1554, say,
" We confess and believe that the Catholic Church, which is the
Spouse of Christ, as a most obedient and loving Wife, doth embrace
and follow the doctrine of these books [of Holy Scripture] in all matters
of religion, and, therefore, that she is to be heard accordingly, so that
those who will not hear this Church, thus following and obeying the
word of her Husband, we account as heretics and schismatics, according
to this saying : ' If he will not hear the Church, let him be unto thee as
an heathen. * * * * And we doubt not, by God's grace, but we
shall.be able to prove all our confession here to be most true by the
verity of God's Word, and consent of the Catholic Church." Ibid. pp.
525—528.
Philpot also writes,
" As many as abode in the Ark of Noe were not drowned by the flood
of Noe, even so many as abide in the true Church of Christ shall
64
receive no hurt by all the blustering and corrupt waters which the
dragon, which persecuteth the Church into the wilderness, doth in the
Apocalypse cast out after her to the end to drown her therewith. You
that stand in doubt of any thing by these new found heretics, run to the
pure Catholic Church for your sure instruction." — An Apology of John
Philpot, &c.
It appears from the above extracts that it was in strict conformity
with the judgment of the Reformers, that the Convocation of A. D.
1571, which first required the subscription of the clergy to the xxxix
Articles, ordained: —
"But chiefly they (Preachers) shall take heed that they teach no-
thing in their preaching, which they would have the people religiously to
observe and believe, but that which is agreeable to the doctrine of the
Old Testament and the New, and that which the Catholic Fathers
AND ANCIENT BlSHOPS HAVE GATHERED OUT OF THAT VERY DOCTRINE."
Liber quorundam Canonum discipline Ecclesice Anglicana. De Conciona-
toribus,— -Sparrow's Collection, p. 238.
R.
SECOND EDITION,
These Reprints are published Monthly, and told at the price of 3d. for each sheet.
LONDON: PRINTED FOR W. E. PAINTER, 342, STRAND; .T. (OCHRAN. 108.
STRAND ; J. H. PARKER, OXFORD; AND T. STEVENSON, CAMRR1DCK.
1880.
W. E. Painter, Printer, at the Office of the Churchman, 342,Strand
Cracts of tfje Anglican jfatfjn*.
PART II.
JEWEL
AND
NOWEL
" Ask for the Old Paths.'
PRINTED AND PUBLISHED FOR W. E. PAINTER, 342, STRAND, LONDON.
1839.
PREFACE
In the Preface to Part I. of these Tracts we explained,
at some length, the object which we had in view in their
publication at this time. Something more, however, seems
to be required in explanation of the principle of selection
by which we propose to be guided. For, it has been said,
' It is to little purpose that you disavow partizanship, while
' it is apparent that the Tracts selected are just such as
' do support the views of strict Churchmen only; who,
' of course, are regarded by the world as a ". party."
' Unless you shew what the principle is on which the
' selection is made, opponents may call it anything they
6 please. Let this be plainly professed, then it will be
' for every one to judge how far it is consistently and
* fairly followed.'
We had hoped that, at the very outset, we had suffi-
ciently indicated the general principle of our publication,
and prevented all just ground of complaint or suspicion,
when we stated that, instead of " selecting" pieces of our
Reformers, or elder Divines, just as they might happen
to accord, or not, with our own sentiments (which we
readily owned that almost any one might do " so as to
suit himself"1) — we should endeavour to confine ourselves
either to " authoritative documents " or " contemporary
» See Preface to Part I. p. 7.
IV.
" publications." But this declaration, it seems, is not
sufficient ; and above all, ' does not explain how it is that
4 all the Tracts which we reprint bear on the same
6 topics, — The Church and the Sacraments, — and nothing
< else.'
Now not to insist, in reply, on the fact, that these are
the very points in dispute — the very subjects on which we
are, professedly,1 here asking the judgment of the Re-
formers and Doctors, we are not unwilling to enlarge a
little on this question. For perhaps there is reason, in the
nature of things, for the tendency of the controversies of
the day towards this class of sacred topics. And in
speaking of this, some light will be cast on the " prin-
ciple of selection" which we have adopted.
Not theologians only, but even mere men of the world
now observe, and, according to their peculiar sentiments,
speculate on, the anomalous condition of our present
Christianity. We are evidently in an uncertain, inde-
finite, position. In carrying on the hereditary, trans-
mitted strife with an evil world, the Church seems indeed
almost hesitating. Of old, " her foundations were on
the holy hills" ; but now is the question raised, Whether
her sons may not safely quit the old mysterious eminences,
and descending to the open plain meet the world on its
own ground. They who among us advise this procedure
seem to be doing it on motives of expediency or of popu-
larity. Thus, some shutting their eyes, as they must do,
to much which in their hearts they obscurely admit, per-
suade themselves that the unbelief of the world is to be
met by shewing that the demand on its belief is not so
i See Preface to Part I. p. 7.
v.
great, after all, as used to be imagined. Accordingly,
the mysteries of the Faith are to be represented as on a
level, or nearly so, with the ultimate facts of science. Or,
they may be coldly spoken of, as of a doubtful character,
or second-rate importance. Or, (too often !) a significant
silence is maintained respecting them, which the unbe-
liever may interpret as he pleases. " Evidences" are
anxiously spread out for the satisfaction of the enligh-
tened— and " explanations " are ready to soothe and con-
ciliate the half-converted. And so, in part, is the way to
be smoothed for making Christianity and modern " phi-
losophy " merge into one another. In close harmony with
those who thus think, there are other sorts of conciliators,
equally willing, according to their modes, to " adapt
" Christianity to the spirit of the age ;" as if the Gospel
were now in a transition state — at least undergoing some
process of amendment : what it has been — what it was
from the beginning, when received from its Divine
Author, is not thought of, so much as what it may now
become. Appeal seems to be made to the present and to
the future, but not to the past. Some are defending
Revealed Truth by proving its utility to the Politician —
others, by shewing to the Free-thinker in Religion (who
wants something abstracted, and flexible) its " elevated
and comprehensive spirit." And so, while the effec-
tiveness and importance of a Christian " Establishment"
are the ideas uppermost in the minds of the one class —
the sublimity, or purity, or spirituality of Christian " prin-
ciples " are the chief subjects of remark with the other.
To take our Holy Religion as it actually presents itself to
us, is certainly not the present fashion. Some abstract
VI.
modification of it, suitable to modern " science" — or state
policy — or private enlightenment — that is the desideratum.
And it seems impossible to avoid thinking that the time
is come when those who embrace Christianity in all its
ancient fulness — its mysteries and institutes, and not sim-
ply its generalized principles, must take their stand on
intelligible ground. Others are calculating how much
may be safely given up ; let us now look to what we are
called on sacredly to maintain. At a time like this, it is
surely not without reason that the controversy has revived
respecting the Christian Church and Her Sacraments,
And if it be so, that there is that in the aspect of these
times which justifies — or perhaps renders inevitable — the
revival of this controversy ; so also there would seem to
be, on the other hand, a peculiar fitness in the subject
matter of these questions, to bring into collision the an-
cient and the modern spirits. On no other matter per-
haps could we so well place in opposition the confessed
" Stewards of the manifold mysteries " — acting " in the
person of Christ " — and the Religious Deputies] of the
people — acting in their own persons. Thus, there is some-
thing in the very notion of a Sacrament as repugnant to
the systems and spirit of the latter, as it is essential to
the very existence of the former. And so far there is an
identity of feeling between those who shrink from the pri-
mitive and Catholic views of Divine Revelation. The
idea of absolutely connecting a visible sign with an invi-
sible grace1 thereby conveyed, is regarded by philoso-
phizing Divines, even among us, as a superstitious relic of
the " old belief in magic," altogether unworthy of an en-
i. " A means whereby m receive the same," See the Catechism.
vu.
lightened age. Others of a more political and worldly
cast look with undefined dread upon any explicit state-
ment on the matter — unwilling to surrender sacred mys-
teries, yet fearful of saying what they admit. ! Might not
* state jealousy be awakened by any seeming assimilation
* to the powerful superstitions of Popery ? — Or, if not so,
\ if the Majesty of a Mysterious Creed began again to find
' favor in the world's eyes might we not speedily learn
i that Rome was more than a match for us ?' Another
class may be specified : — those who fear, with more or
less distinctness, whether the Doctrine of Sacraments may
not be hostile to " rational," or else to what are termed
" Evangelical " views of Religion ? and of these there are
many varieties ; from those who in general terms acknow-
ledge Sacraments as "means of Grace," down (through
the thinly separated shades of believers in "seals" — or
"pledges" — or "signs") to the ultra-spiritualized pure
Scripturalists. These gravely question, Whether " ordi-
nances " be any permanent parts of Christianity ? and
reject the very name of Sacrament (as the Arian does of
the Holy Trinity) — as "not to be found in the Bible."
The modern spirit seems to be nearly the same, whether
it manifest itself in the philosopher or the fanatic; and
perhaps enough has now been said to account for the pre-
sent tendency of religious controversy — so far, at least, as
Churchmen are concerned. The turn which the debate
has taken is, on reflection, just such as is likely to ensure
the most definite result. Looking from another point of
view, the mere facts of the case would bring us to a similar
conclusion. For it is undeniable that the opinion which
any man entertains concerning the doctrine of Sacraments
Vlll.
will give the whole tone and character to his theology ;
so that nothing can be better than this, to be taken as a
test, and examined as such. For we see it invariably to
happen, that if a man disputes the Sacraments of Christ
(in whatsoever way he may think fit to do so) he will,
throughout his system, entertain, more or less, what are
technically called "low" views of Christian Truth in
general. And, vice versa. What might have been antici-
pated by considering the reason of the thing, thus proves
true in point of fact.
What has been thus far alleged may, we trust, suffi-
ciently account for the subjects and tone of these Tracts.
In illustrating the Sacramental Doctrine of our Church,
we shall be affording a true insight into her whole Theo-
logy. We would humbly ascribe it to God's mercy, that
through all the authoritative Revisions of our offices the
ancient Catholic Faith has been preserved. In illus-
trating, as we hope to do, each of those Revisions by
Tracts of the several revisers — Bishops or Doctors of our
Communion — we shall have a special eye to the sacra-
mental offices of the Prayer Book, as affording, in theory
and in fact, the key to all the rest. The first Revision,
under Cranmer, we have already illustrated in Part I.
We think that every fair minded man will acknowledge
that the Catechismus (from which our first four Tracts
are taken) which was set forth by the authority and direct
command of the Archbishop, at the same time as he was
revising the Liturgy, is conclusive as to the animus of the
First English Prayer Book. Let the Baptismal " Office "
and the first of our Tracts be laid side by side — and no
one can doubt the interpretation of either. But, it has
IX.
been said, That the subsequent revisions of the Prayer
Book were intended by the Church for the purpose,
among others, of removing " the remaining leaven of the
old Catholic doctrine." Now, That the Church in-
tended any such thing in any of her revisions, is not only
what has never been proved, but is directly contrary to
the facts of the case. We do not deny that some indivi-
duals, both in the Church and in the State, wished to go
the whole length of the Continental Protestants ; but God
frustrated their designs. On the second revision of the
Prayer Book, in King Edward's time, we shall not dwell
here for several reasons. Chiefly, because it was never
ratified by the convocation of the Church : and was so
short a time in use, that its authority in any case could
weigh but little, either for good or for evil. It was put
forth solely by the authority of Parliament. The State
was, even then, so much more " Protestant" than the
Church, that young King Edward, finding the Bishops
and Clergy hostile to his " Reform," threatened, if ne-
cessary, to interpose his own royal authority to enforce it.1
In truth, then, The Second authoritative Revision of our
Prayer Book was the Elizabethan, A.D. 1559; and the
spirit of this Revision we trust is shewn in this the Second
Part of this Series of Tracts, by the " contemporaneous "
sentiments of our Two great Divines of that era, Jewel
the recognized Apologist, and Nowel the Catechist
of our Church.2 Once more, we repeat, that with the
l Strype's Life of Cranmer, Vol I. p. 301, 8vo. 1812.
2 Nowel's Catechism was authorized by the Convocation of 1562,
(see Advertisement to No. VI.) about three years after the revision of
the Prayer Book.
X.
individual opinions of any, even the greatest, of our
Divines, we have here nothing to do. We should he alto-
gether unwilling now to profess ourselves disciples of
Jewel — any more than we formerly did of Cranmer. On
some points it is too plain that he personally, at one time,
inclined to Continental Protestantism — but this only makes
his testimony the stronger when we find him declaring so
fully the English Doctrine concerning the virtue of Sacra-
ments. Let any one read page 80 (in the following Tract)
and then judge in what spirit the Office of Baptism was
revised in Jewel's days. And the like may be said of
the Office of the Holy Communion, in which the Eliza-
bethan Reformers so pointedly restored the words which
had been omitted as implying Christ's Real Presence
in the Eucharist. " The Body of the Lord Jesus
Christ, which was given for thee," &c. Bearing this
fact only in mind, let any one peruse page 103 in Tract
VI. in the present number — and we think it will be strange
if he mistake the spirit of our Church's teaching on this
head. We look (we repeat it) to the Sacramental Ser-
vices of the Church, not only as most unspeakably im-
portant in themselves — but as the touchstones of her
whole Theology.
In our succeeding numbers we intend to illustrate the
other revisions of our Liturgy, under James and Charles,
in a similar way. Be it remembered, that the question
among Churchmen is simply, what is the honest meaning
of certain offices, as drawn up by certain Divines ? Their
" contemporaneous," or, if possible, " authoritative, "
writings, we take to be sure commentaries on their
own Liturgical works — more especially on points so
XI.
fundamental and vital as those to which only, or chiefly,
we call attention. The perusal of them will at any rate
cure in some degree the ignorance which represents the
English Doctrine of the Sacraments as the offspring of
the times of King Charles II. There cannot be a clearer
confession than Nowel gives us (p. 95) of the doctrine
which maintains the inherent efficacy of the Sacraments,
which nothing frustrates except a positive obstacle in the
receiver. Jewel also implies the same at p. 81.
In conclusion, we cannot but think it a hopeful sign of
our prospects, that so many persons seem anxious to shew
(i. e. provided it be done honestly) that the Church's
judgment is on their side. We have known a respectable
Calvinist to maintain, that his opinions were most rigidly
those of the English Church in her Articles and Homilies
and Formularies ! — We are glad to see a man anxious to
think with the Church. He is right in principle, and only
errs from want of knowledge. Some there certainly are
who scarcely seem ingenuous in their professions on this
head : They would have misgivings if they owned that
the Church was against them, and try, therefore, to shew
the contrary. Even these, however, seem to be rendering
a sort of involuntary homage to the truth that "the
Church hath authority in controversies of Faith." Even
these, we say, by their anxiety to have the felt weight of
the Church's authority for their dogmas, are admitting the
very principle which, if righteously applied, would soon
bring all our controversies to an end.
I.
Oxford,
The Feast of the Circumcision, 1839,
xu.
P.S. The attention of the reader is particularly directed
to the following letter : —
THE ANGLICAN FATHERS.
Sir, — The Editor of a Theological Magazine of some notoriety, has
(in this month's number of his miscellany) thought fit to make one or
two charges against the Editors of the Tracts of the Anglican Fathers,
which you will, perhaps, permit me (as being one of the parties assailed)
to notice in your pages.
HaviDg stated that the sermons (reprinted from Cranmer's famous
" Catechism" of 1548,) contained in Part I. of the Tracts, were not com-
posed by Cranmer, the writer in the Magazine goes on to say j —
" The Editor of the ' Anglican Fathers' is obliged to admit this in
his general Preface to Part I. : but he had given no such notification in
the separate sermons published as tracts ; nay, he expressly calls them
Cranmer's ; he says, for instance, ' see Cranmer's Sermon of Baptism j'
and they are stated to be Cranmer's five times in the advertisement
upon the cover of our last number. "
The impression intended to be conveyed by the above extract is, that
the Editors of the " Sermons" wish to palm them upon the public as the
productions of Cranmer, and merely admit that they are not, in a sneak-
ing, underhand way, in the General Preface. How far such an impres-
sion would be correct, the following. observations will show. To begin
then with the last statement of the Magazine-writer, (that the Sermons
are stated to be Cranmer's five times in the advertisement,) it may,
perhaps, be sufficient to observe respecting it, that the adnitiscmoit in
question was not seen by the Editors until after it had been printed and in
circulation : and is no part of the work itself.
With reference to the second assertion of the Magazine-writer, (that
the Editors have given no notification that the Sermous are not by
Cranmer in the separate ones published as Tracts,) it may be replied that
the Editors were particularly careful to state, in the title pages, and in
the advertisements appended to three of the four Sermons, that each was
" set forth" (not written) by Cranmer, which is the expression employed
in the title page of the first edition of the " Catechismus. »• The reason
why they did not say in each Sermon that it was translated merely, and
not composed by the Archbishop, simply was, that, as they designed to
pve the history of flit Catechism In the Preface to the Part, they saw
no necessity for the repetition of it in each Number.
With regard to theirs* statement of the Magazine-writer, (that tin-
Editors are "obliged to admit" that the Sermons are not Cranmer's) it
will be seen, from the following extract, that so far from wishing to con-
Xlll.
ceal this fact, they desired to call particular attention to it. They say :
" We are not, in this publication, proposing to give the opinions of any
individual Reformers, at any stage of the changes which they certainly
passed through. Any one might thus select passages to suit himself.
Our inquiry is simply, as to the authoritative documents, or contemporary
publications, which they put forth We wish to keep as clear as
possible, from even seeming to rest on the opinion or character of an
individual Viewed in this respect, indeed, it is fortunate that
the Sermons now reprinted ivere not composed by the Archbishop himself,
but merely translated under his direction (from the Latin of Justus
Jonas,) and* set forth by his authority,' for the special instruction of
the people." — Preface, -pp. vii. viii.
It may here be admitted that once (and but once, in the note at p. 24,
No. II.,) the reader is referred by one of the Editors to " Cranmer's
Sermon of Baptism," and the Magazine- writer is quite welcome to all
the uncharitable inferences he can draw from this oversight. The
suspicious expression was used, I believe, for the sake of brevity, and
under the impression, that a sermon which had been adopted and " set
forth" by Cranmer, might in a loose and general way, not improperly be
styled his.(l) Thus much concerning the first charge of the Magazine-
writer. The other which I think it necessary to meet is, that the Editors
of the Sermons have published them under false titles. I may observe,
in reply, that the original title is given at the head of each Sermon and
immediately after the " Advertisement."' It is true that in the statement
of the subject matter of each Tract, the Editors followed their own judg-
ment, just as they were guided by it in choosing a running title for their
contemplated series. It is too absurd to suppose that, in doing so, they
wished to deceive any body, when a reference not merely to the original
Catechism, but to the literal reprint of it, (lately published at Oxford,)
and to Legh Richmond's Fathers, would have at once exposed their
" disingenuous trick of unscrupulous controversial] sm." They simply
wished, in their own titles (which they had no idea could be confounded
with Cranmer's), to state the contents of the pages following, in a way
which, while it faithfully attained this object, was the most likely to
attract attention, and would not have been objected toby the Reformers
themselves. The Magazine- writer is highly offended that the Sermon
" Of the authority of the Keys," is said to be about the " Apostolical
(1) And for so thinking, the Editor might have had no loss an authority than that
of the Archbishop himself, who, when speaking of the Catechism which contains
the " Sermon of Baptism, calls it " My Book of the Catechism ;" and a few lines
under, says, " Not long before I wrote the said Catechism." See his Answer to
Dr. Smith, as quoted by Legh Richmond, in his Fathers of the English Church, Vol.
X1L p. 319.
XIV.
Succession." Surely, the following extract from the discourse in question
states and maintains the above doctrine.
" You shall know that our Lord Jesus Christ, when He began to
preach, He did call and choose His twelve Apostles ; and afterwards,
besides those twelve, he sent forth three score and ten disciples, and
gave them authority to preach the Gospel And after Christ's
ascension, the Apostles gave authority to other godly and holy men to
minister God's Word, and chiefly in those places where there were Chris-
tian men already, which lacked preachers, and the Apostles themselves
could no longer abide with them : for the Apostles did walk abroad in
divers parts of the world, and did study to plant the Gospel in many
places. Wherefore where they found godly men, and meet to preach
God's Word, they laid the;r hands upon them, and gave them the Holy
Ghost, as they themselves received of Christ the same Holy Ghost, to
execute this office. And they, that were so ordained, were indeed, and
also were called, the ministers of Gcd, as the Apostles themselves were,
as Paul saith to Timothy. And so the ministration of God's Word
(which our Lord Jesus Christ Himself did first institute,) was derived
from the Apostles unto others after them, by imposition of hands and
giving the Holy Ghost, from the Apostles' time to our days. And this
was the consecration, orders, and unction of the Apostles, whereby they,
at the beginning, made bishops and priests, and this shall continue in
the Church even to the world's end Wherefore, good children,
you shall give due reverence and honour to the ministers of the Church.
And on the other side, you shall take good heed, and beware of
false and privy preachers, which privily creep into cities, and preach in
corners, having none authority, nor being called to this office," Sec. &c.
^Amjlican Fathers, No. II. pp. 21-23.
The Magazine- Writer denounces the expression, " the blessed Sacra-
ment of the Altar" (which stands in the Editors' title page of the third
Sermon "set forth" by Cranmer,) as an "incorrigibly popish phi
That the Editors were right in supposing that neither Cranmer nor his
brother Reformers would have scrupled to use it, is, however, clear from
the following facts : —
"The Sacrament of the Lord's Supper, they [the Reformer-] called
the Sacrament of the Altar, as appears plainly by the statute, 1 Edward
VI., intituled 'An Act against such as speak unreverently againsi the
Sacrament of the body and blood of Christ, commonly called t
mknt OF the Ai.tar;' far which consult the body of the Act itself. Or,
Secondly, by Bishop Ridley, one of the chief compilers of the Common
Prayer Book, who doth not only call it the Sacrament of the Altar,
affirming, that in the Sacrament of the Altar is the natural body and
blood of Christ, &c, but in his reply to an argument of the Bishop- &/
XV.
Lincoln, taken out of S. Cyril, he doth resolve it thus ; viz. < The word
Altar in Scripture signifieth as well the Altar whereon the Jews were wont
to offer their burnt sacrifice, as the Table of the Lord's Supper; and that
S: Cyril meaneth by this word Altar, not the Jewish Altar, but the Table
of the Lord,' &c. Acts and Mon. Part 3, pp. 492-497. Thirdly, by
Bishop Latimer, his fellow-martyr, who plainly grants that the Lord's
Table may be called an Altar, and that the Doctors called it so in many
places, though there be no propitiatory sacrifice but only Christ.' Part 2,
p. 85. Fourthly, by several affirmations of John Lambert and John
Philpot, two learned and religious men, whereof the one suffered death
for religion in the reign of Henry VIII., and the other in the fiery time
of Mary; this Sacrament being called by both the Sacrament of the
Altar, in their several times ; for which consult the Acts and Monu-
ments, commonly called the Book of Martyrs."— .Heylin Cyprianus An-
glicusy Pre/., as quoted by Dr. Hook in the Notes to his valuable Visi-
tation Sei-mon, pp. 156, 157.
To the facts thus collected by Heylin may be added another, namely,
that in the first reformed Office Book which was put forth contem-
poraneously with the Catechismus, the Lord's Table is frequently, if not
always, called the Altar.
Your readers, I imagine, will now be able to decide how far the Editors
of the Tracts of the Anglican Fathers deserve the censure with which they
have been attacked in the Miscellany in which the above accusations are
made. My only fear now is, that its length will exclude this vindication
from your excellent Magazine. If you think fit to shorten it by abridg-
ing the quotations, &c. , you are perfectly at liberty so to do. My design
is simply to clear the characters of several Clergymen from the asper-
sions which have been so gratuitously cast upon them ; and if this object
can be secured by the publication of even a doaen lines only of this
communication, the Editors of the Tracts will be perfectly satisfied.
The Feast of AU Saints. I am, dear Sir, yours, &c. R.
P. S. The Magazine- writer accuses the Tract Editors with " foppish
egotism," and " too probably downright falsification," because they
choose to date the advertisements to their publications on " red-letter-
days." Since, however, this charge is made against them, in common
with " various [other] writers who have put forth innumerable books,
tracts, and letters, thus ecclesiastically dated," they are quite content
to share the obloquy of it with their brethren in misfortune. (1)
(1) The above Letter owing to the courtesy (for which we take this opportunity of
■asking a public acknowledgment) of the Editor of the Christian Remembrancer,
appeared in th« Dewmber Number of that Periodical.
Cratts ol tfie angtttan ^Tat|)tts.
No. V.
OF SACRAMENTS;
AND CHIEFLY CONCERNING BAPTISM,
A TRACT,
WRITTEN BY THE RIGHT RBVEREND FATHER IN GOD,
JOHN JEWEL,
BISHOP OF SARUM, AND CONFESSOR.
Reprinted from the learned and godly "Treatise of the Sacraments." folio a.d. lGOy.
ADVERTISEMENT.
This Tract is reprinted from Bishop Jewel's " Treatise of the Sacra-
ments. " It principally illustrates the spirit of our Baptismal Formularies,
which were revised and set forth anew at the beginning of the reign of
Elizabeth. Jewel was consecrated Bishop of Salisbury, January 21,
1559, and the Revised Prayer Book was first used (in the Queen's
Chapel,) Sunday, May 12, in the same year.
M.
Cambridge,
The Feast of S.S. Simon andJude.
OF SACRAMENTS;
AND CHIEFLY CONCERNING BAPTISM.
Now I think good to speak of the Sacraments of the
Church, that all you may know what they are, because you
are all partakers of the Holy Sacraments. Christ hath or-
dained them, that by them He might set before our eyes the
mysteries of our salvation, and might more strongly confirm
the faith which we have in His blood, and might seal His grace
in our hearts. As princes' seals confirm and warrant their
deeds and charters, so do the Sacraments witness unto our
conscience, that God's promises are true, and shall continue
for ever. Thus doth God make known His secret purpose
to His Church ; first, He declareth His mercy by His word :
then He sealeth it, and assureth it by His Sacraments. In
the Word we have His promises — in the Sacraments we see
them.
It would require a long time, if I should utter that [which]
might be said in this matter, especially in laying open such
errors and abuses as have crept into the Church. But I will
have regard to this place, and so frame my speech, that the
meanest and simplest may reap profit thereby.
That you may the better remember it, I will keep this order.
I will show you what a Sacrament is ; secondly, who hath
ordained them ; thirdly, wherefore they were ordained, and
E 2
68
what they work in us ; fourthly, how many there are ; and
then I will briefly speak of every [one] of them.
A Sacrament is an outward and visible sign whereby God
sealeth up His grace in our hearts, to the confirmation of our
faith. S. Augustine saith, " A Sacrament is a visible sign of
grace invisible."1 And that we may better understand him,
he telleth us what thing we should call a sign. " A sign is a
thing that, besides the sight itself which it offereth to the
senses, causeth of itself some other certain thing to come to
knowledge."
In Baptism, the water is the sign, and the thing signified is
the grace of God. We see the water, but the grace of God is
invisible ; we cannot see it. Moreover he saith, " Signs, when
they be applied to godly things, be called Sacraments."2 The
signification and the substance of the Sacrament is to show us,
how we are washed with the passion of Christ, and how we
are fed with the Body of Christ. And again : " If Sacra-
ments had not a certain likeness and representation of the
things whereof they be Sacraments, then indeed they were no
Sacraments."3 And because of this likeness which they halve
with the things they represent, they be oftentimes termed by
the names of the things themselves. Therefore, after a certain
manner of speech (and not otherwise,) the Sacrament of the
Body of Christ is the Body of Christ, and the Sacrament
of the Blood of Christ is the Blood of Christ ; so the
Sacrament of Faith is Faith.
Who hath ordained the Sacraments ? Not any prelate, not
any prince, not any angel or archangel, but only God Himself.
For, He only hath authority to seal the charter, in whose
authority only it is to grant it ; and only He giveth the pledge,
and confirmeth his grace in us, which giveth his grace into
our hearts.
[S.] Chrysostom saith, " The mystery* were not of God,
1 Dedoetrinu Cbriatiana. 1. ii. c. 1.
2 Ad Marccliinum, Epist. v. :> Ad Bonifaciuro, Epist. xxiii.
69
nor perfect, if thou shouldest put any thing to it."1 In the
days of Noah, when God determined to be merciful unto His
people, and never to drown the whole world with water, He
said, " I have set My bow in the cloud, and it shall be for a
sign of the covenant between Me and the earth ; and when I
shall cover the earth with a cloud, and the bow shall be seen
in the cloud, then will I remember my covenant which is be-
tween Me and you, and between every living thing in the flesh,
and there shall be no more waters of a flood to destroy all
flesh."2 In like manner, when God would witness and stab-
lish to Abraham and his seed after him the promise of His
mercy, He Himself ordained a Sacrament to confirm the same :
" This is my covenant which ye shall keep between Me and
you, and thy seed after thee : let every man child among you
be circumcised."3 Thus God ordained the Sacrament of Cir-
cumcision. This Sacrament was a seal of God's promise to
Abraham, and a seal of Abraham's faith and obedience towards
God. By this Sacrament man was bound to the Lord, and by
the same Sacrament God vouchsafed to bind Himself to man.
But how is the Sacrament formed ? of what parts is it made ?
[S.] Augustine saith, "Join the word of Christ's institu-
tion with the sensible creature, and thereof is made a Sacra-
ment."4 Join the word to the creature of water, and thereof
is made the Sacrament of Baptism : take away the word, then
what is the water other than water ? The word of God and
the creature make a Sacrament. But why were Sacraments
ordained ? He telleth you, " Men cannot be gathered toge-
ther to the profession of any religion, whether it be true or false,
unless they be found in the fellowship of visible signs of Sacra-
men ts."5
The first cause why they were ordained is, that thereby one
should acknowledge another, as fellows of one household, and
members of one body. So was all Israel reckoned the children
1 Horn. vii. in 1 Corin. 2 Gen. ix. 3 Gen. xvii.
4 Tract lxxx, in, xiii, John. 5 J4t. xix. Cont. Faust, c xj,
70
of Abraham, because of their circumcision, and all such as
were uncircumcised were cut off from the people, and had no
part in the common-wealth of Israel, because they were uncir-
cumcised ; even as we take them that are not baptized, to be
none of our brethren, to be no children of God, nor members
of His Church, because they will not take the Sacrament of
Baptism.
Another cause is, to move, instruct, and teach our dull and
heavy hearts, by sensible creatures, that so our negligence in
not heeding or marking the Word of God spoken unto us,
might be amended. For if any man have the outward seal,
and have not the faith thereof sealed within his heart, it availeth
him not ; he is but an hypocrite and dissembler. So the cir-
cumcision of the foreskin of the flesh taught them to mortify
their fleshly affections, and to cut off the thoughts and devices
of their wicked hearts. Therefore, said [S.] Stephen to the
Jews, " Ye stiffnecked and of uncircumcised hearts and ears,
you have always resisted the Holy Ghost."1
So, when in Baptism our bodies are washed with water, we
are taught that our souls are washed in the blood of Christ.
The outward washing or sprinkling doth represent the sprink-
ling and washing which is wrought within us : the water doth
signify the blood of Christ. If we were nothing else but
soul, He would give us his grace barely and alone, without
joining it to any creature, as he doth to His angels ; but seeing
our spirit is drowned in our body, and our flesh doth make our
understanding dull, therefore we receive His grace by sensible
things.
[S.] Chrysostom sahh, " I am otherwise affected than is he
which believeth not : when he heareth of the water of Baptism,
he thinketh it is nothing else but water; but I see (not the
creature only which mine eyes do see, but also) the cleansing
of my soul by the Holy Ghost. He thinketh that my body
only is washed ; I believe that my soul is thereby made pure
lActsyii.
71
and holy ; and withal, I consider Christ's burial, His resur-
rection, our sanctification, righteousness, redemption, adoption,
our inheritance, the kingdom of heaven, and the fulness of the
spirit."1 For I judge not of the things I see by my eyes, but
by the eyes of my mind.
When one that is unlearned, and cannot read, looketh upon
a book, be the book never so true, never so well written, yet,
because he knoweth not the letters, and cannot read, he looketh
upon it in vain. He may turn over all the leaves, and look
upon all, and see nothing ; but another that can read, and hath
judgment to understand, considereth the whole story, the
doughty deeds, grave counsels, discreet answers, examples, pro-
mises, the very drift and meaning of him that wrote it. So do
the faithful receive the fruit and comfort by the Sacraments,
which the wicked and ungodly neither consider nor receive.
Thus do the Sacraments lead us and instruct us to behold the
secret and unknown mercies of God, and to carry ourselves to
the obedience of His will. And this is the other cause why
Sacraments were ordained.
Thirdly, they are seals or confirmations of God's promise.
S. Paul saith, " Abraham received the sign of circumcision, as
the seal of the righteousness of the faith which he had when he
was un circumcised."2 By these we stop the mouth of heretics :
for if they deny that our Lord Jesus Christ was delivered
to death for our sins, and is risen again for our justification,
we shew them our Sacraments, that they were ordajned to put
us in remembrance of Christ, and that by the use of them
we shew the Lord's death till He come. We tell them these
are proofs and signs that Christ suffered death for us on the
cross. As [S.] Chrysostom saith, " Laying out these mys-
teries we stop their mouths."3
What ? are they nothing else but bare and naked signs ?
God forbid. They are the seals of God ; heavenly tokens
and signs of the grace, and righteousness, and mercy, given
l Horn. vii. in 1 Cor. 2 Rom. iy. 3 In Mat. Horn, i xxxiii.
72
and imputed to us. Circumcision was not a bare sign : " That
is not Circumcision which is outward in the flesh," saith [S.]
Paul, " but the circumcision of the heart."1 And again, " In
Christ ye are circumcised with the Circumcision made with-
out hands, by putting off the sinful body of the flesh, through
the Circumcision of Christ."2 Even so is Baptism not any
bare sign.
Saith [S.] Chrysostom, " Christ's Baptism in Christ's
passion."3 They are not bare signs, it were blasphemy so to say.
The grace of God doth always work with His Sacraments;
but we are taught not to seek the grace in the sign, but to
assure ourselves by receiving the sign, that it is given us by
the thing signified. We are not washed from our sins by the
water, we are not fed to eternal life by the bread and wine,
butty the precious blood of our Saviour Christ, that lieth
hid in these Sacraments.
[ S."] Bernard saith, " The fashion is to deliver a ring when
seizin and possession of inheritance is given ; the ring is a sign
of the possession ; so that lie which takes it may say, the ring
is nothing, I care not for it ; it is the inheritance which I
sought for. In like manner, when Christ our Lord drew
nigh to His passion, He thought good to give seizin and posses-
sion of His grace to His disciples, and that they might reeeive
His invisible grace by some visible sign."4
[S.] Chrysostom saith, " Plain or bare water worketh not
in us ; but when it hath received the grace of the Holy Ghost,
it washeth away all our sins."5 So saith [S.] Ambrose also :
"The Holy Ghost cometh down and lialloweth the water.*
And, " There is the presence of the TBINITY."* So saith [S.]
Cyril : " As water, thoroughly heated with fire, burnetii as well
as the fire, so the waters that wash the body of him that is
baptized are changed into Divine Power by the working of the
Holy Ghost.'*; So saith [S.] Leo, sometime Bishop of Rome
1 Rom. ii. * C'oloss. ii. 3 Ad Hebr. Horn. xvi. I Bam. AeCeena Domini.
i Horn. *xxy. in Julian- 1 Dc Baft 1. i. c v. 7 lu Johuu. 1. ii. ft xiii.
73
"Christ hath given like pre-eminence to the water of Bap-
tism, as He gave to His Mother : for that Power of the Highest
and that overshadowing of the Holy Ghost, which brought
to pass that Mary should bring forth the Saviour of the
world, hath also brought to pass that the water should bear
anew, or regenerate him that believeth."1
Such opinion had the ancient learned Fathers, and such re-
verend words they used when they entreated of the Sacra-
ments. For it is not man, but God which worketh by them ;
yet is it not the creature of bread or water, but the soul of
man that receiveth the grace of God. These corruptible
creatures need it not, we have need of God's grace.
But this is a phrase of speaking. For the power of God,
the grace of God, the presence of the Trinity, the Holy
Ghost, the gift of God, are not in the water, but in us. And
we were not made because of the Sacraments, but the Sacra-
ments were ordained for our sake.
Now for the number of Sacraments, how many there be,
it may seem somewhat hard to say, and that it cannot be spoken
without offence. For men's judgments herein have swerved
very much ; some have said there are two, others three, others
four, and others that there are seven Sacraments. This differ-
ence of opinions standeth rather in terms than in the matter^
The Sacraments instituted by Christ are only two : the
Sacraments of Baptism and of our Lord's Supper, as the
ancient learned Fathers have made account of them. S. Am-
brose having occasion of purpose to entreat of the Sacraments,
speaketh but of two : saith he, "I begin to speak of the Sacra-
1 Serm. v. de Nat. Domini.
2 See Tracts of the Anglican Fathers, No. I. p. 5. Note. Our not having further
guarded and explained the statement " set forth" by Cranmer in Tract I., respect-
ing the right number of the Sacraments has, we regret to find, given offence to some.
We trust it may be removed by Bishop Jewel's remarks, which make it clear how
very much we may overrate in importance, what, in one sense, seemed to the
Reformers almost a verbal question.
3 De Sac. 1. i. c. I.
74
ments which you have received/' And yet in his whole trea-
tise, divided into six books, he writeth but two. His book is
extant ; if any man doubt this, he may see it. S. Augustine
reckoneth them to be but two . " These be the two Sacraments
of the Church."1 Again, he saith, " Our Lord and His Apos-
tles have delivered unto us a few Sacraments, instead of many ;
and the same in doing most easy, in signification most excellent,
in observation most reverend, as is the Sacrament of Baptism,
and the celebration of the Body and Blood of our Lord. "2
Thus [S.S.] Augustine and Ambrose, unto whom I might
also join other ancient Fathers, reckon but two Sacraments.
Let no man then be offended with us for so doing ; we do no
new thing^ but restore the Ordinance of Christ,' and keep the
example of the Holy Fathers.3
What then ? Do we refuse Confirmation, Penance, Orders,
and Matrimony ? Is there no use of these among us ? Do
we not allow them ? Yes. For we do confirm, and teach
repentance, and minister holy orders, and account matrimony
and so use it as an honourable state of life. We visit the sick
among us, and anoint them with the precious oil of the mercy
of God. But we call not these Sacraments, because they have
not the like institution. Confirmation was not ordained by
Christ. Penance hath not any outward element joined to
the word : the same may be said of Orders. And Matrimony
was not first instituted by Christ, but God ordained it in
Paradise long before. But in these two we have both the
element and the institution. In Baptism the element is water ;
in the Lord's Supper, bread and wine.
Baptism hath the word of institution, " Teach all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father, and the Son,
and the Holy Ghost."4 The Lord's Supper, in like manner.
hath the word of institution, " Do this in remembrance of Me."*
Therefore, these two are properly and truly called the Sacra-
1 De Symb. ad Catithuim n. 2 De Doct. Christi, 1. iii. c. 9.
3 See Note 1. 4 Malt, xxviii. 5 Luke xxii.
75
ments of the Church, because in them the element is joined to
the word, and they take their ordinance of Christ, and be
visible signs of invisible grace.
Now, whatsoever lacketh either of these, it is no Sacrament.
Therefore, are not the other five whieh are so reckoned, and
make up the number of seven, in due signification and right
meaning, taken for Sacraments ; for in such sort as these are
called Sacraments, that is, because they signify some holy thing,
we shall find a great number of things which the godly learned
Fathers have called Sacraments ; and yet, I trow, we must not
hold them as Sacraments ordained to be kept and continued
in the Church : for then there should not be seven, but seven-
teen Sacraments.
S. Bernard calleth the washing of the Apostles' feet a
Sacrament : " The washing of feet is the Sacrament of daily
sins."1 So [S.] Leo calleth the cross of Christ a Sacrament:
" The cross of Christ, which was given to save the faithful,
is both a Sacrament and also an example."2 Tertullian called
the whole state of Christian Faith, " the Sacrament of Christian
Religion."3 S. Hilary, in divers places saith, " The Sacrament
of Prayer, the Sacrament of Fasting, the Sacrament of Thirst
the Sacrament of Weeping, the Sacrament of the Scriptures."
Thus much for the number, that by the institution of Christ
there are but two Sacraments, as Cardinal Bessarion con-
fessed : " We read that these two only Sacraments were
delivered us plainly in the Gospel."*
I will now speak briefly of the Sacraments in several, and
leave all idle and vain questions, and only lay open so much as
is needful and profitable for you to know. Baptism, therefore,
is our regeneration or new birth, whereby, we are born anew
in Christ, and are made the sons of God, and heirs of the
kingdom of heaven : it is the Sacrament of the Remission of
Sins, and of that washing which we have in the blood of Christ.
I Sera, de Ccena Domini. 2 De Rosur. S. ii. 3 Cont. Marcion, 1. Iv.
4 De Sacr. Buchar.
76
We are all born the children of wrath, and have our part in
the offence of Adam. S. Paul saith, " By one man sin
entered into the world."1 [S.] Augustine saith, " Christ
said not, it shall come upon him, but, it abideth on him.
He had regard to our offspring when he saith, 'the wrath
of God abideth on him;' upon which, when the Apostle
also looked, he said, • And we, ourselves, also, were sometime
the children of wrath.' That which in Adam was imputed to
his offence and not to be of nature, is now in us, (which are
come of Adam), become natural."2 Therefore saith the
prophet, " Behold I was born in iniquity, and in sin hath my
mother conceived me."3 So that we all have cause to cry out
and moan with S. Paul, " I see another law in my members
rebelling against the law of my mind, and leading me captive
unto sin which is in my members. O wretched man that I am
who shall deliver me from the body of this death ?"4
Hereof speaketh our Saviour, " That which is born of the
flesh, is flesh ; and that which is born of the Spirit, is Spirit."
And for this cause, saith He, " Except a man be born of the
water and the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of
God."s
For this cause are infants baptized, because they are born in
sin and cannot become spiritual, but by this new birth of the
water and the Spirit. They are the heirs of the promise ; the
covenant of God's favour is made unto them. God said to
Abraham, " I will establish my covenant between Me and thee,
aud thy seed after thee in their generations, for an everlasting
covenant, to be God unto thee, and unto thy seed after thee."«
Therefore, saith the Apostle, " If the root be holy, so are the
branches."; And again, " The unbelieving husband is sanc-
tified by the wife, and the unbelieving wife is sanctified by the
husband ; else were your children unclean, but now are they
holy ."8 When the Disciples rebuked those that brought little
I Romam v. 2 De Verbis Apostol. S. xiv. 3 Psalm li. 4 Rom. ▼».
5 John lii. 6 Gen. xrii. 7 Rom. xi. 8 l Cor. vit
77
children to Christ, that He might touch them, He said, " Suf-
for the little children to come unto Me, and forbid them not,
for of such is the kingdom of God."i And again, " Their
angels always behold the face of My Father which is in hea-
ven."2 The kingdom of heaven is of such, saith Christ, not
only then of those, but of other like infants, which shall be in
all times.
As God took the seed of Abraham to be partakers of the
covenant which He gave to Abraham, so He appointed that
every man-child of eight days old should be circumcised. And
" Abraham circumcised his son Isaac, when he was eight days
old, as God had commanded him."3 May we think that the
promise of God hath an end, so that it reached not to our
children ? or might the children of the Jews receive the sign
of the covenant, and may not the children of the Christians ?
Whatsoever was promised to Abraham, the same is also per-
formed unto us. We enjoy the same blessings and free pri-
vilege of God's favour. S. Paul to the Galatians saith, " Know
ye that they which are of Faith are the children of Abraham?"
Again, " If ye be Christ, then ye are Abraham's seed, and
heirs by promise."4
Now is the sign of the covenant also changed, and Baptism
is instead of circumcision, as S. Paul declareth, and calleth
them circumcised which are baptized. " In whom," meaning
Christ, " also ye are circumcised, with Circumcision made
without hands, by putting off the sinful body of the flesh,
through the Circumcision of Christ, in that ye are buried
with Him, through Baptism."5
Our Saviour giveth charge to His Apostles to baptize all
nations in the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of
the Holy Ghost. The Apostles baptized not only such as
professed their belief, but whole households. " The keeper of
the prison was baptized, with all that belonged unto him."6
1 Mark x. 2 Ibid. 3 Genesis xxi. 4 Gal. iii.
5 Colos. ii. 6 Acts xvi.
78
So was Crispus, the chief ruler of the synagogue, and his house-
hold, and the household of Stephanus.
Infants are apart of the Church of God ; they are the sheep
of Christ, and belong to His flock. Why should they not
bear the mark of Christ. They have the promise of salvation ;
why should they not receive the seal, whereby it is confirmed
unto them? They are of the fellowship of the faithful.
[S.] Augustine saith, " Where place you young children,
which are not yet baptized ? Verily, in the number of them
that believe."i Why then should they not be partakers of the
Sacrament together with the Faithful ?
And as the children of the Faithful by right ought to be
baptized, so such others also as were born of unbelieving
parents, and were aliens from the commonwealth of Israel, and
were strangers from the covenant of promise, and had no hope,
if they acknowledge the error in which they lived, and seek
the forgiveness of their former sins, may well receive this
Sacrament of their regeneration.
So when they which heard [S.] Peter were pricked in their
hearts, and said to [S.] Peter and the other Apostles, men and
brethren, what shall we do ? [ S.] Peter said unto them, "Amend
your lives, and be baptized every one of you in the name of
Jesus Christ for the remission of sins."2 They were buried
with Christ by Baptism into His death, and made partakers
of His blood, and continued in the Apostles' doctrine and
fellowship.
Christ, saith the Apostle, " loved the Church, and gave
Himself for it, that He might sanctify and cleanse it, by the
washing of water through the word."3 Again : " According
to His mercy He saved us, by the washing of the new^ birth,
and the renewing of the Holy Ghost."4 For this cause is
Baptism called salvation, life, regeneration, and forgiveness of
sins, the power of God to resurrection, the image and pledge
of the resurrection, and the weed of immortality.
1 Dc Verbis Apost. S. i. 2 Acts ii. 3 Eph. v. 4 Titus iii.
79
And yet are not these things wrought by the water, for there
what need had we of Christ ? what good did His passion ?
what doth the Holy Ghost work in our hearts ? what power
of force is left to the word of God ?
[S.] Augustine saith, " Why doth not Christ say, now ye
are clean, because of the Baptism wherewith ye are washed ;
saving that because in the water it is the word that maketh
clean ? Take away the word, and what is water more than
water ?"i It is the covenant, and promise, and mercy of God,
which clotheth us with immortality, assureth our resurrection,
by which we receive regeneration, forgiveness of sins, life and
salvation.
His word declareth His love towards us, and that word m
sealed and made good by Baptism. Our faith, which are
baptized, and our continuance in the profession which we have
made, establisheth in us the grace which we receive. And it is
said, " True Baptism standeth not so much in washing of the
body, as in the faith of the heart."
As the doctrine of the Apostles hath taught us, saying, " By
faith purifying their hearts/'2 And in another place, " Baptism
saveth us, not the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but the
examining of a good conscience before God, by the resurrec-
tion of Jesus Christ."3 Therefore, [S.] Jerom saith, " They
that receive not Baptism with perfect faith, receive the water,,
but the Holy Ghost they receive not."4
The water wherein we are baptized, doth not cleanse the
soul ; but " the blood of Jesus Christ, His Son, doth cleanse
us from all sin."5 Not the water, but the blood of Christ
reconcileth us unto God, strengtheneth our conscience, and
worketh our redemption. We must seek salvation in Christ
alone, and not in any outward thing.
Hereof, saith [S.] Cyprian, " The remission of sins, whether
it be given by Baptism, or by any other Sacraments, do properly
1 Tract lxxx. in John. 2 Actsxv. 3 1 Peter iii.
4 In Ezek. oa. xvi. "» 1 John i.
80
appertain to the Holy Ghost. The solemnity of the words,
and the invocation of God's Holy Name, and the outward
signs appointed to the ministry of the Priest by the institution
of the Apostles, work the visible outward Sacrament. But
touching the substance thereof, it is the Holy Ghost that
worketh it."1 [S.] Ambrose also saith, " Thou hast seen the
water, thou hast seen the Priest, thou hast seen those things
which thou mightest see with the eyes of thy body, and with
such sight as man hath ; but those things which Work and do the
deed of saltation, which no eye can see, thou hast not seen."2
Such a change is made in the Sacrament of Baptism : through
the power of God's working, the water is turned into blood ;
they that be washed in it receive the remission of sins ; their
robes are made clean in the blood of the Lamb. The water
itself is nothing ; but by the working of God's Spirit, the
death and merits of our Lord and Saviour Christ are
thereby assured unto us.
A figure was given at the Red Sea. The children of Israel
passed through in safety, but Pharaoh and his whole army
were drowned. Another figure hereof was given in the Ark.
The whole world was drowned, but Noah and his family were
saved alive ; even so in the fountain of Baptism, our spiritual
Pharaoh, the devil, is choked ; his army, that is, our sins, are
drowned, and we saved.
The wicked of the world are swallowed in concupiscence
and vanities, and we abide safe in the Ark. God hath chosen
us to be a peculiar people to Himself ; we walk not after the
flesh, but after the Spirit, therefore, we are in Christ Jesus,
and there is now no condemnation unto us.
Now touching the minister of this Sacrament, whether he be
a good man or an evil man, godly or godless, an heretic or a
Catholic, an idolater or a true worshipper of God, the effect
is all one ? the value or the worthiness of the Sacrament
dependeth not of man, but of God. Man pronounceth tfct
1 Dc Baptis. Chbisti. I DcSac. 1. l.c, iii. 3 See Note II.
81
word, but God settleth our hearts with grace ; man toucheth
or washeth us with water, but God maketh us clean by the
cross of Christ. It is not the minister, but Christ Himself,
which is the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of theworld.
Again, whether the infant be signed with the sign of the
cross, or be put into the water once or thrice : whether one,
oi two, or three, or more, be godfathers or witnesses of the
baptism, it maketh nothing to the virtue of the Sacrament ;
they are no part thereof; without these, Baptism is whole and
perfect.i
Hereof [S.] Gregory saith, "The Faith being one, the
diversity of customs hurteth nothing."2 Christ left no order
for the use of these things, neither did, by His word or example,
require them. The Church of God hath liberty to dispose
herein as may be most fitting for decency and godliness.
Some make doubt of those infants, the children of the faith-
ful, which depart before Baptism, whether they be saved or
not. What ! shall we say that they are damned ? It is a hard
matter, and too curious for man to enter into the judgments
of God ; His mercy is infinite, and His purpose secret. He
sheweth mercy upon those whom He will have mercy. Who
can appoint Him, or set Him an order what He shall do ? It
is not good, nor standeth with Christian reverence, to be con-
tentious and busy in searching out, or reasoning of matters
which the wisdom of God hath hid from our knowledge. Yet
if any would fain be resolved, he may thus safely reason : it is
true that children are born in sin, and that by the sin of one
man death hath entered into the world, and that the reward of
sin is death ; but who knoweth if God hath forgiven them
their sin ? Who is His counsellor, who knoweth his meaning ?
Our children are the children of God ; He is our God and
the God of our seed ; they be under the covenant with us.
1 Let this be well weighed by those who suppose the faith of the sponsors to be.
in our Church's judgment, necessary to the validity of Baptism,
2 L.. j. Epist, xli.
82
The soberest way is to speak least, and to leave them to the
judgment and mercy of God.
Howbeit, if any should despise, and of wilfulness refuse this
Holy Ordinance, so that they would in no case be baptized,
nor suffer their children to be baptized, that were damnable ;
otherwise the grace of God is not tied so to the ministration of
the Sacrament, that if any be prevented by death, so that he
cannot be received to the fellowship thereof, he should there-
fore be thought to be damned. For many have suffered death
for God's cause, for their faith in Christ, who never were
baptized $ yet are they reckoned, and are indeed, blessed mar-
tyrs. So Valentinianus, a Christian Emperor, died without
Baptism; yet doth [S.] Ambrose commend him, and nothing
doubteth, but that he is saved. He saith, " I have heard that
you are grieved because he took not the Sacrament of Baptism.
Tell me, what other thing is there in us, but our will and our
desire?"1 Again: "he which was endued with Thy Spirit,
0 God, how might it be that he should be void of Thy grace ?
or, if this move you, because the mysteries were not solemnly
ministered, are not the martyrs crowned if they be only novices
(that be not yet christened) ? But if they be washed in their
blood, then is he also washed in his godliness and in his desire."
[S.] Augustine saith, "he is not deprived from the partaking
and benefit of the Sacrament, so long as he findeth in himself
that thing that the Sacrament signifieth."2
Constantinus the Great was the first Christian Emperor, yet
was he not baptized until the time of his death ; " who when
he was at Nicomedia," saith Theodoretus, " being grievously
sick, and knowing the uncertainty of this life, was baptizedt"3
The thief upon the cross was not baptized ; yet Christ tatd
unto him, This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise. Tin-
Prophet Jeremiah and John Baptist were sanctified in their
mothers' wombs.
By these few it may appear, that the Sacrament maketli not
1 Orat; de obit. Yah See Note III. 3 In Berm ad infantes. 3 Hist, tripart, 1. iii. c xii .
83
a Christian, but is a seal and assurance unto all that receive it
of the grace of God, unless they make themselves unworthy
thereof, and that no man may despise this Holy Ordinance,
and keep back his infants from Baptism, for in so doing he
procureth his own damnation. In time of ignorance, many
would see this and acknowledge it, that the outward Baptism
by water was not [so] necessary to salvation, so that the
children or others that died without it were, for lack thereof,
damned.
The Church hath always received three sorts of Baptism —
the Baptism of the Spirit, or of blood, or of water.1 If any
were prevented by death, or hindered by cruelty or persecu-
tion, so that they could not receive the Sacrament of Baptism
at the hands of the minister, yet having the sanctification of
the Holy Ghost, or making their faith known by their suffer-
ing, they were born anew, and baptized.
God hath His purpose in us and our children. Before we
were born, when we had done neither good nor evil, He had
mercy and compassion on us. Judgment appertaineth unto
God ; He knoweth who are His. No man knoweth the things
of God but the Spirit of God only.
And thus much of the Sacrament of Baptism, which is the
badge and cognizance of every Christian. If any be not
baptized, but lacketh the mark of God's fold, we cannot discern
him to be one of the flock. If any take not the seal of rege-
neration, we cannot say he is born the child of God.
This is the ordinary way ; let us use it, let us not despise
nor be slow to receive the Sacraments ; they are the means
by which God maketh sure His goodwill towards us.
1 See Note III.
NOTES.
Jewel, like the elder Anglican Reformers, paid great deference to
the Writings of the " ancient learned Fathers." More than one example
of this occurs in the preceding Tract, and he expresses himself with
yet greater clearness in some of his other works. Thus, in his famous
Apology of the Church of England c. vi. § 15. he writes, " We [the
Anglican Church] have only departed from that church which may err,
which Christ, who cannot err, so long since foretold should err, ;uid
which we see clearly with our eyes has departed from the Holy Fathers,
the Apostles, Chiust Himself, and the Primitive and Catholic Church.
And we have approached, as much as possibly we could, the Church of
the Apostles, and ancient Catholic Bishops and Fathers, which we know
was yet a perfect, and as Tertullian saith, an unspotted Virgin, and not
contaminated with any idolatry or great and public error. Neither have
we only reformed the Doctrine of our Church, and mad it fill theirs in
all things, but we have also brought the celebration of the Sacraments,
and the forms of our public rites and prayers, to an exact resemblance
to their institutions and customs."
Again, in answer to Harding, Jewel observes, " These be cases, not
of wit, but of faith ; not of eloquence, but of truth; not invented or
devised by us, but from the Apostles, and Holy Fathers, and founders
of the Church, by long succession brought unto us. Wean not the
devisers thereof, but only the keepers ; not the masters, but tin- nchaliri.
Touching the substance of Religion, we believe that [which] tin
ancient, Catholic, learned Fathers he/ieced , tee do that they did, u-e say that
they said. And marvel not, in what side soever ye Me them, if you see
us join in the same. It is our great comfort that we see our Faith and
their Faith to agree in one." — Reply, — Answer to M, Jlardim/'s conclusion,
adfn,
85
The .Holy Catholic Church has never authoritatively declared her
j udgment on the validity of Lay Baptism. In our own Church its validity
has been defended by Hooker, book v. 62, &c, and by Bingham in his
scholastic History of Lay Baptism ; Jeremy Taylor and Waterland have
ably maintained the contrary. It is plain, from the letters and other
writings of our first Reformers, that they allowed lay persons to baptize
in case of necessity, and accordingly the Rubric in the Prayer Books of
Edward VI. and Elizabeth, directed "First let them that be present call
upon God for His grace, and say the Lord's prayer, if the time will sitflvr ;
and then one of them shall name the child, and dip him in the water ," Sfc.
But in the year 1575, the Archbishops and Bishops (who had power and
authority in their several dioceses to resolve all doubts concerning the
maimer hoio to understand, do, and execute the things contained in tlie Book
of Common Prayer,) unanimously resolved that even private Baptism in
case of necessity, was only to be administered by a lawful Minister or
Deacon; and that other persons should be inhibited to intermeddle
with the ministering of Baptism privately, as being no part of their
vocation. This decision was agreed, settled, and subscribed to by both
houses of Convocation. Upon the accession of James I. the question
of Lay Baptism was again debated in the Hampton Court Conference,
and the result was, that instead of those words, Let them that be present
call upon God, &c. the rubric should be, Let the lawful Minister and
them that be present, &c. And instead of what follows, viz., Then one
of them shall name the child &c. it was ordered, that, the child being named
by some one that is present, the said lawful Minister shall dip it in the water,
&c. And thus the rubric remained till the review at the Restoration,
whsn it only underwent some small variation ; the Minister of the Parish
being first named as the most proper person to be sent for, if not out of
the way ; but in his absence any other lawful Minister is to be called in
that can be procured. The Church only provides that none but a
Minister, or one duly ordained, presume to baptize, well knowing that
the persons by whom Baptism is to be administered are plainly as
positive a part of the institution, as any thing else relating to that
Sacrament ; and consequently that the power of administering it must
belong to those only whom Christ hath authorised by the institution.
The foregoing facts and observations will be found stated, somewhat
more at large, in Wheatly's Rational Illustration of the Booh of Common
Prayer, pp. 372-375. 8vo. Edit. Lond. 1825. That learned Author
8C
closes his remarks as follows : " If," says he, " it be asked, whether Bap-
tism, when performed by an unordained person, be, in the sense of our
Church valid and effectual? I answer, that, according to the best judg-
ment we can form from her public acts and offices, it is not. For she
not only supposes [Canon lxix.] that a child will die unbaptized, if the
regular Minister does not come time enough to baptize it, but in the
above said determination of the Bishops and Convocation, she expressly
declares, that even in cases of necessity, Baptism is only to be administered
by a laioful Minister or Deacon, and directly inhibits all other persons
from intermedding with it, though ever so privately, as being no part of
their vocation ,• a plain intimation that no baptism, but what is adminis-
tered by persons duly ordained, is valid or effectual. For if Baptism
administered by persons not ordained be valid and sufficient to convey
the benefits of it, why should such persons be prohibited to administer it
in cases of real necessity, when a regular Minister cannot be produced?
It would surely be better for the child to have it from any hand, if any hand
could give it, than that it should die without the advantage of it. Our
Church therefore, by prohibiting all from intermeddling in Baptism but
a lawful Minister, plainly hints, that when Baptism is administered by
any others, it conveys no benefit or advantage to the child, but only
brings upon those who pretend to administer it the guilt of usurping a
sacred office : and consequently that persons so pretendedly baptized
(if they live to be sensible of their state and condition) are to apply to
their lawful Minister or Bishop for that Holy Sacrament, of which they
only received a profanation before."
Thus Wheatly. The Editors of these Tracts do not wish to give their
opinion on the above question. They may however observe, that when
they have been requested to baptize persons who had before received
Dissenting or Lay Baptism, they have made use of the hypothetical
form, as appointed in the Prayer Book, i.e. If thou art not already bap-
tized, N. I baptize thee, §*c.
Thkre is a large sense, in which every baptized man is included in ilie
Catholic Church, and may be, according to his measure, partaker of her
privileges, though be may not trace the grace to its true source, but
may mistake the hand that blesses him.(i) And the wideness of the
(1) That is; many who have departed and joined the sects in sincerity and igno-
rance, may be attributing to humau causes that re-invigoratiou of spiritual life
87
Catholic principle, as to the bestowal of Baptismal grace, ought not to
be lost sight of here. In the Church there seems to have been re-
cognized a sort of threefold validity of Baptism. The first (2) as
ordinarily received from a Minister of the Church; the second (3)
pertaining to the grace of martyrdom, or "Baptism by blood ;" and the
third (4) even extending in cases of extreme necessity to Christian
confession, and the earnest desire of the Sacrament. Doubtless, it is
the All-seeing God alone who can decide on any individual case. Yet
it is easy to see how the Catholic doctrine does at least open a wide
door to charitable hope. (5) How many even of those who are outwardly
schismatical, may not be wholly so, we can never know here. How far
the sincerity of some, or the circumstances of others, may avail as
excuses before God, He only can decide. Still, while our charity
"hopeth all things," we know that where there is doubt only, there may
be danger ; and charity itself would oblige us to warn : for we think
there is this peril ; and we warn those Churchmen of their greater peril,
who sanction religious principles, or frequent even doubtful assemblies,
which the Church acknowledges not. They not only endanger them-
selves, but by their example may fatally mislead the souls of their
brethren. But let us take the extremest case that can be alleged,
namely, that of persons wilfully guilty of total and deliberate schism
from the Apostolic Church ; when we deny to such all share in the
Church's peculiar grace here, or glory hereafter, are we denying thera
aught that they do not deny themselves ? — aught which they even wish
to claim ? For instance — The Church has ever maintained that Baptism
in the Apostolic community conveys the most exalted and unearthly
blessings, and by consequence maintains, that the unbaptized possess
them not. But is it not a fact, that all such persons totally reject the
which is but the forgotten Baptismal grace of Christ, mercifully " in them, spring-
ing up to everlasting life." (Johniv. 14; Johnvii. 38,39.) This may be also one
of God's means of humbling and reforming His too careless Church.
(2) John iii. 5 — The ordinary " entrance to the Kingdom."
(3) Matt. xx. 22 ; and perhaps, 1 Cor. xv. 29.
(4) Rom. x. 19. (which conveys the principle) ; and Luke xxiii. 42.
(5) Our own Church recognizes this doctrine ; speaking in her Baptismal office of
the " great necessity of the Sacrament where it may be had ,-" and in the Catechism
of its "general necessity," Christ affirmed generally the necessity of being ** born
of water," as the preliminary of "entrance to His Kingdom ;'* yet He promised
admission thereto to the dying thief, who confessed Him with a penitent heart.
88
notion of there being any spiritual value in Baptism ? Does our un-
charitableness then place them in a worse position than that which they
voluntarily choose for themselves, and resolutely defend ? Surely we
are rather taking a high view of our own privileges and grace in Christ,
than in any degree depriving others of theirs. We leave them where
they place themselves. And it seems hard to call this a want of charity.
It is impossible to say that we are depriving of Sacraments those who
do not even pretend to them except in form. It is strange and uncandid
to say, that we ux-church those who (in our sense of the word) do not
even pretend to be Churches. — On the Apostolic Succession. Parochial
Lccturesyby \V. J. Irons, M. A. , Vicar of Barkway, Herts. 8vo. pp. 102-104.
M.
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