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LAI 


AD3ATIOO S.TAaVHOIW “LS 4O ALISHSAINN 

















. THE 


OF THE 


RIGHT REVEREND FATHER IN GOD, 


JOHN COSIY, 


LORD BISHOP OF DURHAM. 


NOW FIRST COLLECTED. 


—_—_—_—_——_ 


VOLUME THE FIFTH. 
NOTES AND COLLECTIONS ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


—_—————— 


OXFORD: 


JOHN HENRY anv JAMES PARKER 
M DCCC LY. 





eS Ocr SERS 





NOTES AND COLLECTIONS 


BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


BY 


JOHN COSIN, 


LORD BISHOP OF DURHAM. 


A NEW EDITION, 


COLLATED WITH THE ORIGINAL MANUSCRIPTS. 


" rae ete ea are Teal era 





= Me 
Mi 


LB A TUE y 





CONTENTS 


PREFACE 


First Series of N gs in interleaved Book of Crinwitin 


Prayer, A.D. 1619 


Second Series of Notes in Seuddiaced Book of erat ee 


Prayer, A.D. 1638 
Third Series in MS. Book 


' Appendix, No. I. Corrections &c. of the Book of Ciniiions 


Prayer 








Index 





— No. II. On Cndhomaition 
No. III. Disputatio de die Dominico 


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TABLE OF CONTENTS. 


The portions of the Book of Common Prayer on which the Notes are made. 


Page 

INTRODUCTORY. 
On the Consonance of our Service with others : : : 5 
On Uniformity in Common Prayer . . . - 401—410 
On the Act of Uniformity : . . 179—184, 411—413 
Proclamation for the Uniformity of Common Prayer . : - 184 
The Preface, and Rules subjoined to it ‘ - 6—12, 185, 186, 413, 414 
On Ceremonies ° . < 12—15, 186—188, 415—419 
The Order how Holy Seripthie i is to be read . . 15—17, 188 
The Table of Psalms and Lessons < 17—21, 189, 190, 419—424 
The Almanack : ° : . ‘ ~. 190—192 
The Kalendar ‘ 5: : 21—37, 192—226, 424—-434 
The Holydays and filowing Rules A eae - 87—40, 226, 435 
Rules before Morning Prayer (of Chancels and of Ornaments in time of 

Divine Service) . . : 40—44, 226—233, 435—441 
On Morning Prayer.—The Sentences < . 44, 45, 233, 441, 442 
The Exhortation, Confession, and Absolution 45—47, 233, 234, 442—445 
The Lord’s Prayer . 3 ° 47, 48, 234 
The Versicles, Gloria Patri, pee Praise ye the tae ‘ 48—51, 445, 446 
Venite Exultemus.—Singing ° : , . . 61,52, 446 
Psalms and Lessons : ; ‘ ‘ 58—58, 235, 446, 447 
Te Deum and Canticles . d pe - 59—65, 235, 236, 447, 448 
The Creed : = ‘ . . 236, 448 
The Lord be with you, Pon ‘ ‘ ‘ . } . 448 
The Lord’s Prayer ° ‘ é ‘ ° 65, 237, 449 
The Collects . ° ° 65, 238 
[ For the concluding Prayers, see at the wad of the Litany. ] 
The Creed of St. Athanasius ‘ . . - 66, 238—240, 450 
The Litany : : . 67, 240-245, 451—454 
Concluding Prayers; For the King, &e é 68, 245—247, 455, 456 
The Collects, Epistles, and Gospels in general ‘ 69, 247—249, 456, 457 
Those of each day . : . ° . - 69—83, 249—298 
Communion Service, Introduction to ‘ F Se - 299—305 
First Rubrics . ‘ ° ‘ : 83, 84, 305—308, 458 
General comparison of the Services in the first and second books of Ed- 

ward ° . ° . . . - 458—462 
On the Altar or Communion-table ° : < 3 85, 88 
On the names Priest and Altar . . ° 88, 89, 308, 309 
Portion before the Offertory . ‘ ‘90—96, 309—318, 462—464 


Offertory, Exhortation &c. to the Absolution 97—103, 318—329, 464—470 
Sursum Corda, &c. 7 = ‘ 103—105, 329—332, 470, 471 


Vili TABLE OF CONTENTS. 














Page 
Prayer of Consecration , - ’ ; 105—111, 332—344 
Communion A : : ‘ 111—113, 344—3847, 471, 472 
Post-Communion . : : - 118, 115, 8347—355, 472 
(Of the Sacrifice of the Eucharist A a » .  W5—122,347—355) 
Gloria in Excelsis and Blessing. « : . 123, 124, 355, 356, 472, 473 
Concluding Rubrics : f 124—132, 356—358, 473, 480, 481 
(Bucer’s proposed alterations in the Service : : - 474—479) 
(Of the frequent receiving of the Holy Communion : - 132—1384) 
The Office of Public Baptism "| x 135—141, 358—360, 482, 483 
— of Private Baptism : ‘ 4 _ : 141, 142 
——____.—. of Confirmation 4 ‘ " 142, 149, 484—490 
The Catechism ; ; ; : 149—156, 360—367, 491, 492 
The Office of Matrimony . -.. 156—163, 367—370, 492—494 
crer-cint the Visitalion like Giak =’. -  1683—165, 370, 494, 495 
of the Communion of the Sick - ‘ . 496, 497 
— of the Burial of the Dead i - 165—172, 371, 497—499 
ofthe Thanksgiving of women after Child-birth - 499, 500 
The Commination Service . 5 Pi 882—385, 500—502 
The Psalter : ‘ : ; ‘ : 172—176, 385 


The Ordination Services. . ig ‘ : . 885—397 


COMPARATIVE PAGING OF NICHOLLS’ ADDITIONAL NOTES, 
| - AND OF THE PRESENT EDITION. 


The first figures indicate the page, the second the line of this edition, at which 
the portion in Nicholls’ corresponding page begins and ends. 





NIcHOLLs. First SERIEs. Seconp SERIES. THIRD SERIES. 
Page 
3 401, 1—405, 6. 


405, 6—411, 19. 
411, 20—415, 29. 
415, 29—82. 

415, 383—419, 8. 
419, 9—420, 23. 
420, 24—421, 13. 


185, 1—186, 20 
186, 21—188, 12 
188, 13—189, 3 


4. 

5 

6 6, 1—11, 23 

7 11, 24—13, 4 

8 13, 5--17, 11 

9* 17, 12—18, ult. 
10 19, 1—22, 32 
11% 22, 33-—-26, 2 
12 26, 3—30, 24 
13 30, 25—36, 13 
14 36, 22—37, 5 
15 37, 17—38 225, 1—226, ult. 
16 40, 4—42,18 227, 1—228, 14 
17 228, 15—231, 26 
18 42, 24—46, 16 231, 27—233, 30 
19 46, 17—49, 8 233, 31—235, 2 
20 49, 9—62, 4 
21 62, 5 to 63 ult. and 


189, 4—192, 4 
192, 5—194, 15 
194, 16—198, 18 
198, 19—222, 12 
222, 13—224, ult. 


424, 14—425, 5. 

425, 6—17. 

425, 18—429, 5. 

429, 6—434, ult. 
435, 1—26. 

435, 27—438, 19. 
438, 20—441, 21. 


441, 22>—446, 35. 


235, 3—9 445, 36—448, 10. 
58, 29 
58, 29—59, 4 and 


23. 65, 13—68, 7 


237, 22—241, 23 
24 68, 8—ult. 


241, 24—246, ult. 


451, 13—454, 8. 


25 69, 1—70, 3 247,1—240,7  § 270 taro, 6. 
26 70, 4—71, 17 249, 8—254, ult. 456, I—26. 


7 18—77;13 255, 1—256, 13 
28 256, 14—263, 11 
29 77, 14—77, 16 263, 12—268, 19 
30. 77, 17—78, 24 268, 20—273, 19 
31 78, 25—79, 5 273, 20—280, 7 


456, 30—457, 24. 


457, 24—26. 


33 80, 683, 6 
34 83, 7—83, 10 


35 83, 11—83, 29 


36 83, 30—84, ult. 


287, 11—291, 19 
291, 20—298, ult. 
302, ult.—303, ult. 
304, 1—305, 15 
299, 1—3801, 4 

301, 4—302, penult. 


458, 1461, 21. 


37 85, 1—89, 22 305, 16—306, 26 461, 22—462, 14. 
38 89, 23—90, 14 306, 27—310, 22 462, 19—28. 
39 90, 15—92, ult. 310, 283—3815, 18 

462, 29—464, 25 
41 94, 3—96, 22 318, 28—322, 14 462, 15—18. 
42 96, 23—98, 11 - 322, 28—325, 19 


* See at end of Preface. . 


464, 26—466, 24. 


> The notes on these pages, as in some other cases, are transposed. 


x COMPARATIVE PAGING OF NICHOLLS. 


NICHOLLS. First Series, SEcenpD SERIES. THIRD SERIES. 
Page 
43 _ 98, 12—100, 12 325, 20—327, 6 466, 25—470, 2. 


44 100, 183—103,23 327, 7330, 18 
45 100, 24—106, 17 330, 19—333, 9 470, 3—471, 5. 
46 106, 18—109, 17 333, 10—337, 8 

47 109, 24, 25 837, 9—842, 20 

48 109, 26—11], 11 342, 21—345, 3 471, 6—473, 12. 
49 111, 12—116, 22 345, 4—847, 17 

50 116,22—120—35 347, 18—350, ult. 

51 120, 36—123, 2 351, 1—355, 13 

52 (122,1—5),124,2—18 355, 14—356, 20 473, 23—477, 27. 
53 124, 19—129, 3 477, 27—480, 14. 
54  129,3—134, 12 356, 21—358, 8 480, 15—481, 18. 
55 184, 183—139, 5 358, 9—358, 25 482, 1—484, 2. 
56 139, 6—145,5 358, 26—360, penult. 

57 —- 145, 6—145, 27¢ . 484, 3—488, 7. 
58 145, 28—149, 14 488, 8—491, 22. 
59  149,15—151,17 —_, 860, penult—367, 11 491, 22—492, 2, 
60 151, 18—158, 8 367, 12—368, 27 492, 3—19, 

61 158, 9—161, 5 368, 28—370, 2 492, 20—494, 29, 
62 161, 6—164, ult, 370, 3—ult. 494, 30—497, 18. 
63 165, 1 —169, 6 371, 1—872, 10 497, 19—499, 15. 
64 169, 7—170, 16 372, 11—376, 25 

65  170,17—171, 18 376, 26—382, 41 

66 171, 14172, 14 382, 15—385 ult. 499, 16—501, 24. 


© And appendix No. II. 


PREFACKE. 


Tue notes and extracts contained in this volume have long 
been known as the “ Additional Notes appended to Nicholls’ 
Commentary on the Book of Common Prayer.” The whole 
of those notes are now reprinted; two of them which were 
not written by Bp. Cosin, but were inserted by Nicholls as 
those of Dr. John Mill, the editor of the New Testament, 
being added at the end of. this preface to complete the 
work. 

Of the three series of notes of which this collection 
consists, the authorship of the second and third was from 
the first correctly assigned to Bp. Cosin; but it was not 
known that the first series was also his, though Nicholls 
probably had the original MS. before him, communicated 
by Dr. Pickering; and though the interleaved Prayer-Book 
of 1619 containing these, as well as the other of 1638, con- 
taining the notes marked as Cosin’s by Nicholls, are thus en- 
tered in the catalogue of Bishop Cosin’s library at Durham, 
drawn up by his secretary and son-in-law, under his own 
eye: “The Common Prayer-Book, in large paper, set forth 
A°®. 1638, with the book of consecration and ordination, 
wherein be inserted leaves of white paper through the whole 
book for my owne notes and observations upon it, both doc- 
trinal and historical. Lond. 1638. The same book again, 
with paper and notes so inserted, set forth A°, 1619.” 

It will make the subject more clear to reprint what 
Nicholls said respecting these collections. 

The title of the notes in his volume is: “ Additional 
Notes on the Common Prayer; many of which are supposed to 
have been collected by the Right Reverend Dr. John Overall, 
formerly Lord Bishop of Norwich; others of which were 
written by Dr. Lancelot Andrewes, formerly Lord Bishop of 
Winchester; others by Dr. J. Cosins, formerly Lord Bishop 
of Durham; and some by Dr. J. Mills, late Prebendary of 


xii 


Canterbury. 
order.”’ 


PREFACE, 


All of them now inserted in their proper 


He then gives the following account of the notes and 


their sources*. 


* With respect to the first publi- 
cation of these notes, the following cor- 
respondence will be interesting. It is 
inserted in a folio Prayer-book of 1619, 
in Bp. Cosin’s library at Durham, (D. 
III. 5,) described at the end of this 
preface. The second letter is a rough 
draft of Dr. Pickering’s reply to Ni- 
cholls’ first letter, written on the back 
of that letter. The Bishop of Dur- 
ham at the time was Nathaniel, Lord 
Crewe :— 


“For the Rev. Dr. Pickering, Pre- 


bendary of Durham, Durham. 
St. James’ Square, London, 
Apr. 4, 1709. 

Reverend Sir,—The MSS. notes 
which you have been pleased to send 
me are wonderfully liked by all parties, 
for persons of different opinions in these 
matters have viewed them with. satis- 
faction. You gave me no limitations 
as to the use of them, and therefore I, 
taking the advice of most of our Bi- 
shops in town, think of publishing them 
entire, only by omitting repetitions, 
and translating some of the long Latin 
notes. As for Bp. Cosins his par- 
ticularities, viz. his bodily though un- 
determinable presence, and his praying 
for the dead, I must make some short 
apologetical note upon; though my lord 
of Durham is for having me leave them 
out, but the Bp. of Lincoln (Dr. Wake, 
added in another hand), who is tender 
enough in these matters, is for having 
them printed as they are. I have sent 
down the new Proposals, if any of the 
clergy in the neighbourhood are willing 
to be subscribers, but for yourself, Sir, 
to be sure you need not take any 
care. My amanuensis takes care that 
your book shall not be injured in the 
transcribing. 

I am, Sir, 
Your most obliged 
and humble servant, 
Witt, NiIcHoLts. 

If any subscribe for my use, I make 
the deduction of the 7th Book, and will 
pick out the strongest, and at 17s. the 
Book, and will take care the Book shall 
be sent down to Durham. 

In dorso. 

Rev. Sir,—When I acquainted you 

with my collection, your desire was to 


extract some notes out of it, [and not 
to publish the whole,] and with this 
limitation which yourself set, I sent 
my book up to you. 

{ heard nothing from you of the re- 
ceipt thereof, till the Postman told me 
that you... publish the whole. But 
notwithstanding that advertisement, I 
must beg of you before you proceed any 
farther to wait upon my Lord of Dur- 
ham, with my book, and to follow his 
Lordship’s directions in any thing re- 
lating thereunto. 

I have lately, in a private library, 
met with large addenda to Bp. Cosin’s 
notes on the Common Prayer, all un- 
der the Bp.’s own hand. The manu- 
script is an 8vo., of near 300 pages, and 
designed by him to be inserted into his 
larger book of annotations. 

They ought to be both printed, or 
not at all. 

I am, Rev. Sir, 
Y¥' affect. Bro. and Serv. 
Ne 

Sedgef{ield], Apr. 16, 1709. 


St. James’ Square, Lond., 
Apr. 26, 1709. 

Reverend Sir,—Yours of the 17th 
instant, which you were pleased to 
honour me with, I received, and am 
heartily sorry that I should have given 
you any occasion of falling under your 
displeasure. Your sending up the Book 
to be serviceable to my design, was I 
thought to make use of it in any way I 
should think most proper, and indeed 
I had no other thoughts but to extract 
some few matters out of it. But I was 
driven from that resolution by the rea- 
sons of some very wise and great men. 
And in particular I consulted my Ld. 
of Durham about it, who declared that 
the notes ought not to be extracted; that, 
as they belonged to his library, he ought 
to give direction as to the printing any 
of them, and that they must stand by 
themselves. Nor was I content only 
with this general direction, but I waited 
upon him a second time with the proof 
of the Proposals, which was brought 
me by the printer, when his Lordship 
was pleased to alter that clause to his 
mind, and that in the presence of 
his Lordship’s chaplain. When some 


PREFACE. Xili 


** dn explication of the marks in the Additional Notes. 


“*-+ signifies MSS. notes written in an interleaved Com- 
mon Prayer-Book, in the Bishop of Durham’s library, printed | 
in the year 1619, supposed to be made from the collections 
of Bishop Overall, by a friend or chaplain of his; a copy of 
which MSS. is in the hands of the Reverend Dr. Hickes, 
some part thereof being printed by him in his preface to his 
‘Christian Priesthood.’” (These form the first series in 
this volume. ) | 

“Cf signifies MSS. notes in another Common Prayer- 
Book, in the Bishop of Durham’s library, collected by Bishop 
Cosins, and written in an interleaved Common Prayer-Book, 
printed 1638, both which were communicated by the Reverend 
Dr. Theophilus Pickering, prebendary of Durham, with the 
leave of the Right Honourable and Right Reverend the 
Bishop.” (This is our second series.) 

“C ** signifies Bishop Cosin’s Additional Notes in a MS. 
in 8vo., containing about 300 pages, written in Bishop Cosin’s 
own hand, and being in the possession of the Reverend Mr. 
C. Neil, vicar of Northallerton in Yorkshire, were commu- 
nicated by him, at the instance of Dr. Pickering; the title of 
which Additional Notes is, Liturgica, sive Annotata ad Divina 
Officia, presertim ea que publica authoritate celebrantur in 
Ecclesia Anglicana, sparsim hic et sine ordine collecta, sed 
deinceps locis quibusque suis inserenda, et ad marginem libri 


few were printed off according to this are pleased to send the book. If you 


direction, the first that were delivered 
to any person were sent down to you by 
the Durham carrier before they were 
published in the prints, with my letter 
to you concerning what my Lord had 
commanded me to do. Since I have 
been very ill, and for some time forced 
to keep within doors, To-morrow I 
think of going out to wait upon my 
Lord, to take his further directions ; 
though I confess I shall be so plunged 
upon the retraction of your former fa- 
vour, that I know not what to do. The 
proposals are sent all over England, 
and subscriptions made in all parts; 
your MSS. is transcribed, and some 
_ parts of it translated. If you think fit 
to have the addenda of Bp.Cosen pub- 
lished, I will take care they shall be 
inserted in their proper places, if you 


will have none of yours printed, I must 
publish only those in Dr. Hickes’ book, 
which are nine parts in ten the same 
with yours. But to send advertise- 
ments of this round the nation is a 
trouble which I hope you will not put 
me upon, and my good Lord of Dur- 
ham, to whom you refer yourself, and 
under whose direction I acted, will not 
be for. I am perfectly resigned to your 
good pleasure, to do what you think fit 
in this affair, and to improve all oppor- 
tunities of testifying your great favour 
to, Reverend Sir, 
Your most obliged 
and most humble servant, 
Witt. NIcHo.L.s. 
For the Rev. Dr. Pickering, Prebendary 
of Durham, at Durham.” 


XIV PREFACE. 


precum reliquorumque divinorum collocanda.” (These form our 
third series. ) 

«+? W-? signifies MSS. notes of Bishop Andrewes, partly 
_ taken out of the library of my Lord Bishop of Durham, and 
partly out of a MS. communicated by the Reverend Mr, C. 
Neil, vicar of Northallerton in Yorkshire. 

“M. signifies MSS. notes written by Dr. Mills, late pre- 
bendary of Canterbury, and Principal of Edmund Hail, 
Oxon., communicated by the Reverend Mr. Pierce, Vice- 
Principal of Edmund Hall.” 


Of these, the notes last specified, marked M., are ween 
to this preface. 

Those marked *?: W :?: suites in fact a portion of the notes 
in the Prayer-Book of 1619, are reprinted in their places in 
the first series of notes, as they occur in the original. They 
will be also found, with notices of the various readings of 
several copies, in the volume of Bp. Andrewes’ Minor Works, 
published for the Anglo-Catholic Library, Oxford, 1854. 


The first series of notes was originally mentioned by Hickes, 
in the Prefatory Discourse to his “ Two Treatises on the Chris- 
tian Priesthood, and the Dignity of the Episcopal Order,” 
(published in 1707,) in the following passage”: ‘“ And to these 
authorities of learned men in print, I shall add others of no 
less moment out of an interleaved Book of Common Prayer, 
with notes, which I happened to meet with, and value very 
much.” ... ‘This book was imprinted in folio at London by 
Robert Barker, printer to the king’s most excellent majesty, 
- Anno Dom. 1617. I cannot tell who was the author or col- 
lector of the notes, but perhaps some other person may by 
these following observations: At the third exhortation to the 
Communion, he refers to his sermon on the Pharisee and 
Publican, Luke xviii. 18, part 2. At the prayer before con- 
secration, ‘vid. Conc. nostram in 1 Cor. xi. [27.] Whoso- 
ever shall eat, &c., he speaks of Bishop Overall, as then 
bishop of Norwich. At baptism; ‘ Vide Concionem meam 
ad John iii. [5.] Except ye be born of water, &e. ‘ Liber 
Constit, Ecclesie Anglicane, qui compositus est ab illo qui 

> Hickes’ Two Treatises, vol. i. p.107. ed. Oxford, 1847. 


. PREFACE. XV 


moor avtdéwos addXwv, J. O.’—He often calls him my Lord 
Overall in his notes. In the Catechism at these words, 
‘Secondly, in God the Son, who hath redeemed me,’ &c. 
‘ Vide Concionem meam in hunc locum tempore pomeridiano.’ 
At the office of burial, ‘ Vide Concionem nostram ad Ps. xcvi. 
[9.] O worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness.’ 

On this passage it is to be observed, 1. that the date of the 
Prayer-Book is 1619, not 1617; 2. that what Hickes had 
was a copy, as it contained observations which are not in the 
original; the repeated Vide concionem nostram not being 
in any case found there, nor the words Liber Constit., &c. 
3. That as these passages are not in the original, so neither 
is there any evidence that they are Bp. Cosin’s; it would 
rather seem that his notes had been transcribed by some one 
else, who had added these memoranda. 4. Dr. Nicholls had 
this copy; see his second letter, in the note, page xiii. 

Owing to these remarks of Hickes, that series of notes 
came to be known as Overall’s Collections, or as Notes by a 
friend of Overall’s, and are often cited (indeed till lately 
were only cited) in connexion with Overall’s name. 

There can, however, be no doubt that they are Bp. Cosin’s. 
Besides the entry in the catalogue of his library already 
cited, the handwriting would be quite decisive. The nu- 
merous specimens of Cosin’s writing at Durham, from the 
early period at which his sermons there preserved were 
written, down to the close of his life, afford ample oppor- 
tunity for recognising his hand, and for observing its 
gradual changes. Still the notes may not have been re- 
cognised as Cosin’s by Dr. Pickering and Dr. Nicholls, 
from the great difference between the early and later hand- 
writing of Bp. Cosin; the notes in the first series being 
for the most part written in a very fine and minute hand, 
so as now to require good eyes to read them; those in the 
second series being for the most part in a large strong hand, 
such as Cosin’s became as he grew older; the gradual 
transition may be traced, but there are some breaks in 
the second series, as if he had resumed his annotations in 
that book after a lapse of some time. 


The interleaved Prayer-Books containing the first and 


Xvi PREFACE,. 


second series of notes are still preserved in Bishop Cosin’s 
Library at Durham, (that of 1619 being marked C. I. 2, that 
of 1636 C. I. 1). Nicholls’ text has been collated with these 
MSS., and by this means many errors have been corrected, 
and omissions supplied. The original Latin text has been 
uniformly preserved where Nicholls had given a translation 
only. | 

Of the omissions supplied from this collation, some, as 
in the instance of the notes on the Invention of the Cross, 
on the Assumption, and St. Augustine’s Day, and on the 
Creed of St. Athanasius, in the second series, were designed 
by Nicholls; of the others, some, as the notes on the Act of 
Uniformity, and on the Ordination Services, in the second 
series, and a few on the Psalms, may have been overlooked 
by his transcriber. 

The editor has used every means, as he believes others had 
done before, to recover the MS. of the third series of notes, 
but without success. In consequence, he is obliged in that 
series to follow Nicholls almost implicitly, and leave some 
passages with evidently incorrect readings, such as the first 
two series previously contained; many of the errors in Ni- 
cholls’ edition of those two series being very great, and 
altering entirely the meaning of the passages in which they 
occur. 

It must be observed further, that Nicholls threw the 
three series together under the portions of the Prayer-Book 
to which they respectively belonged; the present editor 
has adopted the course of printing them separately. He 
is aware that some inconvenience will result from having 
to consult three different portions of the volume for the 
comments on any particular passage in the Book of Com- 
mon Prayer, but as the series differ considerably in the 
time of their composition, in the tone which runs through 
them, and in the authors from whom the collections are 
made, their combination in one work gave not only the im- 
pression of needless repetition, but of a variation of view, 
which is explained, and to a great degree removed, when they 
are read separately. The inconvenience in reference may 
be in some degree obviated by the table of contents, in 
which, under each portion of the Prayer-Book, references 


PREFACE. : XVli 


are given to the pages in each series which illustrate it. To 
assist in finding places cited by reference to the pages of 
Nicholls, a table of the comparative pagings of the two 
editions has been added. 


One result of the process of editing these notes, has been 
the discovery that they are to a great extent, especially in 
the second series, collections rather than original anno- 
tations. It will be seen, that very many portions of the first 
series are extracted or translated from Maldonatus de Sacra- 
mentis. This was first found to be the case in the course of 
editing Hickes’s two Treatises, vol. i. pp. 107, sqq. ed. Anglo- 
Cath. 1847, where a long passage on the Sacrifice inthe 
Holy Eucharist is cited by Hickes as the work of the writer 
of the notes, and has often been referred to as such: it is 
really a translation of passages selected from Maldonatus, 
but yet expressing views in which the writer substantially 
coincided. So in the second series it appears that very 
copious extracts on the same subject were made (at a much 
later period) from Calixtus de Sacrificio Christi, published 
at Helmstadt in 1644°; and passages out of many other 
writers have been found, without their names being added. 
So much so that the editor is disposed to think that all the 
Latin notes (except some short ones, and others that are 
manifestly Bp. Cosin’s own) are extracts; though there are 
still a few instances in which he has not been able to assign 
them to their proper authors. 

Indeed it is evident from an examination of the original 
MSS. that much of the contents of these interleaved Prayer- 
Books consists of collections made by Cosin in the course 
of his reading. From the differences in the handwriting 
it may be seen that as he read a work he copied out 
any portion which seemed to illustrate the Prayer-Book, 
into his interleaved volume; and by minute observation 
we may thus almost trace the subjects and order of his 
reading. 

As to the times at which the collections and notes were 
made, the editor can only put out what appears to him the 


© These were translated by Nicholls, posed to be Bishop Cosin’s own, when 
and consequently were more easily sup- _read cursorily or in extracts. 


COSIN. b 


XVili PREFACE, 


most probable view. The dates of the two Prayer-Books, 
1619 and 1638, taken in connexion with the character of the 
handwriting and the dates of the publication of works or 
editions cited, and some occasional notices, have led him to 
the following conclusions. 

1. That the first series of notes, in the interleaved Prayer- 
Book of 1619, ranged from that year or soon after, when 
the most were written, till (probably) the year 1638 or 
thereabouts. The chief works which Cosin used at that 
time were, a collection of early Treatises on Liturgical 
subjects in Hittorpius de Divinis Offciis, Durandus, per- 
haps some fathers, though it is very uncertain to what 
extent the references to their works are original,. the 
works of Cassander and that of Maldonatus de Sacramentis 
already referred to. Bp. Andrewes’ Sermons, published in 
1629, Hooker, and several other English writers, are also 
used. Into this volume (after many of his own notes 
were written) he transcribed at their respective places 
Bp. Andrewes’ Notes on the Common Prayer, and in one 
place noted upon them, see p. 44. References are made 
throughout to the objections to the Service-book contained 
im a work now rare, but apparently one of the most sys- 
tematic and authoritative collections of the objections of 
the Puritans, entitled, “A Survey of the Book of Com- 
mon Prayer,” sent out in 1606; of which there is a copy 
in the Douce Collection in the Bodleian Library. 

The prevailing character of the notes of this period is 
deference to Catholic Antiquity, and an exhibition of the 
substantial agreement between the Reformed Church of 
England and the Latin Church, though with decided oppo- 
sition to what Bp. Cosin considered peculiar Roman teaching: 
this will be seen especially in the notes on the Eucharistic 
Sacrifice and the eho e. g: at pp. 106, 109, 120, 
142, 150. , 

2. The second series of notes written in the Prayer-Book 
of 1638 seems to be the work of two periods. The extracts 
from the Sarum Missal carried on regularly through the 
series, and those from Lyndwood’s Provinciale, appear to have 
been made soon after 1638. The very large extracts from 
Calixtus are of course after 1644, the date of its publication ; 


PREFACE. X1X 


and some are after 1656, the date of the composition of 
Cosin’s work on Transubstantiation, as appears by the refer- 
ence to it in p. 345. Grotius’s Commentaries, first pub- 
lished in 1641, and A®rodius de Rebus ab omni Antiquitate 
Judicatis, were also, as it seems, read and largely used by 
him at this time. 

But it ought to be observed that Cosin, as was natural, 
made additions to the notes from time to time, often in the 
margin by the side of the original, or at the end with a 
note-mark to the part of the first written note which he in- 
tended to refer to. These points have been noticed when- 
ever they appeared of importance. 

The character of the later part, at least, of this second 
series of notes is to oppose the Anglican view of doctrine to 
the Roman, and there is a controversial tone in them in this 
respect, which is in marked contrast with that of the former 
series. Thus considered, they illustrate the apparent change 
of Cosin’s views. Up to 1638 an union of the Western 
Churches, or at least a better mutual understanding between 
them, might have been an object of hope. Afterwards Cosin’s 
own son left the communion of the English Church for that 
of Rome; and the special post which he himself held as 
chaplain among the English refugees at Paris, was that of 
guarding them against the attempts continually made, and 
often successfully, to draw them over. It does not however 
so much appear that Cosin’s own views of doctrine had 
altered, as that during the earlier part of his life he dwelt 
on points of agreement, during the latter on points of dif- 
ference, between us and Rome. 

3. The date of the third series of notes there is not the 
same means of ascertaining; but the editor’s impression is 
that most of them were written before 1640, as they contain 
no reference whatever to the changes that occurred then, 
and the author speaks as if the Church was in possession of 
her ordinary powers, and suggests corrections in the rubrics, 
He would observe that when Cosin wrote what forms a part 
of them, namely, the references to the First Book of Com- 
mon Prayer, 2 Edw. VI., and to Bucer’s exceptions to it, he 
_ used not that Prayer-Book itself, but the Latin translation 
by Alesius, reprinted in Bucer’s Scripta Anglicana; in con- 

b2 


XX PREFACE. 


sequence of which many erroneous statements have been 
made by him. 

It will be found that Cosin used his interleaved Prayer- 
Book very much as a commonplace-book. In the second 
Book he had commenced a series of expositions, historical 
and other, on the Epistles and Gospels, pp. 255, sqq. Again, 
he used it occasionally for sketches of sermons, partly filled 
up. See p. 76, note b, and the preceding pages. Again, he 
commenced his Notes on the Kalendar in the first Prayer- 
Book, but left them incomplete; he continued them in the 
second, which he also used for writing long essays against 
the Invention of the Cross and the Feast of the Assump- 
tion, which were probably written when he was at Paris. 
And in the first and third are several distinct disquisitions. 


Whilst the editor conceives that very much valuable matter 
is here brought together for the illustration of the Prayer- 
Book, and the doctrines involved in it, and many important 
testimonies to the doctrine of the Church of England as 
received by those who maintained it in its integrity against 
the Puritans, he is aware that portions of the work, such as 
the notes on the Saints’ Days in the Kalendar, and state- 
ments respecting ecclesiastical antiquities, are derived from 
works which are of little or no authority, and cannot be re- 
lied on as matter of historical truth. 


Three appendices are annexed. 1. Some “ Particulars to 
be considered, explained, and corrected, in the Book of Com- 
mon Prayer,” respecting which the editor conceives, as he 
has stated in the note, p. 502, that they were drawn up by 
Cosin about the year 1640, when a revision of the Book of 
Common Prayer was in contemplation. 2. “A Discourse on 
Confirmation,” inserted in Bp. Cosin’s Prayer-Book with 
alterations, (D. III. 5.) and printed by Nicholls, p. 57, but 
not forming a part of any of these series of notes. 3. A 
Determination de Die Dominico, omitted in the fourth volume 
of Bp. Cosin’s Works, see p. 529. 


In the British Museum there is an interleaved and anno- 
tated Prayer-Book, which is thus described in the catalogue 


PREFACE, XAl 


of the Harleian MSS., No. 7311 :—“ The Book of Common- 
Prayer, Lond. 1625, with a great many notes and observa- 
tions, in the handwriting of Dr. John Cosins, Bishop of Dur- 
ham.” The following note is written on one of the first 
leaves by Mr. Wanley :—“ This book is noted, for the most 
part, by the hand of Dr. John Cosins, sometime Bishop of 
Durham, and was bought of Dr. White Kennet, now Bishop 
of Peterburgh, who found it by chance in a private house in 
Peterburgh aforesaid. The particulars contained in it ought 
to be specified. They are as follows. ... 8. The notes of Bp. 
Cosins on the Liturgy, subscribed, ‘ Let me live and dye an 
obedient son of the Church of England my holy mother, and 
I shall be sure to find God my Father. 1648. ” 

The editor examined this volume carefully a day or two 
after he had finished collating the Durham MSS., and was 
convinced that the handwriting was not Bishop Cosin’s; nor 
the notes made by him. He has confined himself to what 
are undoubtedly Bp. Cosin’s. 


It had been the intention and earnest wish of the editor 
to have added to this volume another appendix, containing 
a document of great interest in connexion with the history 
of the last revision of our Prayer-Book ; but the length to 
which the volume has already extended precluded the possi- 
bility of doing this. 

The document referred to is a Book of Common Prayer of 
the year 1619, corrected and altered throughout in Bp. Cosin’s 
hand, with further corrections of Cosin’s suggested altera- 
tions, made in Sancroft’s handwriting. Of the whole so 
altered there is a fair copy in Sancroft’s hand, in a Prayer- 
Book of 1634, preserved in the Bodleian Library. The book 
as prepared by Cosin and copied by Sancroft seemed de- 
signed for the printer’s use, as it contains directions for 
spaces, for “a faire flower,” and other typographical orna- 
ments. 

It is evident from a comparison of these alterations with 
our present Prayer-Book, that they formed the basis of the 
revision by Convocation in 1661, and were to a great extent 
adopted by it; and the conclusion to which the editor has 
come is that Cosin prepared the alterations, that they were 


Xxll PREFACE. 


then submitted to a committee of Bishops who were ap- 
pointed to prepare the book for revision by Convocation‘, 
and that the corrections in Sancroft’s hand on the whole 
represent the modifications made by that committee. The 
employment of Sancroft as their secretary is likely from his 
position as Cosin’s chaplain, and from his being ultimately 
entrusted with the supervision of the printing of the book. 
The nature of the alterations generally confirms the view 
that they were thus made. In some instances, a passage 
proposed to be inserted by Cosin is first corrected in San- 
croft’s hand, and then struck out altogether; as would be 
done in such acommittee. Again, the alterations as modified 
in Sancroft’s hand come nearer to those actually adopted 
than Cosin’s original suggestions; and the absence of the 
Prayer for all Conditions of Men, and the General Thanks- 
giving, which are known to have been introduced as the book 
passed through Convocation, confirms the view. But the ques- 
tion seems almost determined by notes in the Durham and 
the Bodleian books, as will be seen by the extracts in the note, 
p- 518. Cosin proposed a re-arrangement and modification 
of the Prayers of Address, of the Consecration, Oblation, and 
the Lord’s Prayer, in the Communion Office; at the bottom 
of the page in the Durham book is written in Sancroft’s hand, 
“My Lords the bishops at Ely House ordered all in the old 
method, thus,” &c.: in the fair copy in the Bodleian, Cosin’s 
arrangement is written on inserted paper marked B, and at 


4 The following is an extract from 
the proceedings of the Upper House of 
Convocation. Gibson’s Synodus An- 
glicana, Appendix, pp. 83, 84. Die 
Jovis 21 die mensis Novembris inter 
horas secundam et quartam.... di- 
misso Prolocutore, cum cetu Domus 
inferioris, dictus reverendus Pater una 
cum dictis reverendis patribus confra- 
tribus suis tractatum et colloquium ha- 
buit de Revisione Libri publicarum 
Precum, &c., juxts potestatem et liber- 
tatem per easdem Regias [Jiteras] eis 
concessam, &c. Et ad eundem effec- 
tum, dictus Reverendus Pater, cum 
unanimi consensu confratrum suorum, 
elegit Reverendos in Christo Patres 
ee Dunelmen’, Mattheum Elien’, 
Robertum Oxon’, Johannem Roffen’, 
Humfridum Sarwin, Georgium Wigorn’, 


Robertum Lincoln’, et Willelmum 
Gloucestren’; et commisit vices suas 
eisdem, aut eorum tribus ad minus, ad 
procedendum in dicto negotio; et ordi- 
navit eos ad conveniendum apud Pala- 
tium Reverendi Patris Domini Epis- 
copi Elien’, hora quinta post meri- 
diem cujuslibet diei (exceptis diebus 
Dominicis), donec dictum negotium 
perficiatur. Et postea consensum fuit 
inter dictos Episcopos pro meliore et 
citiore festinatione dicti negotii, ut 
dictus Liber Publicarum Precum re- 
videatur in hac domo pro presenti; et 
magna parte ejusdem perlecta et re- 
visa usque ad .... dictus Reveren- 
dus Pater, &c. Continuavit, &c. The 
Bishops were Cosin, Wren, Skinner, 
Warner, Henchman, Morley, Sander- 
son, and Nicholson, 


PREFACE. Xxili 
the place where the new arrangement begins is noted in the 
margin in Sancroft’s hand; “‘ What follows from hence to 
the end of the distribution is somewhat otherwise methodized 
in the paper B, and both left to censure.” It will be seen 
from the extract from the Register of Convocation given 
above, that Ely House was the place of meeting of the Com- 
mittee of Bishops, as it was on other occasions*®. The editor 
has accordingly presumed to speak of the corrections in San- 
croft’s hand as made by the Bishops. The rapidity with 
which a large part of the earlier portion of the Prayer- Book 
was revised by the Bishops in the Upper House of Convoca- 
tion, as appears from the same extract, may be accounted 
for by the circumstance that Cosin had thus made his cor- 
rections in preparation for it; and also that the alterations 
in the earlier part of the book were not such as to give rise 
to discussion. 

We find in these books the new Collects for the Third 
Sunday in Advent, the Sixth after Epiphany, and Easter- 
even, being in that at Durham in the very hand of their 
author, with alterations of other Collects. Again, before 
1662 there were no prayers for the Ember days in the 
Service-book. Cosin, in his alterations, inserted our first 
prayer, (which had appeared before in his own book of 
Devotions, A.D. 1627); some expressions are altered in this 
prayer, and the second, derived from our own Ordinal, 
added in Sancroft’s hand. So Cosin proposed a special 
Collect for the Monday in Easter week, which appears also 
in Sancroft’s fair copy: 


**O God, who for our redemption didst suffer Thine only-begotten Son to die 
upon the Crosse, and by His glorious Resurrection hast delivered us from the 
power of our ghostly enemies; Grant us so to die daily from sinne, that we may 
evermore live with Him in the joy of His resurrection, through the same Christ 
our Lord. Amen.” | 


The words in italics are crossed out; whether by Cosin or 


¢ From the extracts from the Journal 
of Convocation given in D’Oyly’s life of 
Sancroft, vol. i. p. 113, it appears that 
such meetings of the bishops were held 
at Ely House, probably for the con- 
venience of the aged Bishop Wren. 
** 1661, May 16. Chosen to attend the 


Bishops at Elie House, the next morn- 
ing at 8 o’clock, concerning a form of 
prayer for May 29, ‘the Prolocutor,’ &c. 
June 7. A form of prayer... referred 
to eight of this house, (who are to attend 
four bishops at Elie House this after- 
noon),’’ &e. 


XXiv PREFACE. 


Sancroft does not appear. Then he proposed the following 
service for the Rogation days: 


“ The three Rogatton days. 
** The Collect. 

* Almighty God, Lord of heaven and earth, in whom we live, and move, and 
have our being, who dost good unto all men, making Thy sunne to rise-on the 
evil and on the good, and sending raine on the just and on the unjust; Fayour- 
ably behold us Thy people, who call upon Thy name, and send us Thy blessing 
from heaven, in giving us fruitful seasons, and filling our hearts with food and 
gladness, that both our hearts and mouths may be continually filled with Thy 
praises, giving thanks to Thee in Thy holy Church through Jesus Christ our 
Lord. Amen.” 


** The Epistle. S. James v. 13 to the 16th verse. 
** The Gospel. S. Luke xi. 1 to the 11th verse.’’ 


The word ‘three’ is crossed out, whether by Cosin or San- 
croft does not appear, and in Sancroft’s hand is added, 
“print these out at large,” and “stent.” Cosin also added 
proper Psalms for the three Rogation days: ? 

** Rogation Monday. Ps. 12, 13, 107, 86, 90. 

‘* Rogation Tuesday. Ps. 28, 42, 46, 70. 

“ Rogation Wednesday. Ps. 8, 19, 33, 103, 104, 144.” 

Again, as has been said, Cosin proposed additions to, and 
changes in the arrangement of the Prayers of Consecration, 
Oblation, and the Lord’s Prayer in the Communion-service : 
the Bishops agreed that both forms should be “ left to cen- 
sure” (it is presumed in Convocation). Again, the periods 
during which marriages are prohibited were proposed to be 
inserted by Cosin, who also proposed many verbal and 
somewhat curious alterations, as the name “ Dominical” 
instead of Sunday; e.g. “the first Dominical in Advent,” 
&c., which was not adopted by the Bishops. 

With the view of exhibiting some of the more important 
of the suggested alterations which were not embodied in 
our Prayer-Book, they have been given in the notes to Bp. 
Cosin’s earlier suggestions at pages 502—528 of this volume. 
Some notices of the alterations in the Prayer-Book as they 
appear in the fair copy in the Bodleian Library will be 
found in Dr. Cardwell’s History of the Conferences, &c. 
pp. 388—291. 

It is to be hoped that the whole of the suggested altera- 
tions may yet be published. 


PREFACE, XXV 


The editor cannot conclude without expressing his obli- 
gations to friends who have greatly assisted him in his work, 
and especially to the Warden and other members of the 
University of Durham, to whose courtesy he is indebted 
for much information respecting the MS. works of Bp. 
Cosin, and particularly for the facilities afforded him for 
collating the notes in the interleaved Prayer-Book, and for 
copious transcripts from the corrected book of 1619. 

eB: 


St. Edmund Hall, Oxford, 
May 29, 1855. 





The following are the notes by Dr. Mill, printed by 
Nicholls, Additional Notes, pp. 5,9. The editor has not 
been able to discover the original MS. :— 


ON THE ACT OF UNIFORMITY. 


Uniform.| Can. 106. Concilit Carthag. Anno Dom. 419°. 
IT \ a \ 4 ? a , e fa) 

ept THY Tpos OvoracTHpLov Opetdovoay AéyedOau ikeoLov. 
"Hpecev xal todto (tH cuvddw,) @aTE Tas KEKUpwpEevas eV TH 

/ € SYA / Ls oye 

cuvodw ixeolas, elite Tpooipma (preces que initio adhibite sunt) 
elite Tapabéces, (quibus sc. populum quast coram Deo sistebant, 
Eique offerebant) quibus etiam trro@écers addit Zonaras, (seu 
preces ad finem absoluta hymnodia recitari solitas) cite Tas Tijs 
xetpos émulécers (seu preces in ordinum collatione adhibitas) 
ano jwavtwv émitercioOa, Kal TavTedos adras (a sacerdoti- 
bus ac episcopis inter sacra peragenda profusas nonnunquam) 
Kata ths wlorews (tanqguam a fide absonas) wndérote mpoc- 
eveyOjvat, AAN aitwes Simote ard THY TUVETWTEpwY ovV- 
HYOncav, exOncovta. Lx quibus constat publicas ac statas 
preces quasdam in usum Ecclesia Africane tum in usu fuisse, 


f [This canon is found in the so- 
called Concilium Africanum, or Col- 
lection of Canons, can. 70, (Concilia, 
tom. iii. col. 521, C.) and in a Greek 
translation in the Codex Canonum 
Ecclesie Africane, can. 103. (ibid., 
tom. ii. col. 1335, A.) But in Zonaras’ 
Collection of Canons this and many 


others are put together as the canons of 
a council of Carthage; in that collec- 
tion it is numbered 117. The original 
canon appears to be that of the Coun- 
cil of Milevis, next cited. See Zona- 
ras in Canones SS. Apostolorum, &c., 
(pp. 491, 492. Paris, 1618,) whose 
comment is quoted by Mill. ] 


XXV1 PREFACE. 


guibus non licebat Episcopis Ecclesia, nedum inferioris ordinis 
ministris, privatas suas formulas immiscere. 

Placuit, ut preces vel orationes seu missa, que probate fuerint 
an concilio, sive prefationes, sive commendationes, seu manus im- 
positiones, ab omnibus celebrentur. Nec alie omnino dicantur 
in Ecclesia, nisi gue a prudentioribus tractate, vel-comprobate 
in synodo fuerint, ne forte aliquid contra fidem, vel per tgno- 
rantiam vel per minus studium sit compositum. Concil. Milevi- 
tan. secundum, Anno Christi 416. Can. 128. 

Unus ordo orandi atque psallendi, nobis per omnem Hispa- 
niam atque Galliam (seu ut cod. al. Galliciam) conservetur, unus 
modus in missarum solennitatibus, unus in vespertinis matuti- 
nisque officits, nec diversa sit ultra in nobis ecclesiastica con- 
suetudo; qui (codd. al. quia) in una fide continemur et regno. 
Concil. Toletan. IV. Anno Christi 633. can. 2%. 


ON SUNDAY. 


Sundays.| TH Tod jrLov ANeyopéevyn huépa TavT@V KaTa TO- 
evs 4 Aypovs cuvérevots yiveTtat, Kal TA ATro“YNnLovetpaTa 
TOV ATOTTONOD, 7) TA CVYypaupata TOV TpodnTaV davaryl- 
vooKeTar méypis eyywpel. Justin. Apol. 2. p. 77'.  Con- 
suetudo lectionum ab Ecclesia Judaica derivata est: in qua jam 
olim Pentateucho in sectiones majores seu. paraschas diviso, sin- 
gulis septimanis unam parascham sequendo universam legem uno 
anno absolvebant. Lectiones iste hodiernis capitibus aliquanto 
breviores erant. Adjunzere postea in synagogis suis lectionem 
etiam Prophetarum: saltem aliquanto ante Christum natum. 
Hine pericopes a Christo in synagoga lecta mentio, Luc. iv. 20. 
Lectionum e Pentateucho meminit Jacobus, Act. xv.; e Pro- 
phetis, Paulus, Act. xiii. 27. He lectiones hodiernis nostris 
breviores, ac plerumque iis que Hvangelia et Epistolas nomina- 
mus, haud multo majores ; Pentateuchi quidem illa state fuisse 
videntur uti jam nostre ; Prophetarum fortasse non item, siqui- 
dem Salvator noster librum dicitur accepisse e manu brnpérov, 
eoque revoluto, non quidem in lectionem aliquam diet peculiariter 
destinatam incidisse, sed aliam periocham selegisse populo pre- 


& [Cone. Milev. II. (A.D. 416,) 2, apud Concilia, tom. vi. col. 1450, B.] 
can. 12. apud Concilia, tom. iii. col. i [S. Just. Apol. i. § 67. cited be- 
383, D.] low, p. 442, note. ] 

h [Cone. Tolet. IV., A.D. 633. can. 


et hd RESTARTS 


PREFACE. . XXvil 


legendam explicandamque que Messiam spectaret. Utcunque res 
habet, id certum est, morem hune lectionum publicarum a Judeis 
acceptum, mansisse jam ab ipsis Christianismi incunabulis in 
Ecclesia Christiana. Quales vero fuerint iste initio, aut etiam 
tempore Justini: statene ac certis diebus assignate, an vero ad 
arbitrium mpoect@tos hine inde selecta, non constat ex Justino, 
monumentisve ullis Kcclesie Justino prioribus aut coevis. At ex 
Tertulliano verisimile est, arbitrarias fuisse portiones ad libitum 
prasidis recitari solitas. *‘Coimus,” inquit, “ad literarum divina- 
rum commemorationem, siquid presentium temporum qualitas aut 
premonere cogit, aut recognoscere.” Apol. cap. 39*; legebant se. 
partes Scriptura, que pro occasione temporum maximi sibi usus 
esse videbantur. Non alia lectionum ratio tempore Origenis: 
nisi guod ad earum longitudinem. Nam, quum ante breves fere 
essent, tum demum prolixiores subinde erant, ita quidem ut non- 
nunguam una lectio capita tria vel quatuor ex hodiernis nostris 
capitibus absolverit. Nihil adhuc de statis lectionibus; neque 
arbitrariis ipsis quidem, in Ecclesia alio die quovis, quam Do- 
minico, recitatis. Chrysostomi quidem seculo, populus, teste ipso 
Com. in Hebr. viii.' singulis hebdomadis bis vel ter convenit ad 
audiendum Scripture lectionem. Et quidem cum Liturgia certam 
formam accepissent Chrysostomi tempore saltem, aut etiam ali- 
quanto ante Chrysostomum, tum demum pro incertis ac ad libitum 
assignatis capitulis, fixe certisque diebus assignate erant lectiones. 
Hujusmodi precepta sunt in Liturgia Chrysostomi™. Et quidem 
has per totum annum in Ecclesia recitatas in unum volumen 
compingendas curavit Ecclesia, posterioribus seculis. 

Luvex@s akovwv avayivwcKkopévav TOV erLeTOABY TOD pa- 
kapiov IIavvXov, Kat ca® Exdorny EBSopdda Sis, worrdKIs Sé 
kal Tpis Kat TeTpaKts, Hvika av papTipwv dyiwv émuTeNamev 
punpwas, xaipw ev, &c. Chrysost. Prolog. in Epist. Pauli®. 

k [Tert. Apol., c. 39. Op. p. 31,A.] — fuépas.—S. Chysost. Liturg. ap. Goar. 

1 [The editor has not found this Rituale Grecorum, p. 68.] 
passage. |  [S. Chrysost., Hom. in Ep. ad 

m {At the mention of the reading of Rom. argumentum, § 1. Op. tom. ix. 


the apostle there occurs 6 avayvdéorns* pp. 425, A.] 
To Tpokeluevoy TOD aroordAov Kal Tis 


a See 


ae 


tye eu ay Lt 


er 
re; 
cS 





: 
ft big re 
he é, 





C2 ee Soe 


THE FOLLOWING EDITIONS 
WHERE OTHERS 


Apo, Martyrologium, Rome, 1745. 

et ap. Bibl. Max. Pa- 
trum, tom. xvi. Lugd. 1677. 

fErodius, P., Decretorum libri sex, 
8vo. Paris. 1573. 

Rerum ad omni antiqui- 
tate judicatarum Pandectz, fol. Paris. 
1588. 

Alcuinus,-de Divinis Officiis, ap. Hit- 
torp. de Div. Off. 

Alesius, Ordinatio Ecclesie in regno 
Angliz, Lipsiz, 1551; et ap. Buceri 
Scripta Anglicana. 

Amalarius Fortunatus de Eccl. Officio, 
ap. Hittorp. de Div. Off. 

Ambrosius, S., Op. ed. Ben. fol. Paris. 
1686— 90. 

Anastasius Bibliothecarius, de Vitis 
Pont. Rom. fol. Rom. 1731. 

Sinaita, de S. Synaxi, ap. 
Canisii Lect. Antiq., tom. i. 

Andrewes, L., Sermons, ed. fol. Lond. 

1629. 














Works, ed. Angl. Cath. 
8vo. Oxford, 1842, sqq. 

Anselmus, S., Op. fol. Paris. 1721. 

Antoninus, Ep. Flor. Summa Historia- 
lis, fol. Lugd. 1586. 

Aquinas, S. Thom. Op. Venet. 1593. 

Assemani, Codex Liturg. Eccl, Univ. 
4to. Rome, 1749—66. 

Athanasius, S., Op. ed. Ben. fol. Paris. 
1698. 

Augustinus, S., Op. ed. Ben. fol. Paris. 
1721—30. 
Baker, Sir Rich., A Chronicle of the 
Kings of England, ed. Lond. 1730. 
Baleus, (Bale, ) Joan. Scriptorum illus- 
trium Britannie Catalogus, Basil. 
1559. 

Balsamon, Th., Canones cum Com- 
mentariis, fol. Paris. 1620. 

Baptista Mantuanus, Op. Antw. 1576. 

Baronius, Annales Eccles., fol. ed. 
Luce, 1738—46. 

Basilius, S., Op. ed. Ben. fol. Paris. 
1721—30. 

Beda, Eccles. Hist. et Martyrologium, 
ed. Smith, fol. Cantab, 1722. 

Beda, Op. fol. Col, Agrip. 1612. 


HAVE BEEN USED, EXCEPT 
ARE SPECIFIED. 


Beleth, Joan., Div. Off. Explicatio, ad 
calc. Durand. Rat. Div. Off. Lugd. 
1574. 

Bellarminus, R. Op. fol. Venet. 1721. 

Bernardus Lutzenburgus, Catalogus 
Hereticorum, ed. Colon. 1529. 

———— S., Op. ed. Ben. fol. 
Paris. 1719. 

Berno-Augiensis, de quibusdam rebus 
ad missam spectantibus, ap. Hittor- 
pium de Divinis Officiis. 

Beza, Theod., Epistolz Theologice, ed. 
2. Genev. 1575. 

Bibliotheca Patrum, de la Bigne, Auc- 
tarium, Paris.-1624. 





Maxima, fol. Lugd. 
1677. 
Bonaventura, S., Op. fol. Rome, 
1596. 


Brentius, Joan., Op. fol. Tubinge, 
1576—90. 

Breviarium seu Pontiforium in usum 
insignis Ecclesie Sarisburiensis, 
4to. Lond. 1555. 

Bucerus, Mart., Scripta Anglicana, 
fol. Basilez, 1577. 

Burchardus, Episc. Wormat., Decreto- 
rum libri xx. ed. Paris. 1549. 

Calixtus, Georg., Exercitatio de Sacri- 
ficio Christi in cruce oblato et inite- 
rabili, Helmstadt, 1644. 

Calvinus, Joan., Op. fol. Amst. 1667. 

Camdenus, Gul., Annales rerum Angl. 
et Hib. regn. Elizabeth., Lond. 
1615. 

Canisius, Lectiones Antique, fol. Ant. 
1725. 

Capitularia Regum Francorum, ed. 
Baluz. Paris. 1677. 

Casaubon, Isaac, Exercitationes in Ba- 
ronium, ed. Genev. 1655. 

Cassander, Georgius, Op. fol. Paris. 
1616, 

Cassianus, Op. fol. Atrebati, 1628. 

Cassiodorus, M.A., Op. fol. Rotomagi, 
1679. 

Chemnitius, Examen Decretorum Conc. 
Trident. ed. Francof. 1574. 

Christian Directory, (see Parsons, Ro- 
bert). 


XXX 


Chrysostomus, S. Op. ed. Ben. fol. 
Paris. 1718—38. 





(Latine, fol. 
Paris. 1546.) 

Clemens Alexandrinus, Op. ed. Potter, 
Oxon. 1715. 

Conciliorum Collectio, Labbe et Cois- 
sart, ed. Colet. fol. Venet. 1728%. 

Confessionum Sylloge, Oxon. 1827. 

Critici Sacri, fol. Amst. 1698. 

Cyprianus, S., Op. ed. Ben. fol. Paris, 
1726. 





(ed. Fell. fol. Oxon. 
1682.) 
Cyrillus, S., Alexand., Op. fol. Paris. 
1638. 
S., Hierosolym., Op. fol. 
Paris. 1720. 
Damascenus, S. Joannes, Op. ed. Le- 
quien, fol. Paris. 1712. 
Damasus, S., Op. ed. fol. Rome, 
1754. 
Lib. Pontificalis, see Anastasius. 
Dionysius Areopagita, S., (Pseudo.) 
Op. ed. Corderius, Venet. 1755. 
Dorotheus, Episc. Tyr. (Pseudo) de 
vita ac morte Prophet. et Apost. 
Synopsis, ap. Bibl. Patr. Max. tom. 
iii. 
Duchesne, Historie Francorum Serip- 
tores, fol. Paris. 1636—41. 
Durandus, Rationale Div. Off. fol. Ma- 
triti, 1775, (and Lugd. 1574.) 
, de S. Portiano sup. Sen- 
tentias, fol. Paris. 1550. 
Ecclesiast. Hist. Scriptores, ed. Read- 
ing, fol. Cantab. 1720. 
Ephraem, S., Syrus, Op. fol. Rome, 
1732. 
Epiphanius, S., Op. ed. Petavius, fol. 
Colon. 1682. 
Eusebius Cesariensis, Hist. Eccles, ap. 
Eccl. Hist. Scriptores, tom. i. 
Vita Constantini, ibid. 
———— Demonstratio Evangelica, 
fol. Paris. 1628. 
Emissenus (Pseudo), Ho- 
miliz, ap. Bibl. Patr. Max. tom. 





Vi. 

Euthymius Zigabenus, Orthod. Fid. 
Dogmatica Panoplia, ed. fol. Venet. 
1555. 

Evagrius, Eccl. Hist. ap. Eccl. Hist. 
Scriptores, tom. iii. 

Fabricius, Codex Apocryphus N, T. 
Hamb. 1703—19. 

Ferus, Joannes, Postille sive Con- 
ciones in Epist. et Evang. ab Adv. 
ad Pasch. 8vo. Antw. 1563. 


LIST OF AUTHORS REFERRED TO. 


Ferus Joannes, Postille, &c., a Pasch. 
ad Ady. 8vo. Paris. 1559. 
Opuscula varia, 8vo. 





Lugd. 1567. 

Gale, Rerum Britan. Scriptores, fol. 
Oxon. 1691. 

Gennadius Massiliensis de Eccl. Dog- 
matibus, ed. Hamburg. 1614. 

Gibson, Codex Juris Eccl. Angl. fol. 
ed. 1761. 

Goar, Euchologium Grzcorum, fol. 
Paris. 1647. 

Godwin, de Presulibus Anglize Com- 
mentarius, fol. Lond. 1743. 

Gratiani Decretum, ap. Corp. Jur. Can. 
tom. i. 

Gregorius Nazianzenus, S., Op. ed. 
Ben. fol. Paris. 1778, 1840. 

Nyssenus, S., Op. fol. Paris. 

1638. 

——— M., S., Cp. ed. Ben. fol. 
Paris. 1705. 

Grotius, H., Commentaria in Evang. 
ap. Crit. Sac., tom. vii. 

Hesychius in Levit. ap. Bibl. Patr. 
Max. tom. xii. 

Hieronymus, S., Op. ed. Vallarsius, 
fol. Veron, 1734—42. 

Higden, Ranulphus, Cestriensis, Poly- 
chronicon ap. Gale Rer. Brit. Seriptt. 

Hilarius, S,, Op. ed. fol. Veronz, 1730. 

Hittorpius, de Divinis Officiis, Rome, 
1591. 

Holstenius, Codex Regularum Monast. 
et Canon., Aug. Vind, 1759. 

Hooker, R., the Laws of Ecclesiastical 
Polity, fol. 1622. 

Works, ed. Keble, Oxford, 








1836. 
Hugo de S. Victore, Op. fol. Lugd. 
1645. , 





de div. Officiis, 
ap. Hittorp. de Div. Off. 

Hylton, Walter, Scala Perfectionis. 
Lond. 1507. 

Ignatius, S., ap. Patr. Apost. 

Innocentius III., de Sacro Altaris 
Mysterio, 8vo. Antw. 1550. 

Irenzus, S., Op. ed. Ben. fol. Paris. 
1710. 

Isidorus, S., Hispalensis, Op. ed. fol. 
Col. Agr. 1617, and (when the re- 
ference is to a volume) ed. Rome, 
4to. 1797—1803. 

Ivo Carnotensis, Op. fol. Paris. 1647. 

Johnson’s English Canons, 8vo, Ox- 
ford, 1850. 

Josephus, Op. ed. Havercamp, fol. 
Amst. 1726. 


@ [In some of the first centuries Mansi’s edition (fol. Venet. 1759—98) has 
occasionally been used, but as the date of each council is given the references 


may be easily verified. ] 


LIST OF AUTHORS REFERRED TO. 


Juris Canonici Corpus, fol. Lugd. 1665. 

Civilis Corpus, ed. Gothofred, 
fol. Amst. 1663. 

Justellus, Bibliotheca Juris Veteris 
Canonici, Paris. 1661. 

Justinus Martyr, S., Op. ed. Ben. fol. 
Paris. 1742. 

Leo, S., Magnus, Op. ed. Ballerini, 
fol. Venet. 1753. 

Lindanus, Gul., Panoplia Evangelica, 
Col. Agripp. 1575. 

Lipomani de Vitis Sanctorum, ed. 
Surius, fol. Venet. 1581. 

Lombardus, Petrus, Liber Senten- 
tiarum, 4to. Lovan. 1568. 

Lutherus, Mart., Op. fol. Witteburg. 
1562. 

Lyndwood, Provinciale Anglicanum, 
fol. Oxon. 1679. 

Maldonatus, Op. Theologica, Paris. 
1677. 

Martyrologium Romanum, cum notis 
Baronii. fol. Rom. 1589. 

Matthzeus Westmonasteriensis, Flores 
Historiarum, fol. Francof. 1601. 

Menologium Grecorum, fol. Urbini, 
1727. 

Mendoza, Franc. de, in iv. Regum 
Libros, fol. Lugd. 1636. 

Micrologus, ap. Hittorpium de Divinis 
Officiis. 

Minucius Felix, Octavius. Lugd. Bat. 
1672. 

Mirezus, Aubertus, Bibliotheca Eccle- 
siastica, ed. Fabricius, fol. Hamb. 
1718. 








Chronica, Antwerp, 1608. 

Missale ad usum insignis Ecclesiz 
Sarisburiensis, fol. Paris. Merlin, 
1555. 

Molanus, see Usuardus, Martyrolo- 
gium. 

More, Sir T., Works, London, 1557. 

Muratori Rerum Italicarum Scriptores, 
fol. Medio]. 1723—51. 


Nicephorus Callistus, Op. (seu Hist. - 


Eccl.) ed. Paris. 1630. 

Odo Cameracensis, Sacri Canonis Ex- 
positio, ap. Bibl. Patr. Max., tom. 
XXi. 

CEcumenius, Op. fol. Paris. 1630—1. 

Optatus, S., de Schism. Donat. fol. 
Paris. 1700. 

Ordo Romanus, ap. Hittorp. de Div. 
Off. 

Origenes, Op. ed. Ben. Paris. 1733— 
59. 


Parsons, Robert, a Christian Direc- 
tory, 8vo. ed. 1660. 


_ Paschasius Radbertus, de Corpore et 


Sanguine Domini, Op. Paris. 1618, 
and ap. Bibl. Patr. Max., tom. 
xiv. 


XXXi 


Patres Apostolici, ed. Cotelerius, fol. 
Amst. 1724, 

Paulinus, S., Op. ed. fol. Veronz, 
1736. 

Paulus Warnefridus, de Gestis Longo- 
bardoram, ap. Muratori Rer. Ital. 
Scriptt. 

Philastrius, Episc. Brixiensis, lib. de 
Heresibus, ap. Bibl. Patr. Max., 
tom. iv. 

Philo-Judzus, Op. fol. Lond. 1742. 

Photius, Nomocanon, ap. Justelli Bibl. 
Jur. Can. Vet. 

Platina, de Vitis Pontif. Rom. Venet. 
1479. 

Polydorus Vergilius, Angl. Hist. fol. 
Basil. 1570. 

de Inventoribus rerum. 
8vo. Argent. 1613. 

Procopius, de edificiis, ad calc. Hist. sui 
temp. fol. Paris. 1662—3. 

Prosper, S. Op. fol. ed. Paris. 1711. 

Prudentius, Op. ed. Areval. 4to. Rome, 
1788. 

Rabanus Maurus, Op. fol. Col. Agripp. 
1626. . 





de Institut. Clerico- 
rum, ap. Hittorpium de Div. Off. 

Radulphus Tungrensis, de Canonum 
Observatione, ap. Hittorpium de 
Div. Off. 

Regino, Abbas, de Eccl. Disc. ed. 
Vienne, 1765. 

Ridley, Sir T., View of the Civil and 
Ecclesiastical Law, ed. 2. Oxford, 
1634. 

Ruffinus, Hist. Eccles. ap. Hist. Ec- 
cles. Latine, et ap. Opuscula, Paris. 
1580. 

Rupertus, Abbas, Op. ed. fol. Venet. 
1748—51. 

Sacerdotale ad consuetudinem Eccle- 
siz Romane, Venet. 1576, 

Sanctorum Acta, ed. Bolland. fol. Ant- 
werp, Var. ann. 

Sigebertus Gemblacensis, de Viris II- 
lust. ap. Mirei Biblioth. Eccl. 

Sixtus Senensis, Bibliotheca Sancta, fol. 
Par. 1610. 

Socrates, Hist. Eccl. ap. Eccl. Hist. 
Scriptores, tom. ii. 

Sozomenus, Hist. Eccl. ap. Eccl. Hist. 
Scriptores, tom. ii. 

Sulpicius Severus, Op. 8vo. Lugd. 
Bat. 1647, and ed. Fabricius, 4to. 
Verone, 1741. 

Surius, see Lipomani. 

Survey of the Book of Common Prayer, 
12mo. n. p. 1606. 

Symbolici Libri Eccl. Luther. ed, 
Meyer. Gotting. 1830. 

Tertullianus, Op. Priorii, fol. Par. 
1675. 





XXxll 


Theodoretus, Hist. Eccles. ap. Eccl. 
Hist. Scriptores, tom. iii. 

—————— Op. Sirmondi, fol. Paris. 
1642. vol. v. Auctarium, 1684. 

Trithemius, Joan. de Viris Ilust. Ord. 
Bened. ad caleem Regule S. Bened. 
Col. Agr. 1575. 

Catalogus Illust. Virorum 

Germaniez, ap. Op. Historica, fol. 
Francof. 1601. 


Usuardus, Martyrologium cum annot. 
Molani, ap. Acta Sanctorum, ed. 
Bolland. Antw. 1714. 


Vanderhaer Florentius, Antiquitatum 


LIST OF AUTHORS REFERRED TO. 


Liturgicarum Arcana, 8vo. Douay, 


Venantius Fortunatus, Op. 4to. Rome, 
1786. 

Vida, Hieron. Op. Lond. 1782. 

Walafridus Strabo, lib. de Exordiis et 
incrementis rerum Ecclesiasticarum, 
ap. Hittorp. de Div. Off. 

Waldensis, Thomas, Doctrinale, fol. 
Venet. 1571. 

White, John, Works, London, 1624. 

Wilkins, Concilia Magne Britannie. 
Lond. 1737. 

Zonaras, Canones cum Commentariis. 
fol. Paris. 1618. | 





NOTES AND COLLECTIONS 


IN 


AN INTERLEAVED 


“BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 


PRINTED A.D. 1619. 





COSIN. B 











IN ZTERNUM VIVAT REx, ET SUB EO VIGEAT ECCLESIA Det®. 





ANTIQUA. Nova. 








Nobiscum natam Sapientiam non estimo, ut aliquid melius con- 
_ stituere possimus, quam factum est a veteribus. Deinde nihil novi 
_hodie constituendum in ecclesia arbitror, si qui tutus esse vult ab 
adversariorum calumnia, sine approbato exemplo precedentium tem- 
porum. Saravia (de honore Presulibus et Presbyteris Ecclesiarum 
Christi debito, c. 32. ad calc. libri] de divfersis| min{isterit| 
_grad{ibus| p. 151, [ed. 1590. ] 


Idem in prologo ejusdem libri [ scil. de div. min. grad.] 


Veterem ecclesia formam Sc. 


_ Contra novitates vid. Mendoz. in [iv.| Reglwm libros] in 
| Procem. | annot, IT. sect. ii. 2.] p. 32. [Lugd. 1636.] whi antiquitas 
 eujusque doctrine commendatur egregie. 


* [This and the following passages are written on the fly-leaf of the book.} 


82 


Consuetudo divino cultui favorabilis est extendenda, alias vero 
restringenda est: juwta Textum in c. odia de Reg. juris in 6. [scil. 
Lnbr. Sext. Decretalium lib. v. tit. xiii. de Regulis juris, Reg. 15, 
ap. Corp. Jur. Can. tom. iii. | 


Facilius et melius observatur quod provida antiquitas et autoritas 
mstituit, quam quod inconsiderata novitas et infirmitas adinvenit. 


Microlog{ us}, c. xxiii. [ap. Hittorp. de Div. Off. p. 392. col. ii. B.”) 


> | These two passages are written on an inserted leaf. } 


EP aE eee 
: aes, =: we 


OF THE FORM OF OUR SERVICE AND THE 
CONSONANCE OF IT WITH OTHERS:*. 


We are blamed by the puritans that we come too near 
the form of the papists; and by the papists we are con- 
demned for going too far off; nay, for not taking the self- 
same form that they have in all things. To the first 
Mr. Hooker has given a sufficient answer’. To the second 
we say, that our Church has done no more than holy men 
before have given direction and warrant to do. For thus 
writes the old holy abbot Hilduinus, a man excellently 
learned in holy writ, in his epistle ad Ludovicum imperatorem, 
now extant, cited by Berno Aug. c. 2, de quibusd. rebus ad 
missam spectant[ibus]. His epistle is about Dionysius and 
his fellow-martyrs, where, among other things that made 


- for his purpose, he writ on this manner [“ cui adstipulart 


ax 


oe 


eke 


videntur antiquissimi et nimia vetustate pene consumpti Mis- 
sales libri continentes Misse ordinem more Gallico, qui ab 
initio recepte fidei usus in hac occidentali plaga est habitus, 
usquequo tenorem, quo nunc utitur, Romanum suscepit °.’’| 


* {This note, which was left un- D. In the margin is added, extat hec 


finished, is written on one of the fly- 
leaves. | 

> [Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity, 
book iv. ch. iii., &c.] 

© [This passage is now supplied, 
from the work cited, Bernonis Au- 
giensis abbatis de quibusdam rebus 
ad Missam pertinentibus libellus, c. 
2. ap. Hittorp. de Div, Off, p. 359, i. 


epistola : it is the epistle prefixed to the 
Areopagitica of Hilduinus, addressed 
to the emperor Ludoyvicus Pius, printed 
in Surius, De vitis Sanct., Oct. 9. 
tom. v. fol. 229, b. col. i—Berno adds 
other evidences that the Churches of 
the West had offices differing from the 
Roman, and argues for the maintenance 
of them. ] 


6 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


[ON THE PREFACES.] 


that the people (by daily hearing of Holy Scripture read 
in the church.)| People daily to hear divine service. 

has been read in Latin to the people, which they understood 
not.| Lege ea que scripsit Johannes Ferus, vir pius et doctus, 
in prefatione sud ad lectorem ante conciones suas in Ad- 
ventu, §c.4: for which cause also Laurentius Vanderhare 
wrote his Liturgical Antiquities*, as may be seen by his 
preface before them. 

and in this sort the book of Esai was begun in Advent, and 
the book of Genesis in Septuagesima.| So they are now; see 
the Lessons appointed for Sundays, upon which days our 
people only come to church. 

the reading of Holy Scripture is so set forth that all things 
shall be done in order without breaking one piece from another, 
et infra, as did break the continual course of reading the Holy 
Scripture.| If that were such a fault (say the surveyors‘) 
how come the epistles and gospels, that are but pieces of 
Scripture, still appointed to be read? which contradiction 
makes the puritans, allowing this preface, as being against 
the papists, to deride the appointing of epistles and gospels, 


as being contrary thereunto. 


so that here you have an order for prayer (as touching the 


4 [Postille sive conciones in Epi- 
stolas et Evangelia que ab Adventu 
usque ad Pascha legi consueverunt, 
authore R. P. Joan. Fero, interprete 
vero M. Joan. Gunthero; Pref. ad 
Lectorem; Antw. 1563. This preface 
of Ferus is on the importance of the 
people being acquainted with Holy 
Scripture, e.g. voluit Deus apud nos 
perpetuam quasi tesseram religionis 
suz, in uno volumine quod Biblia vo- 
camus extare. ‘Non est itaque unde se 
quisquam de non audita Dei voluntate 
apud tribunal Christi excusare possit: 
in omnem enim terram exivit sonus 
Apostolorum; and after further argu- 
ments, he says, ob quam causam non 
admodum eorum probare possum sen- 
tentiam qui plebeios pariter omnes a 
lectione sacrarum literarum abigendos 


censent. | 

¢ [The work referred to is entitled, 
Antiquitatum Liturgicarum arcana; 
it was published in three volumes, 8°, 
at Douay in 1605, without the author’s 
name. It was Florentius, not Lauren- 
tius, Vanderhaer, a man of some lite- 
rary reputation. In the publisher’s ad- 
dress to the reader there is an indica- 
tion of the author’s name, by a play of 
words upon it; see the concluding 
paragraphs, | 

f [See “A Survey of the Book of 
Common Prayer,’’ &c., 1606, § 18, 
Quer. 45, p. 61; “ Whether the reading 
of these epistles and gospels (so called) 
be not the same fault which is blamed 
in the Preface of the Communion- Book, 
viz. a breaking of one piece of Scrip- 
ture from another.” } 


"SMEARS 


ON THE PREFACES. 


7 


reading of Holy Scripture) much agreeable to the mind and pur- 
pose of the old fathers, ...... here are left out many things, 
whereof some be untrue, some uncertain, some vain and super- 
stitious, and is ordained nothing be read, but the very pure 
word of God, the Holy Scriptures, or that which is evidently 
grounded upon the same, &c.| These are the words which 
were made for the authorizing of King Edward’s first service- 
books. And therefore, though some things be here in this 
book omitted which were in that, yet none of them can be 
accounted those that are here termed untrue, uncertain, 
vain, and superstitious; for certainly then they would have 
made some new preface, and not used the old, to condemn 
those orders by the same words and arguments, wherewith 
they were formerly maintained. 

or which is evidently grounded upon the same.| As the 
Books of Apocrypha, Homilies, Prayers, Confessions, Exhor- 
tations. 

the curates shall need no other books for their public service, 
but this book and the Bible, by the means whereof the people 
shall not be at so great charge, &c.| I cannot see what kind 
of commendation this can be: sure the more books, the 
more solemn would God’s service be: but-it seems the 
people began even then to desire that their divine service 
might be quickly dispatched, and that they might be put to 
no great charges for the maintenance of it; or else these 
two" arguments would never have been thought of. The 
archbishop of Mentz, in the like case, took care of the 
people’s charges, that they which were poor should not be 
put to buy so many divine books as were needful for the 


Church service; yet he took an order for money another way, - 


Fer. in Ep. ad Arch. Mog. prefix. Concion. in adventui. And 
yet Layman, in his preface before his Moral[is| Theologiak, 


& [The Book of Common Prayer, 


_ &e., 1549, Preface. } 


h [A word is struck out between 
‘‘two’’ and ‘ arguments,” and a sen- 
tence after “‘ thought of.’’ } 

i The archbishop’s name was Sebas- 
itan de Helissensteyn, archbishop of 
Mayence from 1545 to 1555. (The 
dedication is dated 1552.) He pro- 
vided for printing a catechism, a re- 
formed agenda (or service-book) after- 


wards referred to, and homilies on the 
Gospels through the year, and required 
these books to be bought by all the 
pastores ecclesiarum of his province, 
and that (si tantos sumptus ipsi ferre 
non possent) ecclesiarum curatores.. 
compararent, Epist. dedic., p. 4, 5. 
Postille, &c. See above, note d.] 

k [In the first edition of this work, 
(R. P. Pauli Laymanni Theologia Mo- 
ralis,) (Monachii 1625,) the only edi- 


First 


SERIES, 


First 
ES. 


SERI 


AnN- 
DREWES, 


8 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


saith, the papists (his men) are herein as covetous and faulty 
as ours. 

and where heretofore there hath been great diversity in 
saying and singing in churches within this realm, some fol- 
lowing Salisbury use, &c.| Nulla res magis discipline mores 
ab ecclesia depulit, quam inordinata diversitas officitt. Quam- 
obrem sic statutum fuit in magno concilio Toletano 4° cap. 2'. 
Placuit ut unus ordo orandi atque psallendi a nobis per omnem 
Hispaniam et Galliciam conservetur, unus modus in missa- 
rum solennitatibus, unus in vespertinis officiis ; nec diversa sit 
ultra in nobis ecclesiastica consuetudo, quia in una fide conti- 
nemur et regno. And the Church of Rome itself, seeing the 
many inconveniencies that came by their variety of breviaries 
and missals which they had, have followed us in this refor- 
mation ; and taken order for the reducing of all under five 
hundred years to one uniformity in their council of Trent™; 
which is since performed, though not as some more learned 
and pious among them expected. Read Pamelius in his 
preface to Micrologus". 

the whole realm shall have but one use.| So did the 
archbishop of Mentz, of his own authority, (when Ferus 
lived his chaplain there about him,) by whom he is highly 
commended for reducing the Agenda of the Church to one 
uniform order throughout all his diocese; VFerus in epis- 
tola prefixd concionibus suis in Adventu®, &c., and not them 
[the Agenda] only, but the doctrine of all sermons through- 
out his diocese to one form, that every body might not only 
pray, but preach alike?. 

though it be appointed in the forewritten preface. *?* W *?°] 


tion published in the author's life-time, 
there is nothing of this kind in the 
preface; but in the epistle dedicatory 
he speaks of; non pauci ex clero... 
quibus vel non sumptus ad libros mul- 
tos emendos, vel non tempus, ingeni- 
umque ad legendos suppetit. | 

1 [A.D. 633, Cone. Tolet.. IV. can. 
2. Concilia, tom. vi. col. 1450, C. D.] 

m [See Cone. Trid. Sess. xxv. Dec. 
4, 1563, c. 8, Concil. tom. xx. col. 194, 
E., and the Bulls of Pope Pius V’ 
7 id, Jul. 1568, and Prid. id. Jul. 
1570, (Bullarium Rom., tom. iv. par. 
3. p. 22, and p. 116,) prefixed to and 


respectively establishing the Roman 
Breviary and Missal, to the exclusion 
of all which had not a prescription of 
200 years. | 

" [Pamelius regretted that in the 
reformation of the service-books, those 
to whom it was committed had not en- 
deavoured to reduce all to the most an- 
cient models, as the Sacramentary of 
S. Gregory, &c. Ap. Hittorp. de Div. 
Off., fol. 379.] 

© (See the whole passage referred to 
above, p. 5, note i.] 

P [“ And not them... alike” is an 
additional note on the word Agenda. | 





See 


NSPE 





ON THE PREFACES. 9 


By virtue of this, those morning prayers which are used in 
colleges are for the most part Latin.” 

and all the priests and deacons shall be bound to say daily, 
except they be let by preaching, studying of divinity, or some 
other urgent cause.| Which was so ordered at the council of 
Venice? under Pope Leo the first, (and after that in the 
council at Mentz, can. 57 .)  Clericus, quem intra muros 
civitatis sue manere constiterit, et matutinis hymnis sine pro- 
babili excusatione egritudinis inventus fuerit defuisse, septem 
diebus a communione habeatur extraneus, &c. 

except they be let by preaching.| Lege Anacletum Siccum 
de Ecclesiast. Hymnodia, lib. 3. cap. 17*. 

‘?- W -?+ Concerning Evening Prayer on Saturdays there is 
an express rule in the primitive Church : quod in sabbatis evan- 
gelium cum alis scripturis legit conveniat. Conc. Laodic. can. 
1608. JIntelligunt ea que fuere sabbata Judeorum ; nam can. 
29', ejusdem conc. aperte patres distinguunt inter sabbata et 


diem Dominicum. Id ipsum semper officium precum nond 


debet exhibert. Can. 16". ejusd. conc., id est, tertia pomeri- 
diand, more computi ecclesie orientalis. 


OF MINISTERS’ DAILY SAYING THE SERVICE*. 


And all the priests and deacons shall be bound to say daily, 
&c.] So that we are also bound, as all priests are in the 
Church of Rome, daily to repeat and say the public prayers 
of the Church. And it is a precept the most useful and 
necessary, of any other that belong to the ministers of God, 
and such as have cure of other men’s souls, would men 


4 [Conc. Venet. A.D. 465. can. xiv. 
conc., tom. v. col. 82, A. This is the 
canon cited: the reference to the coun- 
cil of Mentz, can. 57, seems to be a 
mistake. } 

* [The subject of this chapter is 
De defectu eorum qui studiorum ne- 
gotiorumve pretextu abstinent ab 
hymnodia communi in choro; pp. 
568—588. Antw. 1634.] 

_§ [Tlep) tod, ev caBBdarw ebayyéAia 
mera Erépwr ypapav dvaywoboKerbat.— 
Conc. Laod., Can. xvi.—Conce., tom. i. 
col. 1500. B. The Latin in the text is 
from the version of Dionys. Exiguus. 


—Ibid., col. 1511. B.] 

* ("Ort ob Se? Xpiotiavods iovdatten 
Kat év TQ oaBBdre oxordgery, dAdo 
epyaveo bau avTous éy Th abTH nuepa* 
Thy Sé Kupiakhy MpoTimavTas, elye dv- 
vawto, oxoArdvev ws Xpioriavol. — 
Cone. Laod., Can. xxix. — Ibid., col. 
1501. C.] 

u [Tlep) rod, Thy abrhy Aerroupyiay 
Tav evxav mavToTe Kal év Tals évydrats 
kal év rats éomepaus dpelrAew ylvecOa. 
—Conce. Laod., Can. xviii.—Ibid., col. 
1500. B.] 

x [The following note is written on 
an interleaved page. | 


First 


SERIES. 


AN- 
DREWES. 


First 
SERIES. 





Is. I xii. 6. 
[ See mar- 
gin of 
English 
bible. ] 


Gen. xx. 7. 
Job xlii. 8. 


Levit. v. 
18. 


Deut. 
XXXiii. 


[10.] 


10 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


regard it, and practise it a little more than they do among 
us. We are all for preaching now; and for attending the 
service and prayers appointed by the Church for God’s 
worship, and the good of all men, we think that too mean 
an office for us; and therefore, as if it were not worth our 
labour, we commonly hire others under us to do it, more to 
satisfy the law, than to be answerable to our duties. Here is 
a command that binds us every day to say the morning and 
evening prayer; how many are the men that are noted to do 
it? It is well they have a back door for an excuse to come 
out at here: for, good men! they are so belaboured with 
studying of divinity, and preaching the word, that they have 
no leisure to read these same common prayers; as if this 
were not the chief part of their office and charge committed 
unto them. Certainly, the people whose souls they have 
care of, reap as great benefit, and more too, by these prayers, 
which their pastors are daily to make unto God for them, 
either privately or publicly, as they can do by their preach- 
ing: for God is more respective to the prayers which they 
make for the people, than ever the people are to the sermons 
which they make to them. And in this respect are the 
priests called God’s remembrancers, because they put God 
in mind of His people, desiring Him to keep and bless them 
daily with things needful both for their bodies and their 
souls. And whatsoever the world makes of it, no doubt but 
God hath a greater regard to the prayers of His priests, men 
that are near Him, and appointed for the offering up of that 
daily sacrifice, than to the prayers of other common Chris- 
tians whatsoever. And so God tells Abimelech that He 
would have him to deal well with Abraham, because he was 
a prophet, and “should pray for him.” And so to Job’s 
friends, “that His servant Job should pray for them, and He 
would accept him.” And it was the office that was appointed 
the priests in the law, “ He shall make an atonement for the 
people,” not so much to teach and preach to the people, (as 
men now-a-days think all the office lays in doing that,) but 
“to offer sacrifice and incense unto the Lord,” which was 
but a figure of that which the ministers of Christ were to do 
in the Gospel. Therefore Samuel professes it openly, to the 
shame of all others, that he should sin no less in neglecting 





a ee OP ee As 
SE ee eee Ne ee gee — Pipe 





ON THE PREFACES. 11 


to pray for the people, than he should in leaving off to teach Bro 
them the right way of God’s commandments; both which os 
are needful; but to them that are already converted, prayer 
is more necessary than preaching. Howsoever we are to 
remember, that we which are priests are called “ angel Mal. ii. 7. 
Domini :” and it is the angel’s office, not only to descend to 
the people and teach them God’s will, but to ascend also 
to the presence of God to make intercession for the people, 
and to carry up the daily prayers of the Church in their 
behalf, as here they are bound to do. 

As we are common Christians we should go to our prayers 
three times a day; “ At evening, and morning, and at noon- Ps. lv. 
day will I praise Thee.” But as we are specially separated vide 
from other Christians to be priests and prophets, we should 
go to them seven times a day, “ Seven times a day do I Ps. exix. 

[164. ] 

praise Thee.” 

And of old, this daily and continual prayer made by the 
priests in the behalf of the people, was so much accounted 
and made on, that they took order to have no intermission 
of prayer; and because the same priests could not always 
attend it, therefore they were to do it in their courses; some 
at the first watches, some at the second, and others at the 
third; that so whilst some rested, the others might pray. 
And of this David “tment when he saith, “ Mine eyes pre- Ps. cxix. 
vent the night watches ;” and Christ mentions the second, and Seisga 
the third watches: and David’s diligence, in performing his [38.] 
duty for the good of the people, was such, as that he professes 
it, “At midnight I will rise up to give thanks unto Thee :” [Ps. exix. 
so Paul and Silas rose at midnight to sing praises unto God. yon! abt 
It were therefore well to be wished, that the hke order were [ 26.] 
taken in the Church now; and that the sacrifice of prayer 
might be continually offered up unto God among Christians, 
as well as it was in the synagogues of the Jews. 

It was the custom of the old Christians, daily, before they 
did any thing, to go and worship the Lord that made them ; 
Ante omnia adoremus Dominum qui fecit nos. And therefore 
St. Jerome, in the life of Hilarion the monk, writes, that 
when he and his company were invited to a morning refec- 
tion in a vineyard, Maledictus sit (said the holy man) gua 
prius refectionem corporis quam anime quesierit: Oremus, 


First 


SERIES. 


AN- 
DREWES. 


12 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 
psallamus, reddamus Domino officium, et sic ad vineam prope- 
rabitis. Completo itaque ministerio (says St. Jerome) they 
went and refreshed themselves’, &c. 


OF CEREMONIES, WHY SOME ARE ABOLISHED, AND SOME 
RETAINED. 


Tis preface is the same verbatim with that which is in 
the Service Book of King Edward VI.7; the preface then being 
retained, it seems all the ceremonies of that book are still 
justified by our Church, though some of them, at Calvin’s 
and Bucer’s instance, were omitted in the review of the book 
5 Edw. VI., as not accounted absolutely necessary. 

Ceremonies*.| ‘?: W °?: “ Ceremonias definiunt decorum, dis- 
ciplina, significatio.”’ 

at length turned to vanity and superstition.| None of these 
can be meant of any ceremonies used in King Edward’s first 
Service-Book, for that book has these very words, and there- 
fore they must be meant of other ceremonies, which they in 
the Church of England at that time refused, and of none 
other that are since omitted; I say omitted only, and not 
condemned; for if our Church had meant to condemn the 
ceremonies used in that book, they would never have taken 
the same discourse about ceremonies to do it, which is here 
used to approve and authorize them, but they would have 
made some other of set purpose to condemn them. 

that they would innovate all things.| ?*W-?: Non est inno- 
vatio dicenda, siquid in melius simpliciter, seu alteratione, seu 
adjectione fiat. S. Ambr., lid. ii. de Off.” Alteratio enim illa 
est schismatica innovatio, que bene posita destruit, non perficit. 

than of innovations and newfangledness which is always to 
be eschewed.| When God by His good Spirit put it into 


y [The conclusion of the passage is; 
Completo itaque ministerio, in sub- 
limi stans benedixit vinere et suas ad 
pascendum dimisit oves. S. Hieron, 
Vita S. Hilar. § 27. Op., tom. ii. col. 
28. A.] 

* [ That is, both in the Book of Com- 
mon Prayer of 1649 and 1652. ] 


* “All the notes which have this 
mark ‘?° W °?: are taken out of my 
lord of Winchester’s, Bp. Andrewes, 
Service-Book, written with his own 
hand.”’ [This is a note by Bishop 
Cosin on the margin opposite the note, 
in the text. ] 

» [This citation has not been found. ] 


ON THE PREFACES. 13 


our hearts to reform ourselves, and then by all good means First 
to seek the reformation of others that remained obdurate in —S®®!#8-_ 
_ their wonted superstitions, had we not only cut off their cor- 
4 ruptions, but also estranged ourselves from them in ancient 
; and laudable ceremonies; who seeth not how greatly pre- 
_ judicial this might have been to so good a cause; and what 
occasion it had given them to think, that through a forward 
or wanton desire of innovation, we did those things for which 
conscience was pretended’. Hook[er] 
Those which make so perilous a matter of our retaining 7 
these ceremonies, common to us with the Church of Rome, 
do seem to imagine that we have of late erected a frame of 
some new religion, the furniture whereof we should not have 
borrowed from our enemies, lest they relieving us, might 
afterward laugh and gibe at our poverty; whereas in truth 
we have continued the old religion, and the ceremonies which 
we have taken from them that were before us are not things 
that belong to this or that sect, but they are the ancient rites 
and customs of the Church of Christ, whereof ourselves being 
a part, we have the self-same interest in them which our 
_ fathers before us had, from whom the same descended unto 
_ us. We have therefore most heartily to thank God that they 
- amongst us to whom the first consultations of causes in this 
kind fell, were men which, aiming at the glory of God and 
the good of this His Church, took that which they judged 
thereunto necessary, not rejecting out of any peevish or angry 
disposition those rites and ceremonies which were old, good, p. 144. 
nd convenient‘, 


SSE een 
- iS 


OF CEREMONIES. THE GREAT USE OF THEM IN THE CHURCH: 
THE MODERATION OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND IN RETAIN- 
° ING SOME AND ABOLISHING OTHER. 


‘In every grand or main public duty which God requires Hooke 
at the hands of His Church, there is, besides the matter and / 
form wherein the essence thereof consists, a certain outward 


¢ [This and the following passage vii. § 6. (p. 141. ed. 1622.)] 
are derived (with some omissions and 4 [See ibid., chap. 9. § 1.] (p. 144.) 
slight alterations) from the Laws of © [See ibid., chap. i. § 2.] 
Ecclesiastical Polity, Book iv. chap. 





First 
' SERIES. 


14 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


fashion whereby the same is in decent sort administered. 
The substance of all religious actions, as of the sacraments, 
are by God Himself set down in few words, Accedit verbum 
ad elementum et fit sacramentum ; there needs no more, saith 
St. Augustin’, But the due and decent form of administering 
those sacraments doth require a great deal more. 

The end which is aimed at in setting down the outward 
form of all religious actions, is the edification of the Church. 
Edified men are, when either their understanding is taught 


_ somewhat, which in such actions it behoveth all men to con- 


sider, or when their hearts are moved with any affection 
suitable thereunto ; both which are done when their minds 
are in any sort stirred up unto that reverence, devotion, 
attention, and due regard which in those cases seemeth 
requisite. 

To this purpose not only speech but sundry sensible means 
besides, have always been thought necessary; and among 
them, those most especially that are objects to the eye, which 
being the liveliest, and the most apprehensive sense of all the 
other, is the fittest to make a deep and a strong impression 
in the minds of men. 

From this consideration have risen not only those numbers 
of prayers, readings, questionings, answers, exhortations, but 
even of visible signs also in the performance of all our reli- 
gious actions, whereby men’s minds and hearts must needs 
be a great deal more effectually stirred up to devotion and 
attention than otherwise they could. 

No nation under heaven either does or ever did suffer any 
public actions, which are of weight, whether temporal or 
sacred, to pass without some visible solemnity ; because the 
very strangeness and difference of it from other common ac- 
tions may make popular eyes to observe and mark the same 
the better. And if we should let pass ours without the like, 
we might be thought to transgress the very rule of nature. 
Therefore with singular wisdom hath it been provided, that 
the deeds of men, which are made in the presence of wit- 
nesses, should pass not only with words, which for the most 
part are but slightly heard, because they are common, and 
do not so strongly move the fancy of man; but also with 


f [S. Aug. in Johan. cap. 15. Tract. 80. Op., tom. iii. p. 2. col. 703. C.] 











ee “7 en a ee 
Se) See I 


Sr bs Pe re Pe 


OE Ne OS eee 


hg 


ON THE PREFACES. 15 


4 certain sensible actions that may be seen, the memory whereof 
_ is far more easy and durable than the memory of speech can 
7 be. 
_ needful it was that some at least should be retained; and 
_ ceremonies which long experience of all ages had confirmed 


Now ceremonies having such great use in the Church, 


and made profitable, a needless and a presumptuous act had 
it been to abolish them; a mean therefore was kept, and a 


_ godly resolution here taken by the Church of England, to 
remove only such things as were new and superfluous, re- 


taining the rest which were old, and behoveful for the edify- 


ing of Christian people. 


some are put away, because the great excess and multitude 
of them hath increased in these later days.| And it was not 
amiss to decree, that those ceremonies which were least need- 
ful, and newliest come in, should be the first that were taken 
away; as in the abrogating of an excessive number of saints’ 
days, and of other the like customs: but having this way 
eased the Church, as they thought, of superfluity, it had been 
amiss to have proceeded on till they had plucked up all use- 
ful and ancient ceremonies also by the roots. To abrogate 


_ those things, without constraint of apparent harm thereby 


arising, had been to alter unjustly the ancient received cus- 
toms of the whole Church, the universal practice of the 
people of God, and those general decrees of the fathers,” 
which (in St. Austin’s language®) is madness and insolence 
to do, both in respect of the universal authority of the 


_ Church, which no particular Church hath power to control, 


and also in regard of reasons aforementioned ». 


THE ORDER HOW THE HOLY SCRIPTURE IS TO BE READ. 


The Old Testament.) The first exception of the puritan 


_ surveyor’. 


& [Ad hec itaque ita respondeo ut bem frequentat Ecclesia. Nam _ et 


3 telligendum sit, disputemus. 
‘, liter etiam si quid horum tota per or- 





_ quid horum sit faciendum, si divine 
_ Scripture preescribit auctoritas, non sit 
 dubitandum quin ita facere debeamus 
ut legimus, ut jam non quomodo faci- 


endum, sed quomodo sacramentum in- 
Simi- 


hine quin ita faciendum sit, disputare 
insolentissimz insanize est. S, ele 4 
Ep. 54. ad Januarium, cap. 5. § 6 
Op., tom. ii. col. 126. B.] 
h [See the Laws of Ecclesiastical 
Polity, chap. xiv. § 4 and 6.] 
i [A Survey of the Book of C. P., 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


Jer. XXvi. 
2 


Rev. i. 3. 


Rev. xxii. 


19. 


16 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


excepting certain books and chapters which are less edify- 
ing.] The puritans, in their Survey, are very angry at this 
exception, and tell us we defraud God’s people of some books 
of Scripture, as the papists do defraud them of all. Their 
reasons against it are, “ Stand in the Lord’s house, and speak 
unto the people all the words that I command thee, keep 
not a word back.” “Blessed is he that readeth, and they 
that hear the words of this prophecy.” 

ye must note also that the collect, epistle, and gospel, ap- 
pointed for Sunday shall serve all the week after.| (The 
second exception of the surveyor*.) Which is so appointed, 
for that the epistle and gospel are to be read every day of 
the week, as every day there should be a communion. If 
people be married upon the week-day, at that time by this 
book they are enjoined to receive; and so when women after 
child-birth are churched; or when men in cathedral churches 
(where they are enjoined it every Sunday at the least) shall 
desire to have the communion on the week-day; that then 
the collect, epistle, and gospel shall be used, which was ap- 
pointed for the Sunday. 

But the prefaces proper upon the feasts of Christmas, 
Easter, Ascension, and Whit-Sunday, are appointed to be 
read six days after (that is, if there be communions upon 
those days), and because it is supposed, that all men what- 
soever do receive at Easter, therefore are there special epistles 
and gospels appointed six days together before that time, — 
more than all the year besides. A good note this is, to know ~ 
the intent of our Church by; which was, that the sacrament 
should be propounded every day, for them to come unto and 
receive that were godly disposed; and therefore is that ex- 
hortation to the people, being negligent in coming thereunto, 
not only to be read at the three solemn times, but at what 
time of the year the minister pleases, and as he perceives the 
people to neglect their devotion all the year through. The 
three solemn times being for all upon penalty by law; but 


&c. § i. quere 1. p. 26. The nine note is made in the inner margin 
quzres on this passage are directed against the words ‘the Old T esta- 
against the omission of any part of ment.’’] 

the canonical writings, and the reading k [pp. 383—87. This is also a note 
of any part of the Apocrypha. This in the inner margin of the book. ] 


ON THE PREFACES. 17 


First 
SERIES. 


_ every day being for those devout people that shall be so well 
_ disposed ; first one company, and then another, so there be 
_ not less than three to communicate with the priest, as is 
appointed in the Rubric after the Com[munion]!. 

Item, So oft as the first chapter of St. Matthew is read either 
for lesson or gospel ye shall begin the same at The birth of 
_ Jesus Christ, &c.] The third exception of the surveyor™. 
In the fifth of King Edward" there is no such rubric, and 
yet by the act prefixed before this book® that book is pre- 
_ cisely enjoined to be observed and reprinted, without any 
such addition as this is. 








PROPER LESSONSP, 


Thus was the public service of God performed by the 
_ Jews, among whom the book of the law was read four Neh. ix. 3. 
. times a day, as it is here appointed, and every day of the 
_ year throughout the kalendar; so, Acts xv. 21, Moses was 
read in the synagogues every Sabbath-day. 


Lessons proper for Holydays.| The fourth exception of the 
surveyor4. 
y DE LECTIONIBUS FESTIVIS DIEBUS APTATIS". 


The first exact compiler of these festival lessons was one 
_ Muszus, a famous priest of Massilia, who lived about the 
year of our Lord 480, of whom thus writes Gennadius, De 


__viris illustrious, cap. 79°; Museus Massiliensis icclesie pres- 





! [See the rubric at the end of the 
Communion Service. ] 

™ [pp. 37—389. This exception is 
grounded on the discrepancy men- 
tioned by Bp. Cosin in the next para- 
graph, and is almost in the same 
words. | . 

= [In the Book of Common Prayer 
of 1552, 5 Edw. VI., called, the second 
book of Edward. } 

© [The Act of Uniformity, 1 Eliz. 
c. 2, enjoins the use of the Book au- 
thorized by Pariiament in the fifth and 
sixth years of the reign of King Ed- 
ward VI. “with one alteration or ad- 
dition of certain lessons to be used on 
every Sunday in the year, and the 
form of the Litany altered and cor- 
rected, and two sentences only added 


COUSIN. 


in the delivery of the Sacrament to the 
communicants, and none other or 
otherwise.’’ 

P {This and the following are notes 
on the Table of proper lessons. ] 

4 [p.39. This exception is grounded 


on the addition of forty-seven proper 


lessons for holydays unto those which 
are appointed in the second book of 
Edward VI., whereas the statute 1 
Eliz. c. 2. ‘‘mentioneth but one ad- 
dition of proper lessons only for Sun- 
days.”’ | 

* [This note is on the interleaved 
page, with this heading. ] 

® {Inter Op. S. Hieronym., tom. ii. 
col. 981. The readings of Vallarsius are 
added in the margin of this edition. ] 


First 


SERIES. 


1 de. 
2 diebus 
aptas. 


3 celebri- 
tatique. 


4 jam. 
5 erant. 


18 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


byter, vir in divinis scripturis doctus, &c. hortatu 8. Venerii 
Episcopi excerpsit ex: sanctis scripturis lectiones totius anni 
festivis aptas diebus?, responsoria, etiam Psalmorum capitula 
tempori et lectionibus congruentia. Quod opus tam necessarium 
a lectoribus in Ecclesia probatur, ut expetitum et sollicitu- 
dinem tollat et morem, plebique ingerit scientiam, celebritatem 
et*® decorem. Yet it cannot be, that he was the first appointer 
of them; the Church used that order long before, though 
perhaps not so exactly. S. Augustine’, in proemio Epistole 
Johannis; Meministis Evangelium Johannis ex ordine lectionum 
nos solere tractare; sed quia nunc interposita est solennitas 
sanctorum dierum, quibus crertas ex Evangelio LECTIONES 
oportet in Ecclesia recitare, que ita sunt ANNU& ut alie esse 
non possint, ordo iste quem susceperamus, necessitate paululum 
intermissus est, non omissus. Idem., Tract. vi. in Johannem* ; 
Anniversaria solennitate post passionem Domini nostri Librum 
Act. Apostolorum omni anno in Ecclesia recitari; et Tract. 
xiii." Psalmus vicesimus primus omni anno legitur in novissima 
hebdomada intento universo populo. 

Septuagesima, Gen. i. Sewagesima, Gen. i.| In luctu peni- 
tentie Septuagesima agitur, unde et reticetur interim solenne 
alleluia, et humane transgressionis historia miserabilis ab ex- 
ordio [re|censetur. Bern. Serm. i. in Septuages. ad finem*. 
This is the reason why Genesis is begun in Septuagesima, 
and so continued on through Lent. 

And to fit us for the time of abstinence and fasting, which 
is to follow, there could be nothing more fitly chosen, than 
the story of Adam his eating and sinning in it; that so 
seeing the danger of it, we might be the less given to it, and 
more to temperance and fasting. And though our new 
masters deride this application of fasting to God’s command 
in paradise, yet before our Church the ancient fathers have 
done the same. Tertulliany, De Jejunio, p. 645, ed. Ren. 
Lauren. <Acceperat Adam a Deo legem non gustandi de ar- 
bore, &c. verum et ipse tunc in psychicum reversus, .. nec eam* 
capiens que erat’ spiritus, facilius ventri quam Deo cessit, 

§ [S. Aug. in prologo Tract.in Epist. § 14. col. 397. G.] 

Joan. Op. tom. iii. p. 2. col. 825, 826. ] x [S. Bernard. in Septuag. Serm. i. 

* (Idem. in Joan. cap. i. Tract. 6. § 6. Op., tom. i. col. 819. F.] 


§ 18. col. 337. G.) y (Tertullian. de Jejuniis, cap. iii. 
« (Idem. in Joan. cap, iii. Tract. 13. Op., pp. 545. E, 546. A.] 





; ON THE PROPER LESSONS. 19 


First 


_ pabulo potius quam precepto annuit, salutem gula vendidit : : 
; ERIES, 


manducavit denique et periit, salvus alioquin si unit arbusculo 
jejunare maluisset, at jam hinc animalis fides semen suum ag- 
noscat': exinde deducens carnalium appetitionem et spiritu-' recog- 
alium recusationem. Teneo itaque a primordio homicidam”** 
gulam tormentis atque supplictis inedie puniendam, etiamsi 

Deus nulla jejunia precepisset: ostendens tamen unde sit oc- 

cisus Adam, mihi reliquerat intelligenda remedia offense qui 
offensam demonstrarat. And these last words are the true 
reason why the Church hath appointed this story of Genesis 

to be read at this time, the preparation time to Lent. 

Epiphany, Isa. \x.* xlix.] Lessons proper to declare the 
calling of the Gentiles in the persons of the kings and wise 
men of the east. 

Luke ii. and to so that He was supposed to be the son of 
Joseph. John ii. to after this He went to Capernaum.| Which 
lessons are appointed to be read upon this day, because 
Christ’s baptism, whereby He first manifested His divinity 
unto the Jews; and Christ’s miracle at Cana, whereby He 
first manifested His divinity unto His disciples, fell upon it. 

As well as the adoration of the kings, whereby He first mant- 
fested Himself unto the gentiles; which last is propounded 
in the first lessons, both at matins and evensong, where the 
Church applies all those sayings of kings, &c. to the wise 
men, and is derided for her labour by Calvin, the reformer 
of good and all. 
Good Friday, St. Barnaby, 


te eo 


Conversion of St. Paul*’.] In Good Fri- 
day to be 
kept a so- 

Communion Service, it is implied that Jemn holi- 
the days for which special Epistles and day », 
Gospels are appointed are holydays. 

Hence a contradiction arose. In the 


2 [In the Prayer-book it was printed 
by mistake xl. This Bp. Cosin has 
altered with the pen to lx. xlix. See 
the appendix, No. i. § 9.] 





* {Calvini Comment. in Iesaiam, 


cap. Ix. 7. p- 382. Op., tom. iii. ] 


> [This is a marginal note in large 
letters. | 

© [By the act 5, 6 Edw. VI. cap. 3. 
it was ordered “ that all the days here- 
after mentioned, shall be kept and com- 


_ manded to be kept holydays and none 
_ other:’” 


in the list that follows this 
the Conversion of S. Paul, S. Bar- 


_ nabas, and the days of the week be- 
_ fore Easter, are not mentioned; but 
_ in this place in the Prayer-book they 
are included among holydays, and 
in the first Rubrie at the end of the 


Prayer- books before 1662 this was kept 
up by the list of holydays on a page 
following the kalendar headed “ These 
to be observed for holydays and none 
other,’’ which list follows the act of 
5,6 Edw. VI. and omits the days in 
question. The following note from Bp. 
Gibson’s Codex Juris Ecclesiastici An- 
glicani, tit. x. cap. 3. p. 245. ed. 1761, 
partly illustrates, partly corrects, Bp. 
Cosin’s statement :— 

It is a note on the statute 1 Mar. 
Sess. 2. cap. 2, which repealed the sta- 
tute above cited. 

** In the first of Queen Elizabeth a 


c2 


ou 


First 


SERIES. 


20 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


the title to all these days we read, Lessons proper for holy- 
days. It seems those Parliament-men who made the act, 
“ These to be holidays, and no other,’ forgat to mend this 
title, as they did to put out the epistles and gospels upon 
all the week before Easter, and upon St. Barnabe’s and 
St. Paul’s day, which were commanded by the rubric at 
the end of the Communion to be read only upon holydays. 
I cannot reconcile them. We must either not read what 
is appointed, or if we do read (as fit it is we should, being 
the institution of the Church) we must cross the *act of 
Parliament (as it is no great matter if we do, having so just 
an occasion to do it) and make them holydays, as always they 
have been accounted. For the rest we shall observe some- 
what in their places; only here for Good-Friday it is a shame 
for us that be Christians, not to observe it as holily and as 
solemnly as any other; and the profanation that we suffer 
every cobbler to make on it, can no more be defended than 
the Spaniards’ profaning of Sundays and Kaster-day with their 
markets and fairs. Eusebius‘, lib. 11. cap. 17, tells us that 
it was a solemn feast in his time, and long before him: Po- 
tissimum in festo salutaris Domini passionis non jejuntis solum 
et vigiliis, sed attenta S. Scripturarum auditiene excolere et 
celebrare consuevimus. I know no reason but it should be 


so kept still’. 


bill to revive the act of Parliament 
made 5 Ed. 6, for keeping of Holy- 
Days and Fasting-Days, was brought 
into Parliament, but passed not; so 
that the repeal of Queen Mary re- 
mained upon this act till 1] Jac. cap. 25, 
by which her repeal was repealed; and 
it is a rule, that by repealing of a re- 
peal, the first act is revived. 

In the meanwhile, the kalendar, be- 
fore the book of Common Prayer, bad 
directed what Holy-days should be ob- 
served; and in the articles published 
by the Queen in the 7th year of her 
reign, one was, ‘that there be none 
other Holy-days observed, besides the 
Sundays, but only such as be set out 
for Holy-days, as in the statute anno 
5 and 6 Ed. 6, and in the new kalen- 
dar authorized by the Queen’s Ma- 
jesty ;’ who appears in other instances 
(as she did probably in this) to have 
greatly disliked the Parliament’s inter- 
meddling in matters of religion, the 


Vid. Euseb. De Vita Constantini®, who com- 


ordering of which she reckoned one 
great branch of the royal supremacy.” } 

© [ri Se? rovros émiAdyew tas em 
Tabvroy cvvddous, kal Tas idig uty &vdSpav, 
idia 5¢ yuvaikady ev ravT@ SiarpiBas, wad 
tas € ous eloeti kal viv mpos quay 
émiteAoumevas a&oxhoes &s SiapepdvTws 
kara Thy Tov owrnpiov md8ous Eoprhy, 
év aortas Kal diavuKrepevocotv, mpoo- 
oxats te Tav Oelwy Adywv éKTEdEtV 
ei@Papev.—Euseb. H. E. lib. ii. cap. 
17. p. 69.] 

4 [The following passage coming 
after this word is crossed out in the 
original, ‘‘and so much is the king’s 
court among us ashamed of the Act, 
that notwithstanding the peremptory 
command in it, excluding all observa- 
tion of days for holy, but their number, 
it does still continue the old observa- 
tion on’t, though not so solemnly.” | 

© [Awd rots brd thy ‘Pwualav apxhv 
moAiTevomevors &ract, sXvAHv Wyew Tats 
erwvipmois TOD Swripos juépas évov- 


ON THE KALENDAR. ye 


First 


manded every Friday, as well as Sunday, to be observed : 
ERIES. 


holy. And so Sozomen, lib. i. cap. 8°. 

* sRather the printer’s act; for the act of Parliament 
was repealed ; and certainly, if there were any such act in 
force (as, These to be observed, and no other) the Church of 
England would not have been suffered to have crossed it 
with calling all these days, here besides, holydays. It re- 
mains therefore, that we stick to this place, as being the 
proper act of our Church, and neglect the other place, as 
being the printer’s addition to fill up the page with the 
number of holydays, and the beginnings and endings of the 
four terms. 


Proper Psalms on certain days. Good Friday. Ps. xxii.] 
S. Aug. Tract. xiii. in Johannem". Psalmus vicesimus pri- 
mus OMNI ANNO legitur in novissima hebdomada, intento uni- 
> verso populo. 





THE KALENDAR. 


ten 


DE MENSIBUS. 
[ Of the names of the months. | 


Diebus quippe istis', quarum septenarius numerus in orbem De men- 
redit deorum suorum nomina gentes imposuerunt. ... Sed et Sallations: 
mensibus imposuerunt deorum suorum nomina. Propter hono- 
rem quippe Romuli, quia eum Martis filium crediderunt, pri- 
mum mensem Marti dicantes, Martium vocaverunt. . Et inde 
Aprilem a nullo dei sui nomine, sed a re ipsa, quasi Aprilem, 
quod tunc primum germen quasi aperiatur in florem. Inde 
tertium mensem Maiam, quod Maiam Mercurii Matrem deam 


ee Se 








Oérer’ duolws Kat tas Tod caBBdrov 
riudy.—ld. de Vita{Constantini, lib. iv. 
cap. 18. p. 635. (Scribendum est pro- 
cul dubio thy mpd Tov caBBdrov. At- 
que ita apparet legisse etiam qui titulos 
nomen capitum composuit. Valesius, 
Annot. ad locum.) ]} 

f [Thy 8& Kupiakyv Kadoumevny hué- 
pav, hv ‘EBpato: mpétnv tis éBdouddos 
évoudfovow, “EAAnves 5¢ HAlw avati- 
Ceact, kal Thy mpd Ths EBdduns, évouo- 
Bérnoe Sixacrnpiwy Kal Tov &AAwY wpay- 
bate oxoAhy wyew mavrTas Kal ev ed- 


xais nal Artats 7d Oetov Ocparevery. 
"Etiua 5¢ Thy Kuplakhy ws év ToUT@ TOD 
Xpiotov avacrdvros ex vexpav. Thy 8& 
érépay ws év ad’th oravpwhévtos.—So- 
zomen. Hist. Eccl., lib. i. cap. 8. p. 20. ] 

g [This is a marginal note on the 
above. } 

h [See above, p. 18, note u. ] 

i [The text and references of this 
passage are taken by Bp. Cosin from 
the edition of S. Augustine’s works, 
Paris, 1614, with a few unimportant 
variations. | 


22 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


First colant. Inde quartum Junium a Junone. Inde ceteros usque 
sinc. ad Decembrem a numeris nominarunt. Sed ex eis Quintilis 
atque Sextilis nominibus hominum, quibus divinos honores de- 
creverant, appellati sunt, Julius et Augustus: nam septimus 
September, et ceteri, ut dixi, usque ad Decembrem, numerorum 
ex ordine nominibus enuntiantur. Porro* Januarius a Jano 
appellatus est. Februarius a Febrius Lupercorem. 8. Aug., 
tom. vi. lib. xviii. cont. Faust. Man., cap. 5. [Op., tom. viii. 

col, 311, D. E.] 


* Ovid. 1 Fasti et 3. 
At Numa nec Janum, nec avitas preterit umbras, 
Mensibus antiquis preposuitque Deos. 


ITEM DE APPELLATIONIBUS DIERUM. 


1 viz. se- Una Sabbati', dies Dominicus est: secunda sabbati, secunda? 
cundum . 3 7: : R : . ° 

Hebraos, Je72a, quem seculares* diem lune vocant: tertia Sabbati tertia 
2 viz. se- feria, quem diem illi Martis vocant, quarto ergo Sabbatorum, 


qmeum — quarta feria, qui Mercurii dies dicitur a paganis, et a multis 


Christia- 

nos. Christianis: sed nollemus, atque utinam corrigant, et non di- 
3 i Ld ° . - 
Be cant sic. Habent enim linguam suam qua utantur. Non enim et 


Jeg. Duran- in omnibus gentibus ista dicuntur. Multa gentes alia atque alia 

0 te vii, aliter atque aliter vocant. Melius ergo de ore Christiano ritus 

ce. 1.n.7. Joguendi Ecclesiasticus procedit. Tamen si quem forte consuetu- 
do traxerit, ut tllud exeat ex ore quod improbat corde, intelligat 
illos omnes, de quorum nominibus appellata sunt sidera, homines 
fuisse,.... sed per beneficia quedam mortalium mortalia, illi 
homines pro tempore suo, quia plurimum potuerunt et eminu- 
erunt in hoc seculo, cum cari essent hominibus, non propter 
vitam eternam, sed propter commodum temporale, defereban- 
tur ws divint honores. Veteres enim seculi (vates, ed. Par. 
1614) decepti et decipere volentes, in eorum adulationem qui sibi 
aliquid secundum amorem seculi prestitissent, sidera ostende- 
bant in celo, dicentes quod illius esset illud sidus, et illud illius : 
homines autem qui antea non adspexerant ut viderent quia ibi 
erant et illa sidera antequam nascerentur, decepti crediderunt ; 
et concepta est opinio vanitatis. 8S. Aug., tom. viii. Enarrat. in 
Psal. xcii. in pref. [§ 3. Op. tom. iv. col. 1000. B. C. ed. 
Ben. | 





ON THE KALENDAR. 23 


First 
SERIES. 





: Dicimus mensem habere Triginta dies. 8S. Aug., tom. ii. de 
Gen. ad lit. imperf., cap. 7. [§ 28. Op. tom. iii. col. 103, A.] 


i 4 


fr: ; DE SANCTORUM FESTIVITATIBUS. 


The names of the saints in the Church kalendar were 
not so many, but that for our better remembrance of them 
they might all have stood still. Every day had but one, 
when as Eusebiusé tells us, that upon search made by Con- 
stantine the Great for the names, and times, and places, and 
manner of the martyrs’ sufferings, there were found for every 
day of the year above five hundred! saints, except the first of 
January only, when the Gentiles were so intent upon their 
own riots, that they had no leisure to think upon martyring 
the Christians. Hieron. dicit idem in Epistola que suo Ca- 
lendario preponitur™; unde Greg” dicit, Totus mundus est 
plenus sanctis, Dur. Rat., lib. vii. cap. 1.0.28. Not that they 
are all to be celebrated (as the great feasts are) in all places, 
but some in one province and some in another, that one 
_ where or other their memory may be preserved. Beleth. de 
_ Divin. Off. cap. 5°. 
2? W 2) PReguiritur ut parochus quilibet indicet, qua De pro- 
3 Pee ° mulgatione 
festa dominicam quamque sequuntur, et quota feria celebranda Pestorum 
sunt, ut inde simul statuti jejuniorum dies devoto populo in- ¢ Vigilia- 


rum per 
notescant. Parochum. 


k [This statement is derived from 
the passage of Durandus, cited in the 


nuariarum.—Epist. ad Chromatium et 
Heliodorum, Opus spurium inter op. 





text, see note on Jan. 1; he seems to 
have taken it with a mistake from the 
epistle prefixed to the martyrology 
ascribed to S. Jerome, which is quoted 
in the next note but one, and errone- 
ously to have attributed to Eusebius 
a statement made by the writer of the 
epistle. } 

! [5000 was written first; the last 0 
is crossed out in the MS.] 

m (Et quoniam per singulos dies, di- 


_ versarum provinciarum diversarumque 


urbium, plusquam octingentorum et 
nongentorum sunt nomina nominata: 
ut nullus dies sit, qui non intra quin- 
gentorum numerum reperiri possit ad- 
scriptus, exempto die kalendarum Ja- 


S. Hieron., tom. xi. 474, D.] 

« [These words are so cited by Du- 
randus, l. c. ] 

° [Festorum quedam sunt genera- 
lia, quedam particularia. Generalia 
sunt que generatim ab omnibus cele- 
brantur.... Festa autem particularia 
sunt, que tantum in una coluntur pro- 
vineia.—Divinorum officiorum, ac eo- 
rundem rationum brevis explicatio D. 
Joannis Beleth, ad cale. Durandi Rat. 
Div. Off,, fol. 490, b. Lugd. 1574.] 

P [This note is marked thus by Bp. 
Cosin as from Bp. Andrewes’ Service 
Book, but it is not found in the other 
transcripts of his notes. See his minor 


English Works. Oxford, 1853.] 


First 


SERIES. 


Ratio Vigi- 
liarum et 
Festorum. 


Quare ad 
quedam 

Festa non 
jejunatur. 


24 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Ideo jejunia in prodromis festorum; ideo vigilia precesque ab 
Ecclesia usurpata primum, et statuta nobis. 

Ideo ipsa festa sanctorum et martyrum celebraniur die 
proximo illucescente, ut sciamus eos modicum quidem in afflic- 
tione, jejuniis, vigiliis, precibus degisse; dein in gloriam et 
letitiam translatos, ubi totos feriarum dies agunt: aique inde 
Deo gloriam, nobis exemplum. 

Illud tamen notandum, quod neque vigilia, neque jejunia, sed 
sole preces precedant quedam festa: neque enim ad festum 
Michaelis et Onnium Angelorum jejunatur, aut vigilatur propter 
rationes predictas. Quinetiam licet predicte rationes in festis 
S. Marci, Philippi et Jacobi, eorumque que post Domini Na- 
talem usque ad Epiphaniam observantur, obtineant: tamen ex 
antiquissimis canonibus vetantur ad hujusmodi festa jejunia, 
propter reverentiam majorum solennitatum, Paschatis, sc. et 
Nativitatis. 

Anathema enim dixerunt sancti patres vel intra Pascha et 
Pentecosiem, vel intra Natalem et Epiphaniam jejunantibus. 

Et fiert nequit, ut festa S. Marci, Sanctorum Philippi et 
Jacobi, aliter contingant quam intra dies Paschatis et Pen- 
tecostes. 


(NOTES ON THE KALENDAR.} 


JANUARY. 


Kalend. 1. Circumcision.| Festum minus duplex 4. 

Euseb.. Quolibet anni die plusquam quinque millium sanc- 
torum festa concurrunt, excepta die calendarum Januarti, quo 
intendebant gentiles epulis et solennitatibus, non ad martyri- 
zandum sanctos. Dur. Rat., 1. vii. c. 1. n. 28. 

6 Epiphany.| Fest. principale duplex. 

8 Lucian.| This Lucian was a disciple of St. Peter, 
and sent with St. Denys into France, where preaching the 


a [These notices of the value of the notes are in the margins of the Kalen- 
Festivals are added to the Kalendarin dar and on the inserted pages. | 
the margin in red ink, except S. Mat- r {See above, p. 23. note k. } 
thias, which is in black ink. The longer 











ei? 


ON THE KALENDAR. 


25. 


Gospel he was martyred. Beda‘, Usuard', Ado®, and others, 
- make mention of him. 


13 Hilary.| St. Hilary was the famous bishop of Poictiers 
in France, so highly commended by St. Jerome*, and all 
ancient historiographers of the Church, for his glorious 
combats against the Arians. Vide Brev. Rom., Jan. 13%. 

18 Prisca.| <A virgin that suffered martyrdom in Rome 
under the emperor Claudius. Vide Brev. Rom., Jan. 18’. 

20 Fabian.| Bishop of Rome, martyred under Decius, as 
may be seen at large in the 31st epistle of St. Cyprian*. 

21 Agnes.| Mentioned by St. Jerome, Ep. ad Demeiri- 
adem 8», and St. Ambrose, Serm. 90°, and lib. i. Off, cap. 


414, and by St. Augustine, Serm. 101°. 
Roman virgin, wonderfully commended by the fathers. 


s [Martyrologium, vi. Id. Jan. Op., 
tom. iii. col. 278. ed. Colon. 1612.] 

t (Belvacus, sanctorum martyrum 
Luciani presbyteri (beati Petri disci- 
puli,) Maxiani et Juliani, quorum Maxi- 
anus et Julianus primo a persecutoribus 
gladio puniti sunt. Dein beatus Lucia- 
nus post nimiam cedem, cum Christi 
nomen viva voce confiteri non metuis- 
set, priorum sententiam et ipse excepit. 
—Martyrologium, vi. Id. Jan. ap. Bol- 
land. Antw. 1714 p. 18. The words 
in parentheses are an addition to the 
original. } 

« [Martyrologium, vi. Id. Jan. p. 
34. ed. Rome 1745. Ado and Bede 
mention only the place(Belvacus, Beau- 
vais) and names of Lucian and Maxian. 
In his Devotions Bp. Cosin has wrongly, 
‘Jan. 8. Lucian, a priest of Antioch 
and martyr, A.D. 307.” The previous 
day, Jan. 7, is that of Lucian of An- 
tioch in the Roman Kalendar and mar- 
tyrologies; Lucian of Beauvais, a 
martyr of the Norman Church, was 
alone commemorated in the Sarum 
Kalendar, the day being noted “‘Luciani 
cum sociis ejus,’’ and so in our Latin 
Common Prayer-books of 1574, 1594. ] 

* [See S. Hieron., lib. de Viris Il- 


, lustr., cap. 10. Op., tom. ii. col. 919, et 


alibi. | 

y (Jan. 14. Lectio iv., v., vi. ] 

 [ Lectio ix. ] 

® [Quanquam nobis differendz hu- 
jus rei necessitas major incumbat, qui- 
bus, post excessum nobilissime me- 


_morie viri Fabiani, nondum est epi- 
_ scopus propterrerum et temporum dif- 


She was a noble 
In 


ficultates constitutus.—Cleri Romani 
ad Cypr., Ep. 30, (ed. Pam, 31.) Epist. 
p. 58. ed. Fell. See also S. Cypr. Ep. 
g. ad Cler. Romanum, Op., p. 18. 
Accepi a vobis literas ad me missas 
per Clementium hypodiacorum, quibus 
plenissime de glorioso ejus (Fabiani) 
exitu instruerer: et exultavi satis, quod 
pro integritate administrationis ejus, 
consummatio quoque honesta proces- 
serit. | 

> [Si te virorum exempla non pro- 
vocant, hortetur faciatque securam 
beata martyr Agnes, que et etatem 
vicit, et tyrannum, et titulum castitatis 
martyrio consecravit.—S. Hieron., Ep. 
130, ad Demetriadem, (vet. ed. 8.) Op., 
tom. i. col. 973. A.} 

© [ Ap. edd. vett. Sermo xc. De pas- 
sione beate Agnetis virginis. Opus spu- 
rium; ap. ed. Ben., Epist. i., Op., tom. 
ii., Append., p. 479.] 

4 [Quid de Sancta Agne (loquar), 
que in duarum maximarum rerum po- 
sita periculo, castitatis et salutis, cas- 
titatem protexit, salutem cum immor- 
talitate commutavit.—S. Ambros., de 
Off. Minist., lib. i. cap. 41. § 218. Op., 
tom. ii. col. 54, E.j 

€ [Beata Agnes sancta cujus pas- 
sionis hodiernus est dies. Virgo que 
quod vocabatur, erat. Agnes Latine 
agnam significat, Greece castam. Erat 
quod vocabatur, merito coronabatur. .. 
Agnes puella tredecim annorum vicit 
diabolum.—S. Aug., Serm. 273, de 
Sanctis (aliter Serm. 101, de div.) § 6. 
Op., tom. v. col. 1107. D, E, F. ed. 
Ben.] . 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIEs. 


26 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


her tender years she suffered martyrdom at Rome under 
Diocletian. . 

22 Vincent.| Vincent was a famous deacon of Spain, 
and in the city of Valentia there was put to death by most 
exquisite torments under Diocletian the emperor; of whom 
Prudentius‘ wrote his fourth hymn, and upon whose feast- 
day St. Augustine made four sermons, as Possidonius telleth 
us in Jndiculo8. 

25 Conversion of Paul.| Which miraculous conversion was 
wrought by Christ in the second year after His ascension. 
Act. ix. Gicumenius tn Act. cap. ultim.® 


FEBRUARY. 


2 Purification.| Fest. majus duplex. 

3 Blasii.| He was bishop of Sebaste in Armenia, a man 
of infinite miracles and power, put to death in the same 
city by Agricolaus, the president under the emperor Diocle- 
tian: his famous martyrdom, and infinite torments patiently 
suffered by him, is written by S. Metaphrastesi, &c. 

5 Agathe.| A virgin that suffered martyrdom in Sicily 
under Decius the emperor. Her memory was kept with 
great solemnity among the old Christians, as appears by 
St. Greg., lib. ii. Regist. ep. 19. e¢ alibi*; where he makes 
mention both of her church and of her festival day, as also 
Pope Damasus did before him!. 

14 Valentine.| A man that suffered for Christ a most 
glorious martyrdom under Claudius the emperor at Rome, 
where Pope Theodore the First built a church in memory of 
him, almost a thousand years since; Damasus in vit. Pont. 


f [Prudent. Peristeph. Hymn. 5. A.] 


Op., p. 984, &e. ] 

& [Indiculus librorum, &c. S. Au- 
gustini cura Possidii, c. x. ap. S. Aug., 
Op., tom. x. App. col. 295—297. The 
sermons are extant, Serm. 274—277, 
tom. v. col. 1109, &c.] 

h [amd rod évveakaidendrou érous Ti- 
Bépiov Katoapos devtépov 5 Tod ow- 
tnplov mdOous, cE ob Knptooew Td ev- 
ayyéAov Hptaro.—Cicumen. in Acta 
Apost. cap. ult. Op., tom. i. p. 188. 


i [Vide Surium in diem, tom. i. p. 
258, and Acta SS. Bolland. Feb., tom. 
i. p. 336.] 

k [Ecclesia Sancte Agathe sita in 
suburra.—S. Gregor. M., lib. i. epist., 
lib. iv. ep. 19. (alit. lib, iii, ep. 19.) 
Op., tom. ii. col. 698. A. See also lib. 
i. ep. 54; ibid., col. 547. B, and note 
in the Benedictine edition. ] 

' (S. Damasi, carmen xxx. Op., p. 
238. | 











ON THE KALENDAR. oT 
Rom.™, et S. Greg. in Sacram.. He was a man of most strange 
and excellent parts, so famous for his love and charity, as 
from thence came the use of choosing Valentines (practised 
also amongst us) upon his festival day. 

25 Matthias.| Fest. inf. duplex. 


MARCH. 


1 David.| Who was at first a monk, and became a 
founder of twelve monasteries ; he was made archbishop of a 
city in Wales called Menevia, and now of him St. David’s; of 
whose virtues and miracles, which they say he wrought, see 
Ranulphus, lib. i. cap. 52°; Matth. Westm. an. 871”, Pol. 
Virg., lib. ii.¢ Bale says" he lived with King Arthur. 

2 Ceddes.| A holy man in the north parts of England, 
bishop of the Mercians, and of Lindesferne in Northumber- 
land. Bede writeth his life at large, lib. i. cap. 28*, and 
lib. iv. cap. 2 and 38. 

7 Perpetue".} Who suffered martyrdom under Severus 
the emperor, above 1400 years ago. She is often and 
honourably mentioned by Tertullian, in his book de Anima, 
cap. de inferis*; and by St. Augustine, lib. in. de Anime 
Origine, cap. 9°, in Psal. 47, versus finem2, de Temp. Barba- 


rico, cap. 5. 


m [(Theodorus) fecit ecclesiam beato 
Valentino, via Flaminia, &c.—Anas- 
tasii bibliothecarii (vulgo dict. Damasi 
P.) lib. de vitis Pont. Rom., num. 
Ixxxiv. (p. 128.) p. 102, Rome 1731.] 

» (S. Gregorii lib. Sacrament. xvi. 


kal. Mart. Op., tom. iii. col. 28; he is 


commemorated as a martyr, and prayers 


_ made through his intercession. ] 


° [Ranulphi Higdeni Cestriensis Po- 


e lychronicon, lib. i. cap. 52, as divided 
_ in the MS. copies; cap. de episco- 
_ patibus et sedibus, p. 204, ed. Gale. 


This is only on the translation of the 
see to S. David’s. ] 
P [ Flores Historiarum per Mattheum 


_ Westmonasteriensem collecti, ann. 872. 





p- 168. ed. Franc. 1601. There is men- 


_ tion of S. David’s monastery. | 


4 [After Pol. Virg. lib. ii. the words 


_ claruit an. 210 were written but after- 
wards crossed out; the reference also 
- ought to be lib. iii, A.D. 600, p. 61, 


ed. 1570. ] 

® (Scriptorum illustrium Britannie 
Catalogus, cent. i. num. 55. The same 
statement is found in Higden, as cited 
above. | 

8 |This note is crossed through in 
the original. 

t [Beda, Eccl. Hist. Gentis Angl., 
Op., 1. iii. pp. 80, 84, &c. ] 

" [Quomodo Perpetua fortissima 
martyr sub die passionis, in revela- 
tione paradisi, solos illic commartyres 
duos vidit.—Tertull. de Anima, cap. 
55. Op., p. 304. B.] 

x [De Anima et ejus origine, lib. iii. 
cap. 9. § 12. Op., tom. x. col. 379. E. ] 

y [Quam multos parentes filii pro- 
hibebant mori, sicut novimus et legi- 
mus in passione beatze Perpetue ?— 
Enarr. in Psal. xlvii. § 13. Op., tom. 
iv. col. 423. B.] 

z [Ante paucos dies natalitia cele- 
bravimus martyrum Perpetuz et Feli- 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


28 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


12 Gregory.| The famous doctor and bishop of Rome, 
who augmented the service of the Church, perfected the 
litanies, and appointed the solemn stations, &c. Among 
other his glorious and Christian deeds, we celebrate his me- 
mory here in England for his devout charity to our nation 
in sending Augustine the monk, and many others with him, 
to bring the greatest part of the nation to the knowledge 
and service of Christ, which in a short time they did marvel- 
ously and happily achieve; whereupon, by Bede and other 
historiographers, he is usually called the Apostle of the Eng- 
lish nation, Bede, lib. ii. cap. 13%. His day is kept holy even 
by the Grecians themselves, so famous he was, and admir- 
able, through the Christian world. 

18 Edward.| This man was king of the West Saxons, a 
devout and religious prince, who was slain by his heathenish 
step-mother, Queen Alphred, A°. 978. His day of martyrdom 
was appointed to be kept festival by Pope Innocent IV., A’. 
1245. Surius, tom. i. 18 Mar.° 

20 Cuthbert*. A holy man, who was first a monk in the 
monastery of Mailros in Northumberland, and afterwards 
an hermit for many years; then by general consent of a 
synod was he chosen bishop of Lindesferne, which he re- 
signed for his hermit’s life again, and soon after ended his 
life. He was buried at Lindesferne, and with strange mira- 
cles removed to Durham, which are not unworthy the read- 
ing, in the 26th cap. of the 4 lib. of Bede’s Hist.*, at the end 


observed in the 


citatis et comitum. Et cum tot ibi sint 
viri, quare iste duz prz omnibus no- 
minantur, nisi quia infirmior sexus aut 
zequavit, aut superavit virorum forti- 
tudinem ?—Pseudo-August., Serm. de 
Tempore Barbarico, cap. v. § 6. Op., 
tom. vi. Append, col. 611. D.] 

® [Quem recte nostrum appellare 
possumus et debemus apostolum.— 
Beda, Eccl. Hist. Gent. Angl., lib. ii. 
cap. 1. (not. 13.)] 

{ Baronius, note on Mart. Rom. in 
diem, p.131, ed. 1589, says; ‘* De cele- 
bratione diei festi S. Edwardi regis extat 
epistola Innocentii papz quarti in va- 
ticana bibliotheca, in registro ipsius, 
anno 2, p. 527;’’ but he has the same 
note on Jan. 5, p. 15, on S, Edward 
the Confessor, to which it properly be- 
longs; the feast of Edward King of 
the West Saxons, was appointed and 


English Church 
before A.D. 1017. ‘‘ Wise men have 
chosen S. Edward’s mass day to be 
kept as a festival all over England, on 
the fifteenth of the kalends of April,” 
&c. King Cnute’s Laws Ecclesiastical, 
1017. § 17; Johnson’s Canons, vol. i. 
p. 508. ed. Oxon. 1850, (and Wilkins’ 
Concilia, vol. i. p. 3038.) ] 

© (fol. 87.] 

4 [The name of Cuthbert is inserted 
in the Kalendar by Bp. Cosin. ] 

€ [The miracles attending on the 
removal of S. Cuthbert’s remains are 
not mentioned by Bede, as that re- 
moval did not take place till 875, 
more than a century after his death in 
734. The miracles during the life-time, 
and after the death of S. Cuthbert, are 
related in his Eccl. Hist., book iv. c. 
27, to the end of the book. } 





a ree ay 





ON THE KALENDAR. 


whereof he says, Vitam sancti patris (nostri) monachi simul 
et antistitis Cuthberti prius heroico metro (MS.) et postmodum 
claro (leg. plano) sermone descripsi‘. 

21 Benedict.| He was the first founder of the famous 
order of Benedictine monks, whose admirable life and multi- 
tude of miracles are related by St. Gregory the Great, in his 
second book of Dialogues®. Vid. Brev. Rom., p. 751"; Sigib. 
de Vir. Iil., cap. 35%; Paul. de gest. Longob., lib. i. c. 17); 
A[imoin] de gestis Francorum, lib. ii. cap. 22". He overthrew 
the statue of Apollo at Casinum, and burnt up the groves 
there ; where afterwards he built a famous monastery, and 
made the rule which we call Regula S. Benedicti. He fore- 
told his death, and caused his sepulchre to be made accord- 
ingly, by which he took the eucharist, and presently gave up 


29. 


the ghost. 
24 In. Reg. Jacobi, 
25 Annune. | 


Fest. minus duplex. 


28 Easter-day™.| Fest. principale duplex. 
29 Fer. 2.| Fest. minus duplex. 


30, Fer. 3.] 


Fest. minus duplex. 


APRIL. 


3 Richard. | 
ing and virtues. 


An Englishman, famous for his great learn- 
He was bishop of Chichester, so highly 


reverenced by all men for his good government, his diligence 


f [This passage is from a catalogue 
of Bede’s writings appended to the 
Eccl. Hist. in Smith’s Bede, p. 223, Can- 
tab. 1722; which in the edition of his 
works, Colon. 1612, is in the life pre- 
fixed to the first volume. The same 
statement is made in the Eccl. Hist. 
iv. 28, near the kt ginning, and in the 
prose life of S.C ithbert. The prose 
life is printed after the Eccl. Hist.; 
the life in hexameter verse, which was 
only extant in MS. in Bp. Cosin’s time, 
is printed in Smith’s Bede, p. 628.] ‘ 

& [S. Gregor. Mag. Op., tom. ii. p. 
210—275. | 

h (In diem. Festa Martii, Mart. xii. ] 

i [Sigeberti Gemblacensis de Viris 
Illustribus (sive de Scriptoribus Eccle- 
siasticis,) c, 31, apud Mirei Bibliothec. 


Ecclesiast., p. 90. ed. Fabricius. ] 

i.{ Pauli Warnefridi Longobardi dia- 
coni Forojuliensis, de gestis Longo- 
bardorum, libri vi. (ap. Muratori Re- 
rum Italicarum Scriptores, tom. i. p. 
421,) lib. i. c. 26, where are hymns 
setting forth his life and miracles. See 
also lib. vi. c. 2. p. 490. ] 

k [Aimoini monachi Floriacensis de 
gestis Francorum, p. 61. ed. Par. 1608, 
and ap. Duchesne, Historie Franco- 
rum Scriptores, tom. iii. p. 38. ] 

1 [ This is printed in the Kalendar. ]} 

m [These moveable feasts are added 
in MS. Easter-day fell on March 28 
in the year 1619, the date of the book 
in which these notes are made, (also 
in 1621 and 1630.) ] 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


30 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


in preaching, his devotion in praying, and his admirable in- 
tegrity of life, besides a many miracles that they report of 
him: that about seven or eight years after his death he was 
canonized a saint by Pope Urban the IV., A°. 1261. Where- 
upon his body was removed from the place where it was first 
buried in his church, and laid in a sumptuous shrine, at 
which a multitude of miracles they say were wrought. God- 
win, in the Bishops of Chichester"; Molanus in Annot. ad 
Usuard.° Sur., p. 486. tom. iii.?; Matth. West. A®. 12449, 

4 Ambrose.| Loe Sunday. Fest. minus duplex. The great 
doctor of the Church, and bishop of Milan, chosen miracu- 
lously thereunto while he was appeasing the multitude that 
were striving about the election. By his study and care, 
among many other famous deeds, was all Italy converted 
to the true faith of Christ, in the heat of the Arian heresy. 
He was the man that begat St. Austin to the Church, that 
defended the liberties thereof, and the strict discipline then 
in use, even against the emperors Maximus and Theodosius. 
He was author of Te Deum Laudamus, from whence it is 
called Ambrosianum, and before his time were few hymns 
heard in the Latin Church. 

Brev. Rom.’ In hujus infantis ore examen apum consedisse 
dicitur, que res divini viri eloquentiam premonstrabat. 

25 Mark Evang.| Jest. inferius duplex. 


MAY. 


1 Phil. et Jac.| Fest. inf. duplex. 

3 In[vention] of the Crosse.| This is the memory of the day 
when our British Empress Helena by God’s guidance did seek 
out and find the cross of Christ under the temple of Venus 
on Mount Calvary. The miracles that are reported to follow 


" [Godwin de Presulibus Anglize 
Commentarius; Episcopi Cicestrenses, 
num. 138, p. 505. ed. 1743. ] 

° (In diem, p. 191.] 

P [tom. ii. fol. 151, b. Venet. 1581. ] 

4 {p. 316, 55. ed. Francof. 1601, (of 
his election in opposition to the king’s 
nominee). | 

* [Dec. vii. The words are cited 
from the 4th lection, which is derived 
from the life of S. Ambrose, sent to 


S. Augustine by his secretary Pauli- 
nus, in which this fact is stated. Op. S. 
Ambrosii, tom. ii. Appendix, col. ii. A. 
April 4 was the day of his death, and 
on this day only was his feast kept in 
the Sarum Breviary; though it is not 
noticed in the kalendar of the Roman 
Breviary. Dec. 7 is the anniversary of 
his ordination, and was observed as his 
chief feast at Milan as well as Rome. 
See the Bollandists on April 4.] 


3 core santo mengeladin be S ETE RR 


PFI ey eee 


ra 


I SE IES a 





ON THE KALENDAR. 31 


thereupon are many and strange, yet not to be so much dis- 
credited as some men would have them, being related by 
St. Ambrose, Orat. funebr. in Theod.® Paulinus, ep. 11‘; Sulp. 
Sever., lib. 2. Hist"; Ruffin., lib. xvi. cap. 8%. Upon the 
invention of His cross Constantine made a law, that never 
any offender should be crucified on a cross again. So that 
which before was the shame of the world began then to be 
the glory and honour of Christian men. Brev. Rom.’ and 
Cassiod., Trip. Hist., cap. 4, 5 and 97. : 

6 Johan. Evang.| In memory of that day, wherein St. John 
the Evangelist, being sent bound from Ephesus to Rome, was 
by the commandment of Domitian put into a cauldron of hot 
burning oil, before the gate which is called Porta Latina, and 
was miraculously preserved in it, coming out from thence 
more sound and whole than when he was put in: they are 
Tertullian’s words, Lib. de Prescript.*, repeated by St. Jerome, 
lib. i. adversus Jovinianum, Refert autem Tertullianus, quod 
Rome missus in ferventem olet dolium, purior et vegetior exivit 
guam intraverit. Vid. etiam EKuseb., lib. 11. Demonstr. Evang., 
cap. 7°. ; 

10 Dunstan.| His life is written by Bishop Godwin, in 
Canterbury, Anno 959°. <A great promoter he was of a 
monastical life, being brought up himself first in Glastonbury 
abbey, after made bishop of Worcester by good King Edgar, 
then of London, and afterwards of Canterbury. After his 
death he was sainted, but God knows why. Apud Surium, 
tom. 11.¢; Zrith. de viris Illust., lib. iti. cap. 124; lib. iv. cap. 
1008, 





8 [S. Ambrosii de obitu Theodosii 
oratio, § 41—49. Op. tom. ii. col. 1209, 


Sq4- reve 
‘ (S. Paulini Epist., xxxi. (al. xi.) 


4 § 4, sqq. op. col. 191, sqq.] 


" (Sulpicii Severi Hist. Sacra, lib. 
ii. p. 388. ] 
* [Ruffini Historia Eccles., lib. i. 


_ ¢. 7, 8. Opuse. p. 200. Paris. 1580. ] 


y (Breviarium Romanum in diem, 


 Lectio vi. | 


* (Cassiodori Historia Ecclesiastica 


_ tripartita, lib. ii. ¢. 18. p. 282. Op. 
_ Rotomagi, 1679.] 


* [Ista quam felix Ecclesia (Romana) 


_ ++ ubi Apostolus Joannes posteaquam in 
_ oleum igneum demersus, nihil passus 


est, in insulam relegatur.—Tertullian. 
de Prescriptione Hereticorum, cap. 36, 
Op., p. 215. A.] 

> [S. Hieron. lib. adv. Jovinian. § 26. 
Op., tom. ii. col. 280. ] 

© Plwdvyns te vhow tmapadidora:.— 
Euseb. Demonst. Evangel., lib. iii. 
cap. 7. p. 116. C.] 

[ De presulibus Angliz Comm. Ar- 
chiep. Cantuar., num, 23. p. 51.] 

© (fol. 99. b.] 

f [ Trithemius de viris illustribus or- 
dinis Benedictini, lib. iii. c. 221. p. 496, 
ad cale. Regula S. Bened. cum com- 
ment. Joannis de Turrecremata, Col. 
Agr. 1575.] 

& [Ibid., p. 521.] 


First 


SERIES. . 


First 
SERIES. 





32 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


16 Pentecost.| Fest. principal. duplex. 

17 Fer. 2.| Fest. minus duplex. 

18 Fer. 3.] Fest. minus duplex. 

26 Augustine.] Angl. Ap. The first bishop of Canterbury, 
sent hither by St. Gregory the Great, to convert the Saxons 
from paganism. See his life as it is largely written in Bishop 
Godwin’s Catalogue of Bishops, Cant. i.®, and by Bede in 
Hist. Angl. per multa capita’, 


JUNE. 


3 Nicomede.] A priest of Rome, who for the profes- 
sion of Christ’s Gospel was there cruelly martyred and put 
to death. Usuard.« He was St. Peter’s disciple. 

5 Boniface.| He was an Englishman, and the first bishop 
of Mentz in Germany ; or, according to Usuard, the bishop 
of Utrecht', qui de Britanniis veniens, et fidem Christi Gen- 
tilibus evangelizans, cum: maximam multitudinem in Frisia 
Christiane religiont subjugasset, novissime gladio peremptus 
martyrium consummavit cum 50 sociis. Trithem. in Catal.™ 
Wicelius in Hagiolog.® Moritur Anno 865. *Vide Surium», 
et Bedam?. 

11 Barnabe.| The continual companion and fellow apo- 
stle of St. Paul for the conversion of the Gentiles, Act. 
xili., being first one of the seventy-two disciples chosen by 
Christ: Euseb., lib. ii. Hist., cap. 14. In the Isle of Cyprus, 
where he was born, he was crowned with martyrdom: 


h [De Presulibus, &c. p. 1. ] France. 1601. ] 


i (lib. i. c. 33, sqq.] 

k [June 1. Rome, dedicatio sancti 
Nicomedis presbyteri et martyris, Usu- 
ard, p. 309. The Ist of June is the cor- 
rect day: it is so in the old Sarum 
kalendars; the error was corrected in 
1662. ] 

1 [See Usuard ap. Bollandist., p. 318. 
The pure text is simply Sancti Boni- 
facii Episcopi, qui &c., but in Rosweyd, 
following an Utrecht manuscript, a 
statement of his being bishop of Utrecht 
is inserted, ] 

m [Catalogus illustrium virorum 
Germanie, p. 122. Op. Historica, 


" [This has not been found. ] 

° [In diem, tom. iii. fol. 148.] 

P [In Bede’s Martyrology, as printed 
with the accumulated additions in the 
edition of his works, Colon. 1612. vol. 
iii. fol. 311, there is an account of S. 
Boniface. But in the pure text as 
printed by Smith, Cantab. 1722. p. 
371, the day was blank. ] 

a [Of 5 Aowwol ’ArdoroAa Tots EB- 
Sounkovra (mapédwkav), av els hv Kar 
BapvdBas.—Clem. Alex., Hypotyp., lib. 
vii. apud Euseb. de Hist. Eccl., lib. ii. 
cap. i. p. 44.] 


a Serres 





PIT Lh ie 


Nay eee 











nh Cla tc 


a ete) Fe 


ON THE KALENDAR. 


33 


Hieronym., de Vir. Illust.t; Isidorus, de Patr. Vet. Test.* ; 


Sixt. Sen., lib. 1. Bzbl. Sanct.* 
Edward.| Rex et Mart. 
25 John Baptist. | 
Natalis dies. 


Fest. minus duplex. 
Vid. Mendoz. in Reg., p. 258. 


29 Peter, Ap.| Fest. minus duplex. 


JULY. 


1 Visit. of Mary.| A feast instituted for the memory 
and celebration of the famous journey which the mother 
of our Lord took into the mountains of Judea, to visit the 


mother of St. John Baptist. 


4 Martin.| A feast in memory of the translation of St. 
Martin, the settling of his bishopric, and the dedication of 
his church. Usuard.*, 4. Non. Julii, and Molanusy, ibidem. 

15 Swithun.] Translatio Swithuni Epist. et Sociorum ejus. 
Molanus’, in Addit. ad Usuardum. 


20 Margaret. | 
phrastes*. 


Her history is elegantly written by Meta- 
She was a blessed virgin which suffered martyr- 


dom for Christ’s name at Antioch in Asia, under Decius the 


emperor. 


Bapt. Mantuanus” and Hieronymus Vida* have 


set forth her glorious passion in poems. 
22 Magdalene.| De Magdal., Luke vii., Matth. xxvi., Joh. 
August.4, Hom. xxiii. inter 50, et alit. 


25 St. James, Apostle.| Fest. inf. duplex. 


tian Directory, p. 276°. 


r [S. Hieron. de Vir. Illust., cap. 6. 
Op., tom. ii. col. 825. ] 

* [ Barnabas, qui et Joseph, natione 
Cypriz civitatis, a Cyro Persarum rege 
condite, cum Paulo in Gentibus Apos- 
tolatum adeptus.—S. Isidor. Hispal. de 
Vita et Morte Sanctorum, cap. 83. Op., 


_ p. 368. E.] 


t [Sixti Senensis Bibliotheca Sancta, 
lib. ii. p. 45. ed. Par. 1610.] . 

_ ™ [Mendoza, in lib, ii Regum (1 
Samuel) cap. i. num. 20. § 15. on the 
naming of S. John. } 

x (Turonis, translatio Beati Martini 
episcopi et confessoris, et ordinatio 
episcopatus ejus.—Usuardi Martyrol. 
in diem, p. 380. ] 

y [Molanus adds to the above ‘et 


 dedicatio basilice ejus,’’ p. 381. ] 


’ COSIN. 


Vide the Chris- 


« [In Anglia, translatio sancti Swi- 
thuni Episcopi Wintoniensis, et socio- 
rum ejus episcoporum et confessorum. 
—Ibid. in diem. ] | 

@ (Vita B. Marine, apud Surium in 
diem, tom. iv, fol. 86. S. Margaret is 
called Marina by the Greeks. ] 

b (Baptista Mantuanus, Parthenius 
Tertize B. Margaretzee Agon. Op., tom. 
ii. p. 102. Antw. 1576.] 

¢ [Hieron. Vida, Hymn. 30, 31. D. 
Margarit virgini, p. 164, 166. Op., 
pars 3. tom. ii. Lond. 1732.] 

a4 (S. Aug., Serm. 99. de Scripturis. 
(aliter Hom. 23. inter 50), Op., tom. v. 
col. 521. ] 

e (lib. i, part 1. ch. iv. sect. 3. con- 
sid, vi. § 5. | 


FIRST 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


34: 


26 Anne.| The mother of our blessed lady the Virgin 
Mary, mentioned by many ecclesiastical writers; by Da- 
mascen, lib. 4. de Fide‘, cap. 15; Epiph., Her. 78 and 79°; 
Auctor Libelli de ortu Virginis apud Hier.'; Rodolph. Agric., 
in carm.; Trithem.* Justinian the emperor built a most 
magnificent temple in honour of her name. Procop., lib. 1. 
de adif. Just.‘, Radulph. de R.™, in Calend. The Greeks. 
The emperor Emanuel, in his Constitutions, acknowledgeth 
her day to be festival; Tit. de feriis™. 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


AUGUST. 


Mensis iste, prius Sextilis dictus, quia a primo sextus erat, 


ab Augusto Imperatore, qui annum emendavit, suo nomine - 


Augustus appellabatur, anno septimo ante nativitatem Christi. 
Macrob.°; Dio?; Censorinus4, 

6 Transfigurat.| An ancient festival of the Church, in- 
stituted in memory of Christ’s admirable Transfiguration in 
the mount. It was observed in the Latin Church but of 
late, since Calixtus III.*, but in the Greek Churches long 
before. Metaphrastes‘, et apud eund., Basil. Seleuc.", Cyrillus 











f (Iwakelu tolyuy Thy cepviy te Kal 
&témavov “Avvay mpds ydamov hydryerTo. 
—S. Joan. Damascen. de Fide Ortho- 
doxa, lib. iv. cap. 14. Op., tom. i. p. 
275. B.] 

& (Tuvatka pty 7de abriy TH wAdoe, 
Kal OfArAcayv TH pioe Kal ex pntpds 
“Avyns kat ex matpds “Iwakelu.—S. Epi- 
phan. adv. Heres., lib. iii. tom. 2. 
Heres. 78. cap. 17. Op., tom. i, p. 
1049. D.]. 

h [El yap ayyéAous mpockuvetoba 
ov Ore, wéow MGAAOY Thy ard “Avyns 
vyeyevyvnuevnv.—lId. ibid., Heres. 79. 
eap. 5. Op., tom. i. p. 1062. C.] 

i [Pater ejus Joachim; mater vero 
Anna dicebatur.—Narratio de Nativi- 
tate B.M.V., cap. ii. Opus spurium 
inter Op. S. Hieron., tom. ii. col. 281. 
A. 

} [He wrote a poem on S. Anne, on 
a recovery from an illness, which he 
attributed to her intercession.—See 
Acta Sanctorum, Bolland. in diem; 
Julii, tom. vi. p. 278, 279.] 

- * [Trithemius wrote a treatise De 
laudibus B. Annee.—Ibid. ]} 

1 (Ev xwplw 5& ris wéAcws 0 SéuTE- 


pov emicadeirat, fepompemés Te Kal aya- 
atby bAws dveOnney €d0s “Avyn ayla, hy 
bev Ocotdkov yeyovéva: pntépa tives 
nyovvta, Tod 5 Xpicrod tit Oqv.—Pro- 
copius de Aidificiis, lib. i. cap. 3. Op., 
tom. ii. p. 12. e.] 

™ [This name is left incomplete in 
the MS.] 

» [ This constitution (novella) of Ma- 
nuel Comnenus is cited by Balsamon 
in his Scholium on Photius, Nomoca- 
non, tit. vii. ¢. 1. (Bibliotheca Jur. 
Can. Vet. Justelli, p. 922); it enume- 
rates among the days to be observed as 
holydays, July 25, Sia thy tis aylas 
“Avyns TIS wntpds THs OcouhTopos Kol- 
enor. | 

® (Saturnalia, lib. i. eap. 12.] 

P {Hist. Rom., lib. lv. cap. 6.] 

4 [ De die Natali, cap. 22.] 

® [See note b, p. 35. ] 

t [The Sermons referred to are given 
in Surius from Simeon Metaphrastes, 
Aug. 6, tom. iv. fol. 170. sqq. } 

" [Ibid.; et Greece, Orat. xl. Op. S. 


Basilii Seleucia, p. 230, ad calc. Op., 


S. Greg. Thaum., Par. 1622. ] 


ON THE KALENDAR. 35 


Alexandr.*, Ephr. Edess.¥, guorum orationes illic leguntur. It First 
was also celebrated in France, as should seem by Beleth, in _S®®'**: 
his Rational., c. 144%, vide Const. Eman. Imp., tit. 7. cap. 1°. 
Platina in vita Calixti>. 

7 Name of Jesus.| <A feast instituted in the honour of 
_ that name which is above all names, “that at the name of [Phil. ii. 
_ Jesus every knee might bow.” Vid. Evang. in die Circum- od 
 cisionis. 

10 Lawrence.| This was that admirable and famous deacon 
to Sixtus, bishop of Rome, whom he was always accustomed 
to assist at the sacrifice. When Sixtus was haled to death 
__ by the soldiers of Valerian the emperor, St. Ambrose® tells 
how the holy man cried out to his bishop in this wise, ‘ O 
father, why do you leave me? You were never wont to offer 
sacrifice without me.” And at last, occasion being taken 
against him by the greedy pagans, for denying to deliver up 
the Church-treasury whereof he had custody, he was broiled 
upon a hot gridiron. S. Ambr., lib. i. Off. c. 414, lib. ii. c. 
28°; Aug., Tract. in Joh.£ Serm. 37.8 38%, Leo in Serm.', 








eg oa 


as ee 
’ 








Hier. Vida*, 


x (Ibid., fol. 175; et Grace, Op. 
8. Cyrilli, tom. ii. par. 2. p. 366.] 

y (Ibid., fol. 173.b; et Grace, Op. 
S. Ephraem. Syri, tom. ii, p. 41. 
Rome. 1732.] 

« [Ad cale. Durandi Rational. Div. 
Off, tom. ii. p. 559. Lugd. 1574. Be- 
leth was Rector of the Theological 
School of Paris, cire. A.D. 1162. Cave. | 

* (That is, tit. vii. c. 1. of Photius’ 
Nomocanon, and Balsamon’s Scholion. 
See above note n. 5:4 thy Tod owripos 
jay "Inood Xpiotod petaudppwow. | 

> ( Officium transfigurationis Domini 
nostri Jesu Christi ipse composuit ; 
jussitque eo modo atque cum his in- 
dulgentiis celebrari, quibus celebritas 
Corporis Christi in precio habetur.— 
Platina de Vitis Pontificum; Vita Ca- 
lixti IIT. (A.D.1455—1458.) ad fin., ed. 
Ven. 1479. There is no reason to sup- 
pose that the festival was not observed 
previously, indeed as early as the 9th 
century. See Baronius’ notes on the day, 
Martyrolog. Romanum, in diem. ] 

* [Quo progrederis sine filio, Pater: 
quo, sacerdos sancte, sine diacono pro- 
peras tuo? nunquam sacrificium’ sine 
ministro offerre consueveris.—S, Am- 


See Hooker’s relation of his parley with the 


bros. de Off. Minist., lib. i. cap. 41. § 
214. Op. tom. ii. col. 54. E, 55. A.] 

4 [Impositus craticulo exurebatur. 
—Ibid., § 216. col. 56. A.] 

€ [Laurentius qui aurum Ecclesiz 
maluit erogare pauperibus, quam per- 
secutori reservare, pro singulari suze 
interpretationis vivacitate sacram mar- 
tyrii accepit coronam.—S. Ambros. 
ibid., lib, ii. cap. 28. § 141. Op., tom. ii, 
col. 104. F. ] 

‘f |S. Aug. in Johan., cap. vi. Tract. 
27. § 12, Op., tom. iii. par. 2. col. 507. 
A—D.] 

& [S. Aug., Serm. 304. de Sanctis 


(aliter Serm. 37. de Div.) Op., tom. v. 


col. 1234. ed. Ben. There are three 
other Sermons of S. Augustin on this 
day, 302, 303, 305. col. 1226. sqq. ed: 
Ben. | 

h [ Pseudo-Aug. Serm. 314. de Div. 
(aliter Serm, 38. de Div.) opus spurium. 
Op. S. Aug., tom. v. Append., col. 530, 
ed, Ben. | 

i [S, Leo, Serm. Ixxxv. in Nat. S. 
Laurentii Mart. Op., tom. i. p. 357.] 

k (Hier. Vida, Hymn. 20, 21, 22. D. 
Laurentio Martyri, pp. 132, 142, 144. 
Op., pars iii, tom. ii, Lond. 1732. ] 


D2 


First 
SERIES. 





36 _ NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


pagan for his Church goods, Eccl. Pol., lib. v. sec. 79. p. 
4:30}, 

24 Barthol. Ap.| Fest. inf. duplex. 

28 Augustine.| The renowned doctor and father of the 
Latin Church, who was converted from a Manichee to a true 
Catholic by St. Ambrose, and afterwards became the over- 
throw of all heretics both of his time and before him. His 
life is written by Possid [ius]. 

29 Beheading of John.| The feast is mentioned both by 
Bede™ and Usuard"; solemnly kept by the Greeks in their 
Menologies®. It is reckoned among other feasts in the Con- 
stitutions of Eman. Imp., tit. vii. cap. 1. apud Balsam.?, &. 
Vid. the Christian Directory, p. 2754. 


SEPTEMBER. 


21 St. Matthew.| Fest. inf. duplex. 
29 St. Michael.| Fest. inf. duplex. 


OCTOBER. 


18 Luke Evang.| Fest. inf. duplex. 
28 Simon and Jude.| Fest. inf. duplex. 


NOVEMBER. 


1 All Saints.}| Fest. majus duplex. 


Festum Omnium Sanctorum. 


Et quia in festis (sanctorum) 


circa solennitatis debitum aliquid per negligentiam, aut rei 
familiaris occupationem, aut alias ex humana fragilitate omit- 


1 [Hooker, book v. chap. 79. § 14. 
vol. ii. p. 494—496. ed. Keble. ] 

m [Eodem die decollatio S. Joannis 
Baptiste, qui primo in Samaria condi- 
tus, tune in Alexandria; porro caput 
de Hierosolymis ad Phoenicize urbem 
Emissam delatum est.—Bedz Martyr. 
in diem. Op. ed. Smith, p. 414. ] 

® [ Decollatio, vel potius inventio ca- 
pitis beatissimi Joannis Baptiste. Si- 
quidem decollationem ejus circa solem- 
nitatem Paschalem evenisse ex evange- 


lica comprobatur lectione, que tamen 
hic festiva recolitur, quando caput ejus- 
dem secundo repertum est in Emessa 
civitate, atque in ecclesia conditum.— 
Usuard. Mart. in diem. ] 

© {[Menologium Grecorum, Aug. 29. 
pars iii, p. 224. Urbini, 1727. ] 

P [See above, p. 84. note n. dia Thy 
700 aylov mpodpduov &morouqv. ubi 
supra. } 

4 (Lib. i. part 1. chap. iv. sect. 3. 
consid. vi. § 3.) , 


Ale ee eS eT eee eee 





eS a eae es eee 








ON THE KALENDAR. 37 


titur ; statuit ipsa mater ecclesia certam diem, in qua gene- First 
raliter Omnium Sanctorum commemoratio fieret, ut in hac a. 
tpsorum celebratione communi, quicquid in propriis ipsorum 
festivitatibus omissum existeret solveretur. Urbanus IV. lib. 
ii. Clem. Tit. 16°. 

30 Andrew Ap.| Fest. inf. duplex. 


DECEMBER. 


21 Lhomas Ap.| Fest. inf. duplex. 

25 Christmas.| Fest. princip. duplex. 

Vid. libr. intituled the Christian Directory, p. 186, 187, 
&c.§ 

26 St. Stephen.] Fest. minus duplex. 

27 St. John.] Fest. minus duplex. 

28 Innocents.] Fest. minus duplex. 

Vide eundem librum (the Christian Directory), p. 212, 213, 
&c., and p. 274, 


[RULES AFTER THE KALENDAR. | 


These to be observed for Holydays, and none other.| I The 5th 
suppose: this whole page to be but the printers’ work, no sige agtieee 
order of the Church, as appears by the sequent declaration veyor*. 
of the beginning and ending of the lawyers’ terms* ; for what 
had churchmen to do with them? And so here for holydays, 

I never could see where it was appointed, that these here 
should be observed and no other. Which are holydays, and 
which are not, according to the purpose and intent of our 
Church, appears by the lessons appointed before as proper 
for holydays, where are many more days accounted holy, 
than here are by the ignorance of the printer. In the 


statute of 5 Edw., cap. 3, these indeed were appointed, and 


* [An extract from a constitution of consid. ii. § 7. and sect. 8. consid. vi. 


Pope Urban IV. in the Constitutiones 


§ 1.) 
Clementine (of Pope Clement V.) lib. u [A Survey, &c., p. 32, The excep- 
iii. tit. 16. ap. Corp. Jur. Can. tom. iii.] tion is grounded chiefly on the discre- 
* { Lib. i. part 1. ch. iv. sect. 2. con- pancies between the acts of parliament 


sid. i. § 1.) noticed here by bp. Cosin. ] 


* [Lib. i. part 1. chap. iv. sect. 2. * [See p. 40, note 1. ] 


First 


SERIES. 


Observa- 
tion of 


holydays. 


Dies Do- 
minicus. 


88 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


none other; but that statute being repealed, 1 Mary I. 
cap. 2, and being not since revived’, we are to stick rather 
to the authority of this service-book, in the catalogue of 
lessons proper (as before), rather than to the printer’s plea- 
sure and ignorance. I cannot tell; it seems the printer was 
loth to lose the work of his servants so many holydays in the 
year as-he saw proper lessons appointed for before, and there- 
fore he comes stealing in with this lay-direction, which the 
people’s indevotion and carelessness of observing any day was 
ready enough to lay hold on and to make a rule of, though 
it be no more a part of the service-book established by the 
Church, than that the lawyers’ terms should have their be- 
ginning and ending as is here noted. 

These to be observed for holydays.| Faustus the Mani- 
chee’ objected against the Christians, as the Puritans do 
against us; that likewise as “the Jews forsook the idols of 
the gentiles, but their temples and oblations, and altars and 
priesthoods, and all kind of ministry of holy things, they 
exercised even as the Gentiles did,” so between the Catho- 
lics and the heathen there was in many things little difference. 
“ From them,” says Faustus*, “ye have learned to hold that 
one only God is the author of all; their sacrifices ye have 
turned into feasts of charity, their idols into martyrs, whom 
ye honour with the like religious offices unto theirs; the 
ghosts of the dead appease with wine and delicates; the 
festival days of the nations ye celebrate together with them, 
and of their kind of life ye have changed nothing.” See St. 
Austin’s defence, which is ours: tom. vi. contra Faust. 
Man., lib. xx. cap. 4°. 

All Sundays.| Nec nos terret insultatio tua, quod sabba- 
torum otium catenas Saturniacas appelles; vana est enim et 
inepta ; nec tibt hoc dicere venisset in mentem, nisi quia vos in 


Y [See above, p. 19. note c.] 

* [Necnon et priores vestri Judzi 
segregati etiam ipsi a gentibus sculp- 
turas solum dimiserunt: templa vero, 
et immolationes, et aras et sacerdotia, 
atque omne sacrorum ministerium eo- 
dem ritu exercuerunt.—S. Aug. cont, 
Faustum, lib. xx.cap.4. Op., tom, viii. 
col. 334. C.] 

* [Vos qui descisentes a gentibus, 
monarchie opinionem primo vobis- 
cum divulsistis, id est, ut omnia cre- 


datis ex Deo, sacrificia vero eorum 
vertistis in agapas, idola in martyres, 
quos votis similibus colitis; defuncto- 
rum umbras vino placatis et dapibus: 
solemnes gentium dies cum ipsis cele- 
bratis, ut kalendas et solstitia: de vita 
certe mutastis nihil.—Id. ibid., col. . 
334. B.} 

» [This reference is to the objections 
of .Faustus, just cited; the answer of 
S. Augustine follows in c. 5, ibid. D.] 


ON HOLYDAYS. 39 


die, quem dicunt solis, solem colitis. Sicut autem nos eundem First 
° ° ° ° e ‘A hd S S. 
diem dominicum dicimus, in eo quod non istum solem, sed ~~ 


resurrectionem Domini veneramur ; sic ottum sabbatorum sine 
Saturni veneratione a patribus observatum est, cum sic ulum 
observari oportebat ; erat enim umbra futurorum. S. Aug., 
tom. vi. lib. xviii. cont. Faust. Manich., cap. 5°. e¢ hb. xx. 
cap. 184, 
_ _ Upon the Sunday the ancient Christians held it unlawful Die Dom. 
to fast. St. Ignat., Epist. ad Philippenses*. Iterum crucifigunt 0? 0" 
Christum qui jejunant in die Dominica, &c. Item Tertull. de 
Corona Mil!; Concil. Gangr. can. 18%; et Cone. Carthag. iv. 
can. 64"; et Epiphan. contra Hereses, lib. 3, prope finem’, 
et Her. 75i, ante medium; where fasting upon Sundays is 
made one of Aerius’s wilful and condemned errors. And 
the reason is, because upon this day Christ rose from the 
dead, which made it unto us a day of joy and comfort, rather 
than of mourning and fasting. 

And for the like reason another ancient custom it was, not Die Nati- 
to fast upon Christmas-day, not (says Epiphanius) though it “its Pe 


mini non 
chance to fall upon Wednesday or Friday. Lib. 11. contra jejunatur. 





a Nee ae ee ee 


ee Sa 


ee Pi nS Fe 








Hereses, Her. ult.«, Leo Ep. 93. ad Turb. Astur. c. 4’. 


© [Id. ibid., lib. xviii. cap. 5. col. 
311. C.] 

4 [Quomodo ergo comparas panem - 
et calicem nostrum, et parem religio- 
nem dicis errorem longe a veritate dis- 
cretum; pejus desipiens quam non- 
nulli, qui nos propter panem et calicem 
Cererem ac Liberum colere existimant? 
Quod ideo commemorandum putavi, ut 
advertatis ex qua vanitate veniat etiam 
illud vestrum, quod propter Sabbatum 
Saturno dicatos fuisse nostros patres 
putatis. Sicut enim a Cerere et Libero 
paganorum diis longe absumus, quam- 
vis panis et calicis sacramentum, quod 
ita laudatis, ut in eo nobis pares esse 
volueritis, nostro ritu amplectamur; 
ita patres nostri longe fuerunt a Satur- 
Niacis catenis, quamvis pro tempore 
prophetiz Sabbati vocationem obser- 
vaverint.—Id. ibid., col. 342. D. E. ] 

© [et tis Kupiaxhy 2 odBBaroy yn- 
oTever TAHY évds caBRdtov Tod mdoxe 
ovTos xpiotoKtéves éotlv. — Pseudo- 
Ignat. Epist. ad Philippenses, cap. 13. 
tbe) Patr. Apost., tom, ii. pars 1. p. 
124. 

f (Die dominico jejunium nefas du- 
cimus.—Tertullian, de Corona, cap. 3. 


Op. p. 102. A. ] 

& [eX tis 81d vomiCouevny &onnow ev 
Th Kupiaky yvnorevo., avdbeua eoTw.— 
Conc. Gangr., c. 18, tom. ii. col. 432, A.] 

» [Qui dominico die studiose jeju- 
nat, non credatur catholicus.—Cone, 
Carth. iv. c. 64. Ibid.,fcol. 1442. D.] 

i [ras 8¢ Kuptacds amdoas Tpupepas 
fryetras h ayla abrn KaSoAukh ExxAnala, 
Kal ouvdgers ap Ewbev emiTeAc?, ov v7- 
orever’ avaxdAov0oy ydp éorw év Kupia- | 
Kh vnorevew.—S. Epiphan. adv. Heres., 
lib, iii. tom. ii. in Exposit. fidei Cathol. 
cap. 22. Op., tom. i. p. 1105. B.] 

1 [80ev map’ avtots (’Aepiavois) meqi- 
Aotiunta: maAAOV ey KUpLaKh vnoTedve’ 
retpdda Se Kal mpoodBBarov écOlovew" 
moAAdKis 5¢ Kal Thy TeTpdda ynoTEvov- 
aw, ovx) Ocoug GAN dia mpoapéces 
onot.—ld. ibid., lib. iii. tom. i. He- 
res. 75. cap. 3. Op., tom. i. p. 908. C.] 

k [obre év TH tucpa Tay ’Empaviow, 
bre evyevvhOn év capk) 6 Kipios efeorat 
vnorevou, Kiy Te mwepiTvxn TeTpas, 2 
mpoodBBarov.—ld. ibid., lib. iii. tom. 
ii. Expos. fid, Cath., cap. 22. Op., 
tom, i. p. 1105. A. ] 

1 (Epist. xv. ad Turribium (al. Tur- 
bium) Asturicensem episcopum. De 


First 


SERIES. 


40 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


A brief declaration when every term beginneth and endeth.| 
What has this to do with so holy and divine a book? There 
are almanacks enough to hold it’. | 


[RUBRICS BEFORE THE MORNING PRAYER. | 


{ Zhe Order where Morning and Evening Prayer shall be 
used and said.| Thus in the law it was appointed by God that 
there should be both morning and evening sacrifice day by 
day, and that upon the Sabbath there should be twice as long 
service as upon other days, Numb. xxviii. [5, 6], 9, 10; 
1 Chron. xxiii. 30; where we read that the office of the 
Levites was for to stand every morning to give thanks, and 
to praise the Lord, and likewise at even. 

And the Chancels shall remain as they have done in times 
past.| The sixth exception of the Surveyor™. 


OF THE ORNAMENTS IN TIME OF DIVINE SERVICE”. 


There is an objection against this custom of the Church, 
made by Puritans, that these ornaments are not only popish, 
but Jewish too, (vid. Bellarm.°, tom. iv., de Operibus in 


' part., lib. i. cap. 16, ubi aptissime respondet ad objectionem 


Petri Martyris, asserentis ceremonias omnes Hebreorum abro- 
gatas esse, nec ad Christianos ullo modo pertinere:) and in 
that regard are grown very scandalous, because all the cere-, 
monies of the Jews are to cease at the coming of Christ. So 
Cartwright tells us?, that ‘the Church heretofore being ashamed 
of the simplicity of the Gospel, did almost out of all religions 
take whatsoever had any fair and gorgeous show, borrowing 


Priscillianistarum erroribus. cap. 4. 
(quod jejunent in Natali Domini, et 
die dominica). Op., tom. i. col. 699. ] 

' {This ‘brief declaration’ of the 
beginning and end of the terms of the 
courts of law was omitted at the revi- 
sion in 1662. ] 

m [Whether this maintaining of chan- 
cels be not scandalous to many, by con- 
firming them in their superstitious opi- 
nion of the holiness of one place more 
than of another.—p. 40. } 

» [The following passages are de- 
rived with slight alteration, and con- 


siderable abridgement and omissions, 
from Hooker, Eccl. Pol., book iv. ch. 
11. 

2 Che words in parenthesis are a 
marginal note in red ink, added by 
Cosin. The extract is from Bellarmine, 
de bonis operibus in part., lib. i. c. 16. 
Op., tom. iv. p. 546. Venet. 1721.] 

P [These are Hooker's words stating 
the Puritan objection, as “they say,” 
referring to Eccl. Dise., fol. 98, et T. 
C., lib. iii. p. 281. See Keble’s Hooker, 
i. p. 578.) _ 


SOR EE EE ee 


I NSA oe a a 


Bra 


T54: 


~~ 


PATA. Eee eee ee.” 
MS Cee, 


ee 





OF THE, ORNAMENTS IN TIME OF DIVINE SERVICE. Al 


in that respect from the Jews sundry of their abolished cere- 


monies, and that thus by foolish and ridiculous imitation all 
their massing furniture (such as is here enjoined) they took 
almost from the law, lest having an altar and priest they 
should want vestments for their stage” Thus a wit dis- 
posed to scorn may easily shew itself. But for the easier 
finding out the truth, and so of a modest answer to their ob- 
jection in this point, we are to consider of two things: that 
is to say, first, the causes wherefore the Church should de- 
cline from Jewish ordinances and ceremonies; and secondly, 
how far it ought so to do. 

The causes are especially two. One is, because the Jews 
were the deadliest and most spiteful enemies to Christianity 
that were in the world, and in that regard were many laws 
made by the Church to have no conformity with them, no 
more than with the heathens, in their orders: so praying to 
the east came up, &c. Another cause was the solemn abro- 
gation of the Jewish ordinances by Christ. 

Now how far this abrogation did extend it must be a little 
considered, being not so large in our opinion as in theirs, 
that would not so much as have us imitate them in the 
decency and solemnity of God’s service. ‘Touching those 
things whereunto it reacheth not, we confess indeed the 
Jews, in respect of their own persons, being such venomous 
enemies against Christ, are least to be imitated; but in this 
respect, that God Himself hath been the author of their laws, 
herein they are (notwithstanding the former consideration) 
still worthy to be honoured, and to be followed before any 
other, as much as the state of things in time or place will 
bear. No man can deny but that Jewish ordinances had 


_ some things natural in them, and of the perpetuity of those 
_ things no man doubteth. That which was positive we know 
_ to have been, by the coming of Christ, partly necessary not 
_ to be kept, as circumcision and sacrifice, and partly in- 
_ different, to be kept or not, as to abstain from things offered 
} | unto idols, from blood, and strangled, &c., which the apostles 
| commanded to be kept after Christ, because it suited well 
| with those times. In like sort, for the convenience of the 
| Church, as the state of it afterwards grew, the apostles’ suc- 
| cessors thought it meet to imitate their ordinances in the 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


42 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


solemnity of God’s service, which was a thing partly natural 
and partly positive, not taken away by Christ, but left to the 
Church, either to like, or not to like, as occasion served. 
And to this purpose it is that Leo saith, in Jejun. VII™ 
Mens. Serm. 9”. ‘Beloved, apostolical ordinance, knowing 
that our Lord Jesus Christ came not into this world to undo 
the law, hath in such sort distinguished the mysteries of the 
Old Testament, that certain of those mysteries it hath chosen 
out to benefit evangelical knowledge withal; and for that 
purpose appointed, that those things which before were 
Jewish, should now become Christian customs, both being 
made for the beauty and honour of God’s worship.” Jn de- 
core sancto. Hook., 1. 4. So when Faustus upbraided the 
Christians for imitating the Gentiles, his fi.e. St. Augus- 
tine’s] answer was, that “they followed nothing which the 
Gentiles had, because the Gentiles so taught, but because 
heaven and earth, the law of nature, and the law of God 
had approved it.” Cont. Faust. Man., |. xx. c. 44. 

The minister at the time of the communion, and at all other 
times in his ministration, shall use such ornaments in the 
Church as were in use by authority of parliament in the 
second year of Edw. VI., &c.] The seventh exception of the 
surveyor’. eye 

As were in use.| And then were in use, not a surplice 
and hood, as we now use, but a plain white alb, with a vest- 
ment or cope over it; and therefore, according to this rubric, 
are we all still bound to wear albs and vestments, as have 
been so long time worn in the Church of God, howsoever it 
is neglected. For the disuse of these ornaments, we may thank 
them that came from Geneva, and in the beginning of Queen 
Elizabeth’s reign, being set in places of government, suffered 
every negligent priest to do what him listed, so he would but 
profess a difference and opposition in all things (though never 


¢ 


P [ Apostolica institutio, dilectissimi, 
que Dominum Jesum Christum ad 
hoc venisse in hune mundum noverat, 
ut legem non solveret sed impleret, ita 
Veteris Testamenti decreto distinxit, 
ut quedam ex eis sicut erant condita, 
evangelice eruditioni profutura decer- 
peret, et que dudum fuerant consue- 
tudinis Judaice fierent observantiz 


Christiane.—S. Leo, in jefun. mensis 
septimi Serm. vii. c. 1. Op., tom. i. col. 
358. | 

4 [See above, p. 38. note b.] 

‘ [pp. 41—44. This exception is 
grounded partly on the discrepancies 
in the enactments, noticed below, partly 
on the alleged scandal of the rubric 
itself. ] 


OF THE ORNAMENTS IN TIME OF DIVINE SERVICE. 43 


so lawful otherwise) against the Church of Rome, and the 
ceremonies therein used. If any man shall answer, that now 
the 58th canon hath appointed it otherwise, and that these 
things are alterable by the direction of the Church wherein 
we live; I answer, that such matters are to be altered by the 
same authority wherewith they were established, and that if 
that authority be the convocation of the clergy, as I think it 
is (only that), that the 14th canon commands us to observe 
all the ceremonies prescribed in this book. I would fain 
know how we should observe both canons. (But the act of 
parliament, I see, refers to the canon, and until such time as 








other order shall be taken.) 


8 [The words in parenthesis were added 
at alater time. Bp. Cosin alludes to the 
Act of Uniformity of Elizabeth, which 
was referred to in the rubric until the last 
review. The words of that rubric were, 
‘* And here it is to be noted, that the 
minister at the time of the Communion, 
and all other times in his ministration, 
shall use such ornaments in the church 
as were in use by authority of parliament 
in the second year of the reign of King 
Edward the VI. according to the act of 
parliament set in the beginning of this 
book.’’ The words in italics are not now 
a part of the rubric. The words of that 
act of parliament were, “‘ Provided al- 
ways and be it enacted, that such or- 
naments of the church, and of the 
ministers thereof, shall be retained and 
be in use as was in this Church of 
England, by authority of parliament, 
in the second year of the reign of King 
Edward the Sixth, until other order shall 
be therein taken by the authority of the 
Queen’s Majesty, with the advice of her 
Commissioners,.appointed and authorized 
under the great seal of England, for 
causes ecclesiastical, or of the Metro- 
politan of this realm.” 

The “ ornaments which were in use 
by authority of parliament in the second 
year of King Edward VI.” are set forth 
in the following rubric at the beginning 
of the Communion Office in the Book 
of Common Prayer, which was con- 
firmed by the Act of Uniformity, 2 
Edw. VI. c.1. ‘‘ Upon the day and at 
the time appointed for the ministration 
of the holy Communion, the priest that 
shall execute the holy ministry shall 
put upon him the vesture appointed for 
that ministration, that is to say, a white 
alb, plain, with a vestment or cope. 


And where there be many priests, or 
deacons, there so many shall be ready 
to help the priest in the ministration 
as shall be requisite; and shall have 
upon them likewise the vestures ap- 
pointed for their ministry, that is to 
say, albes, with tunicles.”’ 

The words of the 58th Canon of 1603, 
to which Bp. Cosin refers, are, “‘ Every 
minister saying the public prayers,or mi- 
nistering the sacraments, or other rites 
of the Church, shall wear a decent and 
comely surplice with sleeves, Further- 
more, such ministers as are graduates 
shall wear upon their surplices at such 
times such hoods as by the orders of 
the Universities are agreeable to their 
degrees.’? The 24th Canon is, “ In all 
cathedral and collegiate churches the 
holy Communion shall be administered 
upon principal feast days... .the prin- 
cipal minister using a decent cope, and 
being assisted with the gospeller and 
epistler agreeably, according to the ad- 
vertisements published an. Eliz. 7.” 
These ‘‘ advertisements” are printed in 
Wilkins, vol. iv. p. 247, sqq. They 
were settled by the abp. of Canterbury, 
with other bishops, “namely, such as 
be in commission for causes ecclesias- 
tical,’ and appear to be the order con- 
templated by the Act of Uniformity, 
referred to in the rubric above cited. 
Among the “ Articles for administra- 
tion of prayer and sacraments,”’ the 4th 
is, ‘‘In the ministration of the holy 
Communion in cathedral and collegiate 
churches, the principal minister shall 
use a cope, with gospeller and epistoler 
agreeably; and at all other prayers to 
be said at that Communion table, to 
use no cope, but surplices.’’ The 6th, 
“ That every minister saying any pub- 


First 


SERIEs. 


First 


SERIES. 


4.4, NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Use such ornaments, &c.| *?* W? Mention is there made 
of cope, surplice, tippet, hood, pro cujusque gradu. 
I. C. I find not that*. 


[ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER DAILY THROUGHOUT 
THE YEAR. | 


At the beginning both of morning prayer, and likewise of 
evening prayer, the minister shall read with a loud voice some 
one of these sentences, &c.] I think these sentences were 
appointed to be repeated before divine service, that we might 
have an equivalent preparation to our liturgy to that which 
is prefixed before the Roman missal, and used by the priest 
before he comes to celebrate". 

At what time soever a sinner, §c.| Nos quotidie legimus, 
Malo penitentiam peccatoris, quam mortem. Et, Nunquid qui 
cadit non resurget, dicit Dominus? Et, Convertimini ad me, 
filii convertentes, et ego curabo contritiones vestras 2? 8. Hieron. 
in Epist. ad Marcellam*, scribens adversus Montanistas qui 
ad omne pene delictum Ecclesia obserabant fores, et nec pecca- 
torum confessionem faciebant, nec lapsos propterea homines ad 
penitentiam recipiebant. 

*Tis more plain in St. Basil, Epist. 63, where we see that 
their service began with this humble confession of their sins’ ; 
Populus consurgens antelucano tempore domum precationis pe- 
tit, inque tribulatione ac lachrymis facta ad Deum confessione, 
tandem ab oratione surgentes ad Psalmodiam traducuntur, Se. 


lic prayers, or ministering the sacra- 
ments, or other rites of the Church, 
shall wear a comely surplice with 
sleeves.’’ From this it would appear 
that after the 7th of Eliz. (A.D. 1564) 
the rule of the book of the 2nd of Edw. 
VI. was superseded by these articles, 


_ which were afterwards embodied in the 


Canons of 1604. It is, however, to be 
observed that in the book of 1662 which 
we now use, the rubric is absolute, 
‘‘such ornaments as were in use by 
authority of parliament in the second 
year of the reign of King Edward the 
VI.” See the notes on this rubric in 
the third series of notes in this volume. ] 


t [This is Bp. Cosin’s observation 
on the note of Bp. Andrewes. } 

« [Confessions and prayers for abso- 
lution by priest and people form a part 
of that service. ] 

x (S. Hieron. ep. 41. ad Marcellam. 
Op., tom. i. col. 187. e. ] 

Y [éx vunrds yap dp0pife: map” juav 
6 Aads emt roy olkoy THs mpocevxijs, Kal 
ev wévy kal OAle: Kal cuvoxf Saxpiwv 
efomodoyovmevor TH OcG, TEAEvTaiov 
eavaotdavtTes THY mpocevxX@y, eis THY 
Yaruwdiay Kabiorayrat.—S. Basil. ep. 
207. (al. 63.) ad Clericos Neoczsarien- 
ses, § 3. Op., tom. iii, p. 311. B.] | 


ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER. A5 


To Thee, O Lord God, belongeth mercy, &c. | 

. 2? W.:?+ Adde huc, quod ad invitandam penitentiam egregia 
sunt misericordia et longanimitatis encomia. Psal. lxxviul. 38 ; 
Jer. ii. 7, 12; Heb. iv. 


First 
SERIES. 2 


[ON THE EXHORTATION. | 


Dearly beloved brethren, Sc.] *?* W°?: "Ixecia nititur his 
locis sacre Scripture ; 7 

Job xxxi. 27; Levit. v. 5; Prov. xxvin. 18; Dan. ix. 18; 
‘Luke xv. 18; Acts xix. 18. 

To acknowledge and confess our manifold sins and wicked- 
ness. | 
Hoc inter nos et Montanistas interest, quod illi erubes- 
cunt confiteri peccata, quasi justi, nos dum penitentiam agi- 
mus, facilius veniam promeremur. S. Hier. in Ep. ad Mar- 
 cellam*. | 





sn Jt | 


[ON THE CONFESSION. | 


A general Confession to be said of the whole congregation 
_ after the minister, kneeling. | 

2? W'?> Suis quisque verbis resipiscentiam profitetur. Basil. 
_ ad Neocesar. Ep. 69°; Idem Reg. Contract. 288°. 
_  Kneeling.| Kneeling is the most fit gesture for humble 
_ penitents, and being so, it is strange to see how in most 
places men are suffered to sit rudely and carelessly on 
' their seats, all the while this confession is read; and others 
+ that be in the church are nothing affected with it. They 
' think it a thing of indifferency forsooth, if the heart be 
right. The 27th Canon takes order that the Communion 








2 [Ubi supra, note x. 3. Op, tom. iii. p. 311. C. 
p § 3. Op p 


® [rhv vinta SieveyndvTes peratd 
mpocevxduevor, nucpas %5n brodaurov- 


| ons, wavres xowf, as e& évds orduaros 
Kal ids Kapdias, Troy Tis eLomoroyhoews 





| wWadpdv dvahépover TH Kuple, tdia éav- 
tev ExagTos TA phuata TIS meravolas 


mowvuevot.—sS, Basil. ep. 207. (al. 63.) 


b [dvaykatov rots memeorevpévois THY 
oikovoulay Tav pvoTnpiwy Tod Ocod, 
eEouoroyeioOa: Ta auapThuata, oftw 
yap Kal of mdAat weTavoodvres em) rev 
aylwv edploxovra: memoinndres. — Id. 
Reg. brevius tractate ; Interr. et Resp. 
288. Op., tom. ii, p. 516. D.] 


First 


SERIEs. 


46 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


be delivered to none but those that kneel; and it is as fit 
we should have the like order taken, that this following 
absolution be pronounced to none but those that kneel 
neither. For else there will be no excuse for us, nor no 
reason left us to render the puritans, why our Church should 
more punish them, or hinder them from the benefit of the 
Sacrament for not kneeling then, than it doth punish other 
men, or hinder them of the benefit of absolution, for not 
kneeling in the time of confession. It is a like case, and 
would be better thought on by men of wisdom and autho- 
rity, whese neglect and carelessness in this kind gives not 
only cause of great offence and scandal to them that are 
reverently and well disposed, but withal is a cause of great 
impiety and scorn of our solemnity in God’s service; and it 
is objected to us by the puritans, in their Survey, p. 71°, 
and by the papists passim. 

‘PW? Most merciful Father.] Mercy itself. 

We have erred; we have wittingly and willingly run 
from. 

Like lost sheep; like untamed heifers. Jer. xxxi. 18; 
Deut. iii. 15. | 

The devices ; absurd devices, brutish desires. 

We have offended ; we have been offended at. 

We have left undone ; not done at all. 

We have done; done nothing but. 

There is no health; nor hope of health. 

Miserable offenders ; yea most miserable. 

hat be penitent; that. desire to be penitent, wish they 
were, would be glad if they were so, fear they are not.enough, 
are sorry that they are no more. 

According to Thy promises ; most precious, most gracious, 
most sweet. . 


© [Obj. 22, on the Rubric in the 
Communion Service, ‘‘Then shall the 
minister deliver the Communion to the 


people in their hands kneeling. Quere . 


58. That the 27th canon enjoins of ne- 
cessity kneeling at receiving the Holy 
Sacrament, but ‘neither it nor any 


other canon giveth the like charge con- 
cerning such as do not kneel when the 
most solemn prayer of the book is pro- 
nounced, notwithstanding kneeling be 
expressly required by the communion 
book, and yet commonly neglected of 
most.” ] 








ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER. 47 


First 
SERIES. 


[ON THE ABSOLUTION. | 


The absolution or remission of sins, to be pronounced by the 
minister alone. | 

‘2? W -? And because he speaks it authoritative, in the 
name of Christ and His Church, he must not kneel, but 
stand up. For authority of absolution, see Ezek. xxxii, 12; 
Job xxxili. 23; Numb. vi. 24; 2 Sam. xii. 13; John xx. 23. 

to be pronounced by the minister alone.| Because none has 
received that power but a priest. Vide Maldon., de penit., 
p. 204. | 


Then shall the minister begin the ia: Prayer.| 


Here begins the service: for that which goes before is but Why the 
a preparation to it, and is newly added in King Edward’s Sail 
second® book in imitation of the liturgy and mass of the the Lord’s 
Church of Rome. But as their hours begin with the Lord’s a has 
Prayer, so begins our matins, and the high service of the 
altar. And they begin as they should do, for this was the 
- ancient custom of the Christians, when they were [met] 
- together to pray, they said that prayer for a foundation and 
a beginning of all the rest, which Christ Himself had taught 
them. Tertull., de Orat., cap.9'. Premissa legitima et ordi- 
_ naria oratione (for so they called the Pater Noster) quast 
_ fundamento accidentium, jus est desideriorum, jus est super- 
struendi extrinsecus petitiones. 
| Then shall the minister begin, &c.| The eighth exception 
_ of the surveyor’. : 
In that the minister is appointed to begin we may gither 
_ that the clerks and people are to follow, and sing or say all 
_ the rest with him, as they use to do in collegiate and cathe- 


4 [Non omnibus Christianis, sed solis 
presbyteris et episcopis concessa est 
heec potestas ligandi et solyendi.—Mal- 
donatus de Sacram., tom. 2. de Poeni- 
| tentia, pars 3tia, thesis sexta. Opera 
| Theol. p. 257, E.] 

© [In MS. ‘ first.’] 

f [| Tertull., Op., p. 133, A.] 





& [pp. 45, 46, on the word “ begin.” 
The rubric before 1662 was, “ then 
shall the minister begin the Lord’s 
Prayer with a loud voice,’”’ leaving it 
open to question whether the people 
were to say it with him. It was altered 
at the last review. See Appendix to 
this volume, No. 1. § 22.] 


First 


SERIES. 


48 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


dral churches. And if any doubt be made of this (as the 


Puritans in their Survey are carping at it), it may be ex- 
plicated by other places of this book, as after the Apostles’ 
Creed, the ministers, clerks, and people are to say the Lord’s 
Prayer together, and at the altar the minister is to begin the 
Nicene Creed,-and say “I believe in one God,” the quire is 
to follow and sing the rest with him, 

"2° W °?* IIpocevyy. Preceptum Christi. 

Our Father; Lisi lzsus est, Pater est. 

Which art in heaven ; eminenter, non inclusive. 

Hallowed be Thy name; in me, per me, super me. 

Thy kingdom come; ut destruatur regnum peccati, per 
quod regnavit mors et diabolus. 

In earth; in me, qui sum terra. 

In heaven; a sanctis angelis. 

Give us this day our daily; pro necessitate. 

Bread ; proprium, licite acquisitum, supercelestem et cor- 
poreum. 

Forgive us our trespasses; talenta dimitte. 

Lead us not; nec sinas intrare ductos pronosque. 
diabolo, 
mundo : 
intra, nobismetipsis : 


; . | extra 
From evil; ab authore mali: 


culpe per gratiam 
a malo; pene per misericardiam ; 
omnt per pacem. 


O Lord, open Thou our lips.] Quia sine adjutorio Dei nec 
cor nec labia ad laudem Domini aperire valeamus. Jo. 15. 
Sine Me nihil potestis facere. Dur., [Rational. Div. Off. | 


lib. v. c. 2. n. 8. 


Glory be to the Father, &c.] Post, Deus in adjutorium, 


statim subjicitur Gloria Patri, &c. 


Quos duos versus rogatu 


S. Hieron. Damasus Papa in fine Psalmorum cantari instituit. 


Dur. ibid2 


* [This was so ordered by the rubric 
before 1662. ] 

1 [n. 17. Durandus says, “ quos 
duos versus beatus Hieronymus scrip- 
sit inter opuscula que pape Damaso 


misit, et ipsius rogatu idem Damasus 
illos in fine Psalmorum cantari insti- 
tuit.’’ The statement is grounded on a 
spurious letter called S. Jerome’s, which 
says; Precatur ergo cliens tuus, ut vox 


2 SO 








49 


ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER. 


2? W:?? Doxalogia a sanctis olim patribus contra virus 
Arianum prescripta et retenta. Consule Hookerum™. 


Praise ye the Lord.| After Gloria Patri we say Alle- 
lujah, which is, after we have given glory to God, to invite 
the angels to it also, as if ours were not enough unless the 
choir of heaven joined with us in such a solemn and sacred 
action. Cantatur autem Alleluja (quod est canticum celeste) 
ut per hoc ostendatur dignam esse Trinitatem celesti laude, ad 
quam plene laudandam non sufficit laus humana. Dur,, in Ra- 
tional., lib. v. cap. 38, numb. 82, 


Praise ye the Lord, used in the Church Service in 
St. Hierome’s and St. Augustine’s time. 





Sonabant Psalmi, et aurata tecta templorum reboans in sub- 
lime quatiebat Alleluja, 8. Uier., ep. xxx., ad Oceanum, prope 


finem*. 


Ipsum Alleluja quotidie dicimus, et quotidie delectamur, 
Nostis enim quia Allelujah Latine dicitur, Laudate Dominum, 
et in hoc verbo consonantes ore, et consentientes corde, exhor- 


tamur nos invicem ad laudandum Deum. 


S. Aug., Serm. in 


Festo Pasche de Alleluia®, et in Psal, ex\viii,? 


When it is to be sung, because the mass-books say it is 
sometimes to be left out. 


If this guotidie were to be found in St. Aug. (as I find 
it quoted by Laur. Vanderhare, in his Antiquities, but can 


ista psallentium in sede Romana die 
noctuque canatur, et ut in fine cujus- 
libet Psalmi, sive matutinis horis sive 
vespertinis, conjungi precipiat apo- 
stolatus tui ordo, Gloria Patri et Filio 
et Spiritui Sancto: sicut erat in prin- 
cipio, nunc, et semper, et in secula 
seculorum. Amen. Istud carmen omni 
Psalmo conjungi precipias: ut fides 
trecentorum decem et octo Episcopo- 
rum Niczni concilii etiam vestri oris 
consortio declaretur.—Epist. ad Dama- 
sum; Opus spurium inter Op. 8. Hie- 
ron., tom. ii. col. 277, D. See the Admo- 
nitio prefixed, and Bingham’s Anti- 
quities, book xiv. 2. 1-] 
COSIN. | 


™ [The words, Consule Hookerum, 
were probably added by Bp. Cosin; 
they are not in the other copies of Bp, 
Andrewes’ notes. See the Laws of Eccl, 
Polity, book v. ch. 42. § 7, &e.] 

" (S. Hieron., ep. 77. (al. 30) ad 
Oceanum, cap. 11. Op. tom. i. ¢ol, 
462, C.] 

© [S. Aug. Serm. celv. in diebus Pas- 
chalibus xxvi. de Alveluia, c. 1. § 1. 
Op. tom. v. col. 1050. The words in 
the text are accurately cited from this 
place. ] 

P [(MS. wrongly 118.) Id. Enarr. 
in Psalm exlviii. § 1. Op. tom. iv. col. 
1673, A.] 


First 
SERIES, 


First 


SERIES: some more authority for the using of it every day than the 


50 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


find no such thing in the father himself), then had we 


Church of Rome has for their rubric of leaving it out from 
Septuagesima till Easter. And yet they leave it not out 
neither, for they say Laudate Dominum instead of it, or 
Laus Tibi Domine, which being the same with the other in 
effect, Durandus' and Jansenius* are put to their shifts 
how to give a good reason for such a rubric. 

At the first, it seems, this Allelujah was sung only upon 
Sundays, and every day of the fifty between Easter and Pen- 
tecost, in token of the joy we express for Christ’s resurrec- 
tion. So St. Aug., ep. cxix. ad Jan. c. 15* and 17%. In 
some churches it was not sung upon all the Sundays of the 
year, but only upon those fifty days; sed hoc non usquequaque 
observatur. S. Aug., ib., c. 17*. It was the use, says Isidore, 
lib. i. de Eccl. Offic., c. 15, in the African churches, not to 
say it every day, but only every Sunday, and those days 
which are from Easter to Pentecost: “but among us, accord- 
ing to the ancient custom of Spain, it is sung all the year 
long upon every day” (except only from Septuagesima to 


4 [The whole of the sermon de Alle- 
luia is given in Vanderhare’s Antiqui- 
tatum Liturgicarum arcana, feria tertia 
post Pascha; pars iii. p. ]67. The word 
quotidie is in S, Augustine, but re- 
fers to the paschal season, during which 
the Alleluia was sung daily, whereas 
at other times of the year it was sung 
only on Sundays. See below. | 

* [De Dominica Septuagesima. Ce- 
terum, quia hoe tempus meeroris est, 
non dicuntur cantica Angelorum, sed 
hominum; unde pro deposito Alleluia, 
dicit Ecclesia in principiis horarum ; 
Laus Tibi, Domine, Rex eterne glo- 
riz; non quod equipolleat; Alleluia 
enim est vox angelica, ista humana; 
illa Hebraica, et ideo dignior, ista La- 
tina, et ideo minus dignior—Durandus, 
Rationale, lib. vi. ec. 23. num. 18, 19.] 

* [This reference has not been 
found. | 

* [Quinquaginta (dies) complentur: 
qui celebrantur post Domini resurrec- 
tionem, jam in figura non laboris sed 
quietis et latitia. Propter hoc et jeju- 
nia relaxantur et stantes oramus, quod 
est signum resurrectionis. Unde etiam 
omnibus diebus dominicis id ad altare 


observatur. Et halleluia canitur, quod 
significat actionem nostram futuram 
non esse nisi laudare Deum, sicut scrip- 
tum est, Beati qui habitant in domo tua 
Domine, in sxcula seculorum lauda- 
bant te.—S. Aug., ep.55. ad Januarium 
(aliter ep. 119) cap. 15. § 28. Op. tom. 
ii. col. 139, E.] 

« [Ut autem halleluia per illos solos 
dies quinquaginta in Ecclesia cantetur, 
non usquequaque observatur: nam et 
aliis diebus varie cantatur alibi atque 
alibi, ipsis autem diebus ubique.—Ibid., 
ews 17. § 32. Op. tom. ii. col. 141, 


x [See last note. ] 

Y [In Africanis autem regionibus non 
omni tempore sed tantum dominicis 
diebus, et quinquaginta post Domini 
Resurrectionem Alleluia cantatur, pro 
significatione future resurrectionis et 
letitia. Verum apud nos, secundum 
antiquam Hispanie traditionem, preter 
dies jejuniorum vel quadragesime, 
omni tempore canitur Alleluia, scrip- 
tum est enim, Semper laus ejus in 
ore meo.—Isidor. Hispal., de Officiis 
Eccles., lib. i, cap. 13. Op. tom. vi. p. 
394, B.] 





Cee so ee 


~ ty gel 


eS Se 
<< . & 


Sl Se ee ee 





51 


ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER. 


Easter, the time of lamenting), and his reason is, (how good, 
we must think on’t,) guia scriptum est, semper laus Ejus erit 
in ore meo. And so indeed in the fourth couneil of Toledo, 
can. 10’, the Allelujah is forbidden to be sung, in diebus 
jejunii, quia tempus non est gaudii, sed meroris; which canon 
if we have broken, the papists have broken it with us, for 
Laus Tibi Domine in that time is as good an expression of 
gaudium as our “ Praise the Lord:” but yet both of us are 
better than those whom Sozom., lib. vii. c. 194, Hist. Trip., 
lib. ix. ec. 89°, and Niceph., lib. xi. c. 34°, tells us of, who 
would sing it upon Easter-day morning only, for that was it 
that St. Hierome brought among other novelties against 





Vigilantius. 


Exortus est Vigilantius, &c., qua ane es nist 


in Pascha Alleluja decantandum contendit *. 


[ON VENITE EXULTEMUS. | 


Then shall be said or sung this Psulm following.| So was 
the order in St. Basil’s time, after the confession, in the be- 
ginning of the service, to sing psalms and hymns with solemn 
music, epist. Ixiii.® Ad id vero quod propter psalmodias accusa- 


z [Item cognovimus quosdam His- 
paniz sacerdotes, qui in quadragesime 
diebus Alleluia decantant, preter in 
ultima hebdomada pasche, quod dein- 
ceps interdicimus fieri, statuentes ut in 
omnibus predictis quadragesime die- 
bus, quia tempus est non gaudii sed 
meeroris, Alleluia non decantetur.... 
quousque veniat tempus resurrectionis 
Christi, quando oportet Alleluia in le- 
titia canere, et mcerorem in gaudium 
mutare: hoc enim Ecclesiz universa- 
lis consensio in cunctis terrarum parti- 
bus reboravit.—Conce. Tolet. IV. can. 13. 
Concilia, tom. vi. col. 1455, A, B.] 

* [rdaw ad éxdorov erovs Grat év 
‘Poun Td *AAAEAOVIa WadrAovel, Kata 
Thy TpaTny Hucpayv THs MacxaAdlov évp- 
TiS, &S ToAACts ‘Pwualwy bpkoy elvat, 
TovTov Tov Buvoy akiwivar axodoul Te 
kal WaddAa:—Sozomen., Hist. Eccl., lib. 
i, cap. 19. p. 307.] 

> {M. A. Cassiodori Historia Eccle- 
siastics tripartita, lib. ix. cap. 39. (from 
Sozomen,) Op. tom. i, p. 348. | 

* [én ‘Pouns Kal Exaorov éros amag 

Td GAAEAOVIA WaAAoVeL KaTa THY Kupt- 


évunov Tis TarxaAlas huepdv.— Nice- 
phor. Callist., Hist. Eccles., lib. xii, 
cap. 34. Op. tom. ii. p. 297, D.] ' 

4 { Exortus est subito Vigilantius, seu 
verius dormitantius, qui immundo spi- 
ritu pugnet contra Christi Spiritum, et 
martyrum neget sepulchra veneranda ; 
damnandas dicet esse vigilias; nun- 
quam nisi in Pascha Alleluia cantan- 
dum.—S. Hieron. cont. Vigilantium, 
cht 1. Op. tom, ii. eel. 387. | 

© [mpds 5& 7d emt rais paruwdias 
eyrAnua, @ pdAtora tots &mAovaTé- 
pous poBovow of SiaBadrdovtes mas, 
€xeivo eimeiy Exw* STL TA voV KEKpaTn- 
kota 0n mdoats Tais Tov Meod exkAn- 
clas ovvwid éott Kal otudwya. “EK 
vuntos yap dpOpitec map juiv 6 Aadbs 
éml tov olxoy ths mpocevxis, Kal ev 
mévy Kal OAtper Kal cuvoxn Saxpdwr 
eZouoAoyovmevoe TH Oe@, TeAEvTaiov 
éfavactdvtes TaY mpotevxay, eis THY 
Yaruwdiav Kabiorayra. Kal viv per 
dixH Siaveundevtes, avtupdddrovow GA- 
AfAors.—S. Basil. ep. 207 (aliter ep. 63) 
§ 3. Op. tom. iii. p. 311, A, B.] ; 


E 2 


First 


SERIES... 


First 


SerIeEs. 


52 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


mur, qua re potissimum simpliciores perterrefaciunt Sabellius 
et Marcellus (as their disciples our new puritan masters do 
the poor people among us) gui nos traducunt: hoc habeo quod 
dicam, quod videlicet qui jam obtinuerunt ritus omnibus Eccle- 
siis Dei concordes sunt et consoni: populus, facta ad Deum 
confessione, tandem ab orationes urgentes ad psalmodiam tra- 
ducuntur, et nunc quidem in duas partes divisi alternis sucet- 
nentes psallunt, &c. 

sung.| Quia cantus accendit audientium animas. 8. Aug., 
lib. ix. Confess. cap. 6', et alibi®. Etiam quia facilius et li- 
bentius Deo laudes persolvuntur, quando officitum divinum, 
alioqui prolivum et grave, quadam cantus jucunditate condi- 
tur. Quam enim ob causam Sp. S. voluit divinas laudes a 
prophetis carmine scribi; ob eandem utile fuit, ut ejusmodi 
carmina non simplici pronunciatione sed cantu celebrarentur. 
S. Bas., in S. Psal.» 

Alia causa cantandi Psalmos, precepta, lectiones, et preces, in 
Ecclesia est, ut Christiani testentur, sibi divinam legem non 
esse molestam et gravem, sed jucundam et suavem, seque eam 
non ex timore sed ex amore servare, juxta illud Psal. cxix. 54, 
Cantabiles mihi sunt justificationes tue in terra peregrinatio- 
nis mee. 

Postremo hac ratione perfectum omni ex parte redditur Deo 
obsequium, dum et animo ardentissimis votis, et corpore cla- 
rissima voce laudes Ejus celebrare contendimus. 

De vi autem et utilitate canendi in Ecclesia lege Justinum, 
aut guicunque fuit auctor Quest. apud Justinum, in Resp. ad 
guest. 107%, 


* £ [Quantum flevi in hymnis et can- 
ticis tuis, suave sonantis Ecclesia tuze 
vocibus commotus acriter. Voces ille 
influebant auribus meis, et eliquabatur 
veritas in cor meum, et exzestuabat inde 
affectus pietatis, et currebant lacryme, 
et bene mihi erat cum eis.—S,. Aug. 
Conf., lib. ix. cap. 6. § 14. Op. tom. i. 
col. 162. E.] 

§ [Veruntamen cum reminiscor la- 
crymas reas quas fudi ad cantus Ec- 
clesie tuz in primordiis recuperate 
fidei mez, et nune ipso quod moveor, 
non cintu sed rebus que cantantur, 
cum liquida voce et convenientissima 
modulatione cantantur, magnam insti- 
tuti hujus utilitatem rursus agnosco. 


—ITd. ibid., lib. x. cap. 33. § 49. Op. 
tom. i. col. 187, F.] 

h [See S. Basilii Homil. in Psalm. i. 
§ 1. Op. tom. i. p. 90, A—E. ] 

i [ndtve: yap (rd Goa) Thy Wuxhv 
mpos Séovra mdé0ov tov ev Tots dopuacw 
qdouevov’ KomlCer 7a ex THS CapKds era- 
viotdeva Ta0n ToVs bud TeV GopdtTwY 
exOpav éuBadrdAouevous jutvy Aoyiopors 
movnpovs amwleira’ apdever THY Wuxv 
mpds Kaptodopiay Oelwy ayabav' ‘yev- 
valous mpos Thy év Tots Seivois KapTeplay 
Tous &ywrloras épydfeTai THs evoeBeias’ 
mdviwy Tov év Tois Biwtiko.s AvTNpev 
iamatixdy yiverat Tots evocBeot... TH 
TEAELWTIKA TIS WuXTS ev Tals Kat’ edoeE- 
Bewav apetais dia Tay dopdtwr Tay éx- 





CR PR TO aera Ss 


ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER. 53 


Then shall follow certain Psalms in order. 


De Psalmis canéendis et Antiphonis. 

De hymnis et psalmis etiam canendis publice in Ecclesia et 
Salvatoris et Apostolorum habemus exemplum, Matt. xxvi. Et 
hymno dicto, &c. Eph. v. Loquentes vobismet ipsis in psalmis 
et hymnis, &c. Conc. Tolet. iv. can. 12*. 


The Psalms sung alternatim, by course and sides. 


Ab oratione surgentes ad psalmodiam traducuntur ; et nunc 
quidem in duas partes divisi alternis succinentes psallunt ; 
atque ex eo simul eloquiorum Dei exercitationem ac medi- 
tationem corroborant, et cordibus suis attentionem, et ejectis 
vanis cogitationibus mentis soliditatem suppeditant. S. Basil., 








ep. 63!, 


Sonant inter duos psalmi et hymni, et mutuo provocant quis 
Talia Christus videns et audiens gau- 


melius Deo suo cantet. 


det, &c. Tertull., lib. 11. ad Uxorem in fine™ ; 8. Dion. Areop., 


de Eccl. Hier., cap. 3°. 


Theodoret tells us® it began at Antioch, and being once 
begun there, ubique pervasit, et ad ultimas orbis terre oras 
pervagata est, lib. ii. Hist. Eecl., c. 24. Socrates says? it 


KAnoiactiK@y tots evoeBéow mpusyivd- 
peva.—Quest. et Respons. ad Ortho- 
doxos; Respons. 107. Opus spurium 
inter Op. S. Justin. Mart. in Append. 
p- 486, B. C.] 

Kk (Cone. Tolet. IV. A.D. 633. can. 
13. Concilia, tom. vi. col. 1455, D. 
The words in the text are an extract 
from the-canon. ] 

1 Léx vunrds yap dpOpife: map’ juiv 6 
Aabs, kal... eis THY Wadpwdidy Kabio- 
TavTa’ Kal vov mev bx Siaveunbertes, 
avTiwpdAAovew GAANAOLS, d6u0d wev Thy 
MedeTHY TaY Aoylwy évTedOev Kpativor- 
tes, duod St Kal thy mpocoxhny Kal 7d 
G&ucTedpiotov Tay Kapdi@y éavTots d101- 
kovmevot.—S. Basil. ep. 207 (alit. ep. 
63) § 3. Op. tom. iii. p. 311, B.] 

™ | The words are Tertullian’s, ad Ux- 
xorem, lib. ii, cap. 8. Op. p. 172, B.] 

» [avadtoas d¢ wédAw én Td Oetov 
Ovoiacrhpiov, amdpxerar (6 lepdpxns) 
Tis icpas ToY WadAudv wedwdlas, cuvg- 
Sovons avT@ tiv Warumhy ieporoyiay 


amrdons THs exkAnoiactiKfs Staxocuh- 
cews.—S. Dionys. Areop., de Eccles. 
Hierarchia, cap. 3. § 2. Op. tom. i. p. 
187, E.] 

© Lotto: (FAaBiavds nal Arddwpos) 
mperor Six SeAdvTes ToUs TeV WadrdAdv- 
Ttwy xopous, éx diadoxis dev thy Aav- 
irikny edidatayv peAwdiav. nal revre év 
’AvtTioxela mparov apkduevov, mavtoce 
5i€dpaue, Kal karéAaBe THs oixouuevns 
7a Ttépuata.—Theodoret. Hist. Eccl., 
lib. ii. c, 24. p. 107. j 

P [Iyvdrios *Avtioxelas THs Suplas 
tpitos awd Tod GmootdAou Térpov éext- 
oKotos, ds kal Tots &rooTdAots avTois 
ouvdierpnper, Swraciav eldev ayyéAwy 
dia TeV ayTipdvey Buvwy Thy ayiav 
Tpidda tuvotvtwy, kal Tov Tpdmoy TOU 
épduatos TH ev Avtioxelg exxdnole ra- 
pédwrev. iOev ev mwdoas Tals éxKAn- 
cias aitn % mapddoois d:e5d0n. ovTos 
bev obv 6 wept tav avTipdverv Burov 
Adyos éeoriv.—Socrat. Hist. Eccl., lib, 
vi. cap. 8. p. $22.] 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


54 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


began there too; but whereas Theodoret goes no higher for 
the first authors of it than Flavian and Diodore, he makes 
Ignatius, the bishop there in the apostles’ times, to have 
begun it, upon a vision of angels that he saw glorifying God 
after that sort. Unde illa traditio in omnibus Ecclesiis re- 
cepta est, lib. vi. c. 8. This vision is derided by our new 
masters, and of what authority it is we cannot tell but by 
Socrates’ words; howsoever, whether the story be true or no, 
Iam sure the thing itself is good, and if Ignatius did not 
hear the angels sing so, that which is better, the prophet 
Isaiah did, vi. 3. ‘The seraphims stood upon the throne, and 
cried one to another, saying, Holy,’ &e. 

(Quod scribit Theodoretus’ primos fuisse Flavianum et Dio- 
dorum qui Antiochenis Davidicos Psalmos alternatim canendos 
tradiderunt, non de prima institutione, sed vel de instauratione 
vel de commodiore aliqua ratione alternatim concinendi intelli- 
gendum esse videtur.) 

Apud Latinos primum fuisse S. Ambrosium qui hanc ipsam 
consuetudinem introduxit scribit Isidorus, lib. i. de Off. cap. 
7*, sed hoc de solo officio ecclesiastico in choro recitando acci- 
piendum videtur. Nam in Misse sacrificio Psalmum alternatim 
canendum tradidit Celestinus papa, ut in ejus vita legimus. 
Absolute autem usum canendi psalmos alternatim apud Latinos 
antiquissimum esse, perspicuum est ex Tertulliano quem supra 
citavimus®, 


The Psalms sung standing, and the Hymns. 


Cum vero cantamus psalmos stantes esse solemus, ut ex statu 
corporis demonstremus affectum mentis nostra, hoc est, paratos 
nos esse, sive ad domandam carnem nostram, &c. Amal. Fort., 
lib. iv. cap. 3°. 

Rursus stando hymnos cantamus, in ereclione corporum 


4 [This paragraph, Quod . . videtur, 
is a note on the word Theodoret in the 
beginning of the last paragraph.] 

* [Apud Latinos autem primus bea- 
tissimus Ambrosius antiphonas consti- 
tuit Grecorum exemplum imitatus: 
exhine in cunctis occiduis regionibus 


earum usus increbuit.—Isidor. Hispal. 
de divinis Officiis, lib. i, cap. 7. Op. 
tom. vi. p. 69. ] 

8 [See above, p. 53, note m.] 

¢ [Amalarius Fortunatus de Eccle- 
siastico Officio, lib. iv. cap. 8. ap. Hit- 
torpium de Div, Off, p. 185, D.] 


ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER, 55 


First 
SERIES. 


ostendentes, quod in laudando Deum corda sursum erecta ha- 
bere debemus. Durand., in Ration., lib. v. c. 2. num. 24. 

. Unus in medium psalmos Domino cantaturus exsurgit. 
| Cassian., de Inst. Mon., lib. 1. cap. 5". And the notes upon 
that place produce many more testimonies of the ancients 
_ to that purpose. 





f. The Psalms begun by one and followed by the whole quire. 


Uni ex ipsis hoc muneris dato, ut quod canendum est prior 
ordiatur, reliqui succinant; atque ita Psalmodie varieiate 
superant noctem, &c. Bas., ep. ]xi.* 

The Grecians had this order from the old Esseni, as Euse- 
bius reports out of Philo, lib. ii. cap. 16. Hist. Kecl.’ Hymnos 
etiam qui a nobis recitart solebant, commemorat, et quo pacto 
cum unus suavi quodam concentu psallere decenter et modeste 
inceperit, religui placide et quiete auscultantes, posteriores 
hymnorum partes ad extremum una decantent. 

2? W °?+ Qui sequitur ordo intermiscendi Psalmos cum lec- 
tionibus, nititur can. 17. Conc. Laodiceni, his verbis* ; In con- 
_-ventu fidelium, nequaquam Psalmos continuare conveniat, sed 
per intervallum per psalmos singulos recenseri debeant lectio- 
nes. Hec a sanctissimo Conc. stututa A° D™ 368. Quod non 
oportet plebeios Psalmos cantare in Ecclesia; nec libros, preter 
canonem, legi, sed sola sacra volumina N. T. vel V.* Idem. 
Conc., can. 10. 

At the end of every Psalm, &c., shall be repeated, Glory be The ninth 
to the Father, &c., As it was in the beginning, &c.] Quos duos ¢st;b0™ 


of the 
versus Nicena synodus edidit, et Damasus Papa S“ Hieronymi Surveyor. 


Pee 








u [Cassianus de Coenobiorum Insti- 
tutis, lib. ii. c. 5. Op. p. 23. See notes 
d and e, ibid., p. 24. ] 

* [éreirta madw émitpépavtes Ev) xa-* 
Tapxew TOV méAOus of Aorrol bTHxodar" 
kal oftws ev TH moiiAle THs Waru@dias, 
Thy vinta Sieveyndvres petatd mpocev- 
xdmevot, Tucpas H5n srodaumtovons, 
mavrTes Kos, @s e& évds ordmaros Kab 
plas Kxapdias, Tov THs ekouoroyhaews 
Warudy avapépovat TE kvpiy.—S. Basil. 
ep. 207 (al.ep, 63) § 3. Op. tom. iii. p. 
314, C.] 

Y [rovs Te AéyerOa: ciwdtus mpds 
juav tuvovs icropay, kal ds évds peta 


pvduod Roopiws émupdddortos, of Acro} 
Kad hovxlay akpoduevor, TOY Suvwv Ta 
&kpoteAcUTia auvetnxovow. — Euseb. 
Hist. Eccles., lib. ii. cap. 17. p. 70.] 

* [qepl rod wy Selv emiouvdrrew ev 
Tats ouvdteot Tovs Wadmovs, GAAG Sid 
pécov Kad? Exacrov Warpdy vyiverCat 
avdyvwow.—Cone. Laod. can. 17, Cone. 
tom. i. col. 1500, B.} 

® [Ort ob Sef iSiwrixods Warpods Aé- 
yerOa ev TH exkAnola, ovdé danavdniara 
BiBAla, GAAG pdvoy Ta KavoviKa THS 
kawhs Kal madaias Sia0qnns.—Ibid., 
can. 59. col. 1508, A.} 

> [pp. 46, 47.] 


First 


SERIES. 


Glory 

be to the 
Father, 
&c., re- 
peated at 
the end of 
every 


Psalm. 


56 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


rogatu in fine Psalmorum cantari instituit®, Dur., 1. v. cap. 2. 
n.17. Quia enim Dominus dixit, Adhuc te loquente adsum, 
ideo quasi jam nos intellexerimus exauditos esse, gratiarum 
actiones Trinitati tribuimus, dicentes, Gloria, &c.,1b. Seea 
strange story there of one that could-say, “Glory be to the 
Father, and to the Son;” but could not bring out “to the 
Holy Ghost ;” while St. Gregory had made him confess his 
sin against the Holy Ghost, simony, and then he spake it 
plain, 2d., n. 20. 

This was in use before the fourth council of Toledo, for 
in the fourteenth canon’, whereas before it was the cus- 
tom to say Gloria Patri, &c., it is there ordained in this 
manner; Statuimus et in fine Psalmorum, non Gloria Patri, 
sed Gloria et Honor Patri dicatur: qui vero hoc preterierit 
excommunicetur ; and can. 12°. Acriter reprehenduntur illi qui 
respuunt hunc hymnum, quem in fine omnium Psalmorum dici- 
mus, Gloria, &c., vide que annotavimus in latere opposito'. 

Then shall be read two lessons, &c.| The tenth exception 
of the Surveyor’. 


Why Lessons intermingled in the service. 


The inferior parts of the soul being vehemently intent 
about psalms and prayers, and therefore the likelier to be 
soon spent and wearied; thereupon hath the Church inter- 
posed lessons to be read betwixt them, for the higher part 
of tle soul, the understanding, to work upon, that by variety 
neither may be wearied, and both be an help one to the 
other. Hook., lib. v. § 34%. 


© [See above, p. 48. note 1] 

4 (The words of the carion are; In 
fine Psalmorum non sicut a quibusdam 
hucusque, Gloria Patri, sed Gloria et 
honor Patri dicatur.. . universis igitur 
ecclesiasticis hance observantiam damus, 
quam quisquis preterierit communio- 
nis jacturam habebit.—Conce. Tolet. LV. 
ean. 15. Concil., tom. vi. col. 1456, 
D, EF.) 

¢ (If, the canon says, they reject all 
hymns of human composition, let them 
reject that hymn also which was com- 
posed by men, the Gloria Patri, ‘ re- 
spuant ergo et illum hymnum ab ho- 
minibus compositum, quem quotidie 


publico privatoque officio in fine om- 
nium Psalmorum dicimus; Gloria et 
honor Patri, et Filio, et Spiritui Sancto 


$ in secula seculorum. Amen.’ It does 


not appear that these persons did reject 
it, but the contrary.—Ibid., can. 138. 
col. 1456, A.} 

f (i.e. The foregoing paragraph from 
Quos duos to n. 20.) 

8 [p. 47; on the discrepancy between 
the lessons as appointed in the second 
book of Edw. Vi. and that of Eliza- 
beth. } 

h | The Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity, 
book v. chap. 34. § 1, with some va- 
riations. ] 


ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER. 57 


The first of the Old Testament.| So Joh. Cassianus', de 
Inst. Mon., |. ii. ec. 4, tells us, that it was the general custom 
of all the Christians through Egypt to do. Per universam 
Atgyptum [et Thebaidem, duodenarius| Psalmorum numerus 
[tam in vespertinis, quam in nocturnis solemnitatibus| custo- 
ditur, ita duntaxat, ut post [hunc|' due lectiones, Veteris sci- } post 
licet ac Novi Testamenti, singule subsequantur. Qui modus PS*\m°* 
antiquitus constitutus idcirco per tot secula intemeratus nunc 
usque perdurat, quia non humana adinventione statutus, &c. 

Usum etiam lectionum antiquissimum esse in Ecclesia per- 
spicuum esse potest ex Apologia 2. S. Just. Mart. ubi dicit, 
Lectiones ex prophetis et apostolis in conventu fidelium legi 
solitas. Item ex concilio Laodiceno, quod ante annos mille 
ducentos celebratum fuit ; statutum enim, cap. 17*, ut psalmis 
lectiones interserantur'. 

The minister that readeth the Issson, standing, &c.|. Unus 
in medium [ psalmos Domino cantaturus| exurgit [....], c@- 
teris sedentibus, et in psallentis verba omni cordis intentione 
| defixis. Cassian. de Inst. Mon., lib. ii. c. 5™. ubi Schol. 

_ Omnes qui aderant non recitarunt psalmos, sed solummodo 
amicum psallentem auscultarunt. Ita ex hoc loco utrumgue 
t habetur, et psallentem stetisse, et non psallenies consedisse ; 
_ unde orta consuetudo, que etiamnum observatur, ut qui legit 
S. Script., &c., ipse quidem lector stando legat, reliqui omnes 


First 
SERIFS. 





Se ee. 


ag pect” Tn ce Hl 


sedendo ausculient. Unde pecoyopol dicti, id est in medio 
choro stantes, apud Sidonium Apollinarem™. 

Lecturus autem lectionem ad librum accedens, super gradum 
ascendit, quia doctor perfectiori vita vulgus transcendere debet. 
Durand., lib. v. c. 2. num. 43. 

Before every lesson the minister shall say thus, &c.| Hugo 
Victorinus®, lib. ii. de Off, cap. 3, guerit, Cur in lectioni- 





i [Cassian. de Ccenobiorum Instit., 
lib. ii. cap. 4. Op. p. 21. The words in 
brackets are added out of Cassian. ] 

K [kal ta Gmrouvnmovedpata Trav 
arootéAwy, 2) TH CUyypdumata Tov 
TpoPpyTav avaryryvdaocKkeTat mexpis eyXw- 
pet.—S. Justin Mart., Apol. 1 (al. Apol. 
2) § 67. Op. p. 83, D.) 

1 [8a wécovu Kab? Exacrov Warpudy 
(Setv) yiver Oat avdyvwow.—Concil. Lao- 
dicen. (A.D. 364) can. 17. Concilia, 
tom. i. col. 1533, C.] 


™ [Cassian, ubi supra, p. 23. ] 

» [These are the words of the Scho- 
lion on Cassian, lib. ii. c. 5. (p. 25) ex- 
cept that the passage begins ‘‘ Patres 
illos non recitasse quidem psalmos, sed 
... auscultasse,’’ &c. | 

© [ Hug. de S. Victore, lib. ii. de di- 
vinis officiis, ap. Hittorpium de div. off, 
p- 745. On the contrary he raises the 
question why the name of the author or 
book is not given out in the daily Les- 
sons, as it is in the Lessons (the Epi- 


First 


SERIES. 


The Les- 
sons read 
not sung. 


58 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


bus, &c., semper pronunciatur titulus authoris aut libri; et re- 
spondet, ad missam convenire quogue bubulcos, qui nesciunt 
de authore nisi doceantur. 


DE LECTIONIBUS. 


Then shall be read two lessons distinctly with a loud voice 
that the people may hear.| For in the Church of Rome 
they were wont to sing them modulate, and so they use to do 
still; which how ancient a custom it is I cannot tell, but 
sure it cannot boast of many years, for thus writes their 
Durand. in his Rationale, that lived not long ago; Lectiones 
quoque in singulis horis tam nocturnis quam diurnis dicuntur ; 
et dicitur lecito, quia non cantatur ut psalmus vel hymnus, sed 
legitur tantum. Iilic enim modulatio, hic sola pronunciatio 
queritur. Thus Durandus, in his Rat. Div. Off., lib. v. c. 2. 
n. 43. So singing of lessons (what commendation soever it 
may have, as I myself mislike it not) is not so ancient as the 
plain reading of them, according to this rubric and appoint- 
ment of our Church. | 

And to the end the people may the better hear, in such places 
where they do sing, there shall the lessons be sung in a plain tune, 
after the manner of distinct reading.| And this is the reason 
that in places where they sing, all our prayers are sung in a 
plain and audible tone. Reading hath not the force to affect 
and stir up the spirit, which a grave manner of singing has; 
and singing, if it be not tempered with that gravity which 
becomes the servants of God in the presence of His holy 
angels, is fuller of danger than of edification; therefore hath 
our Church most prudently appointed the lessons and prayers 
so to be sung as may make most for the dignity and glory of 
God’s high and holy service, and be also a means to inflame 
men’s affections, to stir up their attentions, and to edify 
their understandings; which is answerable to St. Augustine’s 


stle and Gospel) in the Mass. His bubulci et subulci et omnes fere opera- 


answer, however, is applicable to our 
practice in daily Morning and Evening 
Prayer; his words are; Queritur cur 
in lectionibus diurnis, &c. non pro- 
nunciatur auctor, sicut in his que ad 
missam leguntur. Quod ideo fit quia 


rii ad missam conveniunt, ad c#teras 
autem horas clerici, &c.. .. qui ex ver- 
bis auctorum /propter frequentem con- 
suetudinem audiendi satis auctores 
cognoscunt. | 


| 


™ test; 


ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER. 59 


B exine, lib. x. Confess., cap. 33°, when he wished for the 
"restitution of that custom which Athanasius was wont to use, 
Qui lectorem [tam] modico vocis flexru jubebat sonare, ut pro- 
nuncianti vicinior foret quam canenti. 


De Hymnis qui in divinis officiis canuntur, in generes. 


The antiquity of hymns in the Christian Church doth suffi- 
ciently appear, by that of our Saviour, Matt. xxvi. Et hymno 
dicto exierunt. Whereupon St.Chrysost., Hom. |xxxiii.in Matt. 
says, Hymnum cecinit, ut nos quoque similiter faciamus*. So 
St. Paul afterwards ordered it in the Church of Colossus ; 
Cantantes vobismetipsis in psalmis et hymnis, &c. Col. iii., 
which we find presently after practised in the Church of 
Alexandria in Egypt, founded there by St. Mark, as Philot, 
in Euseb., lib. ii. cap. 16, writes of the Christians there*, (and 
as St. Hierome writes in the life of Philo*, and of St. Marky, 
and before him Epiphanius’,) that in their churches (their 
ades sacra, ceuveta povactnpta, places of solitariness, and 
separated from company) they did* leges et oracula a pro- 


» [S. Aug. Conf., lib. x. cap. 33. § 
59. Op. tom. i. col. 187 F.] 

4 [This is written on an interleaved 
page opposite to the Te Deum. } 

F (evxaplornse Kal tuynre meré TOU 
Sovva, iva Kal nucts TodTO Torwpev.—S. 
Chrysost. in Matt. xxvi. 30. Hom. 82 
(al. 83). Op. tom. vii. p. 784, B.] 

§ [Si enim eo modo (aliquorum in- 
firmitas) impediat ut majora studioso- 
rum lucra speranda sint, quam calum- 
niatorum detrimenta metuenda, sine 
dubitatione faciendum est maxime id 
quod etiam de Scripturis defendi po- 
sicut de hymnis et psalmis ca- 


_ nendis, cum et ipsius Domini et apo- 
_ stolorum habeamus documenta et ex- 


, 


empla et precepta.—S, Aug., epist. 55, 
ad Januarium (aliter ep. 119) cap. 18, 
§ 34. Op. tom. ii. col. 142, A.] 

t [See below, note a. ] 

. [The words in brackets are added 


in a marginal note. ] 


* {Philo Judeus... librum de pri- 


ma Marci Evangelista: apud Alexan- 
_ driam scribens Ecclesia, in nostrorum 





Jaude versatus est. .. . Ex quo apparet 
talem primam Christo credentium fu- 


isse Ecclesiam quales nunc monachi 


esse nituntur et cupiunt.... Patrimo- 
nia, egentibus dividuntur, orationi va- 
catur et psalmis, doctrine quoque et 
continentiz, quales et Lucas refert pri- 
mos Jerosolymez fuisse credentes.—S. 
Hieron. de Vir. Illust., cap. 11. Op. 
tom. ii. col. 833.] 

¥Y {Philo disertissimus Judeorum 
videns Alexandrie primam Ecclesiam 
adhue Judaizantem quasi in laudem 
gentis sue librum super eorum conver- 
satione scripsit.—S. Hieron. ibid. cap. 
8, Op. tom. ii. col. 829. ] 

% [éwOwvol te Suva ev adbti tH ayla 
exxAnaia Sinvereis yiyvovta, Kal mpo- 
cevxal Ewbival, Avxvikol Te Gua Wadruol, 
kal mpocevxat.—sS, Epiph. adv. Heres., 
lib. iii. tom. 2. Expos. fid. Cath., cap. 
23. Op. tom. i. p. 1106, A. 

év Waruwdias 5 of mAelous (Tov 
povaxa@v), kal edxais Sinvenéow ava- 
yvooect TE ypapay ayiav, kal &moorn- 


Oiopots aoxodvra.—lId. ibid., p. 1106, 


D. 

, [év éxdorn 8& olkia orw olknua 
iepdy 0 Keadetr at oeuveiov kal povagrn- 
prov" év @ povobpmevot 7% TOU geuvod 
Biov puoThpia TeAobvrat* pndév cioeopl- 
Govres, my ToTOy, pH gitLov, unde Tt TOV 


First 
SERIES. 


60 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Finsr Phetis divinitus edita, et hymnos recolere, aliasque res, quibus 
_ Serres. divina scientia et vera erga Deum pietas crescat et perficiatur. 
Item?, non contemplationt solum se dedunt, sed etiam cantiones 
et hymnos variis metri et carminum cujusque modi (et) numeris 
graviter, fusis apte et convenienter ad Dei honorem et laudem 
conficiunt. Andif this be not to be understood of the ancient 
Egyptian Christians, as Eusebius thought, but of the Esseni, 
the strictest livers among the Jews, as Scaliger> and Casau- 
bon® affirm with great probability, yet it will be a good 
pattern to take it in succession from them, seeing Christ 
and St. Paul may be thought not to be the first that used 
any such hymns, but followed the religious custom of the 
best Jews, and approved it by their fact; yet to make it 
good, that after the apostles the true Christians, as well as 
these Esseni, used these hymns, St. Basil, ep. Ixiii.*, being 
unjustly blamed for bringing them into the Church of Neo- 
ceesarea, answers for himself, that it was the custom of Egypt, 
and Syria, and many other places, so to do of old. And so 
of the Churches in Pontus and Bithynia, Pliny, the Emperor 
Trajan’s vicegerent there, affirmeth® that the only crime he 
there knew of them was that they used to meet together 
and to praise Christ with hymns as a God. And this cus- 
tom of singing hymns with instruments of music is as ancient 
as Moses, when he came out of Egypt with the Israelites, 
and was so practised till David’s time, by whom they were 
much augmented. And after him they continued among 
the kings and prophets till the coming of Christ, who gave 
us an example to do as they did still. In the meanwhile we 


&AAwy boca mpds Tas TOD chuatos xpelas 
GvayKata, GAAG vduous Kal Adyia Oeom- 
c0evra 81a mpupnt@y, Kal buvovs kal 
TbAAG ols emiaThun Kal edséBea ovv- 
avfovtat Kal redewodvTat—Philo ap. 
Euseb. Pamph., Hist. Eccles., lib. 11. 
cap. 17. p. 67.] 

® [Sor od Oewpodor pdvor, GAAG Kar 
To.wtvow &tpara Kal buvous eis Thy Oedr, 
5: wavToiwy wétpwv Kal meA@r, pvOuots 
ceuvotéepoats avayKkalws xapdooovTes.— 
Id. ibid., p. 68. ] 

> [ J.J. Sealigeri, Opus de Emenda- 
tione Temporum, lib. vi. p. 539. ed. 
Genev. 1629.] 

© [Isaaci Casauboni, Exercitationes 
xvi. ad Card. Baronii Prolegomena, &c. 


Exer. i. sect. 9. p. 57. ed. Genev. 1655. ] 

4 [érl rovrois Aowby ef Huas aro- 
evyere, pevicabe Aiyumtious’ pevicrbe 
dt Kal ArBias audotrépovs, OnBalovs, 
Tadaorivovs, “ApaBas, Polvixas, Bv- 
pous, kal rods mpds Tav Evopdtn katw- 
kiouevous’ kal mavras aratamwA@s, rap” 
ois Gypumvia: Kal mpocevxat, Kal ai Kot- 
vai Wadruwdion Tetiunvra. —S. Basil. 
ep. 207 (aliter 68) § 3. Op. tom. iii. p. 
311, C. 

© { Affirmant autem hanc fuisse sum - 
mam vel culpe vel erroris, quod essent 
soliti stato die ante Jucem convenire, 
carmenque Christo quasi Deo dicere 
secum invicem.—Plinii Epist., lib. x. 
ep. 97, ad Trajanum. ] 


rare. 


ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER. 61 





are little beholden to Scaliger, who in his vein of contradic- finer 

_ tion tells us, satis superstitiose, that quidam Christiani etiam ———— 
hodie sacris éropyotvtat, et musicis instrumentis, tympanis Tee 
eneis et aliis ejusmodi perstrepunt, ut bacchantes putes (won- 239" 
drous modestly!) gui mos a veteri Ecclesie ritu alienus, 
(wondrous confidently!) What he calls the ancient Church 

I cannot tell; but when men mislike a thing, especially such 

critics as he was, impatient of anything that crossed the puri- 

tanical platform, they can shut up the Church into what straits 

and what number of years they list. Let Scaliger come and 

shew us whether the same Spirit of God assisted not His 
Church in this pious institution, in St. Basil’s, St. Hilary’s, 

and St. Ambrose’s time, that assisted the kings and pro- 

phets and apostles before. We have the direction from 

St. Paul. If the ancient Christians under persecution could 

not practise it openly, what is that to hinder other Chris- 

tians afterwards, when they were a settled and flourishing 
Church, to follow the examples of so many holy men in all 

ages, and of Christ, and the apostles themselves? If those 

Quest. et Resp. ad Orthodoxos be Justin Martyr’s, as they 

may be with admission of some later interpolations, then was 

the custom of singing hymns used in his time, with vocal 

but not instrumental music (for they could not do all at 

once) Qu. 1078. After him, the first I find in the Latin and 

West Churches is St. Hilary, the bishop of Poitiers in France, Hilar. in 
whom Isidore Hisp. de div. Off. c. 6.1. i1, makes the first 7%, 
author of ecclesiastical hymns, as he found it in St. Hierome, celebret 
in his book de Scrip. Eccl.*, where he says that St. Hilary pip 
made a book of ecclesiastical hymns and songs for the 
Church. After him, St. Ambrose brought it into the Church 


f (J. J. Scaligeri, Elenchus Trihe- 
resii Nic. Serrarii, c. 29. p. 239. 8vo. 
Franc. 1605. | 

& [od 7d doa amrAds éot) Tots vy- 
Tiows Opuddiov, GAAG Td weTa THY dabd- 
xwv dpydvev dom... did év tats éx- 
KAnolats mpoalperat ex Tay doudTey 7 
Xpiois tay ToLobTwy dpydvev Ka TeV 
&AAwy Tots vytlos bvTwy apuodiov, Kal 
brovcAeimrat To Goa GTAGS.—Queest. et 
Respons. ad Orthodoxos. Respons. 107. 


_ Opus spurium inter Op. S. Justin. Mart. 


in Append, p. 486, A. ] 


4 [Audiat orantis populi consistens 
quis extra ecclesiam vocem, spectet ce- 
lebres hymnorum sonitus,—S. Hilar. in 
Psal. Ixv. 1. Op. tom. i. col. 196, C.] 

i [Hilarius autem Gallus, episco- 
pus Pictavensis, eloquentia conspicuus, 
hymnorum carmine floruit primus.— 
Isidor. Hispal. de Divin. Officiis, lib. i. 
cap. 6. Op. tom. vi. p. 369. ] 

k [Est ejus (Hilarii)... liber hym- 
norum et mysteriorum.—S. Hieron. de 
Vir. Illust., cap. 100. Op. tom. ii. col. 
919.) - 


First 


SERIES. 


62 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


of Milan, ad leniendum mesti populi fastidium; while they 
were praying night and day for the safety of their bishop, 
persecuted by the Arian empress Justina, the mother of 
Valentinian, as St. Augustine writes, in his Confessions}, 
(Conf., lib. ix. c. 6 et 7™, et lib. 1. Fetract., c. 21". Item 
Strabo de [eb. Eccl., c. 25°; Berno de Missa, c. 2”; Cone. 
Tolet., iv. c. 124.) And from hence came all hymns for the 
most part to be called Ambrosiani, because from him they 
began to be spread over all the Latin Church; as a long time 
before they had the Greek. So St. Benedict, in his Rule*, 
calls them Ambrosiani, &c. After him St. Hierome, ad Ps. 
645, gives testimony of them, Matutinis, vespertinisque hymnis 
delectatur Deus, &c.; and Possidonius'’, in the life of St. Aug., 
cap. 28, tells us that one of the causes why he wept and 
grieved so much was, Quoniam per immanitatem Wandalcrum 
hymni laudesque Dei in Ecclesia deperierunt. There needs no 
farther deduction of them, for every man knows how they 
have been always since those times practised with great and 


1 {The references which follow are 
in the margin of the original. } 

m (Non longe cceperat Mediolanensis 
Ecclesia genus hoc consolationis et ex- 
hortationis celebrare, maguo studio fra- 
trum concinentium vocibus et cordibus, 
Nimirum annus erat, aut non multo am- 
plius, cum Justina Valentiniani regis 
pueri mater, hominem tuum Ambro- 
sium persequeretur heresis suz causa, 
qua fuerat seducta ab Arianis. Excu- 
babat pia plebs in ecclesia, mori parata 
cum episcopo suo, servo tuo. Ibi ma- 
ter mea, ancilla tua, sollicitudinis et 
vigiliarum primas tenens, orationibus 
vivebat. Nos adhue frigidi a calore 
spiritus tui, excitabamur tamen civitate 
attonita atque turbata. Tune hymni 
et psalmi ut canerentur secundum mo- 
rem Orientalium partium, ne populus 
meeroris tedio contabesceret, institu- 
tum est; et ex illo in hodiernum re- 
tentum, multis jam ac poene omnibus 
gregibus tuis, et per cetera orbis imi- 
tantibus.—S. Aug. Conf., lib. ix. cap. 
7. § 15. Op. tom. i. col. 162, E, F. The 
portion preceding in cap. 6. has been 
quoted before, p. 52, note f. } 

" [This is a reference to a hymn of 
S. Ambrose; ... qui sensus etiam canta- 
tur ore multorum in versibus beatissi- 
mis Ambrosii, ubi de gallo gallinaceo 
ait, Hoc ipsa petra Ecclesie@ canente, cul- 


pam diluit.—S. Aug. Retract., lib. i. ¢. 
21. Op. tom. i. col. 32, B.] 

© [ Walafridus Strabo, lib. de exordiis 
et incrementis rerum ecclesiasticorum, 
ce. 25. De hymnis et cantilenis et exor- 
diis eorum. (to the same effect as S. 
Aug.) ap. Hittorp. de Div. Off, p. 
350. | 


» [ Berno Augiensis, libellus de qui- 
busdam rebus ad missam spectantibus, 
c. 2. De Gloriain excelsis; ap. Hittorp. 
p. 358. } 

4 {Et quia nonnulli hymni humano 
studio in landem Dei atque apostolo- 
rum et martyrum triumphos compositi 
esse noscuntur, sicut hi quos beatissimi 
doctores Hilarius atque Ambrosius edi- 
derunt.—Cone. Tolet. LV. A.D. 633. 
can. 13. Concil., tom. vi. col. 1455, E.] 

® [Inde sequatur Ambrosianum (ra-~ 
ther Ainbrosiana). S. Benedicti Regula, 
cap. 9. cf. cap. 12 et 17. Holstenii co- 
dex Regularum Monast. et Canon., 
tom. i. p. 121, 122, Aug. Vind. 1759. ] 

* { Breviarium in Psalm. lxiv. Opus 
spurium inter op. S. Hieron., tom. vii. 
in Append. col. 162.] 

t { Fuerunt ei lacryme panis die ac 
nocte... videbat enim... hymnos Dei 
et Jaudes de ecclesiis deperisse.—S. 
Aug. vita, auctore Possidio, ¢, 28. Op. 
S. Aug., tom. x. append. col. 277, I. 
278, A.] 


ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER. 63 


religious solemnity in the Church. Only because Scaliger 
is pleased, pro criticorum imperio, to deride them, I cannot 
but put him in mind, how ill displeasing [and] harsh the 
effeminate Geneva tunes were to the gravity and ears of the 
ancient Church, and how highly esteemed the solemn music 
of the Christians was by all pious and learned men, even in 
primitive times; for thus Euseb., lib. vil. cap. 24", gives us 
the epistle of the bishops, gathered together at the council 
of Antioch, (which was almost 1400 years ago, it wants but 
three of it*), against the pernicious heretic Paulus Samosa- 
tenus, written to Dionysius the pope of Rome and others; 
Quid vobis in memoriam revocemus, quem ad modum psalmos 
et cantus, qui ad D. N. J. Christi honorem decantari solent, 
tanquam recentiores et a viris recentioris memorie editos ex- 
ploserit iste Samosatenus? (as Scaliger has done for all the 
world) e¢ in media Ecclesia solenni paschatis die, mulieres, 
que inanes cantilenas (quas si quispiam audiret plane exhor- 
resceret) in ipsius laudem funderent, pararit 2? And thus have 
our new masters and mistresses at Geneva made known to 
the world from whom they took example to thrust out the 
solemn music of David’s own psalms, and other glorious 
hymns of holy men, from the Church, and to give us songs 
of their own altering and composing to be sung instead of 
them, by a company of rude people, cobblers and their wives, 
and their kitchen-maids and all, that have as much skill in 
singing as an ass has to handle an harp, Asinus ad Lyram. 
Vide Bellarm., tom. iv. de bonis Operibus in particul., lib. 1. 
cap. 16. de Antig. hymn. 





" [Wadruobs TE Tods wey eis Toy KU- 
pov Tay *Incoby Xpiorby mavoas, ws 5) 
vewT Epous Ka VEWT epwy avbpaiv ovy- 
Yetupara, eis Eautdy 5 év eon Th ee 
kAnoia, Th peydrn TOU ndoxa Tepe 
Paruedeiv yuvaikas Tapackevdswr, ay 
kal axovoas &y Tis pplicev... Ti by 
TavTa ypdpommev ;—Epist. episcoporum 
in cone. ap. Euseb. Hist. Eccles., lib. 
vii. cap. 30. p. 362.] 


* [The words in parenthesis are a 
marginal note. The council of Antioch 
was in 264, and therefore the date of 
this writing should be 1661. The body 
of the notes, however, was certainly 
written forty years earlier. | 

y [The chapter is headed “ Defen- 
ditur cantus, qui in officio divino ad- 
hiberi solet.’”’—Bellarm., Op. tom. iv. 
p- 546. | 


First 
SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


64 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


THE ANTIQUITY OF TE DEUM, 


This canticle was miraculously framed by the two old 
holy and famous fathers of the Church, St. Ambrose and 
St. Augustine, who to the admiration of all men sung it 
on the sudden together, one answering another alternalim, 
and verse by verse, as if God had from heaven taught them 
what to say, presently after St. Augustine’s baptism at Mi- 
lan; which story is written by St. Dacius, a bishop of Milan, 
not much after St. Ambrose’s days, in the first book of his 
Chronicle, and the tenth chapter’. Floruit autem 8. Dacius 
(says S. Greg. lib. i. dialog. cap. 4.*) Imperante Justino 
seniore. 

And after this hymn was so wonderfully framed by these 
two holy and learned doctors (saith Dacius) the whole 
Church of Christ here in our western parts began to use it 
in their offices, which appears plainly to have been so used 
indeed by the ancient rule of St. Benedict’, (which was 
afterwards confirmed by St. Greg.°) where before the lesson 
ex Evangelio, is Te Deuy laudamus prescribed to be sung 
Secundum antiquam consuetudinem Keclesie. Being an ancient 
hymn then in his time, it cannot be thought to be less than 
twelve hundred years old and upwards, the time wherein St. 
Augustine was christened by St. Ambrose‘. 

The Puritan asks why Gloria Patri is not repeated at the 
end of Ze Deum, as well as at the end of Benedicite; 9. 1°. 


% [ This Chronicle exists in MS. only. 
The passage in question is cited by 
Possevin in his Apparatus Sacer under 


si 4. Op. tom. 2. col. 285. A.] 
[Post quartum autem responso- 
rium incipiat Abbas hymnum, Te 


Dacius (p. 409. ed. 1608); he says, 
**Chronicon scripsit, in quo inter alia 
testatur, lib. i. cap. 10, a sanctis patri- 
bus Ambrosio et Augustino, statim a 
baptismo ejusdem Augustini, toto 
populo obstupescente, canticum illud, 
Te Deum laudamus, alternatim et ex 
tempore cantatum fuisse; inde vero 
ab universa Ecclesia frequentari coe- 
pisse. The Chronicle however is a 
spurious work, it was not written till 
the eleventh or twelfth century. See 
Muratori, Anecdota Latina, tom. i. 
Appendix cap. 6. p. 236. ] 

* (S. Gregor. M. Dialog., lib. iii. 


Deum laudamus, quo dicto legat Abbas 
lectionem de Evangelio, &c.—S. Bene- 
dicti Regula Monachorem cap. 11. 
(Holstenii Codex Regularum, tom. i. 
p- 121.)} 

© {See his commendation of the Rule, 
Dialog. lib. ii. cap. 36. Op. tom. ii. 
col. 272, E, and his reference to it as . 
the rule of monks in his epistles, lib. 
xi. Indict. iv. Epist. 48. ibid. col. 
1137, A.] 

4 [These statements are corrected in 
the next series of notes. ] 


© [Survey, &c. § 9, quere i. p. 47. ] 


pig Bnd 


ea a ee 


ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER: 65 


De Hymno trium Puerorum. 


Or this Canticle, Benedicite Omnia Opera.| Hymnum quo- 
gue Trium Puerorum, in quo universa celi et terre creatura 
Deum collaudat, et quem Ecclesia tota Catholica per totum 
orbem diffusa celebrat [....], publice sanctum concilium de- 


— cantari instituit. 4 Conc. Tolet. Can. 13°. 


In the Common Prayer-book, 2° Edw. VI. it is appointed’, 
that this canticle be used all Lent long after the first les- 
son, instead of Te Deum, which was to be said all the year 
besides. 


Lord have mercy upon us. Christ have mercy upon us. | 
The eleventh exception of the Surveyor*. : 

This is in other letters to shew that according to the 
ancient custom the people use to answer the minister, as at 
the end of the Litany. And it is to be noted, that the book 
does not everywhere enjoin and prescribe every little order, 
what should be said or done, but take it for granted that 
people are acquainted with such common, and things always 
used already. Let the Puritans then here give over their 
endless cavils, and let ancient custom prevail, the thing 
which our Church chiefly intended in the review of this 
service. : 

Then the minister, clerks, and people, shall say the Lord’s 
Prayer with a loud voice in English.| The twelfth exception 
of the Surveyor’. 


The third Collect for Grace.] °?: W ‘?: “This collect is in 
some places by laudable custom repeated of the people, as 
the confession is. And thus in St. Greg. under Paul’s by 


f [Concil. Tolet. iv. (A.D. 633.) can. Eliz. cap. 2, that the clerks or people 
14. Concilia, tom. vi. col. 1456, C.] should say the second of these versicles 

& {After the first lesson shall fol- (the minister for the time being si- 
low Te Deum Laudamus, in English, lent) .. seeing by the book the minister 
daily throughout the year, except in should read also.—Survey, p. 46. ] 
Lent, all the which time in place of i [Ibid. p. 48, objecting to the ‘‘loud 


Te Deum shall be used Benedicite, &c. voice,’’ ‘‘the often repeating of the 
—Rubric in Book of Common Prayer, Lord’s prayer,’ and the omission of the 


1549. ] Doxology, ‘‘therein following the Mass- 
» [Whether it be warranted by 1 book rather than Scripture.’’] ; 


COSIN. F 


First 


SERIES. 


66 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Dr. White. Mart. 1621.” 
Vesperis*, 

Safely brought us to the beginning of this day.| Which 
shews when the Morning Prayer should regularly be said, 


Pertinet ad ultimam collectam in 


at the first hour of the day, which is six o’clock in the 


morning, and not towards high noon-day, or after nine, when 
the morning is past., 


ORDER FOR EVENING PRAYER. 


The Priest shall say, Our Father, which art in heaven, &c.| 
Not that the Priest should begin Evensong with the Lord’s 
Prayer, before he has read the Sentences, Confession, and Ab- 
solution, as at Morning Prayer, as he is. by the rubric there 
enjoined’, but that after those Sentences, &c. as a preparation 
both to Morning and Evening Prayer, he should begin and 
say, Our Father, &c. And therefore, because many neglect- 
ing the preceding rubric, which rules this, do begin the Even- 
song here, it gave occasion to the puritans, in their Survey™ 
to ask, whether ministers were not as punishable for that 
neglect, as for not wearing of a surplice? And truly I think 
they are. It is the fourteenth canon that forbids ministers 
to diminish any part of divine service, as it is appointed, in 
regard of preaching, or any other respect, which they thet 
curtail service are wont to allege. . 


[ON THE QUICUNQUE VULT. | 


That we worship one God in Trinity.| Vide heresim 
Fausti Manichei apud S. Augustinum, tom. vi. Contra Faust. 
Man., lib, 20. cap. 12°. 


k [The former part of this note is 
crossed out by Bp. Cosin. The last 
words seem intended as a correction, 
intimating that it is the third Collect 
at Evening Prayer, “‘ Lighten our 
darkness,’’ which was so repeated. } 

1 [In the Prayer-books before the 
last review the Rubric at the beginning 
of Morning Prayer was, “ At the be- 
ginning both of Morning prayer, and 
likewise of Evening prayer, the minis-| 


ter shall read with a loud voice some 


one of these sentences,’”’ &c., and the 
order for Evening Prayer began simply 
as in the text. 

= behets Exception 8, Quere 22, 
p- 46 

= [S. Aug. cont. Faustum Man., lib. 
xx. c. 12. Op. tom. viii. col. 341, F. 
Faustus said, “ Igitur nos Patris qui- 
dem Dei omnipotentis, et Christi filii 
ejus, et Spiritus Sancti, unum idemque 
sub triplici appellatione colimus nu- 
men.” §, Aug. replied, “Cur enim 





ced RCRD =e 
ST NINES 





67 


ON THE LITANY. 


First 


THE LITANY. SERIES. 


Airaviat e Greco Mnuaip®. *?? W.*?: “The Litany to be 
said or sung in the midst of the church. Injunct, Eliz. 

“The Priest goeth from out of his seat into the body of the 
church, and (at a low desk before the chancel door, called the 
faldstool) kneels, and says or sings the Litany. 

* Vide Proph. Joel, de medio loco inter porticum et aliare 
ubi sacerdotes et prophete ingemere et ingeminare jussi, Parce 
Domine, Parce populo Tuo &c. temporibus jejuniorum.” - 

To be used upon Sundays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, &c.| The thir. 
So ordered by the compilers of this book, at first in imitation pare 
of the Lutheran Church. Apud nos (saith Chemnitius, Exam. posh point 
p. 4, pag. 158%.) singulis septimanis certo aliquo die populus yeyor?. 
Srequentior convenit ad publicas et solennes supplicationes, que’ | 
Litanie vocantur. 

From all sedition and privy conspiracy.| Here would the 
puritans have Henry the Eighth’s old words come in again, 
which he added to the litany upon his falling out with the 
pope, viz., “ From the tyranny of the bishop of Rome and all 
his detestable enormities";” because religious people may 
suspect that by the leaving out of these words we are de- 
clining, and going back again to popery. See the Survey, 


q. 15°, 


‘ 


‘2? W + “1, By the mystery of Thy holy Incarnation ; 


sub triplici, ac non potius sub multi- 
plici, non appellatione tantum, sed 
etiam re, si quot nomina, tot persone 
sunt?” &c. | 

° [In Nichols Arravedw. What cor- 
respond to our Litanies in the Greek 
services are the Ectinia, which form a 
part of the morning, evening, and 
eucharistical services, and being said 
by the deacon, are printed separately 
in the Diaconicum as well as in the 
Liturgies ; or perhaps rather the special 
services of deprecation, which are found 
in Goar, Rituale Grecorum, pp. 766, 
sq. ] 
» [pp. 49—56, containing very many 
exceptions. | 

4 [Chemnitii Examen Decretorum 


_ Concil. Trident. par. 4. c. de supersti- 


tionibus, que in festivitates irrepserunt; 
et quomodo in nostris Ecclesiis festa 
religiose observentur. § Quotidiani ec- 


clesie conventus, p. 167, ed. Fran. 
1574. ] 

® [This clause first appeared in * The 
Primer set forth by the King’s Ma- 
jesty and his Clergy, A.D. 1545.” 
(Three Primers put forth in the reign 
of Henry VIII. p. 482, Oxford 1834, ) 
only that the epithet there was ‘‘ abom- 
inable.’”’? In the Prayer-books of Edw. 
VI. it is “detestable.” The clause was 
omitted in the beginning of the reign 
of Elizabeth, being specified as omitted 
in the Act of Uniformity, 1 Eliz. cap, 
2 


: [Exception 13. Quere 34. pp. 49, 
50. Whether the litany in the K. B, 
be as it should be, by 1 Eliz. cap. 2. 
The Act of 1 Eliz. cap. 2 said only, 
“the form of the litany is altered 
and corrected:” the Surveyor argues 
that this omission is more than an 
alteration or correction. | 


F2 


First 


_ SERIES... 


Distinction 


of mortal 


68 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


2. By Thy holy Nativity, 38. and Circumcision; 4. By Thy 
Baptism, 5. Fasting, 6. and Temptation; 7. By Thine Agony, 
8. and Bloody Sweat; 9. By Thy Cross, 10. and Passion ; 
11. By Thy precious Death, 12. and Burial. His 12 Deus 
in carne manifestatus. 1. By Thy glorious Resurrection, 2. 
and Ascension, 3. and by the coming of the Holy Ghost. 
His 3 justificatus in spiritu. 1 Tim. iii. 10.” 

"2? W :?:—To succour—all that be in danger,—that travel 
by land,—or by water,—all women labouring of child,—all 
sick persons,—and young children,—and all prisoners and 
captives.| ‘‘ Ecclesia pia mater in hoc versiculo 7 personas 
(guas vocant canonici ‘miserabiles’) commemorat, dignasque 
existimat duplici privilegio, viz. solenni publicarum precum in- 
teresse, ef carnium esu tempore quadragesimali.”’ 

—To forgive us all our sins, negligences, and ignorances. | 


and venial A strange presumption it is for so many private writers as 


. sins. 


we have among us, to make so much ado with them of the 
Church of Rome, about the distinction of mortal and venial 
or lesser sins, whenas the Liturgy of our own Church does 
here so manifestly acknowledge so much. 


[PRAYER FOR THE CLERGY AND PEOPLE‘. | 


—Send down upon our bishops and curates.|  ‘?* W ‘? 
“ Ministri nunc appellantur, quos olim ecclesia veriori nomine 
curatos dixit propter animarum curam. Non ergo hic solum 
subsidiarit intelligendi, sed ipsi quibus cura incumbit.” 

The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, &c. Amen.| *?* W °? 
«“* Here the minister riseth, and if there be a sermon an introit 
is sung, and after sermon they ascend with three adorations 
towards the altar. If both ministers or priests, the one at 
one end, the other at the other, representing the two cheru- 
bims at the mercy-seat. If one be but a deacon, he kneels 
at the door®.” | 


* [This and other prayers were placed was followed by the celebration of the 
at the end of the Litany before 1662.}. Holy Communion; in other copies. of 
.." [This note of Bp. Andrewes’ be- his notes it is marked “ Ad Commu- 


‘longs to the end of the Litany, which nionem.’’] 





See > hee ee Se ee 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 69 


[ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. | 


- Ratio ordinis Evangeliorum de tempore per totius anni 
curriculum. 

The Church hath not appointed these following gospels 
and epistles, but upon special relation to the time wherein 
they read. And it is admirable to see with what order and 
wisdom all things are disposed and brought in tempore suo, 
that they might be the more kindly for the putting us in 
mind of what we are about, or what we have to do. 

The whole year is distinguished into two parts: the time 
of Christ’s living among us here on earth, which is the first ; 
and our time of living here after His example, which is the 
second. For the first are all the Sundays appointed from 
Advent to Trinity Sunday. For the rest are all the Sundays 
after Trinity to Advent again. (Veteres distinxerunt hec 
duo tempora in tempus Dominice dispensationis, et tempus 
nostre peregrinationis*.) And because the first part is con 
versant about the life of Christ, and the mysteries of His 
divine dispensation, therefore beginning at Advent is the 
memory of His incarnation celebrated, and ‘after that His 
nativity, then His circumcision, His manifestation to the 
Gentiles, His nonage, His doctrine, His miracles, His pas- 
sion, His burial, His resurrection, His ascension, His send- 
ing of the Holy Ghost, all in a most absolute order: in all 
which we see the whole story and course of our Saviour, in 
manifesting Himself and His divine mysteries to the world. 
So that the Gospels read through all this part of the year, 
have their chief end and purpose to make us know and re- 
member orderly with grateful hearts, what excellent benefits 
God the Father hath communicated unto us, first by His 
Son, and then by His Holy Spirit, making us the heirs of 
heaven, that before were the sons of hell; for which un- 
speakable goodness, we do most fitly end this part of the 
year, with giving praise and glory to the whole blessed 
Trinity. “4 

The second part, which contains all the Sundays after 


that, being for our guidance in the peregrination that we. 


x [The words in parentheses are written in the margin of the original. } 


First 


SERIES. 


70 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


First have living in this world, hath for it such gospels in order 
— appointed, as may most easily and plainly instruct and lead 
us in the true paths of Christianity; that those which are 
regenerated by Christ and initiated in His faith, may know 

what virtues to follow, and what vices to eschew. 

Thus in the first part we are to learn the mysteries of 
Christian religion ; in the second we are to practise that 
which is agreeable to the same: for so it behoves us not 
only to know that we have no other foundation of our reli- 
gion but Christ Jesus, born, and crucified, and risen, &c., 
for us; but further also, to build upon this foundation such 
a life as He requires of us. And because the first part ends 
with Pentecost, the giving us a new law in our hearts; 
therefore the second [is] to begin with the practice of that 
law: that as the children of Israel did pass the desert by the 
direction of Moses, so we may pass through this world by 
the guidance of our Saviour, and overcoming at last our 
spiritual enemies, we may come to our heavenly’ dwelling- 
place, and there remain with Him for ever. 


The service of the Sunday is appointed to be longer 
than upon other days of the week, and the like upon holy 
days and festival days; for so it was ordered in the law, that 
upon great feasts and the Sabbath days, the sacrifice should be 
twice as much as upon the ordinary days of the week, Numb. 
xxvill. 9, 10, &c. 


Why the Of the First Sunday in Advent.| By the peculiar com- 

yea °8"S putation of the Church, this is the first Sunday in the year. 
*« For she neither follows the course of sun or moon, to number 
her days and nights according to their revolution; but Jesus 
Christ being to her as the only Sun and Light whereby she is 
guided, she following His course alone, beginning and ending 
her year with Him: when this Sun of righteousness therefore 
doth arise, that is, when His first coming and incarnation is 
propounded unto us, then begins the year of the Church, 
and from thence are all her other days and times computed.” 
Fer. 5. 1. Dom. 26. p. Pent’ 


aie [Joannes Ferus, Postilla sive con- a die Pasche ad Adventum usque, 
ciones in Evangelia et Epistolas, qaz Dominicis diebus in Christi Ecclesia 





it heh eae 


i fs Sieh ali i lk rt aa 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 


71 


The Second Sunday in Advent. Collect.| This Collect is 


not in the Roman Missal. 


The Third Sunday in Advent, Epistle. And stewards of the 
secrets of God.| Vide Wint. Conc. p. 227. 


The Fourth Sunday in Advent, Gospel. 


What art thou ?] 


Vide lib. intitul. The Christian Directory, p. 203°. 
_ Christmas-day. Festum Principale. * 
_ St. Stephen’s day. Festum duplex minus. 
St. John the Evangelist’s day. Festum duplex minus. 
_ Innocents’ day. Festum duplex minus. 
The Sunday after Christmas-day. The fourteenth excep- 


tion of the Surveyor”. 


Collect. This day to be born, &c.] The fifteenth exception 


of the Surveyor’. 
The Circumcision of Christ. 


Festum duplex minus. 


His name was called Jesus.| Vide the Christian Direc- 


tory, p. 2114 


The Epiphany. 


This epistle and the collect run all upon the calling of 
the Gentiles, because Christ was this day made first known 


unto them in the persons of the wise men that came from 


the east to worship Him. 


Of the high and great feast of Christ’s Epiphany. 


This high day’s solemnity is one of the greatest feasts 
which the Church doth celebrate in memory of our Saviour ; 
a feast not only honoured by devout Christians in all ages, 


leguntur. Domin. 26. post Pentecostem, 
Serm. i. p. 1524. The passage is trans- 
lated from Ferus, the first sentence 
only being altered to adapt it from the 
last Sunday of the Christian year to 
the first. ] 

* | This reference is to a sermon of 
Bp. Andrewes (of Winchester). Serm. 
8. Of the Nativity, p. 22. ed. fol. 1629. 
(vol. i. pp. 42, 43. ed. Oxford, 1841,) 


where the ‘‘ mysteries’ are explained 


of the sacraments, of which the clergy 
are the “ stewards or dispensers.” ] 
* [Part i. lib. i. chap. 4. Proofs of 


Christianity; the 8th proof, the general 
expectation of the people. } 

> [p. 56, on the words of the Collect 
‘the young Innocents Thy witnesses” 
that they were not martyrs. ] 

© [ The exception is, ‘‘ Whether these 
words, ‘ this day,’ be evidently grounded 
upon the word of God, seeing Christ 
was born but upon one day, ” p. 57; the 
words are now altered to ‘at this time 
to be born.’ ] 

d (Lib. i. part i, chap. iv, sect. 2, 
Consid. 2. § 6.] 


First 


SERIES. 


First 
SERIES. 


Lib. 21°. 


Orat. in 
laudem 
Basilii£ 


Theodos., 
- lib. ii. ec. 
de Feriis&%, 


Leg. 21. 
sub ini- 
tium 5, 


Chrysost. 
in Luce. c. 
ii.i Cassian, 
Col. x. de 
Orat. c. 1*. 
Epiph. 
Her. 511, 
[John vii. 
37.] 


72 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


but reverenced even by the emperors themselves that were 
the enemies of the catholic Church; as by Julian the apos- 
tate, who to cover his hidden malice against Christ’s religion, 
Cum esset in Gallus (saith Ammianus Marcellinus,) voluit ea 
die cum ceteris Christianis sacris interesse mysteriis. Julia- 
nus autem ut hec interim celarentur, feriarum die quem cele- 
brantes mense Januario Christiani Epiphaniam dictitant, pro- 
gressus in eorum Ecclesiam, solenniter numine orato discessit. 
It was.also honourably observed by Valens the Arian em- 
peror, as Nazianzen reporteth; he knew well he would be 
accounted no Christian at all who did not openly shew him- 
self at such high solemnities, to honour Christ with his 
service. 

Other Christian emperors have held it in such high esteem, 
that for the more honourable and religious celebration of it, 
they have by law and imperial edicts ranked it, with the great 
feasts of Christmas and Easter. Diem Pasche et diem Nata- 
lis Domini, et Epiphania, et septem qui sequuntur (the whole 
week after) sine strepitu judiciali volumus observari. And in 
another law, made by Valentinian, Theodosius, and Arcadius, 
they all three ranked together again, and divers privileges 
equally granted them above all other feasts of the year. 

The old Christians of Egypt were wont to celebrate Christ’s 
nativity upon this day. And indeed it is the last and the great. 
day of Christmas with us: as St. John said of another feast, 
“Tn the last and great day of the feast Jesus stood up.” It 
hath been a feast of joy all this while, but to-day comes in 


¢ [Ammianus Marcellinus, lib. xxi. 
cap. 2. § 5. Op. tom. i. p. 237.) 

‘f [eis yap Td iepdby eioeAOav pera 
mdons THs wep avtoy Sopuoplas* iv 5é 
Tuépa Trav ’Emipaviwy, kal &Opoloimos. 
kal TOD Aaov mépos yevduevos, otTws 
apoowvTa Thy evwow.—S. Gregor. 
Nazian. Orat. 43, in laudem Basilii, 
cap. 52. Op. tom. i. p. 808, D.] 

& (Cod. lib. iii. Tit. 12, de Feriis, 1. 
2. ap. Corp. Jur. Civ., but in the Codex 
Theodosianus, lib. ii. tit. 7. de Feriis, 
1. 2. The feasts of Christmas and Epi- 
phany are not mentioned in the law 


itself; the words cited are from the 
Interpretatio, tom. i. p. 121. Lugd. 
1665. ] , 


» (Cod. ibid. 1. 7.] 


i [Alii putant quod in Epiphaniis 
nascitur, non damnemus aliorum opini- 
onem, nostram sequamur doctrinam.— 
Pseudo-Chrys., Hom. in Luce. cap, ii. 
de Nativitate Domini. Op. S. Chrys. 
tom. ii. p. 273, G. Ed. Par. 1546. 
Latine tantum extat. ] : 

k [Intra AZgypti regionem mos iste 
antiqua traditione servatur, ut peracto 
Epiphaniorum die, quem provincie il- 
lius sacerdotes vel Dominici baptismi 
vel secundum carnem nativitatis esse 
definiunt, &c.—Cassian. Collatio x. de 
Oratione, cap. 2. Op. p. 532.) 

1 [eal werd Tov GAAov éviavToy brep- 
Bas ard ris Tov yeveOAlwv. abTod jué- 
pas, Tovréativ Emipaviwy, h Tis TUYXaveEt 
€xtn lavvovaplou unvds, kara 5 Aiyur- 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 73 


our fulness of joy, the day when the fulness of the Gentiles 
came in, to whom He.was manifested in the persons of these 
wise men, as the King and the Saviour of all the world. 

The chief thing which the Church propounds unto us upon 
Christmas day, is the birth of our Lord, His humanity, and 
His coming in the flesh, there being nothing more proper to 
a man, than to be born of a woman; but to-day it raiseth 
our meditations, and propounds unto us those things where- 
by He that was born, the true son of a virgin, manifested 
Himself to be the only and eternal Son of God. The mani- 


festation of His divinity then, by wonderful and heavenly 


signs, is the proper theme and subject of this day’s so- 
lemnity. 

In which regard it is called the Epiphany by the Greeks ; 
and of old more commonly the Theophania, or the apparition 
of God: and accordingly hath the Church propounded those 
admirable miracles unto us this day, which did manifest 
Christ to be so, and which were all performed upon this very 


First 


SERIES. 


day ; the first whereof was this His apparition or manifesting The Col- 


Himself unto the Gentiles, wherein the collect, epistle and 


lect, Epi- 
stle, and 


gospel of the day is spent ; the second was His glorious bap- Gospel. 


tism in Jordan, when He first manifested Himself unto the 
Jews, having thirty years before concealed Himself from 


them, Luke iii., appointed in that respect for the second 


lesson at matins; the third was His miracle in Cana of 
Galilee, where by turning water into wine, He did first 
manifest Himself to His disciples, saith St. John chap. ii., ap- 
pointed likewise in that regard for the second lesson at even- 
song, this present day. Wherein the Church hath not in- 
tended to propound unto us at the celebration of this feast, 
all those miracles that were wrought to manifest and shew 
forth Christ’s divinity, but those only which in their several 


‘kinds were the first, and wrought before all others for that 


purpose. ‘To the Gentiles, His first manifestation.was by the 


star. To the Jews, His first was by the voice from heaven 
_ at His baptism. ‘To His disciples, the first was the manifes- 


Me efoys TuBl évdexdrn.—S.Epiphan. adv. re GAnOads ra Oeopdvia eyévero kar 


_ Heres. lib. ii. tom. i. Her. 51. cap. éeyevvOn.—Idem. ibid. cap. 29. Op. p. 


227. Op. p. 449. D. “Ews évdexdrov 451, A.] 
TuBl, kal mpd duTw <iday *lavvovapiwy, 


First 


SERIES. 


1 Serm. 29. 


de temp.™ 
2 Bed. in 


74 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


tation of His glory, at the marriage of Cana in Galilee, John ii. 
ult. “This was the first miracle that Jesus did to manifest His 
glory, and His disciples believed on Him.” Which is the reason 
that all the Gospels upon the Sundays after the Epiphany 
are the stories in order of Christ’s manifesting Himself to 
be the Son of God by the same and the like miracles. St. 
Austin!, and out of him Venerable Bede’, added a fourth 
miracle, as being done also upon this day, when He first 


Lue. 2, and manifested His divine power to all the common people, by 


out of them 
Ordo 
Rom.® 


Item Ordo 
Roman.? 

Amal. l. iv. 
ce. 344. Ivo 
in Serm. de 


Epiph.* 


But the 
fashion of. 


the Greek 


feeding five thousand men with a few loaves. But the Church 
has only propounded unto us those three which are before- 
mentioned. And hence are those antiphones so often re- 
peated in the service at Benedictus and Magnificat upon this 
day°®. Tribus miraculis ornatum hunc diem sanctum colimus : 
Hodie stella Magos duxit ad presepium; hodie vinum ex 
aqua factum est ad nuptias; hodie in Jordane Christus bapti- 
zari voluit ut servaret nos. Of these three the Greeks made 
Christ’s baptism to belong most properly to this feast; and 
therefore in their Menologies*, they entitle it Theophania 
Domini, divinusque Salvatoris Baptismus, and the next day, 
Johannes Baptista; in which regard they were wont also 
to make this feast the great and solemn day of baptizing 
their Catechumeni; such as Easter and Pentecost were 
universally used over the Church both Latin and Greek, 
calling it Festorum Luminum, which declareth the effect and 


m [Hodie vero illud colimus, quo se 
in homine Deus virtutibus declaravit, 
pro eo quod in hae die, sive quod in 
ceelo stella ortas sui nuntium prebuit; 
sive quod in Cana Galilee in convivio 
nuptiali aquam in vinum convertit; 
sive quod in Jordanis vadis aquas ad 
reparationem humani generis suo bap- 
tismo consecravit; sive quod de quin- 
que panibus quinque millia hominum 
satiavit.—Serm. in Epiphania, 136 de 
Temp. opus spurium inter Op. S. Aug. 
tom. v. col. 244, A. in Append. Ed. 
Ben. (aliter Serm. 29 de Temp.) ]} 

n [Ordo Romanus de divinis Offi- 
ciis, in Vigilia Theophanie; (to the 
same effect as the citation in the last 
note); ap. Hittorp. de div. Off p 
15, D. ‘The editor has not found the 
passage of Bede in Luc. 2. ] 

° [The words which follow are the 
Antiphone ad Magnificat in the second 


vespers of the Epiphany in the Roman 
Breviary ; the Antiphone ad Benedictus 
in the Lauds is, Hodie ccelesti sponsa 
juncta est ecclesia, quoniam in Jordane 
lavit Christus ejus crimina: currunt 
cum muneribus Magi ad regales nup- 
tias, et ex aqua facto vino letantur con- 
vive, alleluia. } 

P [ubi supr. ] 

4 [Amalarius Fortunatus de Eccle- 
siasticis Officiis, lib. iv. (cap. 33. De 
Theophania) cap. 34, de Octavis Theo- 
phanizw, ap. Hittorp. de Div. Off. pp. 
213, 215. ] 

* (Ivo Carnotensis Epise. Serm. x. 
de Epiphania. Op. pars ii. Paris 1647. ] 

§ [Menologium Grzecum pars ii. 
pp. 86, 87. Urbini, 1727; in this edi- 
tion Jan. 6 is entitled simply Baptis- 
mus Domini nostri Jesu Christi; Jan. 
7, Synaxis Sancti et gloriosi prophet 
Joannis Baptiste. } 





; 
E 


+ 


i 
4 


’ 
ia 


‘ 


- habet. 





ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 


75 


_ virtue of baptism that Christ instituted this day in Jordan, 
to illuminate them that were before in darkness *. 


It is the 


_ reason why St. Cyrily, and other ancient catechists, direct 
_ and entitle their institutions ad Illuminatos et Illuminandos. Pope Leot, 


Nazianzen’s Oration in Sancta Lumina. 


Sanctus luminum 


dies (saith he) ad quem pervenimus, quemque hodie divino bene- 
jicio celebravimus, Christi mei, hoc est vere Lucis, omnem homi- 
_ nemin mundum venientem illuminantis, baptismum pro principio 


the more glorious solemnity of this great feast, and for the 
expression of that high and heavenly joy which they con- tt i 
ceived from it, to adorn their public churches with a great ~ 
number of lights and tapers when they came to perform and 


celebrate their service upon it. 


So Naz. in his Oration upon 


St. Basil#, speaking of Valens the Arian emperor, Nam in die 
luminum (says he) quando populus omnis in Ecclesiam con- 
venit, ingressus et ipse, ubi ordinem psalmodie, ceremonias rite 
celebratas, aras omni decore ac reverentia cultas, populum 
_ denique divino cultui assistentem vidit, admiratus est, &c. 

But it has always been the custom of the Latin Church The Gos- 
to attribute unto this day (as here our Church doth) the P* 
adoration of the wise men, and in their persons the manifest- 
ing of God’s only-begotten Son to us that were Gentiles, 
Eminet, says Rupertus?’, et precipuum est, quod hoc die Chris- 
tus a Magis adoratus est ; whereby it pleased God to take the 


* [S. Leo, Epist. xvi. (scr. Oct. 21. 
A.D. 447) ad universos Episcopos per 
Siciliam constitutos, Op. tom. i. fol. 
716, sqq. } 

“ [This marginal note added to the 
original is translated from Vanderhare’s 
Antiquitatum Liturgicarum Arcana, 
vol. i. p. 329. ] 

x (The first eighteen Catecheses (or 
Institutiones) are entitled trav dwrtf- 
Ttouevwy. The last five or nine pvora- 
yworyical, mpds Tovs veopwttctots. See 
S. Cyrill. H. Op., p. 16, &c., and p. 
306. } 
¥ (Hh yap ayla trav pdrwv jpépa, 
cis hv apiyucda, Kal hy éoptdtew Hkid- 


 weOa ofuepov, apxhv piv Td Tod euod 
 Xpicrod Barticua AauBdver, rod aAn- 
— Owvod hwtds, Tod gwrifovTos mdavTa &y- 
— Opwrov epxouévov eis thy Kkécpov.—sS, 
_ Gregor. Nazian. Orat. 139, in Sancta 
_ Lumina, cap. 1. Op.tom. i. p.677, A.] 


* [els yap tbh iepdy eitedAOdy pera 
adons Tis wept abrov Sopvdoplas. iy 5é 
nucpa Tav ’Emipaviav, kal &0poloimos 
2 see Sktov St unde TodTO wapadpapueiv, 
ered) yap evdov eyéveto, Kal Thy dxohv 
tpocBaroton TH Warduwdia KkareBpov- 
ThOn, TOO TE Aaod Td TéAaYoS Elde, Kar 
macay thy evkooulay bon Te wep 7d 
Bijua Kal bon wAHowwY, wyyeAuKhy WaX- 
Aov 2} avOpwrivny, Toy wey TOD Aavd mpo- 
TeTaypmevorv, UpSiov... erTnAwuevoy, tv’ 
otrws elrw, 0e@ Kal TH Bhuart, Tovs 5é 
mept avroy érrnkdtas ev PdBw Til Kal 
ocBdouart, ered) TavTa cide... @radé 
Tt avOpdmivov, oxdtov Kal divns tANpod- 
Ta Thy www Kal Thy Wuxhv ex TOD Odu- 
Bous.—S. Gregor. Nazian. Orat. 43, in 
laudem Basilii, cap. 52. Op. tom. i. p. 
808, E. 809, A.J 

.® (Rupert. de div. Officiis lib. iii. 
cap. 26. Op. tom. iv. p. 39, b. ] 


First 
SERIES. 


Church 
pleased not 


who wrote 
a long de- 
cretal epi- 
stle against 
it to all the 
bishops of 
Sicily. 


Whereupon it was their custom in that Church for Vide An- 


tiq. liturg. 
in Octava 


First 


SERIES. 


The 
Collect. 


The 
Epistle. 


76 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


heathen also for His inheritance, Psalm ii. He that made 
God and Man to be one Christ, made also the Jew and the 
Gentile to be one people, even His own. And for this it is, 
that the office of the day runs chiefly upon this story; a 
story no less full of wonder than of joy. And it contains 
many things, Que sunt erudite questionis, de quibus nos ali- 
quot in hunc diem conciones formavimus, eas consule”, 
Vide que scripsit Casaub. super hoc Fest. in Exercit. ex. 

2. no. 10. $ 37. p. 187, 188°. 


De Dominicis post Epiphaniam. 


The offices of the Sundays which follow the Epiphany until 
Septuagesima Sunday, are of the same argument with the 
Epiphany itself, all belonging to the manifestation of Christ, 
and to the end for which He was made known unto the sons 
of men. 


Dom. 1. post Epiphaniam. 

The first Sunday after the Epiphany.] The end is ut qui 
oculis carnis apparebat purus homo, oculis cordis credatur verus 
Deus, that He which came into the world in the form of a 
man, may be believed also to be the Son of God; and ac- 
cording to this belief, that He may receive worship and ser- 
vice from us both as God and man, as He was adored of the 
wise men. 

In which regard, most piously and very appositely hath the 
Church expressed that desire which should be in all men, by 
the collect of this day; that with the wise men of the east, 
we may see first and perceive what we ought to seek and do, 
and then while we are a-seeking, as they were, that we may - 
have grace and guidance faithfully and devoutly to perform 
the same (as they also did) through Christ, &c. 

The Epistle exhorts us to make a spiritual use of their mys- 


b [These last words de quibus, &c., vol. i. p. 1.) Appendix 1. on the same 
have been written by Cosin after the text, at Durham House 6 Jan, Die Do- 
rest of the note, with differentink; the minico, 1622-[23,] (ibid. p. 325.)] 
sermons referred to are Serm. i. on Matt. ¢ [Isaac. Casauboni Exercitationes 
ii, 1, 2, preached at S. Edward’s in in Baronium, Exerc. ii. No, xi. (an. 1, 
Cambridge, Jan 6. 1621-[22] (Works, n. 36.) pp. 166, sqq. Genev. 1655. ] 


5 ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 77 


 terious offerings, and especially of myrrh; which signifieth First 
_ yery rightly the mortifying of the flesh, and the offering up S®®=8_ 
of our bodies as an holy sacrifice to God. 

The Gospel belongeth properly’ to the manifestation of The 

Christ to the doctors of the Jews; and continues on the &°%P¢: 
story of His life, from His birth to His time of infancy in 
order; withal declaring that He was both God and man: 
man, in being made subject to His father and His mother, 
—He came down to Nazareth and was obedient unto them. 
God, in going about His Father’s business, and disputing 
with the old doctors while He was yet in His nonage, which 
as man He could not possibly have done. So here’s one Epi- 
phany more. 

The fifth Sunday after the Epiphany. Gospel. But while 
men slept his enemy came and sowed tares.| See Ridley’s 
View, p. 184, 185%. 





De origine Septuagesime, &c. 


In Concilio Altisiodorensi, canon 2°. Statutum fuit, ut pas- 
tores Ecclesiarum, statim post Epiphaniam mitterent nuncios 
ad omnes Ecclesias, qui prenunciarent venturam Quadragesi- 
mam, ut se pararent ad jeyjunium. Unde credibile est, relictam 
nobis esse Septuagesimam, Sexagesimam et Quinguagesimam, 
in quibus Ecclesia futurum jejunium annunciat. 

Septuagesima Sunday. Gospel. He went out about the 
eleventh hour, &c.| Yet let no man presume till the last 
hour. See an excellent passage to this purpose in Sir Thom. 
More’s book of Comfort in Tribulation, book ii, chap. 5. 
p- 11748. 


me 





4 TA View of the Civil and Eccle- 
siastical Law; and wherein the prac- 
tice of them is streitned, and may be 
relieved within this land. By Thomas 
Ridley, knight, and doctor of the civil 
law. The second edition, by J. G., 
Master of Arts. Oxford, 1634. The 
passage referred to is the original holi- 
ness and the gradual degeneracy of 
religious houses. | 

© [The words of the canon are: Ut 
omnes presbyteri ante epiphaniam mis- 
80s suos dirigant, qui eos de principio 
quadragesimez nuntient, et in ipsa epi- 
phania ad populum indicent.—Conce., 
Autisiodor., (A.D. 578.) can, 2, Con- 


cilia, tom. vi. col. 645, A.] 

f [The chapter is on “an objection 
concerning them that turn not to God 
till they come to the last cast.’? The 
work is entitled ‘‘ A dialogue of com- 
fort against tribulation made in the 
year of our Lord 1534, by Sir Thomas 
More, knight, made while he was pri- 
soner in the tower of London, which 
he entitled thus as followeth, A Dia- 
logue of comfort against Tribulation 
made by an Hungarian in Latin, and 
translated out of Latin into French, 
and out of French into English.”” The 
references are made to the edition of 
Sir T. More’s Works, London, 1557. } 


. 73 


First 


SERIES. 


1 [Deinde.] in Christo haberemus. 


3 [i.e. nor 
burning. ] 
/ 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


The first day of Lent.| De observatione Quadragesime. 

Nos unam Quadragesimam, secundum traditionem apostolo- 
rum, toto anno, tempore nobis congruo jejunamus. S. Hieron. 
an ep. ad Marcell. adv. Montanumé. 

The Epistle. With fasting, weeping, and mourning ; rend 
your hearts, &c.| 

See Sir Thom. More’s book of Comfort in Tribulation, 
cap. 6, 7%. 

The first Sunday in Lent. The Gospel, Matt. iv. 1.]- 

Evangelium hoc duabus potissimum causis huic Dominica 
assignatum est. Primo, ut nos Christiani statim in exordio 
Quadragesime certum fundamentum et objectum jejunii nostri 
Secundo', ut admoniti simus, adversus 
invidiosos insultus diaboli, qui, ut hic patet, tunc vel maxime 
savit, quando illius potestati nos per jejunium subtrahere inci- 
pimus. Fer. in Jon., c. 1%, 

Cur in Ecclesia huic 1 Dom. Quadr. assignatum sit hoc 
Evangelium, quiiibet vel ex. sese intelligere potest. Aigrotus 
pharmacum aliquod amarum sumpturus minus abhorret, quando 
videt medicum delibare id prius, &c. Idem. Serm. 5. in 1 
Dom. Quadrag*. . 

The Second Sunday in Lent. The Gospel. And behold a 
woman of Canaan.| This woman betokeneth holy Church, 
that asketh help of our Lord for simple uncunning souls, 
that are travailed with temptation of the world, and cannot 
speak perfectly to God, by fervour of devotion ne brenning’ 
love in contemplation. And though it seem that our Lord 
make danger first, because they-are as it were aliened from 
Him, nevertheless, for the great trouth and faith of holy 
Church, He granteth to her all she will. And so are these 
simple souls that trowen stedfastly, as holy Church troweth, 
and putten them fully in the mercy of God, and maken 


& [S. Hieron., ep. 41. ad Marcellam. 
Op. tom. i. col. 187, A. Toto nobis 
orbe congruo, is the reading of Val- 
larsius. | 

h (The chapters are of “an objec- 
tion to them, that say tribulation of 
penance needeth not, but is a super- 
stitious folly ;” and “What if a man 
cannot weep, nor in his heart be sorry 
for his sins.”—Sir T. More’s Works, pp. 
1174—2177.] 


i [Jonas propheta per quadragesi- 
mam .. pro concione .. una cum evan- 
geliorum ejusdem temporis ad eundem 
applicatione, explicatus. Exordium. 
Dominica Invocayit (i.e. prima). Feri 
Opuscula Varia, p. 176. Lugd. 1567. ] 

k [Postille sive conciones in epist, 
et evang. que ab adventu usque ad 
pascha in ecclesia leguntur, interprete 
M. J. Gunthero, pars ii. fol. 22. 
Antw. 1563.] 





im 


| - Wint. Serm. 17. de Resurrectione™. 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 79 


q them under the sacrament and laws of holy Church, made 
_ safe through prayer and trouth of her mother the Church. 
~ Hilton, in Scala Perfectionis, part ii. cap. 10'. 


Monday before Easter. The Epistle, Isa. lxiti. 1.] Ep. 


Easter-day. Festum Principale. | 
Monday in Easter Week. But their eyes were holden that 


- they should not know Him.| The Gospel. “ Note this, that 


nobody knew Christ at His rising, neither Mary Magdalene 
nor the disciples. For who would ever have thought, it 
could have been He? He was put to death, and put into 
His grave to boot. This party is alive, and alives like.” 
Wint. 570°. 


Trinity Sunday. Collecta.| 8S. Paulus in 1 ep. ad Timoth., 
cap. 2, facit quatuor quasi genera sive partes orationis, cum ait, 
Jieri obsecrationes, orationes, postulationes, et gratiarum actiones 
pro omnibus hominibus, &c. Que omnia in ista oratione de 
sancta Trinitate, et sic in similibus collectis exprimuntur. Nam 
cum dicimus ; Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, oratio est, cum ad- 
dimus Qui dedisti famulis tuis in confessione vere fidei aeterne 
Trinitatis gloriam agnoscere, gratiarum actio est; cum adjun- 
gimus, Tribue, quesumus, ut ejusdem fidei firmitate ab omnibus 
semper muniamur adversis, postulatio est; cum concludimus, 
Per Dominum nostrum, obsecratio est. S. Th. 2, 2a. q. 83. 
are 17°. 

First Sunday after Trinity. The Gospel. But now he ts 
comforted, and thou art punished.| See Sir Th. More’s 2nd. 
book of Comfort in Tribulation, chap. 16, near the end, 
p. 1201, 1199?. ee 

Between us and you there is a great space, &c.| “No 
habeas corpus from death, and no habeas animam out of hell ; 


1 [Scala Perfectionis, (by Walter » [Bp. Andrewes, Serm. 17 on the 

Hylton, a Carthusian, fl. c. 1400,) Resurrection, (p. 570. ed. fol.) Works, 
imprinted at London... by Julian vol. iii. p. 61. 
Notary . .. 1507, (first printed in ° [S. Thom. Aquin., Summa Theol. 
1494, by order of the Lady Mar- pars secunda secunda, quest. 83. art. 
garet. See Ames and Herbert, vol.i, 17, where the same in substance is 
p. 120.) ] wach said. | 

m (Bp. Andrewes’ Serm. 17 on the » (Sir T. More’s Works, p. 1201, 
Resurrection, is on the first three verses A—D. p. 1199, D, E.] 
of this chapter. Works, vol. iii. p. 60.] eat 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


80 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


you must let that alone for ever; when you are in, there you 
must perish; no getting out again.” Wint., p. 569%. 

The twelfth Sunday after Trinity. Collect. Giving unto 
us that, that our prayers do not presume to ask.| The 16th 
exception of the Surveyor". 

The fourteenth Sunday after Trinity. Collect. Give unto 
us the increase of faith, hope, and charity.) Virtutes Theolo- 
gica, 1. Fides. 2. Spes. 3. Charitas’. 

The Epistle. They truly that are Christ’s have crucified the 
Jlesh, &c.|- Vide Epi. Winton. Serm. 5. de Poenitentia, p.217*; 
Sir Tho. More, Trib., 1158"; Mendoza, in Reg. 1. p. 148, de 
mortificatione propria, et p. 269*; Wint., Conc., p. 390%. 

The fifteenth Sunday after Trinity. But rather seek first the 
kingdom of God.| Vide Ep. Wint., Serm. 1. de Peenitentia, 
p. 180%, et retro. 


Rubric after the Twenty-fifth Sunday after Trinity. 


If there be any more Sundays before Advent Sunday, to 
supply the same, shall be taken the service of some of those Sun- 
days that were omitted between the Epiphany and Sexagesima. | 

Pascha modo propius, modo longius abest ab initio anni. Pro 
hac itaque diversitate crescit vel decrescit tempus quod est ab 
Epiphania usque ad Septuagesimam, ita ut modo plures modo 
pauciores sint Dominica ; et quidem quia plures quam sex inci- 
dere in illud tempus non possunt, idcirco in Liturgia nostra 
guingue* sunt ad minimum descripte. Cum vero ea est brevitas 
illius temporis, ut he sex obtinere locum suum non possunt, tum 


4 [Bp. Andrewes, Serm. 17 on the 
Resurrection, (p. 569, ed. fol.) Works, 
vol. iii. p. 65.] 

* [** Whether this prayer be evi- 
dently grounded upon the word of 
God.” p. 57, 58.] 

* [They that are Christ’s, &. “ Fast- 
ing is one of the nails of the cross,” &c. 
Bp. Andrewes, Serm. 6 of Repentance 
and Fasting, (p. 217, ed. fol.) Works, 
vol. i. p. 380. | 

t [Sir T. More’s Works, book i. ec. 
16, p. 1158, H.] 

" (Cruor sacrificii suffusus, sive in 
typum Dominice passionis, sive in 
typum proprie mortificationis, victi- 
mam Deo efficit gratiorem.—Franc. de 
Mendoza, Comment. in iv. Libros Re- 
gum. In lib. i. cap. 1. num. 4. § 6. p. 


148, E. Lugd. 1656.] 
x [See Ibid. num. 24. § 2, 3. p.269,A. ] 
y [**Count yourselves dead to sin. 
And this we do, when there is neither 
action, nor affection, nor any sign of 
life in us toward sin; no more than of 
a dead body: when as men crucified 
(which is not only His death, but the 
kind of His death too) we neither move 
hand nor foot towards it.’”’—Bp. An- 
drewes, Serm. 1, on the Resurrection, 
(P. 390. ed. fol.) Works, vol. ii. p. 200. ] 
* [“ The time of God’s querite is pri- 
mum querite,’’ &c.—Bp. Andrewes, 
Serm. 1. of. Repentance and Fasting, 
(p. 180. ed. fol.) Works, vol. i. p. 318. ] 
* (The Collect, Epistle and Gospel 
for the sixth Sunday after isco 
were not added till 1662.] 


“a 





4 
~ 
" 
Pb. 
i 
é 
i 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 81 


que hic supersunt officia, ea transeunt in illud tempus, quod est 
a Pentecoste usque ad Adventum. Fit enim quodam veluti jure 
accrescendi et decrescendt, ut quantum uni horum duorum tem- 
porum vel accedit, vel decedit, tantum alteri quoque vel accedat, 
vel decedat. 


DE FESTIS SANCTORUM DIEBUS PRAFATIO. 


Inter festos dies qui S. Trinitati quotannis celebrantur, atque 
dedicantur, plereque Festivitates (sic enim veteres quoque lo- 
quuntur) Deipare Virginis, Apostolorum, Martyrum, aliorum- 
que Sanctorum, velut pulchre quedam in eodem celo stelle, vel 
annulo gemme lucentes interseruntur. Ejusmodi ferie com- 
plures, partim propter venerandam antiquitatem multis retro 
seculis institute, magnoque piorum consensu hactenus observate 
durant: partim ob communem utilitatem, que inde ad nos redit, 
in Ecclesia non tantum nostra, sed etiam universa retinentur. 


Etenim nostri profectus causa, ut magnus ille ait Basilius», cele- 


branda est Sanctorum memoria, non quod illi nostris indigeant 
laudibus, sed quia nos ipsorum vite historia et commemoratione 
adjuvaremur. Greg. Naz.° Veritatis Martyribus Festa instau- 
ramus, ut cum eorum certamina veneramur, eorum quoque pieta- 
tem veneremur. S. Augustinus*, Natalitia Sanctorum cum so- 
brietate celebrate, ut tmitemur eos qui precesserunt, et gaudeant 
de vobis, qui orant pro vobis, ut benedictio Domini in aternum 
maneat super vos. EHabemus hic ex ore duorum vel trium pro- 
batorum testium quid vetus Ecclesia de Sanctis, eorumque feriis 
et cultu senserit, docuerit, observarit. Quo magis cavendus est 
error Vigilantianorum, jam olim quidem juste damnatus, sed in- 
feliciter hoe seculo a Calvinistis et Puritanis renovatus, quo multi 
per insignem temeritatem, ne dicam impietatem, Sanctorum ho- 
nort nihil non detrahunt, et illorum ferias tot seculis receptas, 
magnaque religione in honorem ipsius Det observatas, privata 


jn 


> [od yap dh exelvos xpeia mpooOtKns 
eis evdoKlunow, GAN Huy trois ev TH 
Big dvaryKaia 4 uvhun dia Thy plunow. 
"“Qomep yap 1G Tvp) ad’roudtws ererat 
7) gwrifeyv, nal To pipw Td cdwdeiv, 
odtw Kal tals dyabais mpdteow, dvary- 
kalws dxodovbe? 7d &péAimor.—S. Basil. 
Homilia xviii. in Gordium Martyrem. 


COSIN, 


Op. tom. ii. p. 148, A.] 

© [rots maptvot THs aAnOelas mavy- 
yuplfovres, iv av Tovs ayovas Tuner, 
Mindpuela kul thy edoéBeray.—S, Greg. 
Naz, Orat. xiv. § 12. Op. tom. i. p. 
265, C.] > 

4S. Aug., Enarr. in Psa]. 1xxxviii, 
§ 14. Op. tom. iv. col. 954, C,] 


FIRstT 


SERIES, 


First 


SERIES. 


Ps. el. 1. 
Vulg. 


Why it is 


assigned to 


this day. 


The eon- 
nexion of 


82 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


abrogant authoritate. Quod certe qui faciunt, aut probant, 
ipsum Deum in electis suis persequuntur, nec intelligunt illud, 
Laudate Dominum in Sanctis Ejus. 

St. Andrew’s day. The Collect, Epistle, and Gospel.| . This 
feast is the first day in order that the Church doth celebrate 
in memory and imitation of the saints, because St. Andrew 
was the first disciple whom Christ called to follow Him. And 
the Collect, Epistle, and Gospel, do accordingly propound 
unto us the very first duties and offices of a Christian man, 
as are to believe with the heart, and to confess with the 
mouth that Jesus is the Lord, &c. Believe we cannot unless 
we hear, hear we cannot unless we have a preacher, and a 
preacher we cannot have unless he be sent. 

Among them that were thus called and sent, St. Andrew 
was the first; and therefore was this epistle chosen for this 
day, like as the collect and gospel are, which tell us that the 
first and chief virtues that we are to imitate in the apostles is, 
readily to obey the calling of our Saviour, and give ourselves 
over to the obedience of His holy will, as they did. Our call- | 
ing and theirs are much alike; theirs from their nets, at which 
Christ found them busy, and ours from worldly cares and im- 
pediments, which we must first leave before we can become 
servants and followers of Christ. 

Festum S. Andree Apostoli. The Collect. O sanctum et mag- 
num prompte obedientia studium in primis Apostolis. Vocamur 
et nos etiamnum a Christo, si non ad piscandos homines, quod 
ministrorum verbi et pastorum est proprium, at certe quidem ad 
relinquenda retia et abjicienda impedimenta, que nos avocant a 
negotio salutis eterna. Quod si pauct cum Andrea relinguunt 
retia, licet a Christo vocentur, pauciores cum eo Crucem amant, 
et suam in Cruce gloriam statuunt. Andreas enim crucificus est 
propter Dominum A, 62°. regnante Nerone. 

Festum Lhome Apostoli.| The Epistle. Multum debemus 
Thome et Apastolis qui sacrosancte fidei et Evangelica doctrine 
Sundamenta nobis toto orbe jecerunt; qui vero Patres et Prin- 
cipes populorum, Christique Testes ae Pracones precipui existi- 
terunt. Igitur Apostolicae Doctrine successus, quod super pe- 
tram Christum templum spirituale construzxerint, in Epistola 
predicatur. 


St, Andrew’s day was for the Apostle’s office, and this next 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 83 


First 
SERIES. 


_ day in the order of the year, to shew the success and the ex- 
 ercise of their office. _ 
_ The Conversion of St. Paul. Why this Gospel is appointed crak aed 
_ to be read upon this day. Cum cb alia multa, tum ob pauper- ee: 
_ tatem practpue et contemptum mundi laudatur S. Paulus, qui ut F 
Christum lucrifaeeret reliquit omnia et se pro stercore deputavit®. 

St. Michael and all angels. Collect. Everlasting God, 
which hast ordained and constituted the services of all angels 
and men in a wonderful order.] The seventeenth exception 
of the Surveyor‘, 





ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 


2? W :?: “ De apparatu ante eucharistiam faciendo. 

*“« Post finitam primam partem liturgie (quam olim Missam 
Catechumenorum vocabant) jam nostro more sequitur concio: 
concionem tertia hec que subsequitur eucharistie peragende 
forma. fRecte concio peragitur ante eucharistiam. Notandum 
tamen in veteri et primeva ecclesia concionem primo mane ha- 
bitam fuisse (quam tractatum nuncupabant), ad quam cum 
Christianis audientes, energumeni, Judai, Hihnici, promiscue 
admittebantur: et istis egressis, vel exactis, post tractatum, 
pergebatur ad secundam liturgie partem, Missam Catechume- 
norum dictam, eam scilicet quacum nos incipimus. Sed illis 
initium erat, Venite exultemus: nobis confessio publica gene- 
ralis propter male abolitas publicam é£opordynawv, et priva- 
tam auricularem. Tertio, ipsis catechumenis exactis, ad sacram 
Synaxim, i.e. evyaptoriav, soli ti, qui erant a scelere puri et 
baptizati, se recipiebant ; qua ideo dicta est Missa Sanctorum, 
Que omnia aperte mandantur fieri secundum ordinem predic- 
tum. Can. 19. Concil. Laodic.® ”* 

Rubrics. So many, &c.... before the beginning of morning 
prayer, or immediately after.| 

Whereupon is necessarily inferred a certain distance of 


a. =”, 


te, a PROP MERE eS ee 


pees re ts “Sind eas 


€ [The note-mark * is at the begin- 
ning of the Gospel of this day, but the 
note itself is not now in the book; ‘there 
is no interposed leaf here nor in any of 
the following spaces for several leaves. | 

£ {Whether this prayer be evi- 
dently grounded upon the word of 
God.” p, 58, sqq. | 


& [wep Tod, Sety idig mpdrov wera Tas 


GmiAlas tay émickdérov, Kal TaY KATH 
xoupevwy evxiv emiredcic@ar Kal wera 
To ékeAGeiv To’s KaTnxXouLevous, TeV év 
petavola thy edxhv yéverOar Kal Tove 
Twy mpocedOdytwy bd xeipa, Kal tro- 
xwpnodvtwy, ottws TaY MoTay Tas 
evxas yivec@ar.—Cone. Laod., (cire. 
364?) can, xix. Cone. tom. i. col. 1533, 
C.) 


G2 


First 


SERIES. 


84: NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 


time between morning prayer and high service. A rule 
which is at this time duly observed in York and Chichester?, 
but by negligence of ministers and carelessness of people 
wholly omitted in other places. 

And if any of those be an open and notorious evil liver. | 

* No small punishment” (saith St. Chrysostom to those that 
ministered the communion in his time) “ hangeth over your 
heads, if knowing any man to be wicked, you suffer him to 
be partaker of this table. His blood shall be required at 
your hands. If he be a captain, a consul, or a crowned king 
that cometh unworthily, forbid him and keep him off; thy 
power is greater than his. If any such get to the table, reject 
him without fear. If thou darest not remove him, tell it me, 
I will not suffer it. I will yield my life rather than the 
Lord’s Body to any unworthy person; and suffer my blood 
to be shed, before I will grant that sacred Blood to any but 
to him that is worthy.” St. Chrysost., Hom. Ixxxni. in Matt. 
KXxvi.! 

2? W °? Tf any person be a notorious and open evil liver, &c. | 
*€ Our law in England will not suffer the minister to judge any 
man a notorious offender, but him who is convicted by some 
legal sentence.’’ 

And not him that is obstinate. | 

*?- W -?- “Tt seems, he may rather make open protestation 
of his obstinacy, than repel him with safety, by the common 


law.” 


h [At this time observed in some 
cathedrals, as at Winchester and Wor- 
cester, on Sundays; Grindall in his in- 
junctions, as archbishop of York, A.D. 
1571, ordered “The minister not to 
pause or stay between the morning 
prayer, litany, and communion; but to 
continue and say the morning prayer, 
litany, and communion, &c., together, 
without any intermission; to the end 
that the people might... not depart 
out of the church, during all the time 
of divine service.”’——Wilkins’ Concilia, 
vol. iv. p. 269.] 

i [od mixpa ndaaots buiv Zor, €f ov- 
veldotes Tit moyvnplay cvyxwphonre me- 
Taocxelv TavTNS THs Tpamwécns. Td alua 


abtod éx Tay xeipay ex(nrnOhoera TOY 
buetépwv. Kav otparnyds tis fH, Koy 
trapxos, kty abtds 6 7d Biddnua mepi- 
keluevos, avatlws 5& mpooin, KéAvoov, 
peifova exelvou thy ekovolay exes... 
dAAG Kav brd dyvolas éxeivos Epynrat 
meOeiwv, KHAVaOV, UH PoBnOys ... €i BE 
abtdos ov TOAMGs, euol mpdcaye, ov avy- 
Xwphow TavTAa TOANGCOaL. TIS WuxIs 
a&mroothooua. mpdrepov, Tov aiwaros 
petadéow Tod Seorotixod mapa atiav" 
kal Td ciua Td euavrod mpohooua mpd- 
TEpov, 7} ueTAddow aluaros otTw PpiKd- 
dous mapa Td mpoojKov.—S. Chrysost. 
in Matt. xxvi. Hom. 82. (al. 83.) § 6. 
Op. tom. vii. p. 789, C. 790, B.] 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 85 


OF THE ALTAR OR COMMUNION TABLE. 


In King Edward’s first service-book, the word altar was 
permitted to stand, as being the name that Christians for 
many hundred years had been acquainted withal. Therefore 
when there was such pulling down of altars, and setting up 
of tables at the beginning of Queen Elizabeth’s reign, she 
was fain to make an injunction" to restrain such ungodly 
fury, (for which, St. Chrysostom says, the Christians in his 
time would have stoned a man to death, that should have 
but laid his hands upon an altar to destroy it. Hom. li. ad 
Pop. Antioch.' Siquis vellet hoc altare subruere, nonne illum 
lapidibus obrueretis ? &c.) and appointed decent and comely 
tables covered to be set up again in the same places where 
the altars stood; thereby giving an interpretation of this 
clause in our communion-book. For the word table here 
stands not exclusively, as if it might not be called an altar, 
but to shew the indifferency and liberty of the name; as of 
old it was called Mensa Domini as well as Altare Domini, the 
one having reference to the participation, the other to the 
oblation of the eucharist. There are that contend, how it 
was the intent and purpose of our Church at this Reforma- 
tion, to pull down and wholly extinguish the very name of 
an altar; but all their reasons being only the matter of fact 
that altars were then pulled down, and this place of the 
liturgy that here it is called a table; we answer, that the 
matter of fact proves nothing, being rather the zeal of the 
people that were new come out of the tyranny that was used 
in Queen Mary’s time™. But if this were not by order of 
the Church, or according to the intent and meaning of the 


k [Injunctions given by the queen’s 
majesty ... Anno Domini 1559, for 
tablesin the church. Wilkins’ Concilia, 
vol. iv. p. 188. ] 

'{S. Chrysost. Op. Latine, ed. Par. 
tom. v. p. 188, D. The whole of this 
homily is extracted from the 7th Hom. 
on the Romans. The words in the 
original Greek are Ei wip xa) SixeAAdv 
Tis AaBwy, ToUTOY Kabyper Kat éveriumpa 


Tov oikov, kal TovTo KaTtéoKamTe Td Ou- 
c.acThpiov, ovK &v AlBots Ekaoros abrby 
ZBadre Tav wapdvTwy ws evaryn Kal wa- 
pdvowov.—Hom. vii. in Rom. § 6. Op, 
tom. ix. p. 490, E.] 

m [ Six lines are crossed out here, and 
the words “ But if this were not” are 
inserted by Bp. Cosin to make a begin- 
ning of the sentence in lieu of those 
crossed out. ] 





First 


SERIES. 


86 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Church and State at the Reformation, how came it to pass 
then that from that day to this the altars have continued in 
the kings’ and queens’ households after the same manner as 
they did before? They never dreamt there of setting up any 
tables instead of them: and likewise in most cathedral 
churches, how was it that all things remained as they did 
before, but only that the court and governor of those places” 
,.. and therefore were more likely to know the true intent 
and meaning of our Church, by letting the altars stand still 
as they had done before. And it will be worthy the noting 
that no cathedral church had any pulling down, removing, 
or changing the altar into a table, no more than in the 
court®, but in such places only where deans, and bishops, 
and prebends were preferred, that suffered themselves more 
to be led by the fashions which they had seen at Strasburg 
in Germany, and Geneva in France, and Zurich in Switzer- 
land, than by the orders of the Church of England established, 
and “continued in her majesty’s family, the likeliest to under- 
stand the meaning of the Church and State of any other 
place. Therefore they that will not either endure we should 
have, or they that will not believe we have, any altar allowed 
and continued in our Church (howsoever as it is here, and as 
it is in most of the fathers sometimes called a table,) let them 
go to the king’s court, and to most of our cathedral churches, 
and enquire how long they have stood there and kept that 
name only, as being indeed the most eminent and the most 
usual among Christians. The Greeks ever called it @ucta- 


_ .ornptov, as the Hebrews called it misbeach, which is properly 


an altar to sacrifice upon. The Latins called it altare, from 
the form or site of it, because it stood high in the uppermost 
part of the church; or ara, guasi ansa, as Varro? interprets 
the word, because the priest was ever wont, at the time of 
his ministration, to take hold of the altar, arasque tenentem4. 
So it was among the Jews and heathens. But among the 
Christians there is some question made how long they have 
had altars in use. For Philo Judeus de Vit. Contempi.", telling 


" [A line is crossed out here. ] bius, Saturnalia, lib. iii, c. 2.] 
° [A word is crossed out here. } 4 [Virg. Ain, iv. 219.] 
* [In his lost work, Antiquitates re- r [Cosin refers to the account of the 


rum divinarum, lib. 5, cited by Macro- Therapeute of Egypt, in Philo de Vita 








ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION, 87 


of the ancient meetings and sacred offices of the Christians, 
makes no mention of any altars or sacrifices that they had, 
nor Tertullian neither in his Apologeticus, where he writes 
of all such matters: and we read also how the Christians 
were upbraided with it, that they had neither temples nor 
altars, Cecilius apud Minutium Felicem:; so that it should 
seem they had no altars at all. But these seemings are easily 
answered. And first, it is most certain that ever since the 
Clementine Constitutions, (lib. viii.') and the Canons of the 
apostles were made", and Dionys. Areopag. wrote®, (which 
are all three very ancient, though uncertain for their times,) 
the Christians used altars. If the decretal epistle of Evaristus 
be true, there’s a canon for the consecration of altars’; but 
extra omnem aleam, we find it in Tertullian de Penitentia2, 
where, describing the ancient order of public penance in the 
Church, he saith it was presbyteris advolvi, aris adgeniculari 
omnibus fratribus legationem sue deprecationis injungere. After 
him St. Cyprian, lib. i. epist. 9°; lib. ii. ep. 2°; lib. iii. ep. 


Contemplativa (Op. tom. ii. p. 471, &c. 
ed. Lond. 1742), out of which Euse- 
bius (Eccl. Hist. ii. 17) made long 
extracts, understanding that the Chris- 
tians of the apostolic age were described 
therein, and so applying the description 
to them ; the Therapeutz are now more 
generally believed to have been Jews. | 
§ [Cecilius asks respecting the 
Christians, ‘‘ Cur etenim occultare et 
abscondere quidquid illud colunt mag- 
nopere nituntur?~cum honesta semper 
publico gaudeant, scelera secreta sint? 
cur nullas aras habent, templa nulla, 
nulla nota simulachra, nunquam pa- 
lam loqui, nunquam libere congregari, 
nisi id quod colunt et interprimunt, aut 
puniendum est aut pudendum ?’?—M. 
Minucius Felix, Octavius, p. 91. Lugd. 
Bat. 1672. See Orig. contr. Cels. viii. 
17, and the Benedictines’ note on it, in 
which other similar passages are col- 
lected. Op. tom. i. p. 754, 755. } 

* [e.g. Constit. Apostolorum (sive 
Clementinz), lib. viii. c. 12, of Sideovor 
mpocayérwcay Ta SHpa TH emioKdrp 
mpos Td Ouvotacrhpiov.—Concilia, tom. 
i. col. 473, A. ] 

"{Canon. Apost. il, ef tis mpoce- 
vey erepd twa emt 7d Ovoiarrhpiov, 
K.7.A.—Ibid. col. 25, B.] 


= [Dionys. Areop. de Eccles. Hier- 
archia, cap. 3. Op. tom. i, p. 187, C.] 

y [Altaria vero placuit non solum 
unctione chrismatis sed etiam sacer- 
dotali benedictione sacrari—Evaristi 
Decret. (opus spurium) ap. Concilia, 
tom. i. col. 640, E.] 

* (Tertullian. de Pcenitentia, cap. 9. 
Op. 127, p. A. The received reading is 
caris Dei adgeniculari, (ed. Priorii, 
Par. 1675) but see De Oratione, c. 19, 
Nonne solemnior erit statio tua, si ad 
aram Dei steteris, p. 136, A. ] 

* {Que nunc ratio et forma in clero 
tenetur, ut qui in Ecclesia Domini, or- 
dinatione clerica promoventur,... ab 
altari et sacrificiis non recedant, sed die 
ac nocte ccelestibus rebus et spiritali- 
bus serviant.—S. Cypr. ep. i. ad clerum 
et plebem Furnis consistentes. (ed. 
Erasm. lib. i. ep. 9.) epist. p. 1. ed. 
Ben. | 

b [Regredientibus vobis ... magis 
crevit sacerdotalis auctoritas; ut altari 
Dei assistat antistes qui ad confessionis 
arma sumenda et facienda martyria 
non verbis plebem, sed factis cohorte- 
tur.—-Id. ep. 61. ad Lucium. (ed. 
Erasm. lib. iii, ep. 3.) epist. p. 144. 
ed. Ben. | 


First 
SERIES. 





First 


SERIES. 


88 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 

13°; lib. ii. ep. 54, makes mention of them. So Optatus, 
lib. vi. contr. Parm.© And after him all the fathers and writers 
with one uniform consent to this day. For the objections, 
Philo and Tertullian are not exclusive, and Ceecilius in Mi- 
nucius Felix, saying that the Christians had no temples as 
well as no altars, it was only his surmise, because the Chris- 
tians could not perform their services publicly, as the hea- 
thens did, that then they ruled the roast. And therefore 
they thought them to be men without all religion, for want 
of temples; but the Christians had temples (and so might 
have altars as well) before that time, as is most manifest out 
of Tertullian, Lib. contra Valentinianos*. 


THE NAMES OF THE PRIEST AND THE ALTAR, 


Two words that are much objected against by the Puritans, 
as being more proper to Jews than Christians, seeing Christ 
hath abolished the ceremonies of the law. For answer where- 
unto we say and confess, that the law had an end in Christ, 
as much of it as was typical. But what? was the law so 
abolished with Him, that after His ascension the office of 
priests became immediately wicked, and the very name hate- 
ful, as importing the exercise of an ungodly function? No, 
as long as the glory of the temple continued, and till the 
time of that final desolation was accomplished, the very 
Christian Jews did continue with their sacrifices and other 
parts of legal service. That very law, therefore, which our 
Saviour was to abolish, did not so soon become unlawful to 


© [Quid enim tam sacrilegum quam 
altaria Dei (in quibus et vos aliquaudo 


¢ [Se foris esse ccepisse, nec posse a 
quoque nostrum sibi communicari qui 


...» profanum altare erigere et adulte- 
ram cathedram collocare, et sacrilegia 
contra verum sacerdotem  sacrificia 
offerre tentaverit.—Id. ep. 68. ad Ste- 
phanum, (ed. Erasm. lib. iii. ep. 13.) 
Epist. p. 177. ed. Ben. ] 

4 [Sed et per Solomonem Spiritus 
sanctus typum Dominici sacrificii ante 
premonstrat immolate hostie et pa- 
nis et vini, sed et altaris et apostolorum 
faciens mentionem.—Id. ep. 63. ad 
Cecilium, (ed. alt. lib. ii. ep. 3.) epist. 
p- 148. ed. Ben. ] 


obtulistis) frangere, radere, removere? 
in quibus et vota populi, et membra 
Christi portata sunt... Quid est enim 
altare, nisi sedes et sanguinis et cor- 
poris Christi—S. Optatus, de Schism. 
Donat. adv. Parmenianum, lib. vi. cap. 
1. p. 91. See also in that book pas- 
sim. | 

f [Nostre columbe etiam domus 
simplex, in editis semper et apertis et 
ad lucem.—Tert. adv. Valentinianos, 
ce. 3. Op. p. 251, B.)} 


‘ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION.. 89 


be observed as some imagine, nor was it afterwards unlawful 
_ so far that the very name of an altar, of priest, of sacrifice 
itself, should be banished out of the world. For though God 


evacuation of the law of Moses, the names themselves may, I 


do now hate sacrifice, whether it be heathenish or Jewish, so 
that we cannot have the same things that they had but with 
impiety, yet, unless there be some greater let than the only 


First 


SERIES. 


hope, be retained without sin, (as St. Paul retained it ad Heb. xii. 
Her.) in respect of that proportion which things established ae 


by our Saviour have unto them which by Him are abrogated. 
And so throughout all the writings of the ancient fathers we 
see that the words which were do continue; the only differ- 
ence is, that whereas before they had a literal, they now have 
a metaphorical, use, and are so many notes of remembrance 
unto us, that what they did signify in the letter is accom- 
plished in the truth. And as no man can deprive the Church 
of this liberty to use names whereunto the law was accus- 
tomed, so neither are we generally forbidden the use of 


things which the law hath. The weightiest which it com-. 


manded the Jews are prohibited to us in the Gospel; those 
which are not prohibited, the Church by her authority may, 
as occasion serveth, resume and command. 

Shall say the Lord’s Prayer, with this collect.| *?: W°?: “In 
sancta synaxi nihil canitur, quod alias fiert solet; sed omnia 
graviter et severe peraguntur, cum affectu potius quam modu- 


latione. [Cum non est communio recte sequimur prophetict 


Regis morem. Ps. cxviil. 258.’’] 

Say the Lord’s Prayer.| Here begins the high service, and 
begins as the first service does, with the Lord’s Prayer; that 
upon it, as a sure foundation, we may build all the rest of 
our prayers. Tertull., de Orat., cap. 9°. Premissa Oratione 
Dominica, quasi fundamento accidentium, jus est superstruendi 
extrinsecus petitiones. 

Then shall the priest rehearse distinctly all the Ten Com- 
mandments.| *?:W-?: “The priest after the collect de- 
scends to the door of the septum, makes a low adoration 


g [The words in brackets are not English Works, p. 152. Ang. Cath. ed. ] 
written in Bp. Cosin’s book, they are h (Tertullian. de Oratione, cap. 9. 
added from the other copies of these Op. p. 133, A.] 


notes of Bp. Andrewes. See his Minor 


First 


SERIEs. 


90 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 


towards the altar; then turns to the people, and, standing 
in the door, readeth the ten commandments, as from God, 
whiles they lye prostrate to the end, as to God speaking.” 

Then shall follow the collect.| *?:W°?: “ [Tum‘] facta 
adoratione ut prius, minister ascendit, et genuflectit.” 

Immediately after the collect the priest shall read the epistle. | 
"2? W -?+ “ Here the other priest, or, if there be none, he that 
executes, descendeth to the door, adores, and then turning, 
readeth the epistle and gospel.” 

_In cathedral churches the epistoler is seldom a priest, and 
therefore, as this rubric was ordained generally for all Eng-— 
land, most places having but one priest to serve it; so for cathe- 
dral churches it was ordained, by the advertisement in Queen 
Elizabeth’s time*, (that authority being reserved, notwith- 
standing this book, by act of parliament},) that there should 
be an epistoler and a gospeller besides the priest, for the 


more solemn performance of the Divine service. 


The epistle is written, &c.] 
the Surveyor™. 


The eighteenth exception of 


[??W-?-] “In the reading of the holy gospel (and never 
else} is adoration made at the name of Jesus; for then only 
is it in right exaltation; and then men stand in a posture 


ready to make reverence®.” 


When the gospel is named, the people are to answer, 
““Glory be to Thee, O Lord,” which was appointed in King 
Edward’s Service-book, and is still used, howsoever it came 


i [The word Jum is added from the 
copy of Bp. Andrewes’ notes in the 
Brit. Mus. See his Works as above. ] 

k [In the ministration of the holy 
communion in cathedral and collegiate 
churches, the principal minister shall 
use a cope with gospeller and epistoler 
agreeably. — Advertisements for due 
order in the due administration of 
common prayers, &e. A.D. 15645. 
Wilkins’ Concilia, vol. iv. p. 247.] 

1 [ Provided always and be it enacted, 
that such ornaments of the church and 
of the ministers thereof, shall be re- 
tained and be in use as was in tlhiis 
Church of England, by authority 
of Parliament, in the second year of 
the reign of King Edward the Sixth, 
until other order shall be therein taken 


by the authority of the Queen’s Ma- 
jesty, with the advice of her commis- 
sioners appointed and authorized under 
the great seal of England, for causes 
ecclesiastical, or of the metropolitan of 
this realm.—Act for the uniformity of 
Common Prayer, 1 Eliz. c. 2.] 

m [‘ Whether all the epistles so called 
may be truly called so, seeing there be 
twenty-three out of the Prophets, Acts, 
and Apocalypse.” Survey, p.60. The 
rubric has since been altered by insert- 
ing the words “ or the portion of Scrip- 
ture appointed for the epistle.”’ ] 

* (This paragraph is not noted by 
Bp. Cosin as Andrewes’, but is found 
in the other copies of Bp. Andrewes’ 
notes; see as above. | 


lam non decantentur, decernimus, donec predicetur evangelium. 


% 


w 


Pease rr 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 91 


First 
SERIES. 


to be left out here. I think it was by the printer’s negli- 
gence, for the statute at the beginning of this book says, 
nothing shall be altered but a few words in the litany and a 
clause at the delivery of the sacrament, so that, if it had 
pleased the printer, this might have stood still. 


Conc. Tolet. [V. can. 11°. Ut in missa laudes post episto- Glory be 

to Thee, O 
Lord, after 
the Gospel 


Nam laudes ideo evangelium sequuntur, propter gloriam Christi, dads 
1s named, 


que per idem evangelium predicatur. Qui vero hunc ordinem 
perturbaverint, excommunicationis penam suscipiant. 

And this advantage we have against the Roman missal, The Tract 
that whereas we have gospel immediately after the epistle, 9°4,°", 
and they have tracts and graduals between them, we are the novel. 
nearer to antiquity of the two; as may appear by this canon, 
which was made of purpose against the Roman order then 
newly brought into the Church; for so Berno Augien., ec. 1?, 
expounds it: Postea (says he) cum gradualia, &c. inter aposto- 
licam et evangelicam lectionem ceperunt frequentari, Hispani, 
quasi novitate ret perculsi, multum restiterunt, dicentes, in qui- 
busdam Hisp. Ecclesiis laudes post apostolum decantantur, prius 
quam evangelium predicetur, quod est contra canones, &c. 

The epistle and gospel being ended, shall be said the creed.] 

“PW? 'Puvoroyia post evangelium graduale.” 

‘2 W 2? “ Adorat, ascendit, et legit symbolum Nicenum, po-— 

pulo adhuc stante.” 3 


De symbolo post evangelium recitando. 

Berno Augien., lib. de rebus quibusd. &c., c. 24. Symbolum The Ni- 
quoque fide Catholice post evangelium recitatur, ut per sane- Gore vi. 
tum evangelium corde credatur ad justitiam, per symbolum au- nopolitan 

; Creed to 
tem ore confessio fiat ad salutem. Quod tamen non secundum he read 


Nicenum concilium, sed secundum Constantinop. canimus trans- rid . 
ospel. 


° [The words of the canon are, In 
quibusdam quoque Hispaniarum Ec- 
clesiis laudes post apostolum decan- 
tantur, priusquam evangelium pre- 
dicetur; dum canones precipiunt post 
apostolum non laudes, sed evangelium, 
annuntiari. Przsumptio est enim, ut 


_ antea ponantur ea quz sequi debent, 


Nam laudes ideo evangelium sequun- 
tur propter gloriam Christi, que per 


_ idem evangelium predicatur. Circa 


omnes igitur sacerdotes hic ordo dein- 
ceps retineatur; excommunicationis 
peenam suscepturi, qui hune ordinem 
perturbaverint.—Cone. Tolet. iv. (A.D. 
633.) can. 11. (c. 12.) tom. vi. col. 1455, 
C, D. 
? [Berno Augiensis de rebus ad 
Miss. Officium pertinentibus, cap. i. 
ap. Hittorp. p. 358. ] 

4 [Cap. i. p. 358. apud Hittorp de 
Div. Off } 


»* 


92 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


First latum. Concilio quoque Toletano III. can. 22". statutum est, 
SERIES. . ee ey . a ; 
> wipe td omni die dominico secundum morem Orientalium Ecclesi- 

n 0 e ° : 
readon arum decantart. 
-teaypl etl Though this was the custom in the Eastern Churches, and 
use isin was brought here into Spain betimes, yet it was a long time 
slonevblak before the Church of Rome would come to use it. Berno, 


bea pat so cap. 2%, tells the story, how he was at Rome with the Em- 
Well as 


those that Peror Henry, which was about the year 1014, and then they 
si itdaily. used it not; and being asked by the emperor the reason why 
baean be they would not follow the Eastern parts in so laudable a cus- 


putintothe tom, their answer was, that they needed no such matter, 


Miso, being not so subject to heresy as other Churches were; which 
reason so little satisfied the emperor, that he never left till 
he had got Pope Benedict the 2nd to put it in Missarum 
Solemnia, and ever since that it hath held; and this is that 
which Durand., lib. iv. cap. 25. n. 9*. confesses: A Grecis 
ergo usus canendi symbolum creditur provenisse; for before 
this time they used it not. . 

Why the Cum fidei dogmata que ab ethnicis et hereticis irridentur, 

nai ** cantu celebramus, testamur hac ratione, non erubescere nos 


fidem nostram. Cujus rei multa exempla in historia ecclesi- 
astica legi possunt. Vid. 8. Ambros., in Orat. de trad. Basil. 
_ Ruff, lib. i.° Hist., cap. 35 et 30%. and Theodoret, lib. iii. 


Mist. cap. 179. 


r [... Sancta constituit synodus, ut 
per omnes ecclesias Hispaniz vel Gal- 
lecie, secundum formam orientaliumn 
ecclesiarum, concilii Constantinopoli- 
tani, hocest, centum quinquaginta epi- 
scoporum, symbolum fidei recitetur: ut 
priusquam dominica dicatur oratio, 
voce clara a populo decantetur, &c.— 
Cone. Tolet. II1. (A.D. 589.) Concilia, 
ton. vi. col. 706, B.] 

8 [Romani usque ad hee tempora 
dive memorize Henrici Imperatoris, 
nullo modo (post evangelium symbo- 
lum) cecinerunt. Sed ab eodem inter- 
rogati cur ita agerent, me coram assis- 
tente, aud'vi eos hujusmodi responsum 
reddere, videlicet quod Romana eccle- 
sia non fuisset aliquando ulla hereseos 
feece infecta, &c. At dominus impe- 
rator non antea decessit, quam om- 
nium consensu id domino Benedicto 
apostolico persuasit, ut ad publicam 
missam illud decantarent.—Ap. Hit- 
torp., p. 369. Martene, de Antigq. Eccl. 


Rit., lib. i. c. 4 art. v. § 1, (vol. i. p. 
138,) shews from numerous proofs that 
the creed was said in the service at 
Rome before this time; he explains 
Berno’s statement as if it meant only 
that the creed was not sung. ] 

* [Durandus, however, says that it 
was introduced by Pope Damasus at 
the time of the council of Constanti- 
nople. Tertium est Nicenum, quod 
Damasus papa ex communi dicto uni- 
versalis synodi apud Constantinopolim 
celebrare instituit, et in missa cantari 
patenter, quanquam et Marcus papa 
primus statuisset illud alta voce can- 
tari... usus ergo, &c. as in text.— 
Ration., lib. iv. c. 25. § 9.] 

u (Semper Christi laudes verbera 
perfidorum sunt ... cum laudatur 
Christus, Arianorum amentia verbera- 
tur... Grande carmen est, quo nihil 
potentius. Quid enim potentius quam 
confessio Trinitatis, que quotidie totius 
populi ore celebratur? Certatim omnes 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 93 


First 


2? W -?- “ Lecta confessione Nicena,’”’ the priest adores’. 3 
ERIES. 


Then he removes the bason from the back of the altar, 
to the forepart. 

“Then the bishop ascends with treble adoration, and lastly 
kneels down at the altar. 

“Into his hands the priest from a by-standing table on the 
south side, reacheth first the wafer-bread, in a canister close 
covered, and lined with linen. 2ndly. The wine in a barrel 
on a cradle with four feet. These the bishop offereth in the 
name of the whole congregation, upon the altar. 

_.“ Then he offereth into the bason for himself, and after him 

the whole congregation, and so betake themselves to their 
proper and convenient place of kneeling: Bishops and priests 
only within the septum; deacons, at the door; the laity, 
without; the priest (meanwhile) reading the peculiar sen- 
tences for the offertory’. Sols ministerio sacro deditis ad‘ [See be- 
altare ingredi et communicare licet. Conc. Laod. can. 192.” 96.973 

After the creed, if there be no sermon, shall follow one of 
the homilies already set forth, or hereafter to be set forth, by 
common authority.| The nineteenth exception of the Sur- 
veyor?. 

Homilies already set forth or hereafter, &c.| It seems that 
the author of the homilies wrote them in haste, and the Church 
did wisely to reserve this authority of correcting them, and 
setting forth others: for they have many scapes in them in 
special, though they contain in general many wholesome 


student fidem fateri; Patrem et Filium 
et Spiritum Sanctum norunt versibus 
predicare.—S, Ambros., Sermo contra 
Auxentium de Basilicis tradendis, § 19, 
§ 34, apud Epistolas, chap. i, Op. tom. 
ii. col. 869, A. 873, B.] 

_* [Ecclesia universa conveniens, 
matres et viri, virgines juvenesque im- 
mensa exultatione succincti, trahebant 
longe agmine arcam martyris, psal- 
lentes summis clamoribus, et cum ex- 
ultatione dicentes: Confundantur om- 
nes qui adorant sculptilia, et qui con- 
fidunt in simulacris suis. Hee in au- 
ribus profani principis per sex millia 
passuum tanta exultatione psallebat 
omnis ecclesia ut ccelum clamoribus 


_ resultaret.—Ruffini, Hist. Eccles., lib. 


i, c. 35. p. 214.) 
Y [Theodoret, Eccl. Elist., lib. iii. c. 


19. p. 138. This is a narrative of the 
same event as that in Ruffinus in the 
last note, namely, of the Christians 
singing in the removal of the body of 
S. Babylas at Antioch, during the per- 
secution of Julian the Apostate. ] 

* [This note is at the end of the 
Nicene Creed: Bp. Andrewes places 
the sermon between the Morning Prayer 
and the Communion Service; see p. 
83. 

: [udvors e&dyv elvat Tots lepatixois 
eiclevar eis Td Ovoltacrhpioy, Kal Kowww- 
vetv.—Conc. Laod., (circ. 364?) can. 
xix. Concilia, tom. i. col. 1538, D.] 

> [Survey, p. 60, partly objecting to 
the homilies, partly to the indefinite- 
ness of the ‘‘ hereafter’’ to be set forth, 
&c.] 


First 


SERIES. 


Exhorta- 
tions and 
Homilies 
before the 
Commu- 
nion, 


Fasting- 
days, a 
part of our 
religion to 
keep them. 


94, NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


lessons for the people; in which sense our ministers do sub- 
scribe unto them, and in no other. 

After such homily or exhortation the curate shall declare 
unto the people whether there be any holydays or fasting-days 
the week following.| The twentieth exception of the Sur- 
veyor®. 

After such sermon, or exhortation.] Which exhortation is 
here understood, may be gathered from this rubric as it stood 
in 2 Edw.*, where we read it thus, “ After the creed shall 
follow the homily, wherein, if the people be not exhorted to 
the worthy receiving, &c., then shall the curate make this ex- 
hortation, Dearly beloved,” &c. Which is another argument 
that our Church intended a more frequent celebration of the 
Communion than we use either ourselves or the people unto. 

The curate shall declare unto the people whether there be 
any holydays.| Excepted against by the Puritans in the 
Survey. Quer. 51, 53°. 

Or fasting days.| They that speak so much against-us, 
who put some part of our religion in keeping fasting days, 
as if we had nothing but a politic use of keeping Lent, 
Fridays, and saints’ eves, let them look well to this place, 
where the curate is bound to exhort the people earnestly 
towards the religious observation of such times, in abstaining 
from their own wonted diet, and bestowing their liberality 
upon the poor. Certainly, if it be religion to give alms, it 
is religion to keep fasting days too, which are appointed by 
the Church to be spent in prayer and abstinence. Jejunium, 
eleemosyna, et oratio, went ever together, as here ghey do. 
If fasting days and Lent time be but a politic observation, 
without any religion in it at all, according to the conceit of 
some out of the statute of 5 Eliz.‘, and before that 2 and 3 of 
Ed. VI., c. 128, what should the minister here meddle with 


¢ [Survey, pp. 63—69. Objections tions made for the maintenance of the 


on grounds of law and Scripture. | 

@ [That is, in the first Prayer-book 
of Edw. VI,, i in the second year of his 
reign. | 

© [p. 64, sqq. The exceptions are 
against any stated holydays not of im- 
mediate Divine appointment, and espe- 
cially those in honour of saints. ] 

f [The statute 5 Eliz. ¢. 5. is “An 
act touching certain politic considera-_ 


navy.’ It enjoins the eating of fish on 
Wednesdays as well as Fridays and 
Saturdays. ] 

& (The statute 2 and 3 Edw. VI. 
c. 19, is entitled, “An act for absti- 
nence from flesh,’ enjoining the ob- 
servance of fasting on Fridays, Satur- 
days, Lent, Ember-days, Vigils, and 
other accustomed times, ‘‘ considering 
that due and godly abstinence is a 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 95 


it in the Church, the place where all our actions are, or 
- should be, religious ; or what should those religious prayers, 
epistle and gospel, upon the first day of Lent, do among us, 
seeing they all intend a solemn and a religious preparing of 
the people, and the whole Church of God among us, to the 
due keeping of that time with prayer and abstinence? 

As Ember-days are by the 3lst canon" a preparation to Why Eves 
the giving of holy orders, so the eves of most holydays are rapa 
fasted, that the service upon holydays may be more religiously ‘*te¢. 
performed; and therefore when the people had notice given 
them of the one, they were put in mind of the other too, 
holydays and fasting-days together. Concil. Aurelian., cap. 1'. 
Presbyteri cum sacras festivitates populo annunciant, etiam 


First 
SERIES. 


jejunium vigiliarum eos omnimodis servare moneant. 


-Of the Ember fasts. 
View, p. 76*, 


See the notes upon Dr. Ridley’s 


“Tn what and with how much care and Christianity these 


fasts have been heretofore observed, it may be noted out of 


the second council of Milan, tit. i. decree 22'. 
“Tn the fourth council of Milan is set down out of Leo™, Ember- 
the form of bidding these fasts in the Church. Quarta igitur **Y* 
feria, et sabbato jejunemus frequentes in Ecclesia, &c. These 
four fasts at this present day are observed in our Church, 


mean to virtue, and to subdue men’s 
bodies to their soul and spirit; and 
considering also specially that fishers, 
and men using the trade of living by 
fishing in the sea, may thereby the 
rather be set on work, and that by 
eating of fish much flesh shall be saved 


» and encreased,’’ &c. ] 


» [Constitutions and Canons, 1603, 
can. xxxi. | 

i [This does not appear in the 
canons of the councils of Orleans. But 
in the 4th council of Orleans, Conc, 
Aurelian iv. A.D. 541, can. 1. (Conc. 
tom. v. col. 1364, C.) the announcement 
of the time of Easter at the Epiphany 
is ordered. | 

k [A View of the Civil and Eccle- 
siastical Law, &c., with notes by J[ohn] 


_ Gregory]. Oxford, 1634. The pas- 


s) 

qi 
X, 
». 


sage which follows is extracted from 
these notes, p. 77, with slight altera- 


tions. 


: 
4 
or, 


| [Jubeat episcopus, ut dominico illo 
die, qui quatuor statuta jejunii tem- 


_ pora, quibus ordinis sacramentum mi- 


nistratur, proxime antecedit, parochi 
non solum solenne illud jejunium hu- 
jus rei causa institutum denuntient, 
verum etiam in sua unusquisque eorum 
parochiali ecclesia supplicationes lita- 
niasque pie ac religiose vel intus habeat, 
vel prosequente fidelium multitudine, 
foris eeclesiam, sicut moris est, obeat, 
&c.—Concil. Mediolan. II. (ann.1569.) 
titul. i. decr. 22. tom. xxi. col. 112, C.] 

™ [Quarta igitur, sexta feria, et 
Sabbato, jejunemus; frequentes in ca- 
thedrali parochialique ecclesia ad li- 
tanias orationemque conveniamus, Wc. 
The last cap. ends with the words, Idem 
in statis iis temporibus, populo denun- 
tiandis, formulam hane, ex sanctissimi 
pontificis Leonis primi verbis concep- 
tam, adhibeant: cujus sententiam etiam 
vulgari sermone explicent uberius.— 
Concil. Mediolan. IV. (ann. 1576.) par. 
i. cap. 5, 6. Concilia, tom. xxi. col. 
192. See S. Leo, Sermon xiii. De je- 
junio decimi mensis 1]. Op. tom. i. 
col. 43, and throughout the sermons 
for the Ember fasts. ] — 


‘First 
SERIES. 


Gen. iii. 4, 


96 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


and are known to us by the name of Ember-week. And (se 
we find it in Th. Becon") ‘ By opinion of much people, these 
dayes been called Ember-dayes, because that our elder 
fathers would on these dayes eat noe bread but cakes made 
under ashes or imbers, so that by eating of them they re- 
duced into their mindes, that they were but ashes, and so 
should turn again, and wist not how soon.’ And that these 
Ember-days were duly observed and devoutly by our ances- 
tors, we may be persuaded out of the laws of King Cnute, 
where, chap. 16°, it is said, that every man observe the fasts 
that are commanded (whether it be the Ember fast, or Lent 
fast, or any other fast) with all earnest care. And if igno- 
rance (as we call those times) could admit of such devotion, 
how much more would be expected from this knowing age, 
as we account it?” 

Of bidding feasts and fasts. See Bernardinus de ritu Con- 
cion., lib. i. cap. 25”. 


Of the Offertory. 


Saying one or more of these sentences following.| °?* W °?s 
“ Instead of these, read the peculiar sentences for the offer- 
tory, wt infra, and some of these immediately before the 
benediction for the poor 4.” 


2? W °?: “ Peculiar sentences for the Offertory. 


“In process of time it came to pass, that Cain brought of 
the fruit of the ground an offering unto the Lord. And 
Abel brought also of the firstlings of his flock, and of the fat 
thereof. And the Lord had respect unto Abel and his 
offering.” 


n [This the editor has not found. ] 

° [ And let solemn fasts be observed 
(whether Ember fast, or Lent fast, or 
any other fast) with all diligence,”’ &c. 
King Cnute’s Laws Ecclesiastical, 
A.D. 1017. § 16; Johnson’s English 
Canons, vol. i. p. 508. Oxford, 1850. ] 

» [He there traces the bidding of 
feasts, from the practice of announcing 
the time of Easter, which was after- 


wards part of the duty of the preacher. 
Francisc. Bernardinus Ferrarius, de Ri- 
tu Sacrarum Ecclesiz Catholice Con- 
cionum, p. 68, sqq. Mediolani, 1620.] 

4 [See Bp. Andrewes’ note at the 
end of the Communion Service. He 
would put these new sentences for the 
offertory, and read the sentences ap- 
pointed for the offertory at the close of 
the service. | 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 97 


“Speak unto the children of Israel that they bring Me First 
an offering: of every one that giveth it willingly with his SR 
heart, they shall take My offering.” 

“Three times in the year shall all the males appear before Deut. xvi. 
the Lord thy God, in the place which He shall choose, and ** 
they shall not appear before the Lord empty. Every man 
shall give according as he is able, and according to the bless- 
ing of the Lord thy God, which He hath given thee.” 

* All things come of Thee, O Lord, and of Thine own we |! Chron. 
give unto Thee. I have offered willingly in the uprightness eee: 
of mine heart of all these things. Now also have I seen Thy 
people, which are found here to offer unto Thee willingly 
with joy.” 

“We made statutes for ourselves to give by the year the Neh. x. 30. 
third part of a shekel, for the service of the house of our 
God.” 

“Give unto the Lord, ye families of the people, give unto Ps. xevi. 
the Lord glory and power. Give unto the Lord the glory yas 
of His name; bring an offering and enter into His courts.” 

“As Jesus sat over against the treasury, He beheld how Mark xii. 
the people cast money into it, and many rich men cast in *! 
much; and He saw also a certain poor widow which cast in 
[thither] two mites. And He said, Of a truth I say unto you, 
that this poor widow hath cast in more than they all: for 
they [all] of their superfluity cast into the offerings of God, 
but she of her penury hath cast in all the living that she 
had.” 

“Now after many years I came and brought alms to my Acts xxiv. 
nation, and offerings.” 

Then shall the churchwardens, or some other by them ap- 
pointed, gather the devotion of the people. ‘?:W-?+ “ Sapit 
hec collectio per capita Genevensem illum per ecclesias tu- 
muliuaria forma discurrendi morem.” 

And upon the offering days appointed, every man and woman 
shall pay to the curate the due and accustomed offerings.]| 
‘? W -?- “They should not pay it to the curate alone, but to 
God upon the altar; from whence the curate hath his war- 
rant to take it, as deputed by Him, and as the apostle plainly 
alludes, 1 Cor. ix. 18, 14; Heb. xiii. 10. And this is not to 


be forgotten, though it be foregone, that whosoever gave any 
COSIN. H 


Exod. xxv. 
2 


First 


SERIES, 


98 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


lands or endowments to the service of God, he gave it in 
formal writing, (as now-a-days between man and man,) sealed 
and witnessed. And the tender of the gift was super altare, 
and by the donor upon his knees.” 


[ON THE GENERAL PRAYER. | 


Let us pray for the whole state of Christ’s Church.] 
"2? W'? ‘Trrepévtevéts. Diaconi voce indici solebat. S. Aug., 
ep. 119°. cepa edy, Dionysii’. Pro collecta. 

We beseech Thee also to save and defend all Christian kings, 
&c.| This prayer was made after the direction and form used 
by Clement, Const. Apost., lib. viii. cap. 18°. 


[On the Exhortation. | 


If ye stand by as gazers, and lookers on, &c., usque ad, and 
give place to them that be godly disposed™.| A religious invec- 
tive added here, against the lewd and irreligious custom of 


_the people then nursed up in popery, to be present at the 


Communion, and to let the priest communicate for them all: 
from whence arose the abuse of private masses; a practice so 
repugnant to the Scripture, and to the use of the ancient 
Church, that at this day not any but the Romish Church 
throughout all the Christian world are known to use it, as 
the Greek, Syrian, Armenian, and Ethiopian liturgies do 
testify; nay, the Roman liturgy itself is herein full against 
the Roman practice*. 

Omnes igitur fideles, qui ingrediuntur Ecclesiam et Scrip- 
turas audiunt (saith the tenth canon of the apostlesY) non 


munion.”? The substance of most of 
that exhortation forms our second ex- 


* [Communionis oratio voce diaconi 
indicitur.—S. Aug. ep. 55. ad Janua- 


rium, (alit. ep. 119,) cap. 18. § 34. Op. 


tom. ii. col. 142, C.] 


* [ Dionys. Areop., de Eccles. Hier- 
arch. cap. iii. § 2. Op. tom. i. p. 188, A.] 

* [Const. Apostol. (Clement. ascript. ) 
lib. viii. cap. 10. Concilia, tom. i. col. 
470. } 

" [This passage was in the first ex- 
hortation to be said “‘ at certain times 
when the curate shall see the people 
negligent to come to the Holy Com- 


hortation, as framed at the last review 
in 1662, but this part was altogether 
omitted. See the third series of notes. ] 

* [That is, all these services suppose 
the presence of communicants. } 

Y [wdvras tovs eiclovras mio Tovs, Kar 
TaV ypapay akovorTas, un mapauevor- 
tas 8 TH mpocevxi) Kal TH ayia pera 
Anwet, os aratiay éumoodvras TH exkKAn- 
aig, &popifec@a xph.—Canon. Apost. 
can. 9. Concilia, tom, i. col. 27, A.] 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 99 


First 


autem perseverant in oratione, nec sanctam communionem per- 
SERIES. 


cipiunt, velut inquietudines ecclesia commoventes, convenit com- 
munione privari. And Quicunque est (says St. Chrysost., Hom. 
il. in ] ad Ephes.”) gui mysterioruim non est particeps, is im- 
pudenter stat, et nimis audacter. For tell me (says he) Siguis 
ad convivium invitatus manus laverit et accubuerit, et ad men- 
sam paratus fuerit, deinde non fuerit ejus particeps, annon con- 
tumelia eum afficit, gui invitavit 2? Annon esset melius, eum ne 
adfuisse quidem? So that this preface and exhortation seem 
to be taken out of St. Chrysostom’s words, they are in all 
points so like one to the other. 


[Zhe second Exhortation*. | 


Let him come to me....and open his grief.| Confession of 
sins must necessarily be made to them to whom the dispens- 
ation of the mysteries of God is committed. ‘‘ For so they 
which in former times repented among the saints are read to 
have done. It is written in the Gospel, that they confessed Matt. iii. 6. 
their sins to John Baptist. In the Acts they all confessed 
their sins unto the apostles, of whom they were baptized.” ha xix. 
S. Basil., in Regulis Contractioribus, Quest. 288». 
716 aint willingly judgeth himself, lest against his will 
he be judged of the Lord, let him come to the priests, by 
whom the keys are ministered unto him in the Church, and 
receive of them that have the oversight of the sacraments 
the manner of his satisfaction.” 8. Augustin., lib. 50%. Hom. 
Su", cap..11°. 


2 [ras yap 6 uh weTexwy TOY pvOTN- 
ploy avaloxuvtos Kal irauas éornKas... 
Eimé por ef Tis eis eotiagi KAnéels, Tas 
xeipas viputo, Kal KatakAdeln, Kal 
ETotmos yévorro mpds Thy Tpdmelay, elra 
bh meréxot, odx bBpifer Toy KadéoarTa; 
ov BéATiov Toy ToLovTOY nde Tapaye- 
véoOau ;—S. Chrysost. in Ep. ad Ephes. 
cap. 1. Hom. 3. § 5. Op. tom. xi. p. 
23, C & E.] 

® { This is now our first exhortation. ] 

b [ ob yap Kal of wdéAat weTavoovy- 
Tes emt TaY Gylwy edplokovTas memotn- 
Kéres. Téyparrat yap év wey T@ evary- 
yeAle, ore 7 Barriorh "lodvyn eEwpo- 
Aoyodvro Tas Guaptias avr@y* ev be 
Tais mpdteow tots awoctéAas, bp av 
¢ €Banrifovto émavres.—S, Basil. Re- 


gule brevius tractate. Quest, 288. 
Op. tom. ii. p. 516, D.] 

© [Judicet ergo seipsum homo in 
istis voluntate, dum potest, et mores 
convertat in melius: ne cum jam non 
poterit, etiam preter voluntatem a Do- 
mino judicetur. Et cum ipse in se 
protulerit severissimz medicine, sed 
tamen medicine sententiam, veniat ad 
antistites, per quos illi in Ecclesiz 
claves ministrantur: et tanquam bonus 
jam incipiens esse filius, maternorum 
membrorum ordine custodito, a prz- 
positis sacramentorum accipiat satis- 
factionis sue modum.—S. Aug. Serm. 
351. de div. (ol. 50. inter quinqua- 
ginta Homilias.) cap. 4. § 9. Op. tom. 
v. col, 1359, B, C.]} 


H 2 


First 


SERIES. 


100 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Ordinatio Ecclesie Lunenburgensis admodum severe mandat, 
nulli debere Eucharistiam communicari, nisi confesso, et pri- 
vata absolutione absoluto: vetans ne pastores posthac duos aut 
tres simul absolvant. Similiter et Agenda Saxonica per Justum 
Jonam, Georgium Spalatinum aliosque, Anno 1536, confecta, 
docet, confessos per absolutionem privatam debere fieri parti- 
cipes promissionis generalis de remissione peccatorum. Lindan. 
Apol. part. altera, p. 1284, 

Ad eundem modum et Confessio Wittenburgensis, cap. de 
Penit.® profitetur, semper agnoscenda esse peccata, semperque 
agendam in hac vita penitentiam, ut post confessionem pecca- 
torum, concipiatur privatim fides absolutionis. Ibid. 

That he may receive .... the benefit of absolution.| ‘?*W-?: 
“Tt is most expedient that this be read, to induce the people 
that they bethink themselves of the sovereign benefit of ab- 
solution, by their penitent confession.” 

Idem. “ Dr. White, in his Way to the Church, quotes all 
this latter part of the exhortation, shewing, against the slan- 
der of the Jesuits, that we abolish not, but willingly retain, 
the doctrine of confession.” § 40. p. 231% 

Then shall the priest say this exhortation&.| °?: W °?: “Stans 
recitabit,” 


Of the great preparation that Christians are to make before 
they come to the receiving of the holy and blessed Sacra- 
ment. 


The veneration of the holy Sacrament hath from all times 
and ages, since Christ left the celebration of it to His apo- 


4 [The work referred to seems to be 
Gul. Lindani Apologeticon, libri iii. 
ad Germanos, pro concordia cum Ca- 
tholica Christi Ecclesia, contra novam 
Protestantium Confessionem Augusta- 
nam ex Lutherana Calvinizantem.— 
4°. Antwerp, 1570, et pars altera 4°. 
1578, typis Plautini. The editor has 
not seen this work, nor the rituals re- 
ferred to in it. ] 

¢ [Cum semper nobis agnoscenda 
sint peccata nostra, ... sentimus sem- 
per etiam in hac vita nobis agendam 
esse poeni‘entiam.. .. Etsi autem senti- 
mus, enumerationem peccatorum co- 


ram sacerdote non esse necessariam ad 
salutem, &c.... tamen damus operam, 
ut generalis confessio peccatorum, 
quantum fieri potest et licet, in Eccle- 
siis nostris conservetur... ut per audi- 
tum Evangelii seu absolutionis, fides 
vel concipiatur vel confirmetur.—Con- 
fessio Wirtembergensis, Concil. Tri- 
dent., A.D. 1552, oblat. ap. Joan Bren- 
tii Opera, tom. viii. p. 5. | 

f [The Way to the True Church, 
by John White, D.D. Works, p. 122. 
London, 1624. ] 

8 [This is our present exhortation as 
read in the course of the service. } 


101 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 


stles, been so great, that they which either carelessly came 
unto it, or negligently behaved themselves at it, were always 
accounted and punished as great offenders; 1 Cor. xi. St. Paul 
tells us, that many became sick and weak, and subject to 
divers diseases, and that many also died upon it, for that they 
came with such small preparation unto it, and behaved them- 
selves when they were there with such little reverence. These 
are then the two things we are to look to, 1. Our preparation 
before we presume to come. 2. Our reverence when we are 
come. 

For preparation first, we find these things religiously ob- 
served among the primitive and old Christians. 1. That 
they were to abstain from all fleshly thoughts, insomuch that 
if they chanced to have but a lustful dream, it made them 
afraid to come. 2ndly, That married people were bound to 
keep themselves asunder for awhile before, as St. Paul speaks 
of prayer, 1 Cor. vii. And so St. Hierome, being reprehended 
for what he wrote against Jovinian about marriage", Quale 
bonum est matrimonium, quod impedit sumptionem Corporis 


Christi? defends himself after this wise', Quid majus est, 


orare, an accipere Corpus Christi? Utique Corporis Christi 
accipere. Si igitur per coitum inpeditur quod minus est, 
guanto magis quod majus est? S. Hier. in Apol. pro libris 
contra Jovin. Out of which place it is most evident, that it 
was the custom of those old and holy Christians, that such 
as were married had not the carnal use of one another’s body 
for certain days before they went to the Sacrament, that so 
they might retire and fit themselves the better, by being 
wholly and only employed in spiritual and heavenly medita- 
tions. Omnis homo ante sacram Communionem a propria 
uxore abstinere debet tres aut quatuor [aut quinque, aut sep- 
tem| aut octo diebus. Conc. Eliberitan., cap. 3. cit. ab Ivone, 
lib. i.* 


S. Chrys., Hom. iii. in cap. 1. ad Ephes.' Quomodo stabis 


h-(S. Hieron. lib. i. adv. Jovinianum, 
cap. 7. Op. tom. ii. col. 247, D.] 

i {S. Hieron. ep. 48. ad Pamma- 
chium, (aliter Apolog. pro libris cont. 
Jovinianum.) cap. 15. Op. tom. i. col. 
225, B.] 

* ([Concil. Eliberit. (A.D. 305?) 


Fragment. ex cap. 3. Concilia, tom. i. 
col. 979, C, cited in Ivonis Decretum, 
par. ii. cap. 32. Op. par. i. p. 58. A 
spurious canon only found in the De- 
cretum of Gratian, Ivo, and Burchard. ] 

1 [xol rs mapacrhoen TH Bhuatt Tov 
Xpicrov, piapais xepol Kal xeiAeot Ka- 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIEs. 
_—_—_—_— 


102 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


ad tribunal Christi, qui pollutis manibus ac labris ad id audeas 
accedere. Dic mihi, vellesne manibus illotis ad sacrificium 
accedere? Non opinor; sed malles potius omnino non acce- 
dere quam sordidis manibus. Et cum in re parva sis adeo 
religiosus, sordidam et immundam habens animam accedis et 
audes tangere ? 


Of profaning the Sacrament of God’s altar, and of a 
careless and irreverent receiving of it. 


We provoke Him to plague us with divers diseases, &c.| 
Taken from St. Paul, 1 Cor. xi. “For this cause are many 
weak among you, and many die.” Si nos hodie diceremus 
propterea multos sacerdotes (sec. 290™) trucidatos fuisse ab 
hereticis, quia indigne tractabant Corpus Christi, putarent 
Calviniste nos delirare. And so when the Donatists, the 
old puritans of the primitive Church, arose, and made so 
slight an account of God’s altars, and the blessed Sacra- 


“ment upon them, as that they overturned and brake them 


down wheresoever they came, (just as our puritans are wont 
to do,) God sent many judgments upon them. Among the 
rest, Optatus tells us one worth the remembering, lib. ii. de 
Schism. Don." Omnia sacrosancta episcopi vestra violarunt, 
jusserunt Eucharistiam canibus fundi, non sine signo divini 
judiciti: nam tidem canes rabie accensi ipsos dominos suos, 
guast latrones Dominici Corporis reos, tanguam ignotos et 
inimicos dilaniarunt. 

Judge therefore yourselves.| He that willingly judgeth 
himself, lest against his will he be judged of the Lord, veniat 
ad Antistites, per quos illi in Ecclesia claves ministrantur, et a 
prepositis sacrorum accipiat satisfactionis sue modum. 8. Aug. 


a > ~ ~ 4 by / 
TATOAMWY AUTOU TOU TMMaTOS;... Eime 


fot, apa dv Edrowo xepoly avinros TH 
Bucla mpocedbeiv; ove eywye olua’ 


m [These words, sec. 290, are added, 
but written so small and so close to the 
margin as to be illegible. The passage 


GAA’? OeAors By nde SAws mpowedOeiv 
q purapais xepolv. elta ev Te pipe 
obtws dv evrAaBhs, Wuxhy Exwv puTapav 
mpocépxn, Kal &mrecOar torAuds.—S. 
Chrysost. in Ephes. cap. 1. Hom, 8. 
§.4. Op. tom. xi. p. 22, C, D.] 


may be a quotation from a Roman Ca- 
tholic account of a persecution in which 
two hundred and ninety secular priests 
had been put to death. } 

2 [S. Optatus, de Schism. Donat., 
lib. ii. cap. 19. Op. p. 39.] 


an Red no SE oc en i me eee ee ed 


103 


Lib. Quinquag. Homil. Hom. 50. cap. 11°; vide 8. Chrys., 
Hom. iii. in cap. 1. ad Eph.? 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 


Ye that do truly and earnestly, &c. ...... draw near. | 
“2 W °?: “ Forte non est opus his verbis, quia jam accesserunt.” 


Then shall this general Confession be made in the name of 
all those that are minded to receive the Holy Communion, 
either by one of them, or else by one of the ministers.| The 
21st Exc. of the Survey4. 

‘2 W :?> “The other priest, (if there be a second,) or he 
that executeth, descendeth to the door, and there kneeling, 
saith the Confession, the people repeating after him.” 

Almighty God, &c.| *?? W °°? "E€oponoynots. 

Then shall the priest, or the bishop if present.| For so it 
was ordained in the second council of Seville, can. vii.", where 
priests are not only forbidden to absolve, but to preach or 
baptize, &c., in the presence of the bishop, without his 
special command. Sed neque coram episcopo licet presbyteris 
in baptisterium introire, nec presente antistite infantem tingere 
aut signare, nec peenitentem sine praceptione episcopi sut re- 
conciliare, nec eo presente, nisi illo jubente, sacramentum Cor- 
poris et Sanguinis Christi conficere, nec eo coram posito popu- 
lum docere, vel benedicere, aut salutare. Leo, ep. 88°. 

Stand up.| 2: W°?: “’AzrorvtiKov, in quo absolvit stans.” 


SURSUM CORDA. 


Lift up your hearts.| 8S. Cyprian. de Orat. Dom.t “When 
we are at prayers we ought to attend, and give ourselves 


° [S. August. Serm. 351. de div. (ol. can. 7. Concilia, tom. vi. col. 1406, B.] 


Hom. 50. inter Hom. quing.) c. 4. § 9. 
Op. tom. v. col. 1359, B, C. cited above, 
p. 99, note c. ] 

P [See above, p. 99, note z; p. 101, 
note 1. The whole of the Jatter part of 
the Homily is against abstaining from 
communicating, and on the duty of 
preparing oneself. ] 

4 [p. 65. objecting to a layman pray- 
ing in presence of a m‘nister. This was 
altered at the last Review. ] 

¥ (Conc. Hispalense II.(circ. a.D.619.) 


s [S. Leonis Op. p. 463, D. ed. 
Paris. 1618. ‘The epistle is, however, 
spurious, and for the most part made 
up out of this canon of the council of 
Seville, with which, in the passage cited, 
it agrees verbatim. See S. Leonis Op, 
tom. ii. p. 1270. ed. Venet. 1753.] 

t (Quando autem stamus ad ora- 
tionem, fratres dilectissimi, vigilare et 
incuimbere ad preces toto corde debe- 
mus. Cogitatio omnis carnalis et se- 
cularis abscedat, nec quidquam tunc 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


104 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


wholly to it with all our heart. Let all carnal and worldly 
cogitation depart. Let not the mind then think upon any- 
thing, but that alone which it prayeth. Therefore the priest 
before prayer prepareth the minds of the brethren, saying, 
Sursum corda, that when the people answer, Habemus ad 
Dominum, they may be admonished to think of nothing but 
God.” 

S. Chrys., lib. iii. de Sacerd.* ‘ When thou beholdest our 
Lord sacrificed, the priest occupied in the sacrifice, and 
pouring forth prayers, dost thou think thou dost converse 
with mortal men, and to be on earth? Art thou not rather 
forthwith transported into heaven,” &c. ? 

Sursum cor, qui habes sursum caput. 
datum optimum de sursum est. 

2° W °?: "Ava cy@pmev Tas Kapdias. Sursum corda, Aug. de 
ver. Relig. cap. 3*. 

*?? W °?- Sequentia jubilans. 


Jam. i. 16. Omne 


OF THE PROPER PREFACES. 


Upon Christmas-day and seven days after.| A plain proof 
that our Church intends to have the Communion celebrated 
every day’. 


Then shall the priest kneeling down (before the prayer, “We 
do not presume,” &c.)| °?* W°?: Descendit, repetit solus. 

So to eat the Flesh of, §c. and to drink His Blood.| By 
this it may be known what our Church believeth and 
teacheth of the presence of Christ’s Body and Blood in the 
Sacrament. And though our new masters would make the 
world believe she had another mind, yet we are not to follow 


animus, quam id solum cogitet quod dpa @r: wera avOpdrwv civat voultes, 


precatur. Ideo et sacerdos ante ora- 
tionem prefatione premissa, parat fra- 
trum mentes dicendo: Sursum corda; 
ut dum respondet plebs: Habemus ad 
Dominum, admoneatur nihil aliud se 
quam Dominum cogitare debere.— 
S. Cypr. de Orat. Dominica, Op. Tract. 
p. 152. ] 

" (8rav yap Sys tov Kbpiov Tebv- 
pévov, kad Kkelwevov, kal Toy iepéa ee- 
oTaTa TH Oipart Kal éwevxduevov’... 


kal ém) ths yns éordvat; GAA’ ovdK €d- 
Oéws érl robs ovpavods peravicracat.— 
S. Chrysost. de Sacerdot., § 4. Op. 
tom. i. p. 382, D.] 

x [....ut.quotidie per universum 
orbem humanum genus una pene voce 
respondeat, sursum corda se habere ad 
Dominum.—S. Aug. de Vera Religione, 
c. 3. § 5. Op. tom. i. col. 750, C. | 

y [The note mark is inserted at each 
mention of the “‘ seven days after.” | 


. 
b 
| 
| 
| 
| 


Re 


¢ 
§ 


their private fancies, 


t 
if 
b 
; 


| 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 105 


when we have so plain and so public a 
doctrine as this.. Such as are profane may deride it, and 
move what harsh and unsavoury questions they list about 
the eating of Christ’s Body,’as Berengarius and his followers 


did; but we are of St. Cyprian’s spirit’, Quam preclarus 


est calix iste, quam religiosa hujus potus ebrietas ? 


Sangut- 


nem sugimus, intra ipsa Redemptoris nostri vulnera figimus 
_linguam, quo interius exteriusque rubricati a sapientibus hujus 


seculi judicamur amentes. S.Cypr. de Cena Dom. Lege Mald. 
de Euch. p. 243, &c.* item Testimonia Patrum, pp. 249, 250°. 


Then the priest standing up, shall say the Prayer of Con- 
secration.| The transposing of this after that which goes 
before, otherwise than it was in King Edward’s Book °, hath 
left the priest to receive the Sacrament standing, there being 
no rubric or appointment to alter his gesture after this; and 
upon this have the puritans taken occasion to plead, and say 
that they may as well be left to their liberty and stand as 
the ministér, when they receive*. But see the answer infra. 

“2? W °?-] “Here the priest having made adoration, poureth 
water on the napkin ready for that purpose, and cleanseth 
his hands: mystice respiciens illud Psalmi, Lavabo in inno- 
centia manus meas, et sic introibo ad Altare Dei, ut sic an- 


nunciem vocem evyaptotias, Ps. xxvi. 6. Moraliter et decore,. 


uli cum magnatibus accubiturt. 

“ Postea panes e canisiro in patinam ponit. Dein vinum e 
dolio, adinstar sanguinis dirumpens in calicem, haurit. Tum 
aquam e tricanal® scypho immiscet. Postremo omnibus rite, 


* [Arnold. Abb. De Coena Domini; 
in Tract. de Cardin. Operibus Christi ; 


inter Op. S. Cypr., pp. 41, 42.] 


® [Maldonatus Disputatio de Sacra- 
mentis, de Eucharistia. The place re- 
ferred to is headed, Secundum genus 
argumentorum, ex quibus cognoscimus, 
Dei voluntatem fuisse non tantum figu- 
ram, sed verum corpus suum nobis 
relinquere in Eucharistia;. continet 
rationes et conjecturas. Opusce., p. 161, 


_ &c., in which the opinions of Beren- 
_ garius and others are combated.—Bp. 
_ Cosin’s reference is to the edition Lugd. 
1614.) 


‘" 


2 


> [Id. ibid. Tertium genus, &c. con- 
tinet testimonia scriptorum ecclesiasti- 


corum, p. 169, &c. | 

© {In the first book of Edw. VI. the 
Sursum Corda &c. preceded, and the 
prayer of consecration immediately fol- 
lowed, the prayer for the whole state of 
Christ’s Church; after that came the 
exhortation, &c. and so the prayer ‘“‘ We 
do not presume” immediately preceded 
the priest’s communicating. | 

@ [This is a point raised in the Sur- 
vey. See below, p. 112, note g.] 

€ [For tricanali Bp. Cosin had ¢ri- 
clinari. It has been corrected from the 
other copies of these notes. See the 
description of Bp. Andrewes’ Chapel, 
in the Appendix to his Life prefixed to 
his Minor English Works. 


First 
SERIES. 





+90 Ww “2° 
Sancta 
Sanctis. 


First 


SERIES. 


106 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


et quam fiert potest decentidime compositis, stans pergit et 
peragit. 
“‘ In rariore solennitate hic pergit episcopus et consecrat.”’ 


De Consecratione Elementorum. 


That there is to be a certain form of words wherewith the 
Sacrament is to be made and consecrated, we make no doubt; 
and therefore it is but a calumny of theirs that say we do 
nothing else but recitare historiam, tell the story of Christ’s 
Institution, and so go to it. For we have first the recitation 
of Christ’s command to have His Death and Passion remem- 
bered; and then we have prayer to perform it as we ought 
to do. After that we have the words of consecration, as fully 
and amply as any priest whatsoever can or may use them. 
The Mass-book hath no more than we have here; so that to 
make a controversy here betwixt us, where none is, sounds 
more of the evil spirit—the desire of contradiction, than of 
the good Spirit—the desire of peace and unity. 

Sufficient sacrifice ... of that His precious Blood. | This word 
[“that”] refers to the sacrifice mentioned before, for we 
still continue and commemorate that sacrifice which Christ 
once made upon the cross: “ And this sacrifice which the 


‘Church makes‘, as a sacrifice is taken pro mactatione et 


f [The rest of this note is derived 
from Maldonatus; his words are: Nos 
igitur cum comparamus Eucharistiam 
cum sacrificio corporis Christi, quod 
in cruce oblatum est, non negamus de- 
generare aliquo modo ab illo.verissimo 
sacrificio, si spectentur omnia, que in 
sacrificio esse solent. 

Primum enim in sacrificio solebat 
esse mactatio et occisio victime, que 
in cruce reipsa facta est: in Eucha- 
ristia non fit, nisi commemoratione et 
sacramento. 

Secundo, in cruce corpus Christi 
forma visibili oblatum est, in Eucha- 
ristia, invisibili. 

Tertio, in cruce corpus Christi ob- 
latum est ad sufficientiam, ut dicunt 
Theologi, id est, tanquam sacrificium 
habens in se ipso vim abolendi peccata 
omnium hominum, quamvis non con- 
tinua abolerentur, nisi sacrificium illud 
singulis hominibus applicaretur. Quod 


variis fit modis: per fidem, per chari- 
tatem, per bona opera, et per obla- 
tionem incruentam ejusdem corporis, 
item per sumptionem illius. Qua- 
propter cum comparamus Eucharis- 
tiam cum sacrificio facto in cruce, ha- 
bita ratione mactationis et visibilis 
forme, voecamus illam sacrificium com- 
memorativum. Et quia fuerunt non- 
nulli authores, qui existimarunt, ver- 
bum sacrificandi concludere in se occi- 
sionem (ut revera accidit Grecis, apud 
quos Ove utrumque significat, et sacri- 
ficare et occidere) dixerunt Eucharis- 
tiam tantum esse sacrificium comme- 
morativum. Ut D. Chrysost. in Homil. 
contra Judwos parte 2. [ovyxpwouevn 
mpos éxeivnv atrn 7 Ovala, Kupiws by 
Aexbein udyn Kabapd’ ob yap Sid Karvod 
Kal kvioons, ovde 8: aiudrwy Kal AdTpwr, 
GAAG ia THS TOU MvEevuaTos Mpocd yerat 
xdpiros.— Adversus J udxos, Orat. v. (ii. 
ed. Lat. 1546.) tom.i. p.648, C. ed. Ben. } 


107 








ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 


“occisione victime, is only commemorative and sacramental ; 
for in that sense Christ only offered it really upon the cross 
‘by His own death; and so likewise, as it is taken for a visible 
F sacrifice, Christ only offered it; for here it is invisible: but 
‘as it is taken for a sufficient wsiorifics to take away the sins of 
‘the world, so indeed it was offered upon the cross, as having 
‘power in itself to abolish all sin whatsoever; but doth not 
‘abolish any man’s sins for all that, unless it be applied. 
‘And the ways to apply it are divers. By faith, by good 
works, by the unbloody offering up of the same sacrifice, by 
the receiving of His most precious Body and Blood. So if we 
compare the Eucharist with the sacrifice once made upon the 
cross, with reference to the killing or destroying of the sacri- 
fice, or with reference to the visibility of it, in that sense, 
we call it only a commemorative sacrifice, as the fathers do. 
Chrys. Hom, contr. Jud. part. 2. Sentent. lib. iv. dis. 12. But 
if we compare the Eucharist with Christ’s sacrifice made once 
upon the cross, as concerning the effect of it, we say that that 
was a sufficient sacrifice; but withal that this is a true, real, 
and efficient sacrifice, and both of them propitiatory for the 
sins of the whole world.” And therefore in the oblation 
following we pray that it may prevail so with God, as that 
we and all the whole Church of Christ (which consists of 
“more than those that are upon the earth) may receive the 
benefit of it. ‘Neither do we call® this sacrifice of the 
Eucharist an efficient sacrifice, as if that upon the cross 
wanted efficacy; but because the force and virtue of that 
sacrifice could not be profitable unto us, unless it were ap- 


Et Magister Sentent., 1. 4. dist. 12. 

[‘ Ad hoc breviter dici potest, illud quod 
_ offertur et consecratur a sacerdote vo- 
¢ari sacrificium et oblationem; quia 
_ Memoria est et representatio veri sacri- 

 ficii, et sancte immolationis facte in 
> ara crucis.’] Sed cum hee dicunt, non 
it negant esse verum sacrificium, sed tan- 

tum esse commemorativum, si spectes 
a vim verbi quatenus significat occidere 
_ et mactare. Cum autem conferimus 
Eucharistiam cum illo sacrificio cor- 
poris Christi, quod in cruce peractum 
est, quantum ad effectum, dicimus illud 
fuisse sacrificium sufficiens, hoc effi- 
_ ciens et applicatorium, utrumque ta- 







_ men propitiatorium.—Maldonati Disp. 


circa vii. Sacramenta, tom. i. pp. 322, 
323. Lugduni, 1614. (Opuse. p. 218. 
Paris. 1677.) ] 

gs {Et non vocamus Eucharistiam 
sacrificium quantum ad efficientiam, 
propterea quod sacrificium crucis non 
fuerit etiam efficax; sed quia vis illius 
sacrificii non poterat prodesse, et ad 
efficientiam effectumque redigi, - nisi 
tum per hoc sacrificium, tum per alia 
sacramenta, tum aliis modis. 

Propitiatorium autem ideo dicimus 
esse utrumque, quia propitiatorium 
sacrificiam esse non est alind, quam 
habere vim placandi Deum.—Maldona 
tus, ibid., p. 323.] 


First 
SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


108 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


plied and brought into effect by this eucharistical sacrifice, 
and other the holy Sacraments, and means appointed by 
God for that end. But we call it propitiatory, both this and 
that, because they have both force and virtue in them, to 
appease God’s wrath against this sinful world.” Read Mald. 
de Sac., p.323. ‘Therefore this is no new sacrifice", but the 
same which was once offered, and which is every day offered | 
to God by Christ in heaven, and continueth here still on 
earth by a mystical representation of it in the Eucharist. 
And the Church intends not to have any new propitiation, 
or new remission of sins obtained, but to make that effectual, 
and in act applied unto us, which was once obtained by the 
sacrifice of Christ upon the cross. Neither is the sacrifice of 
the cross, as it was once offered up there modo cruento, so 
much remembered in the Eucharist, though it be comme- 
morated, as regard is had to the perpetual and daily offering 
of it by Christ now in heaven in His everlasting priesthood, 
and thereupon was and should be still the Juge sacrificium 
observed here on earth, as it is in heaven.” The reason which 
the ancient fathers had for their daily sacrifice. 8. Chrysost. 
in 10 ad Hebr.: In Christo semel oblata est hostia, ad sulutem 
potens. Quid ergo nos? Nonne per singulos dies offerimus ? 
Et si quotidie offerimus, ad recordationem ejus oblationis fit. 
S. Aug. de Civ. Dei, lib. x. cap. 20". Jpse sacerdos, et ipse 
oblatio, cujus ret sacramentum quotidianum esse voluit Ecclesia 
sacrificium. 

Creatures of bread and wine.] These words, as I once 
conferred with a papist, were mightily excepted against, 
because forsooth they must acknowledge no bread and wine, 





h [This passage is derived from the 
Consultatio of Cassander: Non igitur 
hic novum est sacrificium, nam et 
eadem hic est hostia, que in cruce 
oblata fuit, et sacrificii illius in cruce 
peracti in mysterio commemoratio, et 
continuati in ccelis sacerdotii, et sacri- 
ficii Christi in imaginem representatio, 
quo non efficitur nova propitiatio et 
remissio peccatorum, sed ea que semel 
sufficienter in cruce facta est, nobis 
quoque efficax esse postulatur. Itaque 
veteres in hoc mystico sacrificio non 
tam peracte semel in cruce oblationis, 
cujus hic memoria celebratur, quam 
perpetui sacerdotii et jugis sacrificii, 


quod quotidie in ccelis sempiternus sa- 
cerdos offert, rationem habuerunt, cujus 
hie imago per solennes ministrorum 
preces exprimitur. . .. After intervals of 
a few lines, the citations from S. Chry- 
sostom and S. Augustine occur.—Georgii 
Cassandri Opera, p- 999. Paris. 1616. ]} 
i Em 5& rod Xpiorod, Tovvayrlov* 
mat mpornvex9n, Kal eis 7d del TipKere, 
. Tl ody hueis; Kad’ Exaorny iuépay 
ov mpoopépouer ; ™poopépoper Bey GAN? 
avdurvnow mo.ovmevot TOD Oavdrov adrod. 
—S. Chrysost. in Heb., cap. 10. Hom. 
17. § 3. Op. tom. xii. p. 168, A et D.] 
k (S. Aug. de Civitate Dei, lib. x. 
cap. 20. Op. tom. vii. col. 256, B.] 


f 
\ 
h 
i 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 109 


but a desition of the nature and being of them both. My  Fiesr 


answer was, That here we term them so before consecration : 
after that we call them so no more, but abstain from that 
“name, because our thoughts might be wholly taken up with 
the spiritual food of Christ’s Body and Blood. So in the 
thanksgiving following we say, “that hast vouchsafed to feed 
us with these holy mysteries,” and “ the spiritual food of the 
“Body and Blood of Thy Son,” &c. In the mean while we 
deny not the bread and wine to remain there still, as God’s 
creatures. And I wonder the papists should so contend for 
this same desitio panis et vini, whenas in their own service 
or mass, they abstain not from these words, “Thy creatures,” 
after consecration, as we do. See the book!; Per quem hec 
omnia, Domine bone, creas. A certain argument that the 
Church of Rome never meant to teach that doctrine, which 
private men, the late doctors and schoolmen, have brought up 
and propagated. 
_ Creatures of bread and wine.| See what is noted in the 
Catechism. 

Partakers of His most blessed Body and Blood.| 8. Ambr. 

lib. iv. de Sacr. c.5™, hath the same words, from whence the 
antiquity of using this form in the consecration of the Sacra- 
ment is manifest. 

_ He brake it.) *?: W°?: Sic nos Ejus ductu et exemplo qui 
hic presidet. 

This is My Body which is given for you, do this in remem- 
brance of Me.| The words of Consecration. Liturg. Jacob.", 
Bas.°, Chrys.”, Clem.4, lib. viii. Const. cap. 13, his verbis utuntur. 
Justin. in 2 Apol. saith", that by the Word of God the Sacra- 


‘ [The words of the canon referring 
to the elements after consecration, are, 
per Christum Dominum nostrum, per 
quem hec omnia, Domine, semper bona 

_ ¢reas.— Missale Romanum. | 

_ ™ (The words of S. Ambrose are, 
_Antequam consecretur panis est; ubi 
autem verba Christi accesserint, corpus 
est Christi... . Ipse dominus Jc sus tes- 
_tificatur nobis quod corpus secum acci- 
piamus et sanguinem.—S. Ambros. de 
Sacramentis, lib. iv. c. 5. § 23. Op. 
‘tom. ii. col. 371, E.] 

_ * [The words of consecration are 
found in the Liturgy of St. James; see 







pp. 36, 37.] 

° {In the Liturgy of S. Basil; see 
Goar’s Euchologium, p. 168. ] 

P [In the Liturgy of S. Chrysostom, 
ibid. , p. 76. 

4 [In the Pseudo-Clementine Li- 
turgy in the Apostolical Constitutions, 
lib. viii, c. 12. Concilia, tom. i. col. 480, 
E. 

: [... Obrws wad rhy bP edxijs Ad- 
you Tov Tap’ av’Tov evxapioTnOcioay Tpo- 
ghv. e& fs aiua kal odpres Kata peta- 
Bodhv tpepovtat Hua, éxelvov Tov cap- 
Koroinbevtos *Inood Kal odpna Kal aina 
€5:5dxOnuev elvai.—S. Just. Mart., Apol. 
i. (al. Apol. 2.) c. 66. Op. p. 83, B.] 


First 


SERIES, 
—_—_—_—_—_— 


110 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


ment is made. So Iren. lib. iv. cap. 34s, and lib. 5, znitiot, 
Panis cum percipit verbum Dei fit Corpus Christi. 8S. Aug. 
lib. xx. contr. Faust. Man. cap. 13%. Panis noster et calix 
certa consecratione mysticus fit nobis, non nascitur. Qua- 
propter quod ita non fit, licet calix et panis fit, alimentum est 
refectionis, non Sacramentum religionis. And I doubt whether 
the puritans’ Sacrament at Geneva and elsewhere be not 
such an one or no, for they do boldly deny any words of 
mystical consecration at all. 

Many disputes there are by them made that have leisure, 
with what words this consecration is perfected ; whether with 
the prayers before or the prayers following. But we rest in 
that of 8. Cyp. de Can. Dom.* Ex quo dictum est, hec est 
Caro Mea, et hic est [Sanguis] Meus. Quotiescunque his 
verbis, et hac fide actum est, panis iste [super] substantialis, 
solemni benedictione sacratus, ad salutem hominis proficit. 
And so 8S. Amb. lib. iv. de Sacram. cap. 4%. Reliquis omnibus 
gue dicuntur, laus Deo defertur, petitur pro populo, &c. cum 
autem venitur ut conficiatur venerabile Sacramentum, jam non 
suis sermonibus utitur, sed sermonibus Christi. And these are 
the only words we have of Christ’s. And S. Chrys.” yet more 
plainly, in Hom. de Juda Proditore; Hoc est Corpus Meum ; 
his, inguit, verbis proposita consecrantur. And when the 
Latins say that the Sacrament was consecrated by prayer, 
they mean not by every prayer; but either mean the whole 
action, or whole service of the Church; or else they mean 
this form of consecration, which was always recited in the 
form of a prayer, as now it is. Mald. 133°. 





8 [Os yap ard yijs &pros mpocAau- 
Bavouwevos thy ExxdAnow (1. éwixAnoww) 
Tov Bcod, ovKeri kowds &pros eotiv, GAN 
edxapiotia, ex dbo mpayydtwev cvveory- 
Kula, émvyeiou Te Kal ovpaviov. K. T.A.— 
S. lren. cont. Her. lib. iv. cap. 18. 
(alit. cap. 34.) § 5. p. 251, 2.) 

t (“Omote oty al 7d Kexpapévoy mo- 
Thpiv Kal 6 yeyovws &ptos émidéxeTat 
Tov Adyov Tov Bcod, Kal ylyvera 7 
edxapiotia oaua Xpiotod.—ld. ibid., 
lib. v. cap. 2. § 2. p. 294. ] 

« [S. Aug. contr. Faustum, lib. xx. 
cap. 13. Op. tom. viii. col. 342. B.] 

x (Arnold. Abb. de Coena Domini, 
in Tract. de Cardin. oper. Christi, 
(S. Cypriano falso tribut.) ad calc. Op. 


S. Cypr., Op. p. 39. The last words 
run thus, Ad totius hominis vitam sa- 
lutemque proficit. | 

y (S. Ambros. de Sacr., lib. iv. cap. 4, 
§ 14, Op. tom. ii. col. 368, D. The first 
words run thus, Reliqua omnia que 
dicuntur in superioribus a sacerdote 
dicuntur, &c.] ' 

2 [*Eornkey db iepeds, ra phuata pbery- 
youevos éxeiva’ 7 dé Suvduis, kal 4 xdpis 
Tov @eod Ear. TodTd pov €or 7d coud 
ont. TOVTO TO pHua meTappvOuifer TH 
mpokelueva.—S. Chrysost. de Prodit. 
Judx, Hom. i. § 6. Op, tom. ii, p. 384, 
B.] 


* (Quemodo autem Latini prece 
mystica fierl dixerint consecrationem, 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 111 


First 
SERIES. 


Shed for you and for many.| Tantundem valet ‘pro multis’ 
_ atque ‘pro omnibus,’ sicut apud S. Paul. ad Rom. v., Cum per 
unum hominem multi dicuntur esse constituti peccatores, ‘mult?’ 
_ accipiuntur ‘pro omnibus” Mald. de Sacr. p. 136°. 

Then shall the minister first receive, &c.| Conc. Tolet. iv. 
Can. 17°. Tune [demum] Corporis et Sanguinis Domini Sa- 
cramentum sumatur, eo [videlicet| ordine, ut sacerdotes et Le- 
vite ante altare communicent, in choro clericus, extra chorum 

populus. 

In their hands.| ‘The Church of Rome use to give it the The people 

people into their mouths, which is not so ancient. It was the gcne- 
the ancient custom, that the people took it from the priest ie into 
in their hands, as may be gathered out of Tertullian, L720. hands. , 
de Spectac. cap. de Munere*; Eas manus quas ad Dominum 
extuleris, &c. and out of S.Greg. Naz. Orat. in Sor.© Procidit 
ante altare, ibique venerata est, deinde manibus etiam sumpsit 
Eucharistiam, et ad oculos ceterosque sensus admovit. From 
whence we have another custom of the Christians, now also 
used among many, that they touched their eyes, their nose, 
their temples and forehead, with the Sacrament before they 
did eat it, as being confident that there was such virtue and 
force in it, that it would make all their senses the more 
happy by it, and less subject to evil desires. And these 
things men did and do naturally, more than out of any 
injunction; therefore Maldonat confesses‘, that in divers 





tres causas fuisse arbitror. Unam, quod 
precem mysticam vocaverint totam ac- 
tionem, cum qua hec verba conjuncta 
sunt... . Secundam, quod sacerdos hee 
verba non pronuntiat in sua persona, 
sed Christi: ipse autem, quantum in 
se est, oret. Itaque quamvis forma 
verborum non sit precatoria; tamen a 
sacerdote tanquam preces dicuntur.... 
_ Tertiam, quod hee verba sint quasi 
_ coronis quedam precedentium oratio- 
- num, guibus finitis fiat corpus Christi. 
_ Propterea dixerunt, oratione fieri Corpus 
_ Christii—Maldonatus de Sacramentis, 
_ de Eucharistia, part. i. quzstio vit, 
col. 91. See the whole passage. | 
_ » [Ibid. cols. 92, E, 93, A.]} 
© [Concil. Tolet. 1V. (A.D. 633.] 
can. 18. Concilia, tom. vi. col. 1457, 


B. | 
{Ulas manus quas ad Deum ex- 
tuleris, postmodum laudando histrio- 
nem fatigare—Tertullian. de Specta- 


4 
_ 


1 





culis, cap. 25. Op. p. 85, C. This may 
refer only to the lifting up the hands 
in prayer. | 

€ (Te Ovo.acrnplw mposwimre: werd 
miorews... Kal Ti moet; TE Ovotaorypip 
Thy Kepadryy éEavTis mpocbcioa... eita 
TQ Tap EavTjs papudkw ToUTH Td Toya 
may émadreipovoa kal ef mov Tt THY GyTI- 
TUTwY TOU Timiov THuaTos 7) TOU aiuaros 
nh xelp €Onoabpicey TovTO KaTamyvioa 
Tois ddxpvow @ Tod Oabuaros' &rna- 
Oey ed0ds aicbouevn HS owrTnpias.— 
S. Gregor. Nazian. Orat. viii. in laudem 
Sororis Gorgoniz, cap. 18. Op. tom. i. 
p. 229, C.] 

f [Unde relictam esse credo consue- 
tudinem in multis locis, ut laici quando 
non communicant, dum Eucharistia 
ostenditur, manus tendant quasi ges- 
tientes manibus sumere, deinde ad os 
et oculos admoveant.— Maldonatus de 
Eucharistia, part. ii, arg. iii. conj. 9. 
col. 194, E.] 


First 


SERIES. 


ao.aeee 


112 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


places among the very papists, where they have not the 
Sacrament delivered them, but are there present only to see 
the priests take it, the people use to lift up their hands 
(when the Sacrament is lift up by the priest) as earnestly 
desiring to have it given into their hands, and then they put 
their hands to their mouth and to their eyes, as applying the 
virtue of it unto them ; which very one thing might admonish 
the priests and governors of that Church, what an injury 
they do to the people in keeping that blessed food from them, 
for which their very bowels do so yearn with devotion. 

Kneeling.| Kneeling here, for all the puritans’ objection’, 
hath reference as well to the minister himself, as to the peo- 
ple and other ministers. 

And when he delivereth the bread he shall say, The Body of 
our Lord Jesus Christ which was given for thee, &c.| “ After 
the sacrifice is ended, let all in order receive our Lord’s 
Body, with shamefacedness and fear, as coming to the body 
of the king. Let the women also, with their heads veiled, 
come in order. Let the bishop give the oblation, saying, 
The Body of Christ. And let him that receiveth say, Amen. 
When the rest receive, let the 33rd Psalm be said.” This 
was the old order, as appeareth by Clem. Const. 1. 11. c. 61, 
and |. vii. c. 20. 

The Body of our Lord, &c. . . . unto everlasting life.| Here 
are the people to answer Amen, according to all ancient and 
modern liturgies. From whence we gather, that the priest 


_ did not deliver the Sacrament to any, or say, “Take and eat,” 


before the communicants had professed their faith of Christ’s 
Body to be exhibited unto them. Dicit tibi sacerdos, Corpus 
Christi, et tu dicis Amen, hoc est, Verum; non otiose dicis 
Amen, sed jam confitens, quod accipias Corpus Christi. Ambr. 
de Sacr. lib. iv. cap. 54. He ore quo Amen in sanctum pro- 


& [‘‘ The priest is expressly directed 
in the next rubric before, to stand, and 
not directly to kneel now.’’—Survey, 
ex. 22. quere 57. p. 70. ] 

h [kal 6ray dvevex Of, peTadapBaveTw 
éxdotn Takis Kal? Eavthy Tov KupiaKxod 
ompatos Kal Tov Titov aiuaros év rdget 
Meta aidods Kal evAaBelas ws Bacirews 
mpocepxduevor odpati. Kal af yuvaikes 
KaTakekaAuupevat Thy Kepadyy, as ap- 
pole: yuvainay Taker mpooepxeoOwoay.— 


Apost. Const., lib. ii. c. 57. Cone. tom. i. 
col. 297, D, E. Kal 6 wey énioxomos 
d:5é7w Thy mpocpopay A€éywv" coma 
Xpiotud' Kal 6 dexduevos AcyéeTw, ’"Auhy. 
Warpmds 5€ AeyéoOw tpiaxoords tplros 
év T@ pmetarauBdveoOa mdvtas Tovs 
Aoirovs.—Ibid., lib. viii. c. 13. col. 484, 


E. 
; {S. Ambros. de Saer., lib. iv. cap. 
5. § 25. Op. tom. ii. col. 372, D.] 





i, 

a 

3 
r 


7 





Le rea a 


tuleris. Tertull. de Spect. cap. 26): 
_charistiam Christi accedam, et respondebo Amen, cum de 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 


charitate dubitem porrigentis*? Out of which words it is 


_ plain, that when the priest reached it the people answered, 
_ Amen, or, So it is. 
of St. Paul, 1 ad Cor. cap. 14: Quomodo respondebit Amen 
_ super tuam Eucharistiam ? 


To which also divers divines apply that 


And Eusebius}, lib. 7, cap. 8, 
Kecl. Hist., tells the story, how Dionysius, the bishop of 
Alexandria, refused to baptize a certain Christian, of whom 


t there was some doubt whether he had been rightly baptized 
or no; because, says he, it is enough that he hath so often 


received the holy Sacrament with true Christians, and with 
all the rest answered Amen to the words of the priest. So 
Leo, Serm. 6, de jejunio Sept. Mens.™ Hoc ore sumitur quod 
fide creditur, et frustra ab illis Amen respondetur, a quibus 
contra id quod sumitur disputatur. 

Body, &c.... Blood of our Lord, &c. .. . unto everlasting 
life.| :??W-?: “To this prayer of the priest every communicant 
should say Amen; and then, and not before, take the Sacra- 
ment of him. Universam Ecclesiam, accepto Christi sanguine, 
dicere | Amen] asserit Aug. ad Orosium, quest. 49". Quare 
duo hic egregia habemus. 1. Universam Ecclesiam  siimeatea 


113 


Qua conscientia ad Eu- 


_ esse calicis; et 2. Cum accipiant et dicere, Amen. 
“ Kt quanquam schismatici cavillantur debitum genuflexionis 


i 
we 


{ 
Kf 


ritum ; 
catorius 2??? 


orantibus, quis alius gestus usurpandus nisi suppli- 


[Post- Communion. | 
The Lord’s Prayer.| That the Lord’s Prayer was said at 


ij [ Tertullian. de Spectaculis, cap. 25. 
Op. p. 85, C.] 
k [S. Hieron. Epist. 82. ad Theophi- 


1 [°Orep eye Bev obk érdAunoa Tol}- 


= § 2. Op. tom. i. col. 510, A. ] 





oa, pioas abrapKy Thy ToAux pdvioy 


_ abT@ Kowwviay eis TodTo ‘yeyovévat 
KA 


a 





Ebxapiotlas yap éraxotcayra Ka) cvve- 
 mipdervyidwevoy Td Spay kal Tpawétn Ta- 


 parrdyra Kal Xeipas eis brodoxiy Tis 
 aylas tpodijs mporelvavra, Kal Tair ny 
_ karadeEduevoy kal TOU gépatos Kal Tob 


‘alwaros To xuptou petacxdyra, ixdvy 


 xpdve, ovn dy e& bwapx7s avacKevdfew 


&tt ToAUHoayu.—Dionys, ap. Euseb. 
Hist. Eccl., lib, vii. cap. 9. p. 330.] 


COSIN. 


m [{S. Leo, Serm. xci. cap. 3. Op. 
tom. i. col. 357. ] 

. [Sanguis Abel significat sanguinem 
Christi quo universa Ecclesia accepto 
dicet, Amen. Nam quam clamorem 
faciat universa Ecclesia dum potatur 
sanguine Christi, et dicet Amen, tu 
ipse si potes considera.—Dialogus 65 
Question. Aug. et Orosii. Quest. 49. 
Opus spurium seu consarcinatum ; inter 
Op. S. Aug. tom. vi. in Append. col. 16, 
D. But see cont. Faust. Man., lib. xii. 
cap. 10. tom. viii. col. 882, B. Habet 
enim magnam vocem Christi sanguis 
in terra, cum eo accepto ab omnibus 
gentibus respondetur, Amen. | . 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


114 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


the celebration of the Sacrament, it was the institution of 
Christ and His apostles; S. Hier. lib. iii. contr. Pelag.2 And 
by the Church it seems ever to have been used in this place. 
S. Ambr. 1. v. de Sacr. 1, iv.?: Ante verba Christi panis ap- 
pellatur ; ubt Christi verba deprompta sunt, jam. non panis sed 
Christus dicitur. Quare ergo in oratione Dominica, que postea 
sequitur, ait Panem nostrum, &c. So St. Aug, Serm. 28, de 
verbis Domini4, et Ser. in vigil. Pasch,*: Ecce ubi peracta est 
sacrificatio, dictmus orationem Dominicam. Which growing 
afterwards by negligence and course of time to be displaced, 


St. Gregory set right again, lib. 7. ep. 615, and was not the 


first author of it, as some suppose, 


O Lord and heavenly Father.| In King Edward’s first 
Service-book, this prayer was set before the delivery of the 
Sacrament to the people, and followed immediately after the 
conseeration ; and certainly it was the better and the more 
natural order of the two; neither do I know whether it were 
the printer’s negligence, or no, thus to displace it. For the 
consecration of the Sacrament being ever the first, it was 
always the use in all liturgies to have the oblation follow 
(which is this), and then the participation, which goes before, 
and after all, the thanksgiving, which is here set next before the 
Gloria in Excelsis ; in regard whereof, I have always observed 
my lord and master‘ Dr. Overall to use this oblation in its 
right place, when he had consecrated the Sacrament to make 
an offering of it (as being the true public sacrifice of the 
Church) unto God, that by the merits of Christ’s death, 


© [Sie docuit Apostolos suos, ut quo- 
tidie in corporis illius sacrificio cre- 
dentes audeant loqui, Pater noster, &c. 
. +» De baptismatis fonte surgentes et 
regenerati statim in prima communione 
corporis Christi dicunt et Dimitte nobis 
debita nostra.—S. Hieron. Dial. cont. 
Pelag., lib. iii, § 15. Op. tom. ii. col. 
786, A.J 

P [S. Ambros. de Sacr., lib. v. cap. 4. 


- § 24. Op. tom. ii. col. 378, B. The 


words are, Jam non panis dicitur, sed 
corpus appellatur. ] 

_ 4 [This sermon is taken from S. Am- 
bros. de Saer., lib. v. cap. 4, See the 
spurious sermons in S. Aug. Op. tom.v. 
in Append. Serm. 84. col. 152. ] 


r [S. Aug. Serm. 227, de Temp. Op. 
tom, v. col. 974, C.] 

s [There was a complaint that St. 
Gregory ordered the Lord’s Prayer to 
be said immediately after the Canon. 
He replies, Orationem vero Dominicam 
idcirco mox post precem dicimus: quia 
mos apostolorum fuit ut ad ipsam so- 
lumrnodo orationem oblationis hostiam 
consecrarent, &c. He seems to have 
only settled the place in which it was 
to be used, and the manner of saying 
it.—S. Gregor. Epist., lib. ix. Ep. 12. 
(al. 64.) Op. tom. i. col. $40, D.] 

t [The words “ my lord and master” 
are added by interlining, Cosin was 
Bp. Overall’s chaplain. ] 





ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 115 


which was now commemorated, all the Church of God might 
receive mercy, &c. as in this prayer; and when that was 
done he did communicate the people, and so end with the 
thanksgiving following hereafter. If men would consider the 
nature of this Sacrament, how it is the Christian’s sacrifice 
also, they could not choose but use it so too; for as it stands 
here it is out of his place. We ought first to send up Christ 
unto God, and then He will send Him down unto us. 


OF THE SACRIFICE OF THE EUCHARIST. 


This our sacrifice of praise, &c.| So the ancient fathers 
were wont to call this sacrifice, Sacrificitum laudis et gratiarum 
actionis ; not exclusively, as if it were no other sacrifice but 
that; for they called it also, Sacrificium commemorationis, 
and Sacrificitum Spiritus, and Sacrificium obsequii, &c., and 
which is more, Sacrificium verum et propitiatorium. All other 
ways but this the Eucharist, or any other sacrifice we make, 
are improperly, et secundum quandam similitudinem, called 
sacrifices. The true and proper nature of a sacrifice is, 
* To be an* oblation of some real and” sensible thing, made only 
to God°*, for the acknowledging of man’s‘ subjection to God, 
and of God’s supreme dominion over man, made by a® lawful 
minister, and performed by certain’ mysterious rites and 
ceremonies, which Christ and His Church have ordained. 
a. When we say it is an oblation, we say two things. 1. That 
the true nature and essence of a sacrifice consists only, tan- 
quam in genere, in the offering of it; and therefore we do 
not say that the killing of the thing to be sacrificed, or any 
other ceremony to be used about it, is a sacrifice ; for that is, 
and ever was called the sacrifice, which belonged to the 
priest’s office alone; now the Levites might kill the sacrifice, 
but none could offer it except the priest. Odblatio ergo est 





« [The passage which follows in the 
text is from Maldonatus on the Eu- 
charist ; his words are: Sacrificium est 
oblatio sensibilis rei sensibilis, facta soli 
Deo, ad agnitionem humane infirmitatis 
et nature, et ad professionem divine 
majestatis, a legitimo ministro, ritu ali- 
quo mystico. Cum oblationem vocamus, 
duo significare volumus. Primum, non 
in alia re naturam et essentiam sacri- 


ficii consistere, tanquam in genere, nisi 
in oblatione. Quare nec mactationem 
victime, neque ullam aliam ceremo- 
niam, sacrificium vocamus : quia Scrip- 
tura oblationem appellat sacrificium, 
non mactationem. Nam id nominat 
sacrificium, quod solus faciebat sacer- 
dos; solus sacerdos offerebat victimam, 
ministri mactabant. Sola ergo oblatio 
in Scripturis significatur esse proprium 


12 


First 
SERIES. 


First 
SERIES. 


116 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


genus sacrificit. 2. That every offering is not called a sacri- 
fice, but every sacrifice is an offering; for there were many 
things that private men came to offer, as first-fruits, &c. 
which were not called sacrifices. 6. When we say, it is a 
sensible thing, it is to shew that every act of our religion, 
whereby we profess our subjection unto God, is not properly 
ealled a sacrifice in Scripture; for we profess that by con- 
fessing of our sins, by prayer, by praise, &c., which are no 
proper sacrifices. c. As a part of that worship which is due 
only to God. And therefore, Exod. xxii., there is a command, 
that no sacrifice be made but only to God alone; and it is 
so His due, that without it we hardly acknowledge Him to 
be our God,” [and for that reason we profess it here in this 
offertory, that it is our bounden duty and service so to do*.] 
“Therefore, as there never was, nor could be, any religion 
without a God, so there never was, nor can be, without sacri- 
fice, being one of the chiefest acts whereby we profess our 
religion to Him that we serve. d. The end of all sacrifices, 
For though every sacrifice had some special end whereunto it 
was made, yet there was none of them all that had not this 
for their general aim and scope. e. To exclude many private 
offerings, which in Scripture are called sacrifices, but not 
properly. jf. The general form of a sacrifice, which consisted 
always in some céremonious offering of it, the better to ex- 
press the mystery contained in it; and therefore tenths and 


genus sacrificii. Alterum est, non _ alii, quam soli Domino. Quamobrem 


omnem oblationem sacrificium vocari; 
tamen omne sacrificium dici oblatio- 
nem in Scriptura. Offerebant enim 
multa etiam homines privati, ut ele- 
mosynas, primitias ; sed non vocaban- 
tur sacrificia, 

.... Cum dicimus, esse rei sensibilis, 
volumus indicare non omnem actum 
religionis, quo profitemur nostram sub- 
jectionem, et agnoscimus Numen, vo- 
cari sacrificium proprie in Scriptura. 
Nam id facimus etiam per confessio- 


nem, per Psalmodiam, per orationem, . 


sed hee in Scriptura non dicuntur pro- 
prie sacrificia. Cum addimus, facta 
soli Deo, volumus docere sacrificium 
esse unum actum externum ex illis, 
quos habet illa species religionis, que 
debeturesoli Deo, queque proprio no- 
mine vocatur Latria...... fuit pro- 
hibitum Exod, xxii. ne quis sacrificaret 


sicut religio nulla fuit unquam, neque 
esse potuit sine Deo: ita esse non 
potuit sine sacrificio: quia unus actus 
est, quo maxime religionem profitemur. 
Cum dicimus fieri in agnitionem hu- 
mane subjectionis, et professionem di- 
vine majesiatis, declaramus finem om- 
nium sacrificiorum.' Nam etsi erant 
alii fines speciales singulorum sacri- 
ficiorum; tamen sacrificium nullum 
erat, quod non hoc generaliter spec- 
taret.. Cum dicimus, esse oblationem 
factam a legitimo ministro, excludimus 
multas oblationes privatas, que vocan- 
tur in Scriptura sacrificia, ut eleemo- 
synz et primitie. Cum dicimus fieri 
debere ritu mystico, declaramus gene- 
ralem formam sacrificii, que semper 
consistit in aliqua ceremonia habente 
aliquid mysterii, sicut erat illa in sacri- 
ficio pro peccato, ut sacerdos imponeret 


x [These words are added in the margin. ] 





ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 117 


first-fruits, though they were offered unto God, yet because First 
they were not offered up ritu mystéico, pent were no proper _ SERIES: 


sacrifices. 

* But those which were Cit called sacrifices were three 
ways distinguished ; in matter, in form, in the end. In mat- 
ter, either when the thing to be offered was alive, and it was 
called victima; or res solida, but not viva, and it was called 
immolatio (as the heathens were wont to call their sacrifices 
immolationes a mola, or a molendo) ; or res liquida, and it was 
called libamentum. And besides these, we find in Scripture 
seven appellations of a sacrifice, by way of analogy only, but 
not truly and properly. In form, either when all the sacrifice 
was consumed by fire, and it was called holocaustum; or part 
of it by fire, and part of it by the priest, and it was called 
hostia pacifica. In the end, either when it was offered for 
the profession of God’s supreme dominion, and it was called 
holocaustum, which was all burnt, to signify that it was all 
and wholly from God, whatsoever man enjoyed; or for the 
obtaining of remission of sins, and it was called the sin-offer- 
ing; or for thanksgiving after victory, &c. and it was called 


hostia pacifica. 


‘ 


“Therefore, because the chief and general end of every sa- 
crifice was to acknowledge God’s majesty and dominion over 


manus super caput victime.... Qua- 
propter hac etiam de causa decimz 
et primitiz, etiamsi Deo offerebantur, 
quia tamen non offerebantur Deo ope- 
ratione mystica, non erant proprie 
sacrificia. 


Ea autem que proprie dicebantur 


sacrificia, tribus modis distingueban- 
tur, materia, forma, et fine. Ma- 
teria, aut quia id quod conferebatur, 
erat res viva, et vocabatur victima; 
aut res solida, sed non viva, ut cum 
offerebatur simila, sal, et alia hujus- 
modi, que proprie dicebantur immola- 
tiones: sicuti etiam apud prophanos 
authores hujusmodi sacrificia a mola 
vel a molendo immolationes appella- 
bantur. Aut quod offerebatur, erat res 
liquida, ut vinum, et cetera, et hec 
proprie dicebantur libamenta. Préter 
hee reperimus in sacris literis, septem 
modis dici sacrificium i improprie, et per 
analogiam proprii ac veri sacrifici. 
Forma autem distinguebantur sacri- 
ficia: quia aliquando tota res, que 
offerebatur, consumebatur igni, et vo- 


cabatur holocaustum; aliquando pars 
una igne absumebatur, par altera ede- 
batur a sacerdotibus, quod fiebat in 
sacrificio pro peccato; aliquando una 
pars incendebatur, altera edebatur 4_ 
sacerdotibus, tertia ab iis, qui hostiam 
obtulerant, ut in sacrificio quod voca- 
batur hostia pacifica. Fine autem dif- 
ferebant sacrificia etiam tribus modis: 
quia aliquando non in aliam finem 
offerebantur, quam in agnitionem di- 
vine majestatis, ut Holocaustum, quod 
propterea totum comburebatur, ut sig- 
nificaretur, totum esse Dei quicquid 
boni habent homines: aliquando ad 
obtinendam remissionem peccatorum, 
quod aliquando vocabatur Peccatum, 
absolute, aliquando sacrificium pro pec- 
cato: aliquando etiam offerebatur sacri- 
ficium in gratiarum actiohem, propter | 
adeptam victoriain, vel aliam rem pros- 
pere gestam, atque hee vocabatur, hos- 
tia pacifica..... 

Ergo, quia quod precipue efficie- 
batur in omni proprio sacrificio, id erat, 
ut homines agnoscerent suam infirmi- 


First 
SERIES. 


1 [ Wisd. 
lil. 6; a 
mistake 
copied from 
Maldona- 
tus. ] 


118 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


the world, hence it is, that every act almost which did but 
shew that, was called in Scripture a sacrifice, in analogy to 
the other. As, 1. when men submit themselves to God in 
their souls; so Psalm li., “ A broken spirit is a sacrifice to 
God.” 2. When men offered up their “ bodies as lively sacri- 
fices,”” Rom. xii., by keeping them pure and clean from sin. 
3. By taming and afflicting the body, Heb. xi.', Zanguam 
holocausti hostiam accepit eos. 4. By words, Immola Deo 
sacrificium laudis vitulos labiorum. 5. By works of mercy, 
Heb. xiii., “for with those sacrifices God is well pleased.” 
6. The whole giving up of a man’s self to God, Rom. xv.; 
Philip. 1. 7. The profession of all ministerial functions in 
divine things, because by that service men profess themselves 
to be subject and servants unto God, Rom. xv., Obsequit mei 
oblationem.” Now the Eucharist, though by way of analogy 
it may be called a sacrifice many of these ways, yet the true 
and real nature of it, in the offertory, is to acknowledge 
God’s majesty and our misery, and to appease His wrath 
towards us, to get blessings from Him, to make Christ’s 
bloody sacrifice effectual unto us. See the notes upon this 
word, in the words of the consecration, fol. praced.’ 

And so, though it may analogically be called a sacrifice 
most of the seven ways, yet formally and truly it may be 
called a sacrifice also, in the very natural signification of a 
sacrifice, for aught I know any harm should come on’t. [Not 


Et: ‘hostiam vociferationis reddam 


tatem et divinam potentiam; factum 
tibi.’ Et: ‘reddemus vitulos labiorum 


est, ut id omne, quo illud idem quoquo 


modo efficiebatur, sacrificium vocare- 
tur in Scriptura. Fit autem hoc pri- 
mum, cum animo homines sese sub- 
mittunt Deo, ideo spiritus contribu- 
latus vocatur sacrificium. Secundo fit 
corpore, quando continetur ne labatur 
in ea vitia, ad que quis proclivis est. 
Quapropter aliquando sacrificium voca- 
tur continentia corporis, ut ad Roman. 
xii. Obsecro vos, ut exhibeatis corpora 
vestra hostiam viventem. Tertio fit 
corpore domando et affligendo, prop- 
terea omne martyrium et omnis corporis 
castigatio dicitur sacrificium ad Hebr. 
xi. [Sap. iii. 6.] ‘Tanquam holocausti 
hostiam accepit eos.’ Quarto, id ipsum 
fit verbis, sicuti cum profitemur Deum 
esse omnium rerum bonarum largito- 
rem. Quare oratio vocalis, hymni, et 
laudes vocantur sacrificium, juxta il- 
lud: ‘Immola Deo sacrificium laudis.’ 


nostrorum,’ inquit Oseas. Quinto, hoc 
‘profitemur operibus pertinentibus ad 
corpus, sicuti eleemosynis, ideo elee- 
mosynas vocat hostias D. Paulus ad 
Hebr. xiii. ‘ His enim hostiis promere- 
tur Deus.’ Sexto, integra declaratio 
hominis Deo facta et corpore et animo 
dicitur sacrificium, sicut conversio gen- 
tiwum apud D. Paulum ad Roman. xv. 
et ad Philippens. ii. Septimo, omnis 
professio et functio divini muneris ita 
appellatur: quia ea etiam ratione ho- 
mines profitentur, se esse ministros et 
servos Dei. Quocirca Paulus ad Rom. 
XV. vocavit ‘obsequii sui oblationem.’— 
Maldonatus, ibid., cols. 217—219.] 

Y [This alludes to the note on the 
word ‘‘that His precious death” in 
the prayer of consecration, beginning, 
“This word refers.’”? See above, pp. 


106; sqq.] 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 119 


Frrst 


in strictness and rigour of speech; for so was there never : 
ERIES. 


_ sacrifice, nor never shall be any, but Christ’s alone*.] 

. See the exposition of the place in Malach. apud Maldon. 
de Euch., p. 3265, and of Psalm cx. Tu es sacerdos, &c.7, 
both which the ancient fathers with one consent under- 
stand of the sacrifice of the Eucharist, and the priests of 
_ the gospel. 

That by the merits and death of Thy Gon Jesus Christ, and 
through faith in His Blood, we and all Thy whole Church?, 
&c.| This is a plain oblation of Christ’s death once offered, 
and a representative sacrifice of it, for the sins, and for the 
benefit, of the whole world, of the whole Church; that both 
those which are here on earth, and those that rest in the 
sleep of peace, being departed in the faith of Christ, may 
find the effect and virtue of it. And if the authority of the 
ancient Church may prevail with us, as it ought to do, there 
is nothing more manifest than that it always taught as much. 
And it is no absurdity to say”, here is an oblation made for 
all, when it is not only commemorated to have been once 
offered, but solemn prayers are here also added, and request 








made, that it may be effectual to all. 


x [These words in brackets are added 
in the margin, as a note to the word 
“* formally.’’ ] 

y [The exposition of Malachi i. is in 
the same part of Maldonatus, col. 220 
and 221.] 

2 (Ibid. col. 173.] 

« [On these words Bp. Cosin added, 
vid. pag. preced., that is, the passage 
“which consists of more than those 
that are upon the earth,’’ in the note on 
the prayer of Consecration, p. 107. ] 

b [This is in substance taken from 
Cassander’s Consultatio, except the 
words in brackets, which are written 
at the side of the note, in the same 
hand, and apparently at the same time. 
The words of Cassander are: Cum 
igitur hec victima semel oblata sit pro 
communi totius orbis salute, tam vi- 
yorum quam mortuorum, et ad eam 
salutem quotidie efficiendam perpe- 
tuam virtutem obtineat, nihil est ab- 
surdi, si in sacra hac actione pro vivis 
et mortuis, et communi omnium salute 
offerri dicatur, quando non solum pro 
iis oblata commemoratur ; verum etiam 


- solenni prece, pro iis omnibus efficax et 


salutaris esse postulatur, unde Chrysos- 
tomus in vili.cap. Matth, ‘‘ [dcirco,&c.,”’ 


S. Chrys. in 8 Matth.: 


[51d 5 nal 6 iepeds bwép Tis oixoupévns, 
brép Tav TpoTépwy, bTép THV voir, drEp 
TeV yevynlévtwy TeV Eumporbev, bwEp 
TOY METR TAUTA eooméevwy els Nuas, €v- 
xapioTeiy KeAEvEL, THS Ovolas mpoKel- 
pévns exetyns.—In Matt. Hom. xxv. al. 
xxvi. Op. tom. vii. p. 311, A, B.] Idem 
alibi, Hom. 77. in Johan. ‘‘ Ideo, &c.” 
[Sia TodTo Kal ev Tots vot nplos dona 
CbueBo. &AANAOus, iva oi TwdAAOL yEVvd= 
peda, ev" ak em) TeV Gphyroy Kolvas 
morobuebar TaS ed xa, Arravevoyres bmép 
vooovytwy, Kal TeV KdpTwY TIS oiKoU- 
pévns Kal ys Kal Oadrdrrns. In Joan. 
Hom. Ixxviii. al. xxvii. Op. tom. viii. 
p. 464, D.}... Atque hac ratione hoc sa- 
crificium, quatenus sacerdotis pia sup- 
plicatione peragitur, non modo eucha- 
risticum, sed etiam propitiatorium dici 
possit, non quidem ut efficiens propi- 
tiationem, quod sacrificio crucis pro- 
prium est, sed ut eam jam factam im- 
petrans, quomodo ofatio, cujus hoc 
sacrificium species est, propitiatoria. 
dici potest.—Georgii Cassandri de Ar- 
tic. Relig. inter Catholicos et Protes- 
tantes controversis Consultatio. Art. 
xxiv. cap. De iteratione. Cassandri 
Op. p. 1000. } 


First 


SERIEs. 


120 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Idcirco altari assistens sacerdos, pro universo orbe terrarum, 
pro absentibus atque presentibus, pro his qui ante nos fuerunt, 
pro his qui postea futuri sunt, sacrificio illo proposito Deo nos 
gratias jubet offerre. Hom. 72. in Johan.: Ideo in mysteriis 
invicem salutamus ut multi unum efficiamur, et communes pro 
ceteris preces effundimus, et pro ipfirmis, et terre, maris, et 
universi orbis finibus, sacrificamus. 

And in this sense it is not only an eucharistical, but a pro- 
pitiatory, sacrifice. [And to prove it a sacrifice propitiatory”, 
always so acknowledged by the ancient Church, there can be 
no better argument than that it was offered up, not only for 
the living but for the dead, and for those that were absent, 
for them that travelled, for Jews, for heretics, &c., who could 
have no other benefit of it, but as it was a propitiatory sacri- 
fice: and that thus they did offer it, read a whole army of 
fathers, apud Mald. de Sacr., p. 342, &c. Nos autem ita com- 
parati sumus, ut cum tam multis et magnis authoribus errare 
malimus, quam cum Puritanis verum dicere.| “not that it 
makes any propitiation, as that of the cross did, but that it 
obtains and brings into act, that propitiation which was once 
made by Christ; and so. we may speak of prayer, for that is 
propitiatory too.” Why should we then make any contro- 
versy about this? They love not the truth. of Christ, nor the 
peace of the Church, that make these disputes between the 
Church of Rome and us, when we agree, as Christian Churches 
should, in our Liturgies: what private men’s conceits are, 
what is that to the public approved religion of either Church, 
which is to be seen in their Liturgies best of alk? For let 
the schools have what opinions and doctrines they will, and 
let our new masters frame themselves what divinity they list, 
as long as neither the one nor the other can get their fancies 
brought into the service of the Church, honest men may serve 
God with one heart and one soul, and never trouble them- 
selves with the opinions of them both. 

_ And here we offer and present unto Thee, O Lord, ourselves®, 
our souls’, and bodies’, to be a reasonable, holy, and lively 
sacrifice’’.| Cujus (oblationis a Christo semel facte) sacra- 
mentum quotidianum voluit esse Ecclesie sacrificium. Que 
. > [The words in brackets are added _ bodies’, sacrifice’, Bp. Cosin had writ- 


in the margin. ten these numbers, referring to those 
© [Over the words ourselves*, souls!, of Maldonatus. See above, p. 115.] 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 121 


“cum ipsius capitis corpus sit, seipsam per ipsum discit offerre. 


S. Aug. de Civis Dei, lib. x. cap. 20. 


We most heartily thank Thee.| :?: W:?: “When the Psalm 
is ended, let the deacon say, ‘ Let us give thanks to Him who 
has made us worthy to receive His holy mysteries,’ &c. 
Clem. Const. Ap., lib. viii. cap. 20%.” 

Those holy mysteries, with the spiritual food of the most 
precious Body and Blood, &c.| Before consecration, we called 
them God’s creatures of bread and wine, now we do so no 
more after consecration; wherein we have the advantage 
against the Church of Rome, who call them still creatures in 
their very mass after consecration; and yet they will be up- 
braiding us for denying the real presence, when-as we believe 
better than they: for after consecration we think no more of 
bread and wine, but have our thoughts taken wholly up with 
the Body of Christ; and therefore we keep ourselves to these 
words only, abstaining from the other, (though the bread re- 
main there still to the eye,) which they do not. And herein 
we follow the fathers, who after consecration would not 
suffer it to be called bread and wine any longer, but the 
Body and Blood of Christ. Ivren., lib. iv. cap. 34°; Justin. 
in Apol. 2£; Ambr. de his qui initiantur, cap. ix.€; Aug., lib. 
Sent. Prosp.® ; vide Cassandr. sik Art. 10%, 


a [at 6 didkovos Aeyéro, Mavoapevov 
Tov Pardovros. peTradaBdvres TOU Ti- 
plov caéuaros Kal Tod Titov alwaros 
TOD Xpiorod, edXapLOTHTwMEV T@ kara 
Edoavre nuas peradraBely tev aylwy 
avTod uvornplwv, K.T.A.—Const. Apost., 
lib. viii. cap. 13, 14. Concilia, tom. i. 
col. 485, A. | 
© [Quomodo autem constabit iis eum 
panem in quo gratiz actz sint, corpus 
esse Domini sui, et calicem sanguinis 
ejus, si non ipsum fabricatoris mundi 
_ Filium dicant.—S. Irenzus cont. He- 
2 res., lib. iv. cap. 38. (al. cap. 34.) § 4 
p- 251, 1. See also § 5. p. 251, 2. 
é quoted ‘above, p- 110, note s.] 








_ 2.) § 66. Op. p. 83, B. See the words 

* pried above, p. 169, note r.] 

m= - © [Ante benedictionem verborum 

— ceelestium alia species nominatur, post 
_ consecrationem corpus significatur. Ipse 

_ dicit sanguinem suum. Ante conse- 

_ ¢rationem aliud dicitur, post consecra- 


i f [S. Justin. Mart. Apol. 1. (al. Apol. | 


tionem Sanguis nuncupatur.—S. Am= 
bros. De Myster. (aliter de iis qui mys- 
ter. initiantur,) cap. 9. § 54, Op. tom. 
ii. col. 339, E. 340, A.] 

h {Nec similiter comprehendimus 
has duas species, quemadmodum ante 
consecrationem comprehendebamus, 
cum fideliter fateamur, ante consecra- 
tionem panem esse, et vinum quod na- 
tura formavit: post consecrationem 
vero carnem Christi, et sanguinem 
quod benedictio consecravit.—In the 
Decretum, par. iii. de Conseer. dist. ii. 
c. 41, these words are cited as from 
Augustinus, in libro sententiarum 
Prosperi. They are not in that book. 
See Corp. Jur. Can., tom. i. Cosin 
followed Cassander, who cites them 
thus. } 

i [De Coena Domini. ... Cum Ee- 
clesia non presens modo, verum etiam 
antiqua et catholica semper senserit, 
et docuerit, hoc sacramentum non in 
sola actione et usu consistere: sed post 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


122 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Very members incorporate.| Sic Cyrillus in Catech. Mystag.* 
Sumpto corpore et sanguine Christi ait nos fieri cvccdpovs, 
i.e. ejusdem corporis cum Christo, et inter nos, cvvaipovs, i. e. 
ejusdem sanguinis. 

And be also heirs through hope.| So the ancient fathers 
were wont to prove the article of our resurrection by the 
nature of this very Sacrament. Synod. Ephes, Alexandr.’, 
Cyrill. in Joh., lib. xii. cap. 58™, and Iren., lib. iv. cap. 347, 
and Tertull., de Resur. Car.°, and Ignat. sub finem Ep. ad 
Ephes.?, use this reason to exhort the people unto the fre- 
quent receiving of the Holy Communion; because (they say) 
it is pharmacum a0avacias, medicamentum immortalitatis, 
et antidotum rod pr) Oavetv; which if the men of this age 
would but set their hearts on, as they did, we should not 
have them set so slightly by the blessed Sacrament, as 
they do. : 

In ordinario Sarum iste hymnus dicitur ad initium misse. 


ipsam consecrationem...de panis et 
vini substantiis fieri corpus, et san- 
guinem Domini, neque benedictionis 
virtutem amitti: etiamsi ad usum pre- 
sertim infirmorum servetur, &c. The 
authorities given in this note are from 
this passage of Cassander, who gives 
also the testimonies of Lutheran di- 
vines on the subject, ubi supra. Op. 
p. 938.] 

k PEv timm yap Uprov, déd0Tal oor 
Td oGua’ Kar ey Timp olvov déd0Tal cor 
To aiua’ va yévn, meTaraBov cduatos 
kat alwatos Xpiorov, aicowpuos Kal ob- 
vaiyos avTov. OtTw yap Xpioropdpat 
yevducda TOU oduatos advtod Kal Tod 
aiuaros eis TH huérepa Siddueva, méAn. 
—S. Cyrill. Hierosol. Catech. 22. Mys- 
tag. 4. cap. 3. p. 320, C.] 

1 [karayyéAdovtes yap Toy Kare 
odpKka Odvatoy Tod povoryevoids viod Tod 
cod, Thy Te ex vexpav dvaBiwouw, Kar 
Thy eis ovpdvous avddn tu duodoyoovTes 
TH avaluaKTov, év Tals éxKAnolas Te- 
Aovuev Ovalav. obx as odpKa KowWhy 
Sexduevor’ wh yévorro’ ... GAN as 
Sworody GAndas; Kal idiay abtod Tod 
Adyou. Swh yap dv kara bow as Ocds, 
ered) yéyovey ey mpds Thy eavTod odp- 
ka, Sworowdy amépnvey avthy, K.T-A.— 
Synodi Alexandrini Nestorio, ap. Act. 
Conc. Ephesini (A. D. 431.) pars i. 
c. 26. Concilia, tom. vi. col. 951, C, 
D, E.] 

m [rpdomev yap kata xdpw cod TH 


pecOeter THs mvaoTiKhs edAoyias, eis xel- 
pas Sexduevor Tov Xpioroy, tva Kal juets 
Gpapdtws morevowuer, Ott Tov Tdi0v 
GANOaS Hryeipe vaby. St. yap H Kowwvia 
THS MvOTIKIS EvAOYias duoAoyla Tis éort 
THS dvacTdocews TOU XpioTod capes dy 
yévoito, K.T.A.—S. Cyrill. Alex. Comm. 
in Joan. Evang., lib. xii. (§ 58.) in 
c. xxi. 16. Op. tom. vi. p. 1104, E. 
1105, A, B.] 

n [w@s... Thy odpxa réyovow eis 
pbopayv xwpeiy kal wh meréexew THs Cwijs 
Thy Gd TOD THuaTos Tod Kuplov kal TOD 
aluaros av’tov Tpepomevnv;... ‘Qs yap 
amd ys &ptos mposAauBavéduevos Thy 
exkAnow Tov Oeov ovKéte Kowwds &pros 
éorly GAN edxapioria, éx Sto mpayud- 
TwY CuvedTHKviA, emiyelov TE Kal ovpa- 
viov’ otrws Kal TA CHmaTa Nuay meTa-~ 
AauBavovra tis evxapiotias unnéri elvan 
peapTa, Thy éAwida thy eis aidvas ava- 
aotdcews &xovra.—S. Ireneus cont. 
Heres., lib. iv. cap. 18. (al. cap. 34.) 
§ 5. p. 251.] 

° (Igitur ut retexam, quam Deus. 
manibus suis ad imaginem Dei struxit 
+++ quam sacramentis suis disciplinis- 
que vestiort... heccine (caro) non re- 
surget ?—Tertullian. de Resurrectione 
Carnis, cap. 9. Op. p. 530, D.] 

P ("Eva &prov kAarres, bs éorw odp- 
Makov G0avacias, dytidotos Tov amoba- 
veiv, AAG Civ év Inood Xpiorg 51d wWav- 
T6s.— : Ignat. Ep. ad Ephesios, cap. 20.. 
p. 17. 





. 


; 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 123 


[Gror1a IN Excexsis. | 


Glory be to God on high.| :?* W°?: “ Socrat. vi. 89. Hymnus 
Angelicus. “Avtipwova post communionem, D. Hilarii Pictav.*, 
S. Chrysost. ad Antioch. 57°.’ An hymn appointed by 
Clement, Const., lib. vii. cap. 47°. 

Hymnus angelicus ita dictus est, quia illum cecinere angeli in 
nativitate Domini usque ad—“ hominibus bona voluntas”—cuti 
addidere reliqua usque ad finem vari doctores. Concil. Tole- 
tan. iv. can. 12%. Quomodo conciliari possunt qui eum tribuunt 
Apostolis, ut Clemens in margine opposito citatus* ; et qui Te- 
lesphoro, ut Innocent III. lib. ii. cap. 20%; et gue Symmacho 
ut Berno, cap. xxv. de Off. Miss.2; et qui Sancto Hilario Pic- 
taviensi, ut Alcuinus, cap. de celebr. Misse*, qui verius in La- 
tinum transtulit, ait Bovius ad Clementis locum citatum>. Ut 
autem dicatur in Missa, constituit Telesphorus ex Innocentio 


4 ['Iyvdris *Avtioxeias THs Supias, 
Tpttos amd Tod amooTdAvuv TMérpov énl- 
okotos, ds Kal Tots amroordéAols avTots 
ovviiérpupev, dmraciay eldev ayyéAwy, 
dia Tay ayTipdvev tuvwv thy aylav 
Tpidda duvevyvtwv, x.7.A.—Socrat. H.E., 
lib. vi. cap. 8. p. 322. ] 

* [Audiat orantis populi consistens 
quis extra ecclesiam vocem, spectet ce- 
lebres hymnorum sonitus, et inter divi- 
norum quoque sacramentorum officia 
responsionem devote confessionis ac- 
cipiat.—S. Hil. in Ps. lxv. § 3. Op. 
tom. i. col. 196, C.] 

* [Ad Pop. Antioch. Hom. Ilvii. 
S. Chrys. Op. Latine, tom. v. fol. 193. 
Paris, 1546. - These homilies are made 
up out of portions of S. Chrysostom. 
The passage referred to is from the 
homilies on S. Matthew, c. lv. (lvi.) 
§ 5, 6. tom. vii. p. 561, sqq. on the 
hymn of thanksgiving after meals used 
by the monks, portions of which are 
the same as the Gloria in Excelsis, | 

* [These words are added to Bp. An- 


: drewes’ note by Bp. Cosin. The refer- 


ence is to the Apostolical Constitutions, 
lib. vii. c. 48. (Concilia, tom. i. col. 
452, D.) where a form of the Gloria in 
Excelsis' is given, with the title, rporevx) 
€wOivh, but no rule for its use. } 

" [Reliqua que ibi sequuntur eccle- 


- Siastici doctores composuerunt.—Cone, 








Tolet. IV. A.D. 633, can. 15. Concilia, 


tom. vi. col. 1454, A.] 

x [That is in the preceding note of 
Bp. Andrewes. } 

y [Innocent. III. de sacro altaris 
mysterio, lib. ii. c. 20. fol. 79. Antw. 
1550. Here follows. the statement of 
Berno. | 

z [Berno mentions both Telesphorus 
and Symmachus; his words are, De- 
nique Telesphorus Papa a beato Petro 
octavus, constituit, ut ante sacrificium 
hymnus diceretur Angelicus, hoc est, 
Gloria in excelsis... De Symmacho 
quoque Papa ita legimus: Hic consti- 
tuit, ut omni die Dominica vel nata- 
litiis martyrum, Gloria in excelsis 
hymnus diceretur.—Berno de Off. 
Misse, c. 2. ap. Hittorp. p. 358. i. 
C, D.] 

« [... Hymnum in nativitate Salva- 
toris ab angelis decantatum: sed a B. 
Hilario Pictavensi postea auctum et 
consummatum,— Alcuin. de divinis 
Officiis, ec. de celebratione Missz, ibid. 
p. 68.i.D. But in the previous chap- 
ter he has almost the same words as 
Berno, attributing the appointment of 
its use to Telesphorus and Symmachus, 

“TP 66. ii. D.] 

[De Cee Na Apostolicis, 
B. Clemente Romano authore, libb. 
viii. Jo. Carolo Bovio interprete; scho- 
lia, p. 466. Lugd. 1565. ] 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


124 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


loco citato. Atque idem asserunt Damasus*, Rabanus4, et alii 
complures apud Durandume, lib. i. cap. 14. 

We end with this hymn, in imitation of our Saviour, 
Matt. xxvi. 30. Et decantato hymno exierunt. 


‘2: W -? Here the congregation ariseth, and having made 
their adoration, they go towards their seats to a little private 
devotion. In their way, at the foot of the choir, stands the 
cippus pauperum, into which every man puts a small piece of 
silver; whiles the priest, standing still at the altar, readeth 
the exhortatory sentences for alms, ut supra. 

When all are composed in their seats, he proceeds to the 
blessing. 

Then the priest, or bishop, if he be present, shail let them 
depart with this blessing.| For by the canons it is not law- 
ful for a priest to do it in the presence of the bishop, nor 
that, nor many other things; not to baptize, not to absolve, 
not [to] consecrate the sacrament, not to preach, &c., with- 
out the bishop’s special command. Concil. Hispal. ii. can. 7°. 


{ON THE RUBRICS AT THE END OF THE COMMUNION SERVICE. | 


By all that follows it appears, that the mind of the Church 
of England ever was and is to have a Communion and com- 
memorative sacrifice of Christ’s death every day, that the 
people will but come to it, and make up a sufficient number. 


© [This reference has not been 
found. | 

@ [Rabanus Maurus de Institutione 
Clericorum et ceremoniis Ecclesia, lib, 
i. c, 32. Op. tom. vi. p. 13, C, D. et 
apud Hittorp. p. 278, B,C. His state- 
ment is the same as that of Berno and 
the others cited. ] 

€ [No authorities are given by Du- 
randus; he says, (lib. iv. cap. 13, n. 
3, 4.) que verba (Laudamus te) et 
sequentia a beato Hilario dicuntur ap- 
posita fuisse, et preecedentia solum an- 
tiquitus dicebantur in Missa. Inno- 
centius tamen III, dixit illa a Teles- 
phoro Papa addita fuisse: alii vero a 
Symmacho Papa, Symmachus Papa 
constituit tam in Dominica die quam 


in Natalitiis Martyrium ‘ Gloria in ex- 
celsis ad Missam cantari,’ &c. ... Dic- 
tus quoque Telesphorus Papa precepit 
illum cantari ad Missam nocturnam 
natalis Domini quam et ipse instituit. ] 

f [ Neque coram episcopo licere pres- 
byteris in baptisterium introire nec 
presente antistite infantem tingere aut 
signare, nec pcenitentes sine precepto 
episcopi sui reconciliare, nec eo prx- 
sente sacramentum et corporis et san- 
guinis Christi conficere, nec eo corain 
posito populum docere, vel benedicere, 
aut salutare, nec plebem utique exhor- 
tari—Conc. Hispalense, II. (c. A.D. 
3 can. 7. Conc., tom. vi. col. 1406, 
B 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 125 


Upon the holydays, if there be no Communion, shall be said 
all that is appointed at the Communion, until, &c.] Under 
which Sundays are comprehended, for certainly Sundays are 
holydays too; and therefore it is but a peevish cavil of the 
puritans, to ask by what warrant men may read the second 
service upon Sundaysé. 

If there be no Communion.| Not that there should be no 


Communion when they be read, (as we use now-a-days,) but 


err oo” —s 





that though there be no Communion for want of devout com- 


SERIES. 


pany, yet they should be read: so that by the authority of ~ 


our Church, I cannot see how it will be avoided, but that 
every Church is bound daily to propound the Sacrament to 
the people, that such as be disposed might receive, and the 
fault not be laid upon the Church, or the priest that serves. 
And therefore upon these holydays in King Edward’s time, 
if the people were negligent to come to the Communion, the 
curate was to read the exhortation to them which begins, 
“ Dearly beloved, forasmuch,” &c. And in cathedral churches, 
and other places like them, it was then appointed, that there 
should be daily Communions, and so there were’. See the 
Rubric before the Exhortation there in King Edward’s first 


Service-booki, 


Shall be said all, &e.] When the people first, and after- 
wards the priests and clergy in some places, gave over their 


& [The rubric was altered to “ Sun- 
days and holydays’’ in 1662. ] 

h [The first rubrics at the end of the 
Communion Service in the first book 
of Edward VI. were as follows :—Upon 
Wednesdays and Fridays, the English 
Litany shall be said or sung in all 
places, after such form as is appointed 
by the king’s majesty’s injunctions; or 
as is or shall be otherwise appointed by 
his highness. And though there be 
none to communicate with the priest, 
yet these days (after the Litany ended) 


the priest shall put upon him a plain 
_albe, or surplice, with a cope, and say 
all things at the altar, (appointed to be 
said at the celebration of the Lord’s 

Supper,) until after the offertory: and 


then. shall add one or two of the collects 
aforewritten, as occasion shall serve, by 


his discretion, And then, turning him 
to the people, shall let them depart 


with the accustomed blessing. 


And the same order shall be used all 
other days, whensoever the people be at 
church, and none disposed to commu- 
nicate with the priest. 

Likewise in chapels annexed, and 
all other places, there shall be no cele- 
bration of the Lord’s Supper, except 
there be some to communicate with 
the priest. ] 

i | These rubrics are :— 

In cathedral churches, or other places 
where there is daily Communion, it shall 
be sufficient to read this exhortation 
above written once in a month. And 
in parish churches, upon the week days, 
it may be left unsaid. 

And if upon the Sunday or holyday 
the people be negligent to come to the 
Communion, then shall the priest ear- 
nestly exhort his parishioners to dis- 
pose themselves to the receiving of the 
Holy Communion more diligently, say- 
ing these or like words unto them. ] 


First 
SERIES. 


Survey, 
Exc. 24, 


pp- 76, sqq. 


‘perfect the celebration. 


126 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


devotion, and neglected the old use of communicating every 
day; yet the prayers, and lessons, and other the appendants 
to that holy office they omitted not, specially such as were in 
orders. Socrates tells us in his History, lib. v. cap. 21*, that 
it was the custom of the Church of Alexandria so to do, yet 
upon every Wednesday and Friday alone. Durandus calls 
this “the dry mass,” lib. iv. Div. Off.c. 11. And the Ordo Ro- 
manus™ styleth it Missa nautica, as allowable to men at sea, 
where storms and tempests would not suffer them well to 
It is mentioned also by Thomas of 
Walden, lib. vi. tit. iv. cap. 35". So that this order and ordi- 
nation of our Church is not altogether either without cause, 
or without example. | 

And if there be not above twenty persons, &c.| *?* W °?: 
Communionis tempore dum populus conveniat. Gelas. 

And there shall be no celebration, &c. except there be a great 
number.| This was made against the Solitarie Misse that the 
papists are now-a-days content withal. It was an abuse 
springing up about Charlemagne’s time (it seems) to have 
the priest communicate and say mass, though there were 
none to celebrate with him. Therefore the council of Mentz 
then made a canon against it°. Nullus presbyter solus missam 
cantare valet recte, ut nobis videtur. Quomodo enim dicet, Domi- 
nus vobiscum, &c. They say yet, ut nobis videtur ; fain would 


they have had the abuse amended, and yet the Communion 


* [Abd@s 5& ev "AAckavdpela rH Te- 
Tpad. Kal TH Aeyouevyn Tapackeun ypa- 
gal re dvayiwdonovra Kal of diddoKadror 
TavTas Epunvetovol, TavTa Te TA TUVE- 
tews yivera Sixa tis Tév wvoTnpiwr 
TedeTHs.—Socrates Hist. Eccl., lib. v. 
cap. 22. p. 295. ] 

1 [Durandus had said, n. 22, that 
no one could (regularly) celebrate 
twice in one day; he here adds, that 
one who could not celebrate might say 
a part of the service: Potest quoque 
sacerdos unam missam cum sacrificio, 
et aliam siccam conficere. Missa sicca 
dicitur, quoniam si sacerdos non po- 
test conficere, quia forte jam celebravit, 
vel ob aliam causam, potest accepta 
stola, epistolam et evangelium legere ; 
et dicere orationem dominicam, et dare 
benedictionem, &c.—Durandus, Rat. 
Div. Off, lib. iv. c. 1. n. 23.] 

™ [This authority, and the others 


cited by Cosin, are found in Cassander, 
Liturgica, c. xxxiv. p. 84. He adds 
the words, In Libello ordinis missz se- 
cundum usum Romane ecclesie. The 
editor has not found the statements re- 
ferred to. ] 

1 [Ceeterum totum lectionem et can- 
ticorum variorum officium antemissale 
est, quod item dicitur missa catechu- 
menorum; quod item sine canone, 
commemoratio misse, vel memoria no- 
minatur, et in ipsis domibus aut agris, 
vel super mare dicere fas est.—Thomas 
Waldensis, Doctrinalis (lib. vi.) de 
Sacramentalibus, tit. iv. c. 85. ad fin, 
tom. iii. fol. 72. b. Venet. 1571.] 

° [Conc. Moguntiacum, A.D. 813, 
can. 43. Concilia, tom. ix. col. 338. 
The words ‘ ut nobis videtur’ ought to 
come next after presbyter. In Nicholls, 
the council of Nice was substituted for 
Ment. } 





ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 127 


not neglected for all that. They knew not well whether they 
should forbid it absolutely and simply if there were no com- 
pany ; as indeed, better were it to endure the absence of the 


people, than for the minister to neglect the usual and daily 


sacrifice of the Church, by which all people, whether they be 
there or no, reap so much benefit. And this was the opinion 
of my lord and master Dr. Overall. In the primitive Church 
it is most plain, both by the canons of the old councils (Can. 
Apost. 10°) and by the writings of the ancient fathers, that 
some part of the people at least never failed to communicate 
with the priest. And when the multitude began to grow so 
negligent that, as they say, vel duo vel nemo, either few or 
none would come to assist the ministers, and to participate 
with them of the blessed Sacrament; how ill it was taken at 
their hands, and how hardly. censured, we may know from 
that sharp increpation which St. Chrysostom used towards 
them in cap. i. ad Eph. Homil. 3°. Eiki Ovcia xaOnpepivi, 
&c. Yet. when this lewd custom had so far prevailed, that 
the indévout people put the priest to do his office alone, there 
wanted not them, among the learned and religious men, that 
condemned as well the one as the other, the people’s retch- 
less indevotion, not to communicate with the priest, and the 
priest’s presumption, to communicate alone, terming such a 
Communion to be no Communion at all, at least an unlaw- 
ful and imperfect Communion. Walafridus, de rebus Eccl.’, 
cap. 22, (circa finem,) Quamvis cum soli sacerdotes missas cele- 
brent, {intelligi possit| illos ejusdem actionis esse co-operatores, 
pro quibus tune celebrant[ur officia et quorum personam in qui- 
busdam responsionibus sacerdos exequitur ;] tamen fatendum est, 
tllam esse legitimam missam, cui intersunt sacerdos, respondens, 
offerens atque communicans, sicut ipsa compositio precum evi- 
denti ratione demonstrat. 

And in the cathedral or collegiate churches where be many 
ministers and deacons, they shall all receive the communion 
with the minister every Sunday at the least, except they have 


4 [rdvras Tovs eiciovtas micros, kal col. 27. A.] 
TaV Ypapav akovovTas, uh wapauévor- * fein Ovola Kabnuepwh, eixf} mwa- 
Tas 5¢ TH mpocevxh, kal TH ayia weTa- peoThkapey TO Ovotacrnple’ ovdels 6 ue- 
Aner, as aratliav éumowovvTas tH éx-  Téxwv.—S. Chrysost. in Ephes., cap. 


 KkAnoig, apopiferOar xph.—Can. Apo- Hom. 3. § 4, Op. tom. ii. p. 23. A.] 
_ Stol., can. 9. (alit. 10.) Concilia, tom, i. s [Apud Hittorp., p. 349. B.] 


First 


SERIES. 





128 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


a reasonable cause to the contrary.| Quod de clericis solis 
possit concedi, quorum vita debet esse religiosior quam laicorum. 
Dist. 4. Deniquet. Nam quoad laicos illi non arctantur ad com- 
municandum, nist ter in anno, ut in rubr. seq. 

A rule (if it were observed) tending to the great advance- 
ment of piety, and somewhat answerable to the practice of 
the primitive Church. 8. Basil. ad Cesar. Patric. Epist. 289" : 
Singulis certe diebus communicare bonum et fructuosum est. 
Walafrid. de reb. Ecel., cap. 20*: Cum Christianis et maxime 
clericis, omnes dies in ferias deputantur, videtur ratione plenis- 
simum, ut per singulos dies sacris occupemur officiis, et quando 
mentis vel corporis graviores macule non obsistunt, Panem et 
Sanguinem Dominicum, quibus sine vivere non possumus, jugiter 
ambiamus, ... imitantes Ecclesie primitive studium salutare, 
de quo in Act. Apost. legitur ; “ Erant autem... quotidie perse- 
verantes in templo, et fractione panis, eum exultatione et simpli- 
citate cordis laudantes Deum.” Item 8. Cypr., ep. 56%. ad Thi- 
berit. ita scribit: Idcirco quotidie calicem Sanguinis Christi 
bibunt, ut possint et ipst propter Christum Sanguinem fundere. 
So it held in many places, and for many years together. But 
in after-ages, the number of Christian people waxing more, 
and their piety less, they gave their priests leave to commu- 
nicate every day by themselves, serving their own turn with 
once or twice a week, and well if that; as upon the Satur- 
day and Sunday, (whereof St. Austin tells us, ep. 118. ad 
Jan.” ;) nay, in process of time, the very priests themselves, 
in some churches, followed this indevotion of the people, 


* [Decret. pars i. dist. iv. c. 6. ap. 
Corp. Jur. Can., tom.i. The words are 
not a quotation of the Decretum ; it is 
cited for the principle that the clergy 
are bound to stricter observance than 
the laity; the words speaking of the 
clergy’s fasting are, ‘‘eorum qui laicali 
ordine consistunt, observantiam, sicut 
loco, ita religione preecellant.’’ | 

" [eal 7d Kowwvety dt Kal Exdorny 
huepay, Kal peradrapBdvew tod aylov 
odépmatros kal aliwaros Tov Xpicrov, Ka- 
Adv kal érwpeAés. But he goes on to 
say that, however, they communicated 
four days in the week, on Sunday, 
Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, and 
on saints’ days. tjuets wévrovye TeTAp- 
Tov Kal Exdorny EBdoudda Kowwvodper, 
év TH Kupiakh, ev Th TeTpddi, Kad ev TH 


mapackeuy, Kal TS caBRdT@, Kal év Tais 
hAAats juepaus, cay 7 mvhun aylov tivds. 
—S. Basil. Epist. xciii. ad Cesariam 
Patriciam de Communione, Op. tom. 
iii. p. 186. D.] 

x fApud Hittorp., p. 344. C, D, 
where Cosin has ‘‘ fractione panis.” Wa- 
lafrid’s words are, “ frangentes circa 
domos panem sumebant cibos.”’ | 

y [S. Cypr. Ep. 58.ad Thybaritanos 
(ed. Pam. 56.) Epist. p. 120. ] 

* [Alii quotidie communicant Cor- 
pori et Sanguini Domini, alii certis 
diebus accipiunt; alibi nullus dies 
pretermittitur, quo non offeratur, alibi 
sabbato tantum et dominico, alibi tan- 
tum dominico.—S. Aug. Epist. liv. ad 
Januarium, § 2. Op, tom. ii. col. 124. 


‘ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 129 


against whom was the ninth canon made in the fourth coun- 
cil of Toledo*, Nonnullus sacerdotum in Hispania reperimus, qui 
Dominicam orationem non quotidie, sed tantum die Dominica 
dicunt. It was then accounted a fault, which would now be 
held a good Christian virtue, if priests might be so often seen 
to communicate. But whatever they did then in Spain, and 


First 


SERIES. 


we would be glad now to have done in England, it is well~ 


known that the general practice of the Church ever was to 
have the priests and clerks devoutly at their office every day, 
and to communicate of Christ’s Sacrament as often. Microl., 
cap. 46>: Ad quotidiane missarum solennia, non generaliter ab 
omnibus, sed a religiosis convenitur, qui plus spiritualibus negotits, 
guam secularibus invigilant. 

Scrip. vetustus de Divin.” Off. dana Cassand. ine: sy Cues” 3 
In Dominicis tantum et festis diebus fideles, qui secularibus so- 
lent occupari negotiis, conveniebant, ad audienda solennia:... 
in diebus vero profestis ministri et votis adstricti intererant missa@. 
Regino, lib. i. de Eccl. Discip.1: Ut presbyter vel diaconus, vel 
quilibet Ecclesia deputatus clericus, si intra civitatem fuerit, vel 
in loco, in quo Ecclesia est, aut vici, aut ville, ad Ecclesiam ad 
sacrificium quotidianum non venerit, clericus non habeatur, st 
castigatus non emendaverit. Which holy order was here (no 
doubt) regarded by our Church, when she enjoined her 
priests and deacons to communicate every Sunday at least, 
supposing it ought and should be done by them oftener. 
And from hence was it, that the Collects, Epistles, and Gos- 
pels were appointed upon the Sundays and holydays; and a 
rubric made at the beginning of this Service-book®, for the 
Collects, Epistles, and Gospels to serve all the week long, that 
were used on the Sunday, that is, at any time when there is 
a communion on the week-day. And certainly, though it 


* [Cone. Tolet. IV. A.D. 633. can. x, 
Concilia, tom. vi. col. 1454. B.] 

, {Micrologus de ecclesiasticis ob- 
servationibus, c. 46, apud Hittorp., p. 
400. B. 

© [Ex libro vetusto de Divinis Offi- 
clis, cited by Cassander, Liturgica, 
cap. 33. De variis generibus missarum, 
publicis, quotidianis, peculiaribus seu 
privatis, et solitariis. Op., p. 82. Most 
of the authorities cited here are in 
Cassander. ] 

4 [Reginonis abbatis Prumiensis de 

COSIN, 


ecclesiasticis Disciplinis libri duo. lib. i. 
c. 181. (ex Concil. Toletano I. c. 5. 
Concil. tom. ii. col. 1471, E.) p. 94 
ed. Viennz. 1765. ] 

® [Before 1662 this rubric was at 
the beginning of the Prayer-book, 
under the heading, ‘‘ The order how 
the rest of Holy Scripture is to be 
read;’’ and in these words, “* Ye must 
note ‘also that the collect, epistle, and 
gospel appointed for the Sunday, shall 
serve all the week after, except there 
fall some feast that hath his proper.’’ } 


First 


SERIES. 


130 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. ’* 


be no fault to read the Collect, Epistles, and Gospels, either — 
upon Sundays or week-days; yet to read them, and not to 
go on with the Communion, is contrary to the intent of our 
Church, that, if there were any company, intended a com- 
munion every day, for the continuing the daily sacrifice in 
the Church, ever used till Calvinism sprung up, and leaped 
over into England. 

Odo Camerac., in Canonem: Cum primitus misse sine col- 
lecta (i.e. collectione populi) non fierent, postea mos tnolevit 
Ecclesia solitarias, et maxime in caenobiis, fiert missas'. Solita- 
rie autem dicebantur, que solis clericis presentibus fiebant. 

And, to take away superstition, it shall suffice that the bread 
be as usual.| Survey, Exc. 26, p. 79. 

And if any of the bread and wine remain, &c.| Which is not 
to be understood of the bread and wine already consecrated, 
but of that which remains without consecration ; for else it 
were but a profanation of the holy Sacrament to let the 
curate have it home to his own use. Quam indigne faciunt, 
gui hae rubrica ad tantum facinus excusandum abutintur, ist 
viderint. It was Nestorianism once to think, that the conse- 
crated bread, if it were kept in crastinum, became common 
bread again, if St. Thom., p. 3. q. 72. a. 11. ad 2%, quoteth 
St. Cyril of Alexandria right, Hp. ad Calen. Vide Maldon., 


de Sacram., p. 120". 


f [Odonis Cameracensis Episcopi 
Sacri Canonis Expositio; dist. ii. ap. 
Bibl. Patrum Max., tom. xxi. p. 222. 
Lugd. 1677. The words “ solitarie,’’ 
&c. are not in Odo. } 

& [This reference is incorrect, The 
passage intended is in S. Thom. Aqui- 
nas, Summa Totius Theologia, pars iii. 
quest. 76. art. 6. ad secundum, where 
he speaks of quidam ponentes quod 
Corpus Christi non remaneat sub hoc 
sacramento, si in crastinum reservetur. 
Contra quos Cyrillus dicit, &c. The 
same passage of S. Cyril is cited by 
him in the Aurea Catena on S. Luc. 
c. xxii. with the reference Ep. ad Ca- 
losyr. ‘‘Insaniunt quidam dicentes 
mysticam benedictionem cessare a 
sanctificatione, si que ejus reliquize 
remanserint in diem subsequentem: 
non enim mutatur sacratum corpus 
Christi, sed virtus benedictionis et 
vivificativa gratia jugis in eo est.” 


The Greek was found by Cardinal Mai 
in the Vatican MS., which contains 
S. Cyril’s commentary on S. Luke, and 
it is printed by him in the Classici Auc- 
tores, tom. x. p. 375, note. KupfAdov 
mpos Kadroglpiov. Maivoyral ye why ot 
Aéyovres Gmpaxreiy eis ayiacudy Thy 
pvotixhy evAoyiay, ef drouetvor Achpa- 
vov avrijs eis Erépay juépay* ov yap 
&AAowdTa & Xpiords, ovde rd dyiov 
avrod caua petraBAnOjoera’ GAN 7H 
THs evaAoylas Stivauis Kal % Swomods 
xdpis, Sinverhs oti év adr. } 

h [Maldonatus cites (p. 185) the 
words out of S. Cyril on S. Luke, which 
in the Aurea Catena immediately pre- 
cede those quoted in the last note, as 
Cassander does, (see below, note 1,) as 
if they were those of the Epist. ad Ca- 
lor. prefacing the words, ‘* Divus Cy- 
rillus in ea epistol. que ab omnibus 
citari solet ad Colloridium.’’ ] 





131 


There was order taken for it of old in the Church, which 
were well to be observed still, that No more should be brought, 
at least consecrated upon the altar, than would suffice to com- 
municate the people, and if any remained, that the priests 
should reverently receive it. Tanta in altari holocausta offe- 
rantur, quanta populo sufficere debeant. Quod remanserit (ni- 
mirum ex holocaustis et elementis consecratis) non servetur in 
crastinum, sed cum timore et tremore clericorum diligentia con- 
sumetur. Clem. PP. Ep. 2. de Consecrat. distinct. 2. c. tribus 
gradibusi, 

Bread and wine, &c.| It is confessed by all divines, that 
upon the words of consecration the Body and Blood of Christ 
is really and substantially present, and so exhibited and given 
to all that receive it; and all this not after a physical and 
sensual, but after a heavenly and invisible, and incompre- 
hensible manner: but yet there remains this controversy 
among some of them, whether the Body of Christ be present 
only in the use of the Sacrament, and in the act of eating, 
and not otherwise. They that hold the affirmative, as the 
Lutherans, in Conf. Sax.*, and all Calvinists do, seem to me 
to depart from all antiquity, which place the presence of 
Christ in the virtue of the words of consecration and bene- 
diction used by the priest and not in the use of eating of 
the Sacrament, for they tell us that the virtue of that con- 
secration is not lost, though the Sacrament be reserved either 
for sick persons or other. Whereupon Cassander', Consul. 
Ar. 10, saith, They are mad, qui dicunt mysticam benedictionem 
Sacramenti cessare, aut virtutem suam amittere, sique reliquie 
remanserint in dies futuros: non enim mutabitur SS. Corpus 
Christi, sed virtus benedictionis, et vivificativa gratia jugis in 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION, 


i [Ap. Decretum, pars iii. de conse- 
cratione, dist. ii. c. 23, apud Corp. Jur. 
Canon., tom. i. The passage is taken 
out of a spurious epistle of S. Clement, 
Epist. ii. ad Jacobum fratrem Domini 
de sacratis vestibus et vasis, printed in 
the Concilia, tom. i. p. 99. A, B.] 

* [Docentur etiam homines, sacra- 
menta esse actiones divinitus institutas, 
vt extra usum institutum res ipsas non 
aabere rationem sacramenti, sed in usu 
instituto in hac communione vere et 
substantialiter adesse Christum et vere 
exhiberi sumentibus corpus et san- 
guinem Christi—Confessio doctrine 


Saxonicarum Ecclesiarum synodo Tri- 
dentine oblata, A.D. 1551. cap. 16. 
(p. 282. ap. Syllogen Confessionum, 
Oxon. 1827.)] 

1 [See above, note g. Cassander, 
Consultatio, art. x. p. 938, says, Cyril- 
lus ad Colossyrium: nec dubites an 
hoc verum sit eo manifeste dicente: 
Hoc est Corpus Meum: Insaniunt ergo 
dicentes, &c. He seems to have cited 
from the Aurea Catena, in which these 
words are found, with the marginal 
reference to the Epist. ad Colossy- 
rium, but the first clause is out of 
S. Cyril, on S, Luke. ] 


K 2 


First 


SERIES. 


132 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


ipso est. And this did most of the protestants grant and 
profess at first, though now the Calvinists make popish magic 
of it in their licentious blasphemy™. | 

To his own use.] We read in Clemens’, that after the Com- 
munion was done, the deacons took up that.which was left, 
and carried it in Pastophorium, the room where the priests 
were lodged. In Origen®, that it was not kept till the next 
day. In St. Jerome”, that after the Communion, they that 
had eaten it in the church spent all that remained of the 
oblations. In Hesychius4, that after the example of the old 
law, all that was left was cast into the fire. In Evagrius’, 
that it was an ancient custom at Constantinople, that if any 
of the Sacrament remained, young children were called from 
the school to eat it up; which was retained in France’, as in 
Concil. Matiscon. et J'uron., held under Charlemagnet. 


Of the frequent receiving of the Holy Communion". 


In the primitive Church, while Christians continued in 
their strength of faith and devotion, they did every day com- 
municate, as we read in the Acts of the Apostles, and in Epis- 


™ A line is worn out here, on the edge 
at the bottom of the page. 

" [kat drav mdvres weraddBwor Kab 
maoo, AaBdyrTes of Sidkovor Ta TEpir~ 
cevoavTa eiopepérwoay eis Ta TacTo- 
oépia.—Const. Apost., lib. viii. c. 13. 
Concilia, tom. i. col. 485. A.] 

° {Nam et Dominus panem, quem 
discipulis dabat, et dicebat eis; Acci- 
pite et manducate, non distulit, nec 
servari jussit in crastinum.—Origen. 
in Levit. (cap. v. 7. 15.) Hom. v. § 8. 
Op. tom. ii. col. 211. B.} 

P {In ecclesia convenientes obla- 
tiones suas separatim offerebant, et post 
communionem quecungue eis de sa- 
crificiis super fuissent, illic in ecclesia 
communem ccenam comedentes pariter 
consumebant. — Pseudo-Hieron. in 1 
Cor. xi. 20. S. Hieron. Op. tom. xi. col. 
931. D, E.] 

4 [Quod reliquum est de carnibus 
et panibus, in igne incendi precepit. 
Quod nune videmus etiam sensibiliter 
in ecclesia fieri, ignique tradi quecun- 
que remanere contigerit inconsumpta.— 
Hesychius in Levit., lib. ii. (in ¢. viii. 
$2.) ap. Bibl. Patr. Max., tom, xii. p. 86, 
C. Lugd. 1677.] 


* [200s madaby BovAeTa ava Thy Ba- 
oiAevovoay, bt ty word TL xpijud TOY 
ayiwv pepidwy tod &xpdvrov oduaTos 
Xpictovd tov Ocod juav evatopueivor, 
maidas a&pOdpovs petameumrovs yly- 
veoOar mapa tay eis xamal SidacKdAov 
gpoitéytwy, kal TadTa Katregblev.—Eva~ 
grius, Hist. Eccl., lib. iv. c. 36. p. 416. ] 

§ [Quecunque reliquie sacrifici- 
orum post peractam missam in sacrario 
supersederint, quarta vel sexta feria 
innocentes ab illo cujus interest, ad 
ecclesiam adducantur, et indicto eis 
jejunio, easdem reliquias conspersas 
vino percipiant.—Conc. Matisconense 
II. A.D. 585. can. 5. Concilia, tom. vi. 
col. 675. C, D.]} 

t [Presbyteri omnino admonendi 
sunt, ut cum sacra missarum solennia 
peregerint, atque communicaverint, 
pueris aut aliis quibuslibet personis 
adstantibus Corpus Domini indiscrete 
non tribuant.—Conc. Turonense III. 
sub Carolo Magno. A.D. 813. can. 19. 
ibid. tom. ix. col. 351. D.] 

2 [This note is on the rubric,—“ And 
note, that every parishioner shall com- 
municate at the least three times in 
the year, whereof Easter to be one,’’ } 


ros 


that Christ’s 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION, 


133 


tola Decretali Anastasii Pape, tom.i. Conc.* This custom con- 


tinued in Africa unto St. Cyprian’s! 


and after him unto 


St. Austin’s? time; in Milan, Rome, and Spain, unto St. Am- 
brose* and St. Jerome’s‘ time ; insomuch, that those words in hap 
the Pater Noster, “ Give us this day our daily bread,” they in- kp. O8 ad 
terpreted of the Eucharist, as being daily to be celebrated. 
But afterwards, when charity grew cold and devotion Januar. 
waxed faint, this custom grew faint withal, and within a 
small time began to be left off by little and little; and some Vv. cap. 4.° 
for carelessness, and other for a pretence of reverence, would 
communicate but once every week; the first not believing Ep. 28. 


Body was in the Sacrament, and therefore ¢ 
making no great account of it’. 


And the second not ac- 


First 
SERIES. 


1S, Cypr. 


de Orat. 


Bonif.? et 
118. ad 


3S. Ambr. 
de Sacr. lib. 


4 S. Hier. 
ad Lucin, 


ad Hedib, 
Ep. 150.4 
In Apol. ad 


Pammach. 


counting themselves worthy of so often receiving it, and pro lib. 
therefore abstaining, they said for reverence of the Sacra- 


x [This name was omitted by Nicholls. 
Anacletus seems to be meant. In the 
forged Decretal Epistle bearing his 
name, c. 4, are the words, * Peracta au- 
tem consecratione omnes communi- 
cent, qui noluerint ecclesiasticis carere 
liminibus. Sic enim apostoli statu- 
erunt et sancta Romana tenet ecclesia.” 
—Anacleti Pa. Epist. i. c. 2. Concilia, 
tom. i. col. 517, E. These are cited 
in the Decretum, pars iii. de conse- 
cratione, dist. ii. c. 10.] 

y [Hune autem panem dari nobis 

quotidie postulamus, ne qui in Christo 
sumus, et eucharistiam quotidie ad 
cibunt salutis accipimus, intercedente 
aliquo graviore delicto, dum abstenti 
et non communicantes a ccelesti pane 
prohibemur, a Christi corpore sepa- 
remur.—S. Cypr. de Orat. Dominic. 
Op. Tract. p. 147. ] 
- 2 [ Nonne semel immolatus est Chris- 
tus in seipso, et tamen in sacramento 
non solum per omnes Paschz solem- 
nitates, sed omni die populis immo- 
latur.—S. Aug.’ Ep. 98. ad Bonifacium 
(aliter Ep. 23.) § 9. Op. tom. ii. col. 
267, E. 

* (Alii quotidie communicant Cor- 
pori et Sanguini Domini, alii certis die- 
bus accipiunt? alibi nullus dies preter- 
mittitur quo non offeratur.—S. Aug. 
Ep. 54. ad Januarium, ed. Ben. (aliter 
Ep. 118) cap. ii. § 2. Op. tom. ii. col. 
124, C.] 

> [Si quotidianus est panis, cur post 
annum illum sumis, quemadmodum 
Greci in oriente facere consuerunt? 
Accipe quotidie quod quotidie tibi pro- 


sit.... Sic vive ut quotidie merearis ac- 
cipere. Qui non meretur quotidie ac- 
cipere non meretur post annum acci- 
pere.—S. Ambros. de Sacr., lib. v. cap, 
4. § 25. Op. tom. ii. col. 378, D.] 

¢ [De Eucharistia, an accipienda 
quotidie, quod Romana Ecclesia et His- 
paniz observare perhibentur, scripsit 
quidem et Hippolytus.—S. Hieron. 
Ep. 71. ad Lucidium (ed. vet. 28.) § 6. 
Op. tom. i. co]. 432, D.] 

4 [Illius bibimus sanguinem, et sine 
ipso potare non possumus, et quotidie 
in sacrificiis ejus de genimine vitis vere, 
et vinez Sorec, que interpretatur electa, 
rubentia musta calcamus, et novum ex 
his vinum bibimus de regno patris.— 
S. Hieron. Ep. 120. ad Hedibiam (ed. 
vet. 150.) quest. 2. Op. tom. i. col. 
818, C.] 

© [Scio Rome hance esse consuetu- 
dinem, ut fideles semper Corpus Christi 
accipiant, quod nec reprehendo nec 
probo.—S. Hieron. Ep. 48. ad Pamma- 
chium, ed. Vall. (aliter Apol. pro lib. 
cont. Jovianum) § 15. Op. tom. i. col. 
225, C.] 

f [edxapiorias kat mpoopopas ovk 
Gmodexovras, dia Td wh buodoyety Thy 
cbxapioriay odpxa elvar Tov owrijpos 
hay *Incov Xpiorod. —Theodoreti Era- 
nistes, Dial. iii. Impatibilis. Op, tom. 
iv. p. 154, D. This is a citation from 
S. Ignatius, (except t that our text of Ig- 
natius has mpocevxijs daréxovrat,) who 
was speaking of heretics that denied 
that our Lord had really suffered.— 
Epist. ad Smyrn. c. 7. p. 36.] 


Cae JOVe5 
cap. 6.¢ 
5 Theodo- 


retus, Dial, 
ert,f 


134 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Pied ment, because they would not make it too common; others 
————— said, which was the most likely, for love of themselves, be- 
cause they might have a little more liberty of life, than the 

often receiving of Christ’s Body would suffer them to have. 
In the Eastern Churches they grew to a worse neglect 
betimes; which in after-ages began to come into the Latin 
Church too. They fell there from every day to Sundays and 
Athanas holydays only. And from thence, semel in anno, once a year, 
Sods and no oftener, like the high-priest into the sanctum sanctorum. 
se rai The fashion that men have gotten now-a-days. S. Ambros.: 
lib.iv. S% qguotidianus est panis, cur post annum illum sumis, quemad- 

cap. 4.» — modum Graci in Oriente facere consueverunt ? 

Cone. La- In which regard, the bishops of Rome, and the councils 
oI, ta" Which were afterwards assembled, were fain to take order 


sok, Age for this general neglect of the holy Sacrament, and make 
then,, cap. Canons, that If men would be got to receive it no oftener, 
see Pa yet at least they should be forced to receive it thrice in the 
Distinct.ii. year, that is to say, at Christmas, Easter, and Pentecost ; 
cap. 16. but howsoever at Easter, or in Cana Domini, unless while 
ee they lived they would be thrust from the communion of the 
ii»; Cap. Church, and when they were dead, be kept from Christian 


Ep.Fabian, 
Pape ™; 
Car. Mag., burial. 


lib. ii. cap. 
45°; Burchardus, lib. iv. cap. 18»; Sententiarii, lib. iv. Dist. 124; 


Concil. Eliberitan., 


cap. 8°; Synod. Sext. Trull., et Antioch, ut Author est Zon. ad Can. 9. Apost.§ 


& [kal yap 6 réros éxeivos ev @ Ke- 
KAGoOa Td toThpidy dynow ovK jy éx- 
KAnola, mpecBirepos ov hv 6 Thy TéTov 
mapoKarv, nucpa Kal’ hv Maxdproy Tovro 
mevoinkevar pacly ovk fy Kkupiakh’ phre 
tolvuy éxxAnalas ovons éxel, unre Tod 
iepoupyotvros, wate THS huépas amas- 
Tovons, Totov 2) wéTe }} mod Tb woThpiov 
“KeKAaoT at pvoTiKdy.—S. Athanas. Apol. 
Cont. Arianos (al. Apol. 2.) Op. tom. i. 
-p. 133, E.] 

h [See above, note b, ] 

i [Omnis utriusque sexus fidelis 
... Suscipiens reverenter ad manus in 
Pascha Eucharistie Sacramentum.— 
‘Conc. Lateran. IV. A.D. 1215, cap. 21. 
Concilia, tom. xiii. col. 958, A. ] 

k [Ut si non frequentius, vel ter 
laici homines in anno communicent; 
nisi forte quis majoribus quibuslibet 
criminibus impediatur.—Cone. Turon. 
III. A.D. 813, c. 50; ibid., tom. ix. 
col. 357, A.] - 

. + [Ut cives, qui superiorum solen- 


nitatum, id est pasche, ac natalis 
Domini, vel Pentecostes festivitatibus 
cum episcopis interesse neglexerint... 
triennio a communione priventur ec- 
clesie.—Conec. Agathense, A.D. 506; 
c. 63. ibid., tom, v. col. 53], E.] 

™ [Item Fabianus papa ait; etsi non 
frequentius, saltem in anno ter laici 
homines communicent, (nisi forte quis 
majoribus quibuslibet criminibus im- 
pediatur) in Pascha videlicet et Pente- 
coste et Natali Domini.—Decret., pars 
iii. De Consecratione dist. ii. c. 16. 
ap. Corp. Jur. Can., tom. i. See Con- 
cilia, tom. i. col. 668, B. The passage 
does not occur in any of the so-called 
decretal epistles of Fabian. ] 

" [Ivo. Decret. pars ii. cap. 27. Op. 
par. i. pag. 57. Ed. Par. 1647. The 
same as in Gratian. ] 

° {Capitularium Karoli Magni et 
Ludovici Pii. libb. vii. Collecti ab 


“Angesiso Abbate, &c. lib. ii. c. 45, 


(tom. i. col, 750. ap, Capitularia Regum 





ON THE OFFICE OF HOLY BAPTISM. 135 


THE ADMINISTRATION OF BAPTISM TO BE USED IN THE CHURCH. 


It appeareth by ancient writers that the Sacrament of bap- 
tism in the old time was not commonly mmistered, but at two 
times in the year.| Tempus baptismi congruum est Sabbatum 
Sanctum Pasche, et vigilia Pentecostes. De Cons., Dist. 4. c. 
duo tempora, c. proprie, c. si quis, c. de catechumenis, c. si 
qui, et c. venerabilis*. Sed hoc in pueris propter periculum non 
servatur, secundum gloss. in d. c. venerabilis. Servari tamen 
debet in adultis, ut in eadem glossa; sed intellige, ubi mortis 
periculum non immineat, ut in cap. si qui, eadem distinct. 
Sacerd. Rom., cap. 7°. 

The font.| ‘The rites of baptism in the primitive times 
were performed in rivers and fountains, where the persons to 
be baptized stood up and received the sacrament; [....] 
which manner of baptizing the ancient Church received 
from the example of our Saviour, who was so baptized by 
John in Jordan. And surely this was convenient for that 
time, when their converts were many, and men of years. 
A reason also may well be, for that those ages were other- 
wise unprovided of fonts and such conveniences which are 
now in use. Which was the cause why this manner of bap- 
tizing was used also in after times, in such places where no 
fonts were. So Bede tells us, That some here in England 
were baptized in the river Swale in Yorkshire; and he gives 
the same reason, Nondum enim oratoria seu baptisteria, in 


Francorum Ed. Baluz. Paris. 1677,) 
respecting the words of the Council of 
Tours. | 

P [D. Burchardi Epise. Worma- 
tiensis, Decretorum, lib. vy. c. 17. Th 
same as in Gratian. | 

4 [P. Lombardi Sententiarum, libb. 
-iv. Lib. iv. dist. xii. § 8, the same 
words as in the Decretum, referring to 
Fabian. } 

* [Nec inter catholicos numerabitur 
qui in istis videlicet temporibus Pascha, 
Pentecoste, et Natali Domini non com- 
municaverit.—Concil. Eliberitan. A.D. 
805. Fragment. ex Can. 3. ab Ivone 
citat. Concilia, tom. i. col. 1002, A.] 

® [xavov ydp éori Ths ev Sapdiuch 
ovvddov, Kad Is év TpovAAw@ Erepos, Kah 
&AAos tis év *Avtioxela, as ef Tis em 
Tpeis Kuplakas Tapwy gy peTadrdBor, 
apopiferOw.—Zonaras in Can. Apost., 
can, 9. This is, that if one be present 


without communicating for three Sun- 
days successively, he should be ex- 
communicated. } 

t [Decretum, pars iii. De consecr. 
dist. iv. cap. 12—17, apud Corp. Jur. 
Can., tom.i. The gloss on chap. 17 
(venerabilis) says: Cum preter bap- 
tismum salus nulla infantibus, ut in 
eadem dist. c. nulla (i. e. cap. 42) non 
videtur circa eos observandum quod in 
istis capp... . continetur. .. ne przeve- 
niente morte &c....secus in adultis, in 
quibus simile periculum non timetur, 
quia in eis conversio mentis ad Deum 
baptismi vicem supplere non dubita- 
tur. ] 

" [The first words are: Congruitas 
temporum ; scil, Sabbatum, &c. Sacer- 
dotale ad consuetudinem S. Romans 
Ecclesia, &c.—De Sacramento Bap- 
tismi,c. 7. Ritus Sacramenti Baptismi, 
fol. 12, b. Venet. 1576. ] 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


136 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 


ipso exordio nascentis ibi Ecclesiae, poterant edificari. Eccl. 
Hist., lib. ii. cap. 14*. 

«‘The days we now live in have no other remainder of this 
manner of baptizing, than the very name; for hence it is 
that we call our vessels, which contain water for baptism, 
fonts or fountains. 

“But this ancient custom (the Church growing to some 
settled estate) was soon given over, and fonts were erected 
in private houses; yet because the violent persecutions in 
those older times barred the Christians from that conve- 
nience, their next recourse was to woods and devious places, 
and there they fitted themselves with such baptisterials as 
they could best provide. In more peaceable times they drew 
nearer, and made bold to build their fonts a little distance 
from the church: afterwards they obtained that they might 
be set in the church-porch, and at last got them into the’ 
church. But yet they were not placed in every church. At 
the first in the city churches only, where the bishop resided, 
(we now call them cathedrals,) unless in case of necessity ; 
and it was therefore called the mother church; because that 
as people in their mother’s womb were born men, so in the 
font of baptism, as in the Church’s womb, they were born 


‘Christians. In after ages, when it was found that the mother 


church was too far distant from some villages, consideration 
was had of this inconvenience, and from thence the bishop 
took occasion to transfer the right of baptism and burials to 
other rural churches, and this together with the right of 
tithes, made it a parochial church, such as now we have.” 
See Linwood, Provinc. Baptisterium, in verb. Baptismalis 
Ecclesia’. See Notes on Ridley’s View’. 


* [ Bede, speaking of Paulinus,‘Says : 
Hic quidem in provincia Berniciorum, 
sed et in provincia Deirorum, ubi se- 
pius manere cum rege solebat, baptiza- 
bat in fluvio Sulva, qui vicum juxta 
Cataractam preterfluit. Nondum, &c.— 
Hist. Ecel., lib. ii. c. 14, p. 95. Ed. 
Smith. ] 

Y [Ecclesia Baptismali: sive cathe- 
drali sive parochiali, tali viz. que habet 
populum; nam in ecclesia collegiata 
vel conventuali que non habet popu- 
lum, non debet esse Baptisterium, 18. 


. q. 2. precipimus. 


Dicitur etiam ecclesia Baptismalis 


respectu capellarum subjectarum, qua- 
rum plebis infantes in ea baptizantur, 
et non in ipsis capellis, imo ad ipsas 
ecclesias Baptismales, tanquam ma- 
trices, pro baptismo recurritur. —Lynd- 
wood, Provinciale, lib. iii. tit. 24. De 
Baptismo et ejus effectu, c. 1. Gloss, 
m, in verb. Baptisterium habeatur in 
qualibet ecclesia Baptismali lapi- 
deum. | 

* [The whole of this passage is ex- 
tracted from the notes to Ridley’s View, 
somewhat abridged. See A View of 
the Civil and Ecclesiastical Law, and 
wherein the practice of them is streitned, 


“ON THE OFFICE OF HOLY BAPTISM. 187 


First 


WATER. SERIES. 


In baptism the true and natural element of water is re- Water es- 
quired, such as John the Baptist used, when our Saviour meee 
came unto him, Matt.iii.; such as Christ spake of, Johniii. 234; 
such as the apostles used, Acts vii. 28, “They went both into 
the water ;” and Acts x. 47, “Can any man forbid water,” &c.; 
whereupon St. Paul, Eph. v. 26, calleth it lavacrum aque. 

With those heretics then, who refused to baptize with water Heretics 
we have nothing to do. St. Aug., Her. 59, tells us of them, ee 
Seleuciani et Hermiani.baptismum in aqua non accipiunt”. with water. 
The cause of their refusal St. Austin tells not; and Danzus® 

in his notes there must needs be guessing at it: he says it 

was the commonness and the baseness of that element, which 

they thought was not answerable to the dignity of so high 

a sacrament. He should have said, it was because they Hermians, 
pretended, that John the Baptist, comparing Christ’s bap- 5¢!ucins- 
tism and his own together, puts a difference between the 

materia of them both; “I baptize you with water, but He 

with fire.” For so said Philastrius concerning those heretics, 

one that was a little better acquainted with ecclesiastical 
antiquities than Danzus was: Seleucus et Hermias (says he) 

heretici animas hominum de igne et spiritu esse existimantes, 

nostro baptismo non utuntur, propter verbum hoc, quod dixit 
Johannes Baptista, Ipse vos baptizabit in spiritu et igne “, Jacobites, 
lisdem Baptiste verbis in errorem abrepti sunt Jacobite, qui t)0,>°?> 
non baptizabant aqua, sed ignis adustione ; nempe crucis figu- fire, and 

es ° burnt a 

ram candente ferro fronti imprimentes, as Bernardus Lunen- cross in the 


burgensis tells the story*; as if St.John the Baptist had frshead | 


iron, 


and may be relieved within this land, 
written by Sir Thomas Ridley, Knight, 
and Doctor of the Civil Law; the 
second edition, by J. G., Mr. of Arts. 
(‘John Gregory, who was author of 
the Jearned notes to this discourse.” 
Note in the copy in the Bodleian Li- 
brary.) Oxford, 1634, pp. 176, 177.] 
* [So in Cosin’s MS., see John iii. 5. ] 
b [Seleuciani vel Hermiani, &c.... 
Aquam, &c.—S. Aug. lib. de Heres., 
cap. 59. Op. tom. viii. col. 20, D. In 
Cosin’s MS. 69 is put instead of 59.] 
_ © [Baptismum in aqua fieri non pro- 
bant propter elementi vilitatem, quod 
est tamen signum a Christo institutum. 


—S. Aurel. Augustini, lib. De Heres. 
Lamberti Danzi opera emendatus, et 
commentariis illustratus, c. 59. p. 989. 
col. i. C. Danzi Opuscula, Genev. 
1583.] 

@ [Philastrii Ep. Brixiensis, lib. de 
Heresibus, iii. 6. Seleuci et Herminze 
heresis; ap. Bibl. Patr. Max., tom. iv. 
p. 707, G. Lugd. 1677, for ‘ nostro’ 
read ‘illo? The quotation ends at ‘in 
Spiritu Sancto et igne.’ ] 

© [The words of Bernardus Lut- 
zenburgus, speaking of the Jacobite, 
are; Parvulos suos circumceidunt; per 
adustionem in fonte vel in genis putant 
expiari a peccato originali, occasione 


First 
SERIES. 


Why the 
Sacrament 
of Baptism 
was insti- 
tuted in 
water. 


Beza’s 
novelty. 


138 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


meant the elementary, and not the heavenly and spiritual 
fire rather. Besides these, water hath been refused in bap- 
tism by the Pauliciani, men that would admit no material 
thing in the administration of sacraments, but perfected all 
with pronouncing the words only, and not the words of the 
Church neither, but Ego sum aqua viva, and there an end. 
Euthym. Panopl., par. ii. tit. 22, Voss.‘ 

For the analogy betwixt water purging our bodies, and the 
Blood or Spirit of Christ purging our souls, was this Sacra- 
ment instituted in that element. S.Ambr., lib. i. ef ii. de 
Sacr.¢ S. Hieron., Ep. ad Oceanum". Nec temere est, quod 
sapientissimus Deus hunc potissimum liquorem elegit, quando 
ut nihil eo est utilius ad vitam (dpiotov pév ddwp, saith Pin- 
darus) ita nec communius aut vulgatius est quicquam. He 
therefore that should luxuriously use wine, to christen withal 
instead of water, would sin no less, than he that should, under 
pretext of abstinence, (as St. Aug. saith the Aquarii did, 
Her. 64',) use water instead of wine for the administra- 
tion of the Eucharist. There is a frivolous question made, 
whether it were not lawful to baptize a man ready to die in 
some other liquor, if water be not so readily at hand; as if 
water were not as readily to be had as any other liquor what- 
soever. Howsoever, if this case should chance at any time 
to happen, it is the opinion of most divines that the Sacra- 
ment were better to be omitted, God accepting the will for 
the deed where it cannot possibly be done. Only Theod. 
Beza thinks otherwise, and is so bold as to write and make 
bold with Christ’s own institution in both Sacraments. Ep. ii. 
ad Th. filium*. Non errat, qui pro pane et vino substituat 


illius Johannis quod de Christo dicebat: § 6. Op. tom. i. col. 416 sqq. This 


Ipse vos baptizabit in Spiritu Sancto et 
igne; exponentes hoc solum ad lite- 
ram.—Bernardus Lutzenburgus, Cata- 
logus Hereticorum, lib. ii. ed. Colon., 
1529.] 

f (The words of Euthymius are; 
Quinetiam cum baptismum asper- 
nentur, illud tamen se fingunt susci- 
pere, nam evangelii verba baptismum 
existimant, quoniam Dominus, Ego 
sum, inquit, aqua viva.x—Euthymii Zi- 
gabeni Orthodoxe Fidei Dogmatica 
Panoplia, pars ii, tit. 21. (tit. 22 is 
against the Massalians) fol. 47.] 

s [S. Ambros. Op. t. ii. col. 349 sqq. J 

» {S Hieron. Epist.lxix. ad Oceanum, 


passage and that of S. Ambrose are 
referred to generally. The Latin which 
follows is not an extract from either 
of them. ] 

i [Aquarii ex hoc appellati sunt 
quod aquam offerunt in poculo Sacra- 
menti, non illud quod omnis Ecclesia. 
—S. Aug. Lib. de Heres. cap. 64. Op. 
tom. viii. col. 21, A.] 

k [ Epistolarum Theologicarum Theo- 
dori Bezz Vezelii, Epist. 2. ad Theo- 
dorum filium, p. 27. Ed. 2. ab ipso 
auctore recognita, Geneve, 1575. The 
first words are; Itaque a Christi sen- 
tentia nihil aberrat qui nullo prorsus 
novandi studio pro pane et vino sub- 





ON THE OFFICE OF HOLY BAPTISM. 139 


First 


ea que etsi non panem, similem tamen alimonia analogiam 2 
ERIES 


habeant. Desit etiam aqua, ego certe quovis alio liquore non 
minus rite quam aqua baptizarim, cum baptismus alicujus 
differri amplius cum edificatione non possit, nec debeat. And 
he says there are some superstitious schoolmen of his mind, 
fare them well together: let the person be baptized in water, 
as our book says, or not at all. 


THE COLLECT. 


Red Sea, figuring thereby, &c.| De quo Apostolus, 1 Cor. 
x. 2. Omnes baptizati sunt nube et mari. Ac mare quidem 
per quod Israelite transierunt aque baptismatis; columna 
nubis que noctu perlucebat, Spiritus Sancti fuit antitypon. 
S. Cyprianus, lib. iv. Ep. 6. ad Magnum', 8. Ambr., de iis qui 
initiantur mysteriis, cap. 3", S. Chrys. in tllud, 1 Cor. x. 
Nolo vos, &¢.", 8. Aug. Tract, 11. in Joh.° 

O merciful God, grant that the old Adam.| Instead of of exor- 
exorcism anciently in use, are these prayers placed:. Yet sp pactoaat 
if we had retained the old custom of exorcism itself, we had tration of 
done no more, than the Churches of Lunenburg, Brunswick, °*?"™ 
Saxony, and the best doctors among them, Justus Jonas, 
Georgius Spalatinus, Casper Cruciger, Fred. Miconius, Justus 
Menias, and others have approved, who teach most plainly, 
that infants, &c. are to be exorcised. Agend. Saxon. edit. 


stituat que, &c.; and the last, Desit 
enim aqua, et tamen baptismus alicu- 
jus... debeat, ego certe... baptiza- 
rim. 

1 [Quod exemplum cernimus in rege 
Pharaone, qui diu reluctatus, et in sua 
perfidia demoratus, tamdiu_resistere 
potuit et prevalere, donec ad aquam 
veniret: quo cum venisset, et victus est, 
et extinctus. Mare autem illud sacra- 
mentum baptismi fuisse declarat beatus 
Apostolus Paulus dicens: Nolo vos 
ignorare fratres, &c.—S. Cypr. Ep. 69. 
ad Magnum. (ed. Erasm. lib. iv. Ep. 7.) 
p- 187.] 

m [Tods tod Bawticuaros kal Tovs 
TOV uvoTnplwy mapdyer TUTOUS, K.T-A.— 
S. Chysost. in 1 Cor. Hom. xxiii. § 3. 
Op. tom. x. p. 203, A. ] 

" [Advertis quod in illo Hebreorum 
transitu. jam tunc sacri baptismatis 


figura precesserit, in quo Aigyptinz 
interiit, et Hebrzeus evasit, &c.—S. 
Ambros. de Mysteriis (de iis qui Mys- 
teriis initiantur, ed. Erasm.) c. 3. § 12. 
Op. tom. ii. col. 328, B, C.] 

© [Significabat mare illud rubrum 
baptismum Christi. Unde rubet bap- 
tismus Christi nisi Christi sanguine 
consecratus? Quo ergo perducit cre- 
dentes et baptizatos? ad manna. Ecce 
dico manna: notum est quid acceperint 
Judzi, populus iste Israel, notum est 
quod illis pluisset Deus de ccelo: et 
nesciunt catechumeni quid accipiant 
Christiani. Erubescant ergo quia ne- 
sciunt; transeant per mare rubrum, 
manducent manna: ut quomodo cre- 
diderunt in nomine Jesu, sic de ipsis 
credat Jesus,—S. Aug. in Johan. cap. 
3. Tract. 11. § 4. Op. tom, iil. par. 2. 
col. 377, B, C.] 


First 


SERIES. 


140 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Anno 1536, et renovat. Lips. 1564. Adjuro te, immunde 
Spiritus, in nomine > Patris, et Ya Filii, et Spiritus Sancti. 
Lisdem verbis, sed omissis S. crucis signaculis, utitur Ordinatio 
Ecclesia Lunenburg., Anno 1564, Wéittenb. impress. Folio N. 
ll. Ste et Agenda Ducis Julii, Anno 1569, emissa?. 


The minister shall command that the children be brought to 
the bishop to be confirmed by him.] 

S. Hieronymus, contra Luciferianost. An nescis (inquit) 
etiam Ecclesiarum hunc esse morem, ut baptizatis postea manus 
imponantur, et ita invocetur Spiritus Sanctus ? 


The dependence that Confirmation has upon Baptism. 


Extat illustre apud 8S, Cyprianum hac de doctrina Africane 
Ecclesia testimonium, ubi Cyprianus una cum Episcoporum 
synodo suam fidem luculenter exponunt. ‘ Eos qui foris extra 
Eccclesiam tincti sunt’. . . (inquiunt Epist.1.lib.ii."). . . ‘bap- 
tizart oportere, eo quod parum sit eis manum imponere ad 
accipiendum Sp. Sanctum nisi et Ecclesia accipiant Baptismum, 
tunc enim demum plane sanctificari, et esse filiti Det possunt, si 
Sacramento utroque nascantur.’ Item, lib. i. Ep. 12.8 ‘ Ungi 
quogue necesse est eum qui baptizatus est 

Whereby we perceive, that in his time Confirmation was 
to follow Baptism. andem fuisse illa etate et Rom. Ecclesia 
fidem, B. Cornelius Martyr Epist. ad Fabium Antiochenum 
docet, que apud Eusebium extat, lib. vi. cap. 43*, ostendens 
Novatum Hearesiarcham non fuisse Spir. Sanctum consecutum, 
quod juxta Ecclesie Canonem reliqua post baptismum non fu- 
isset consecutus, que debuisset, i.e. consignationem ab Episcopo 
factam. The Novatians were the old puritans of the primi- 
tive Church, and made no more account of Confirmation than 


our new ones do. 


P [The editor has not seen the rituals 
here referred to. ] 

4 [S. Hieron. Dial. adv. Luciferianos, 
cap. 8. Op. tom. ii. col. 180, D.] 

* (S. Cypr., Epist. 72, ad Stepha- 
num, (lib. ii. Ep. 1, ed. Erasm.) p. 
196. } 

» [Id., Epist. 70, ad Episcopos Nu- 
midas, (lib. i. Ep. 12. ed. Erasm.) ibid., 


Qui plura testimonia desiderat, consulat 


p- 190.] 

t [ob phy ob8t “ray Aoiwav ervxe, 
diapvyav thy vdcor, Gv xph -pmerarap- 
Bdvew kata tov ths éxxAnoias Kavéva, 
Tov TE ohpayicOjvat brd TOD emicKdrov. 
Tovrov 5€ ut) Tuxwv, Tas dv TOD ‘Aylov 
Tveduaros érvxe.—Epist. Cornelii, ap. 
Euseb. Hist. Eccl., lib. vi. cap. 43. 
p. 313.] 


141 


7-—oo 


ON THE OFFICE OF HOLY BAPTISM. 


Panopliam Lindani", ubi ex Tertulliano, Augustino, aliisque 
huic sacre Consignationi swus Sacramenti locus vindicatur. 


[OFFICE OF PRIVATE BAPTISM. | 


By the minister of the parish, or any other lawful minister. | 
Minister hujus Sacramenti est solus sacerdos 23 dist. cap. 
Ecclesiastica*. In necessitate autem quilibet potest baptizare, 
dummodo intendat facere, quod intendit Ecclesia, dist. 32. 
c. preter. § verum’Y 24. q. 1. cap. Subdiaconus*. Nec debet 
reiterart, dummodo baptizans servat formam supradictam. 
Exira casum vero necessitatis nulli licet. baptizare, nisi sacer- 
dott parochiano, alias efficientur irregulares. De Cle. non Ord. 
Mi. cap.i.* Imo sacerdos non debet aliquem baptizare, si non 
sit eyus parochianus, 16. q. 1. cap. Interdicimus?. S. Thom. 
3. par. q. 67. a. 4. ad 2m.° Diaconus tum potest solenniter 
baptizare in extrema necessitate, in absentia presbyteri, vel 
si a presbytero ei jussum fuerit propter multitudinem baptizan- 
dorum, c. 5. 

And say the Lord’s Prayer, if time will suffer.] 

St infans graviter infirmatur, ita quod de ejus morte dubi- 
tetur, non fiat totus ordo predictus, sed [....] solum a sacer- 
dote dicatur forma baptismi, viz. Ego te baptizo in nomine 
Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti. Amen; faciendo signum 


“ [W. Lindanus, Dordrachenus, Pa- 
noplia Evangelica, lib. iv. cap. 26. pp. 
218, sqq. col. Agrip. 1575. ] 

* (There is nothing on the subject 
in the canon here referred to. ] 

y [...affirmantes baptisma, sive ab 
heretico, sive schismatico, ecclesiastico 
more celebratum ratum esse, et merito: 
quia alia in baptismo, et alia in reliquis 
sacramentis consideratio est, quippe 
cum et ordine prior, et necessarior sit, 
&c.—Decret. pars i. Dist. xxxii. c. 6. 
§ verum. apud Corp. Jur. Can., tom. i. ] 

* [Baptisma, sive ab heretico, sive a 
laico ministratum fuerit, dummodo in 
unitate catholice fidei accipiatur non 
carebit effectu.u—Decret. pars ii. caus, 
24. quest. 2. c. 39. addit. ap. Corp. 
Jur. Can., tom. i. et gloss. in casu ne- 
cessitatis nec a laico nec ab heretico 
baptizatus est refutandus. ] 

* [Si quis baptizaverit, aut aliquod 
divinum officium exercuerit, non ordi- 
natus, propter temeritatem abjiciatur 


de ecclesia, et nunquam ordinetur.— 
Decretal., lib. v. tit. xxviii. de clerico 
non ordinato ministrante, cap. 1. ap. 
Corp. Jur. Can., tom. ii.] 

b Interdicimus etiam abbatibus, et 
monachis publicas pcenitentias dare, 
infirmos visitare, et unctiones facere, 
missas publicas cantare. Chrisma et 
oleum (gloss. infirmorum vel catechu- 
menorum), &c. ab episcopis accipiant 
in quorum parochiis manent.—Decret. 
pars ii. caus. 16. quest. 1. c. 10. ap. 
Corp. Jur. Can., tom. i. ] 

© [Quando baptismus solenniter et 
ordinate celebratur, debet aliquis sacra- 
mentum baptismi suscipere a presbytero 
curam animarum habente, vel ab aliquo 
vice ejus. Hoc tamen non requiritur 
in articulo necessitatis, in quo potest 
mulier baptizare—S. Thom, Aquin. 
Summa Theol. pars iii. quest. Ixviii. 
de ministris baptismi, art. 4. ad secun- 
dum, } 


First 


SERIES. 


142 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


crucis et effundendo aquam super caput ejus. Sacerd. Rom. de 
Baptis., c. ult.4 

But yet nevertheless, if the child, which is after this sort 
baptized, do afterward live, &c.] 

Si autem infans convaluerit; debent omnia suppleri, qua 
omissa fuerant, scilicet, omnia que baptismum precedunt, vel 
sequuntur, et dicta non fuerint. Sacerd. Rom. ibidem.* 

1. With what matter was the child baptized ? 

2. With what words was the child baptized ? 

3. Whether think you the child was lawfully and perfectly 
baptized f ? 

1, 2, 3. As the two first questions refer to the substance 
of baptism, so the third and the last refer to the due circum- 
stances and ceremonies that are to be used therein, and to be 
supplied in the church, if through haste they were omitted 
at home. 


First 
SERIEs. 


OF CONFIRMATION, OR LAYING ON OF HANDS. 


The nature of this holy Sacrament (for so we need not fear 
to call it in a right sense) will be the more easily understood 
by the several names it had of old, whereof two are here, 


The divers 
denomina- 
tions. 


Confirmation, or Laying on of Hands. 


a [Sacerdotale ad consuetudinem 
Romane Ecclesiz de Sacramento Bap- 
tismi, c.12. Forma baptizandi puerum 
vel puellam, de cujus morte dubitatur 
ad succurrendum, fol. 25, a. After the 
word ‘sed’ comes a service to be per- 
formed of some length, and afterwards 
the following note: Sivero adeo propin- 
quus morti fuerit, quod credatur ipsum 
immediate obiturum solum dicat for- 
mam baptismi, &c.... et dicendo verba 
preedicta, effundat, &c., fol. 26, b. After 
this he performs other rites. ] 

¢ [This rubric immediately pre- 
cedes that cited in the last note, Si 
vero; the words ‘ vel sequuntur’ are not 
in the Sacerdotale, fol. 26, b.] 

f [These questions were altered at 
the last Review. } 

& [This passage is taken from Mal- 
donatus ; his words are: Impositio ma- 
nuum apud Latinos fuit semper com- 
mune vocabulum, non item inter Gre- 
cos. A Grecis autem vocata est Te- 
Aclwors, id est, perfectio, ut ab Areopag. 
in cap. de Baptismo, (see note h), et a 
Latinis perfectio, ut ab Ambrosio 2% 


Impositio manuums& 


de Sacramentis, “cap. 2. (see note i). 
Vocarunt etiam Greci oppayiéa, id est, 
obsignationem, et Latini signaculum, ut 
est sepe apud Cyprianum, (see note k), 
aliquando apud Augustinum, (see note 
1 


Preterea chrisma, aut Sacramentum 
chrismatis, ut apud eundem Augustin. 
lib.ii. contra Petilianum cap.10.(see note 
m). Denique ab Ambrosio, quod sciam, 
primum vocata est confirmatio, lib. de 
lis, qui mysteriis initiantur, cap. 8. (see 
note n). Quod postea apud Leonem, 
et Gregor. ccepit esse frequent. (see 
notes 0, p). Calvinus cum non posset 
negare semper fuisse confirmationem 
in Ecclesia, ejus usum falso declaravit, 
dicens nihil aliud fuisse, quam profes- 
sionem quandam publicam fidei, que 
fiebat coram Episcopo. Nam qui bap- 
tizati, inquit, fuerant infantes, quia non 
potuerant proprio ore fidem profiteri in 
baptismo, cum adolevissent, adduce- 
bantur ad Episcopum, ut coram illo 
fidem profiterentur. At ne viderentur 
frigide discedere, cceperunt, inquit, 
Episcopi illis manus imponere et dare 


: 


ON THE OFFICE OF CONFIRMATION. 143 


was the common denomination of it among the Latins. The 
Greeks were wont to call it reXeiwors, i. e. perfectio, as Di. 


_Areop., cap. de Baptismo*; and so the Latins sometimes 


called it, S. Ambr. 2 de Sacram., c. 2'. The Greeks were 
wont also to call it o¢payida, i. e. obsignationem* ; and the 
Latins signaculum, as often St. Cyprian doth, and St. Austin’. 
Besides these names, it was called chrisma, Aug. 2. contr. 
Petil., cap. 104™. And last of all by St. Ambrose, Lid. de iis 
qui mysteriis initiantur, cap. 8, it was called confirmatio™. 
He was the first who was observed to give it that name, 
which afterwards in St. Leo and St. Greg. came to be com- 
mon®’. So that there is more in it than Calvin would have, 
who tells us it is nothing else but a certain public confession 
of faith made before the bishop, which children could not do 
before in baptism but by sureties’; and that the imposition 
of hands was used for nothing else, but ne viderentur frigide 


discedere ab episcopo.. 


benedictionem.—Maldonatus de Sacra- 
mentis, De Confirmatione, quest. i. 
col. 73, A, B, C.] 

h (‘H 5€ rod uvpov TeAciwrikh Xplois 
evédn wore? Toy TeTEACoMEVOY® H yap 
iepa ths Oeoyeverias TeAclwors évot Ta 
Tercobdyta, TE OeapxiK@ Mvevuart.—s. 
Dionys. Areop. de Eccles. Hierarchia, 
cap. 2. § 8. Op. tom. i. p. 173, C.] 

[Sequitur spiritale signaculum, 
quod audistis hodie legi, quia post fon- 
tem superest ut perfectio fiat; quando 
ad invocationem sacerdotis Spiritus 
Sanctus infunditur.—S. Ambros. de 
Sacr., lib. iii. cap. 2. § 8. Op. tom. ii. 
col. 363, E.] 

x [Quod nunc quoque apud nos geri- 
tur, ut quiin ecclesia baptizantur, pre- 
positis ecclesiz offerentur, et per nos- 
tram orationem ac manus impositionem 
Spiritum Sanctum consequentur et sig- 
naculo dominico consummentur.—S. 
Cypr. Epist. Ixxiii. ad Jubaianum de 
hereticis baptizandis, p. 132; and a 
little before, Non est ei venienti manum 
imponi ut Spiritum Sanctum consequa- 
tur et signetur. | 

1 [See the passage in the next note. 
The word ‘signaculum’ does not appear 
to be elsewhere used by S. Augustine 
of Confirmation. It is very often so used 
by S. Ambrose.—De Sacr., lib. iii. ¢. 2. 
§ 8. col. 363, E.; vi. c. 2. § 6. col. 381, 
‘C., § 8. ibid. E.; de Sp. S., lib. i. c. 6. 
§ 78, 80. col. 616, E, F.] 

m [Et in hoc unguento Sacramentum 


Chrismatis vultis interpretari; quod 
quidem in genere visibilium signacu- 
lorum sacrosanctum est, sicut ipse 
Baptismus.—S. Aug. cont. literas Petil., 
lib. ii. cap. 104. § 239. Op. tom. ix. 
col. 293, B.] 

2 [ Accepisti signaculum spiritale... 

signavit te Deus Pater, confirmavit te 
Christus Dominus, et dedit pignus 
Spiritus in cordibus tuis, sicut aposto- 
lica lectione didicisti—S. Ambros. de 
Myst. (aliter de iis qui Myster. initian- 
tur) cap. 7. § 42. Op. tom. ii. col. 336, 
A, B. 
° [Qui baptismum ab hereticis ac- 
ceperunt, cum antea baptizati non fuis- 
sent, sola invocatione Spiritus Sancti 
per impositionem manuum confirman- 
di sunt.—S. Leo. Epist. clix. ad Nice- 
tam. Op. tom. i. col. 1334, 1335. But 
see the note (ed. Ballerini) in which it 
is argued that Confirmation is not meant 
here. §S. Leo speaks of the rite as, 
Chrisma salutis, et signaculum vite 
zeterne. Serm. xxiv. in Nativ. Domini, 
iv. ibid. col. 81. ] 

P [e. g. quoties tam de baptismo 
aliquorum vel confirmatione... dubi- 
tatis habetur, et nec scriptis nec testi- 
bus ratio certa habetur utrum baptizati 
vel confirmati... ut baptizentur tales 
ac confirmentur.—S. Greg. M., lib. xiv. 
Ind. vii. Epist. 17, Op. tom. ii. col. 
1279, C, D.] 

4 [The words in the text are in Mal- 
donatus, see noteg. The editor has 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


The time 
of giving 
Confirma- 
tion. | 


144 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


~The Church hath thought good to order that None hereafter 
shall be confirmed but such as, &c.*} 

They were wont of old time to give Confirmation and the 
Eucharist presently after Baptism even to children them- 
selves. Since, it has been thought more expedient by the 
Church, that children should be first able to give an account 
of their faith, Atque in ea re laudabihor est consuetudo Ec- 
clesie hodierne, quam veteris, saith Maldonat. de Sacr. p. 115%. 
And therefore it is a fault, both among their bishops and 
ours, that children are confirmed (all that come) without dis- 
cretion, before they come to the years of discretion. True 
it is, that of old Confirmation was administered to children 
as soon as ever they were baptized; but as the giving of the 
Eucharist, so likewise the giving of Confirmation unto them 
is now taken away by the consent of the whole Western 
Church ; and the rather because fathers and god-fathers, and 
curates, and others that have care of young children, might 
hereby take occasion to instruct them in that profession of 
faith and religion, which they had made for them in their 
baptism. 

That by imposition of hands and prayer they may receive 
strength and defence against all temptations to sin, and the 
assaults of the world, &c."] ; 

Maldonatus, de Sacram., p. 107", requires no more for the 
use of this holy ceremony, Quam ut qui baptizati erant, per- 
ficerentur, ut Greci loquuntur, i.e. fierent integri quodammodo 
Christiani, et ut acciperent robur Sp. S. ad perfungenda 


not found them in Calvin; but the 
view is expressed in the Institutes, 
lib. iv. c. 19. § 4, (Op. tom. ix. p. 389,) 
that those who had been baptized in 
infancy were brought to the bishop and 
examined by him, according to a cate- 
chism which he imagined existed. He 
then says; Quo autem hec actio, que 
alioqui gravis sanctaque merito esse 
debebat, plus reverentie haberet et 
dignitatis, ceremonia quoque adhibeba- 
tur manuum impositionis. Ita puer 
ille, fide sua approbata, cum solenni 
benedictione dimittebatur. ] 

* (The first words of the preface 
now read by the bishop was in the old 
Prayer-books a rubric. ] 

* [This is also from Maldonatus: 
‘Quando autem confirmari debeant bap- 


tizati, ea in re laudabilior consuetudo 
est Ecclesia hodierne, quam veteris. 
Nam in Ecclesia veteri statim post 
baptismum confirmatio et Eucharistia 
dabantur etiam infantibus; nunc autem 
merito expectatur illud tempus, quo 
tempore possint baptizati confiteri fem 
suam.—Maldonatus, ubi supra, quest, 
2. op. var. col. 78, E. ] 

* [This was a part of the old rubric, 

setting forth the design of Confirma- 
tion. } 
« [Maldonatus, in opposition to the 
words of Calvin, as above, says; Hoc 
ubi Calvinus potuerit legere, non video. 
Scio autem certo confirmationis usum 
semper in Ecclesia fuisse, ut qui bap- 
tizati erant, &c. as in text, ubi supra, 
fol. 73, C.] 


145 


omnia munera hominis Christiani. This is here said in words 

as full as his. The controversy then, which the Church of 

Rome makes, is not to be made with our Church, but with 

them of the new stamp of Geneva, with whom we have as 
_ little to do as with the papists themselves, where either these 
_ or those depart from the tenet of antiquity. 

« Eusebius Emissenus sets forth the virtue of this laying on 
of hands to the full. Homil. in Die Pentecostes*. Quod nunc 
in confirmandis neophytis manus impositio tribwit singulis, hoc 
tunc Spiritus S. descensio in credentium populo donavit uni- 
versis. [....] Spiritus Sanctus in fonte plenitudinem tributt 
ad innocentiam, in Confirmatione augmentum prestat ad gra- 
tiam, quia in hoc mundo tota atate victuris inter invisibiles 
hostes et pericula gradiendum est. In Baptismo regeneramur 
ad vitam, post Baptismum confirmamur ad pugnam. In Bap- 
tismo alimur, post Baptismum roboramur. 

Not that men have novsuch strength given in: Baptism, but 
that they have more, and a new strength given them in Con- 
firmation; and indeed, the proper effect of Baptism is to 
make a man a Christian, but the proper effect of Confirma- 
tion is to give him the Holy Ghost’. 

From whence the ceremony arose which is now used in 
the Church of Rome’, Ut qui confirmatur cedatur alapa mo- 

desta. Ceremonia ista (saith. Maldonate) non est, ut opinor, 
antiquissima ; sed habet tamen accommodatam significationem. 
Incipit enim tune qui. confirmatur excipere ictus adversariorum 
spiritualium. De Sacram., p. 117%. 


ON THE OFFICE OF CONFIRMATION. 


First 
SERIES. 


For that it is agreeable with the usage of the Church in 
limes past, whereby it was ordained that Confirmation should 
be ministered to them that were of perfect age”, &c.]| 

Not the ancient but later times; for of old they were 


x [The Homily is on the text of Joel. 





‘In those days, saith the Lord, I will 
pour out My Spirit upon all fiesh;’’ and 
after these words begins: Advertamus 
summe divitias bonitatis; quod nunc, 
&c., as in the text. Eusebii (Episcopi 
Gallicani) Hom. in die Penteeostes, 
ap. Bibl. Patr. Max., tom. vi. p. 649, 
B,C,D. These Homilies are probably 
writings of a bishop of Lyons of the 
COSIN. 


fifth century. ] 

¥ [This.is added as a note on the word 
roboramur in the preceding extract. } 

% [This is a note on the word ‘as- 
saults’ in the prayer. | 

@ [Maldonatus, ubi supr. col. 79, 
D, E, the word spiritualium is not in 
this edition of Maldonatus. ] 

> [This was the third portion of the 
introductory rubric. ] 


146 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


First wont to give both Confirmation and the Eucharist unto chil- 
SERIES: dren newly baptized. We are beholden to the Church of 
Rome then for this ordinance. 


Of the necessity of Confirmation. 


And that no man shall think that any detriment shall come » 
to children by deferring of their Confirmation, he shall know 
for truth, that it is certain by God’s word, that children being 
baptized, have all things necessary for their salvation, and be 
undoubtedly saved®. | 

Howsoever Confirmation hath been always had in high 
esteem in the Church, and hath many excellent and heavenly 
effects flowing from it, which might make Christians the 
more desirous for themselves and their children, to be made 
partakers of it, and the more fearful lest they wanted some- 
what for their salvation, if they had it not; yet the truth is, 
that the Church of God in all ages never held it so abso- 
lutely necessary, as if without it salvation might not be 
obtained. The papists are accused to hold this opinion, but 
for my part, I suppose they have some wrong done unto 
them. That which is alleged out of Gratian, c. fideles et 
c. omnibus‘, is not to be understood of all things necessary 
to salvation, as if they were not perfect without it; or of the 
perfection and substance and being of a Christian, as if men 
were not so to be taken until they were confirmed; but of a 
man’s plenary and full perfection in the graces of the Holy 
Ghost, which without Confirmation he cannot ordinarily ob- 
tain, for his better being, and his more powerful strength 
to resist the world, the flesh, and the devil. When learned 
men therefore seem to tell us, and to say, that there is a 
necessity of Confirmation, it is not simply and absolutely to 
be taken thus, but e# hypothesi, and upon supposition only ; 
if men desire to be more perfect than others are, or to be 
more strongly armed against their spiritual enemies. So 


¢ [This was the last rubric at the Christiani inveniantur: quia cum Spi- 
end of the Confirmation Service before ritus Sanctus infunditur, cor fidele ad 
1662. ] prudentiam et constantiam dilatatur.— 

4 Omnes fideles per manus imposi- JDecret., pars iii. de consecrat. dist. v. 
tionem episcoporum, Spiritum Sanctum c.1. The reference in the text should 
post baptismumacciperedebent,utpleni be c. omnes fideles, ] 








s 


ON THE OFFICE OF CONFIRMATION. 147 


Euseb. Emiss. Hom. de Pentecoste®. Ac si continuo transi- 
turis sufficiunt regenerationis beneficia ; victuris tamen neces- 
saria sunt Confirmationis auxilia. They that die presently 
after Baptism have all things needful to salvation; they need 
not fear it; but they that are to live and maintain a spiri- 
tual combat against sin and Satan, they have need of God’s 
further graces, which are communicated unto them by im- 
position of hands. .So Baptism saves a man that lives not 
long after, but Confirmation must help them that are to go 
on in the hard and strait ways of Christianity, or else he 
may hap to perish as he goes. Therefore it is not here said 
that men of ripe years, but that children, being baptized, and 
so dying while they are children, have all things necessary 
to their salvation; for afterwards, there are many things 
needful, and among the rest this a chief one, to be con- 
firmed, and to receive a more perfect power of the Holy 
Ghost for the resisting of the temptations of Satan. So 
Euseb., ubi suprat, Regeneratio per se salvat mow in pace 
seculi recipiendos, Confirmatio armat et insiruit ad agones 
hujus mundi et prelia reservandos. When we read in the 
Acts of the Apostles, that those Samaritans which Philip 
baptized had not yet received the Holy Ghost, it is not 
simply to be understood this, as if by Baptism they had re- 
ceived no fruits of the Spirit at all; but that they had not 
received that fulness and perfection of the Spirit, which is 
given by Confirmation. The apostles received the Holy 
Ghost both when they were baptized, and when they were 
ordained by Christ, yet we read, that after both these, the 
Holy Spirit was not yet given, because they were not then 
endued with that fulness of ghostly strength, which they had 
poured upon them at the feast of Pentecost. Before, they 
were all fearful, that they fled and ran away. After, they 
were so full of courage, that no death and martyrdom could 
amaze them. And this is the fruit of Confirmation. Euseb., 
ubi supra, In Baptismo per Christum redimimur &, In Confirma- 
tione vero per Spiritum Sanctum dono sapientia, &c. illumi- 
namuir, edificamur, erudimur, insiruimur, consummamur, 


© [This is the continuation of the f [ibid. These are the next words to 
passage cited above, ubi supra, p. 649, _ those cited last. ] 
D.] & (Ibid. ] 


L2 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


The cere- 
monies 
used in 
Confirma- 
tion, 


148 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Collect... .. Daily increase in them Thy manifold gifts of 


grace.| 1. The spirit of wisdom. 2. Understanding. 38. The 
spirit of counsel. 
knowledge. 6. ‘True godliness. 7. Of holy fear. 

Septem dona Spiritus Saneti», 1. Sapientia. 2. Intellectus. 
3. Consilium. 4. Fortitudo. 5. Scientia. 6. Pietas. 7. Timor 
Dei. 

Then the bishop shall lay his hand upon every child seve- 
rally, saying. | 

Quatuor cause sunt necessarie ad integritatem hujus Sacra- 
menti (saith Maldonat.) and here they be all. Prima est 
materia, quam inter apostolos non aliam [usitatam]| fuisse 
legimus, quam externam impositionem manuum, que ipsa etiam 
hodie appellanda est, &c. Maldon., de Sacram., p. 113%. 

Secunda causa est forma verborum*. Tertia est minister! ; 
which is the bishop only. So Philip baptized, but the 
apostles confirmed. And the seventh canon of the second 
Council of Sevil™ prohibited any priest to meddle with it, 
no less than with ordination, &c.; and 8.Greg., lib. iii..ep. 9". 
Quarta est suscipiens®; baptizati autem omnes sunt capaces 


4. Of ghostly strength. 5. The spirit of 


Confirmationis. 


There were divers ceremonies? used in the confirmation of 


* [This is a:note on the words :in 
the Collect which are numbered cor- 
respondently as here. ] 

‘i [Maldonatus, ubi supra, quest. ii. 
cols. 76, E, 77, A.] 

k [Ibid., col..77, B. The form of 
words in Maldonatus is, Consigno te 
signo crucis, &c. | 

+ (Ibid. Maldonatus gives several 
opinions and arguments. 

™ [ Nam, quamvis cum episcopis plu- 
rima:illis ministeriorum communis sit 
dispensatio, quedam novellis et eccle- 
siastiis regulis sibi prohibita noverint: 
sicut .presbyterorum, et diaconorum, 
ac virginum consecratio; sicut consti- 
tutio Altaris, benedictio, vel unctio: 
siquidem nec licere eis Ecclesiam vel 
Altaria consecrare, nec per imposi- 
tionem manus fidelibus baptizatis, vel 
controversis ex heresi, Paracletum Spi- 
ritum tradere, &c.—Conce. Hispal. LM. 
can. 7. tom. vi. cols. 1405, 1406.] 

™ (In the Epistle referred to, ad 
Januarium Episc.Caralitanum, S. Gre- 
gory said: Presbyteri baptizandos un- 
gant in pectore, ut Episcopi postmodum 


sprohibuimus. 


ungere debeant in fronte.—S..Greg. M., 
lib. iv. Ind. xii. Epist. 9. Op. tom. ii. 
col. 689, A. ed. Bened. In another 
letter written shortly after to.the same 
bishop, he says, referring to this: Per- 
venit quoque ad nos quosdam scanda- 
lizatos fuisse, quod Presbyteros chris- 
mate tangere eos qui baptizandi sunt 
Et nos quidem secun- 
dum usum veterem Ecclesie nostre 
fecimus ; sed si -omnino hee de re 
aliqui .contristati sunt, ubi Episcopi 
desunt, ut Presbyteri etiam in fronti- 
bus baptizandos chrismate.tangere de- 
beant, concedimus.—lIbid. Epist. 26. 
col. 705, A. In the Canon Law the 
words are baptizati and baptizandos. 
See the note in the Benedictine edition, 
which shews that, according to the true 
reading, the unction conceded to the 
Presbyters was part of the anointing 
before baptism, which if a bishop had 
been present he would have performed, 
not the unction of Confirmation. ] 

° [Ibid., col. 78, D.] 

P [ This is derived from Maldonatus, 
who says: Inter ceremonias hujus Sa- 


ee 





ON THE CATECHISM. 149 


this Sacrament: two very ancient, chrism, and the cross ; 
the other two more late, gossips, and the blow upon the 
cheek. ‘Three of these we omit, as not being necessary; yet 
being so significant, it were better we had them: neither 
were it any fault, for aught I see, if any man should use 
them in our Church, more than it is to use the fourth, of 
having godfathers or godmothers at the time of Confirma- 
tion’; that we allow and approve, why not the rest as well? 
But for the susceptores, it being a custom of old to confirm 
instantly after Baptism, that so the susceptores of one, were 
the susceptores of the other also; therefore the custom still 
prevails with us, that such as are confirmed should have 
witnesses and undertakers for them, as well as those which 
are baptized among us. 


First 
SERIES. 


[ON THE CATECHISM. | 


Who was conceived by the Holy Ghost.| Vide heresin 
Fausti Manichei, qui dementissime affirmavit terram ex viri- 
bus Spiritus Sancti concipientem genuisse patibilem Jesum, &c. 
S. Aug., contra Faustum Man., lib. xx. cap. 11. in tomo 
sexto™; et lib. xxii. cap. 1—4, &c. Ibid. 

Remember thou keep holy the Sabbath day.| See the Sur- 
vey of the Puritans, p. 65°. 


Two only, &c.| 8S. Aug., ep. 118%. Tenere te volo, ge. Of the 


number of 


jis distil ¥, _.. ,, the Sacra- 
‘ex viribus Sancti Spiritus ac spiritali ments. 
profusione terram quoque concipientem, 


cramenti due fuerunt semper usitate ; 
chrisma,... Altera fuit impressio sig- 


naculi erucis in frontem. ... Secundo, 
quia statim confirmatio dabatur post 
baptismum, illi ipsi qui erant suscep- 
teros baptismi erant susceptores con- 
firmationis. Unde mansit consuetudo, 
ut etiamsi confirmatio statim non dare- 
tur; tamen non daretur sine susceptoe 
ribus. Illa vero ceremonia, ut cedatur 
alapa modesta, qui confirmatur, ut opi- 
nor, non est antiquissima.—Maldonatus 
de Sacramentis, De Confirm. quest. iv. 
opera varia, col. 79, D, E.] 

4 (In the Prayer-book before 1662, 
it was ordered that the child should 
‘*be brought to the bishop by one that 
shall be his godfather or godmother, 
that every child may have a witness of 
his confirmation.’ ] 

* (Quid autem hinc dicam, quod ait 


gignere patibilem Jesum, qui est vita 
et salus hominum, omni suspensus ex 
ligno.”’—S. Aug., cont. Faustum, lib. xx. 
cap. 11. Op. tom. viii. col. 339, G.] 

§ (Id. ibid., col. 423, 424. ] 

* (Sunday, though not the very day 
which the Jews sanctified for the seventh 
day, is yet a seventh day, and being the 
day whereon Christ mightily declared 
Himself to be the Son of God by His 
resurrection, is called the Lord’s day, 
because on that day the Father is glori- 
fied in the Son.”—Survey of the Book 
of Common Prayer; quere, whether the 
curate may bid holydays and fasting 
days without warrant of God’s word, 
p- 65. | 

 (S. Aug., ep. 54, ad Januarium 
(aliter ep. 118.) cap. 1. § 1. Op. tom. ii 


First 


SERIES. 


150 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 


D{[ominum] N[ostrum] J[esum] Clhristum] leni jugo [et sar- 
cina levi|nos subdidisse, unde et Sacramentis numero paucisst- 
mis, intellectu augustissimis, significatione prestantissimis, so- 
cietatem novi populi colligavit, sicut est Baptismus, et commu- 
nicatio Corporis et Sanguinis Domini, et siquid aliud in Scrip- 
turis canonicis commendatur. Where though St. Augustine 
may seem to allow more Sacraments than two, (as elsewhere 
he expresseth himself, lib. ii. cap. 104*, contr. Lit. Petilani, 
Sacramentum chrismatis in genere visibilium, inquit, signacu- 


lorum est, sicut et baptismus), yet in this sense which our — 


Church propounds, “as generally necessary to salvation,” 
Maldonate himself confesseth that he acknowledgeth no 
more, de Sacrum., p.111¥: Divus Augustinus (inquit) non de 
omnibus Sacramentis novis agit illo loco, sed de illis que omni- 
bus hominihus communia esse debent ad salutem. Preterea, 
guia agebat de sarcina Veteris Testamenti, et gugo Novi, et 
sarcina vocatur proprie id quod necessario ferre debemus, st 
volumus esse salvi, numeravit hec duo Sacramenta. Hec Mal- 
donatus. That to me it seems strange there should any con- 
troversy be made between our Church and the Church of 
Rome for the number of the Sacraments, whenas in this 
sense they acknowledge no more than two, and in a larger 
sense we acknowledge many more; and more eminently the 
other five; which though we call not Sacraments ordinarily, 
and though that general name be gone, yet for the things 
themselves, their proper names, their true names, those we 
preserve inviolate. And if Maldonate and others can be so 
courteous, as when St. Aug[ustine] speaketh of two Sacra- 
ments, to interpret him fairly, why may not we expect the 
same equity from them, seeing we say no more than that 
father doth? 

An outward and visible sign.| This would be a little 
thought of, whether by a visible sign is meant a thing that 
may be seen, or not; for so the common divinity runs now- 
a-days, and grounds itself upon St. Augustine’s known 


col. 124, A. For “leni’’ Bp. Cosin has x [Id. cont. Literas Petil., lib. ii. 
‘‘levi;” the “et” after “unde” is not cap. 104. § 239. Op. tom. ix. col, 292, 
in Augustin, and the words, “intellectu B. 

augustissimis” ought to be “ observa- y [Maldonatus de Sacramentis, De 
tione facillimis.”’ Cosin follows Maldo- Confirmatione, quest. i. arg. Calvini. 
natus in these readings. } Quarto. resp. 3, col. 76, A.] 





151 


ON THE CATECHISM. 


-FIRST 


words’, Accedit verbum ad elementum, et fit Sacramentum. z 
ERIES. 


And hence they gather that there can be but two Sacra- 
ments, because but two of them that are commonly called 
Sacraments have the outward elements ordained by Christ. 
All the matter then depending upon St. Austin’s words, it 
would be thought on, whether Maldonate gives not a suffi- 
cient interpretation of them or no, Lid. de pen., p. 23%, after 
this manner: Errat hic Calvinus putans Sacramentum debere 
esse signum visibile, id est, quod visu percipiatur, quia Aug. 
ita definit. Item fallitur, dum putat debere esse elementum, 
quale est agua. Nam cum Aug. vocat Sacramentum visibile 
signum, visibile appellat generaliter quod sensibus percipitur. 
Non enim visus est, qui facit Sacramentum. Ht cum dicit ac- 
cedit verbum ad elementum, &c., primum, non loquitur nist de 
baptismo, ubi est elementum aque; deinde si loqueretur de 
omnibus sacramentis, non vocaret tamen elementum, more phi- 
losophorum, unum e quatuor, sed quicquid est quasi materia. 

For the continual remembrance of the sacrifice, &c.| Vide 
S. Aug., tom. vi. contra Faust. Manich., lib. xx. cap. 18°. 
Dicit apostolus, Que immolant gentes, demoniis immolant, et 
non Deo; non quod offerebatur culpans, sed quia illis offere- 
batur. Hebrei autem in victimis pecorum quas offerebant Deo, 
multis et variis modis, sicut re tanta dignum erat, prophetiam 
celebrabant future victime, quam Christus obtulit. Unde jam 
Christiani peracti ejusdem sacrificiti memoriam sacrosancta 
oblatione et participatione Corporis et Sanguinis Christi cele- 
brant. 

Bread and wine which the Lord hath commanded, &c.| (Lege The mate- 
S. Augustinum, tom. vi. contra Faustum Manich., lib. xx. cap. ae 
13°.) This is the material part of the Sacrament‘, not san- bread and 
guis humanus, as Marcus the heretic in Irenzeus, lib. i. cap. ae 
9°, and as the Montanists, Cataphryges, and Pepuzians, in 


2 [S. Aug. in Johann., cap. 15. Tract. 
80. § 3. Op. tom. iii. p. 2. col. 703, C.] 
' ® [Maldonatus de Sacramentis, de 
Peenitentia, pars 3%, quest, 3. Thesis 
sepeimna, fol. 259, E.] 

> [S. Aug., cont. Faustum, lib. xx. 
cap. 18. Op. tom. viii. col. 345, E, F.] 
¢ {Noster panis et calix, non quili- 
bet... sed certa consecratione mysti- 
cus fit nobis, non nascitur. Proinde 
quod non ita fit, quamvis sit panis et 


calix, alimentum est refectionis, non 
sacramentum religionis, &c.—Id. ibid., 
col. 342, B.] 

4 [The substance of this note is de- 
rived from Maldonatus, De Sacra- 
mentis, de Eucharistia, quest. sexta, 
de Materia, col. 86, A, sqq. 

e [Morfpra olv Kexpaidve mpostro.ov- 
pevos ebxXapiorety, kal em wAéov éxrel - 
vwv Tov Adyov THs emiKANT ews mopbpea 
Kal epv0pa dvapaiverOa more? &s Soneiv 


First 


SERIES. 


152 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 


S.Aug., de Heres., cap. 27 et 28‘, et in Epiph. Heres. 498, 
nor beans and cheese as some of old, either for poverty or 
curiosity, were wont to bring unto the priest to be con- 
secrated. ‘Therefore in the third canon of thé apostles, 
thus it was ordained; Ne quis preter panem et vinum quic- 
guam offerret': and so Cone. Afric., cap. 44; Bracarens. 
TI. cap. 1*; Sexta Synod. generali, cap. 28', it was de- 
creed, that if any other thing but bread and wine were 
brought for offerings by the people, it should not be conse- 
crated for the Sacrament, but blessed only and given to the 
people to carry away. That for bread, which is one part of 


the matter of this Sacrament. 


Now for wine, which is the other part, the matter is some- 


what more difficult. 


Thy amd Tay brép Ta bAa xdpw 7d alua Td 
éauTjns ordfew ev TS exelvm mornply did 
THs eTWLKAHT EWS AUTOU.—NS, [renzus cont. 
Heres., lib. i, cap. 13. (al. cap. 9.) Op. 
p. 60. ] 

f (Sacramenta perhibentur (Cata- 
phryges vel Montaniste) habere fu- 
nesta, nam de infantis anniculi san- 
guine, quem de toto ejus corpore mi- 
nutis punctionum vulneribus extor- 
quent, quasi eucharistiam suam con- 
ficere perhibentus, miscentes eum fa- 
rine, panemque inde facientes,—S.Aug. 
Liber de Hzres., cap. 26. Op. tom. viii. 
col. 10, B. 

Faciunt et ipsi (Pepuziani) de san- 
guine infantis quod Cataphryges facere 
supra diximus: nam et ab iis per- 
hibentur exorti.—lId. ibid., cap. 27.] 

& [airy yap kal 7 Tv KvivTiAAtavav 
alpeots tovTo émiredci. GpOdpov ‘yap 
maidvs KaTaKevTG Td coma, Kal Td aiua 
57n0ev cis werdAn Ww amropéepera eis uv- 
oraywylay dvéuaros Xpiocrov, tods ima- 
Thuevovs TAav@oa.—S. Epiphan. adv. 
Her., lib. ii. tom. i. Heer. xlviii. cap. 
ult. p. 417. Cosin follows Maldonatus 
in peng Her. xlix. ] 

h [Artotyrite sunt quibus oblatio 
eorum hoc nomen dedit; offerunt enim 
et panem et caseum, dicentes a primis 
hominibus oblationes de fructibus terre 
et ovium fuisse celebratas.—S. Aug. 
ubi supra, cap. 28. 

"Aptotupiras de. avrous ( Merovfiavois) 
Kadovaw, amd Tod éy Tois a’T@y [u- 
ornplois émiriOévtas prov Kal tupdr, 
kal obtws moiety TH a’TaY mvOTHpLA.— 
S. Epiphan. ubi supra, Heres, xlix. 
cap. 2. p. 418, D.] 

t [et tis érioxoros, } mpeoBirepos 


For cheapness, of old some would have 


Tapa Thy Tov xuptou Budrakw Thy én TH 
Ovoin, mporeveyin erepd tiva em 7d 
* vowaarhpioy, A wer, Fj yada, h avr 
olvov olkepa, 2) émirndevta, 7) dpvets, 7) 
Cad Tiva, 2 dompia, s Tapa Thy didTa- 
Ew kuplov mov, KadaipeicOw, kK. T. A— 
Canon. Apost. iii. Concilia, tom. i. col. 
25, B.] 

i [ Ut in sacramentis Corporis et San- 
guinis Domini nihil amplius offeratur, 
quam quod ipse Dominus tradidit, hoc 
est, panis et vinum aqua mixtum. Pri- 
mitiz vero, ceu mel -et lac, quod uno 
die solemnissimo in infantium mysterio 
solet offerri, quamvis in altari offeran- 
tur, suam tamen habeant propriam be- 
nedictionem, ut a sacramento Domi- 
nici Corporis et Sanguinis distinguantur. 
—Concil. vulg. dict. Africanum, (seu 
Collectio variorum Canonum, sec. 4. 
ineunt.) cap. 4. Concilia, tom. iii, col. 
503, E. 504; A.] 

* [Quidam in sacrificiis Domini re- 
lati sunt lac pro vino, pre vino botrum 
offerre : eucharistiam quoque vino ma- 
didam pro complemento communionis 
credunt populis porrigendam, &c.— 
Cone. Bracarac. iv. (cited as the 3rd 
in the Decret. pars iii. de Conscr. dist. 
11. ¢. 7.) A.D. 675. c. 1. Concilia, tom. 
vii..col. 579, A,-B.] 

| [éwed) ev Siapdpors exceAnotats Me- 
TeOhKapev arapvrris év T@ Bvovacrnple 
Mpoopepomerns Kard Tt Kpariioay eos, 
TOUS AetTovpyous TAUTHY TH avamdnte 
Tis mporpopas Ouaig ouvdrrovtas, 
ottTws Ewa 7 Aa@ Biavéwew dupdrepa 
guveldouev, ws banker TovTd TWA TOY 
lepwuevov moreiy, .7.A.—Cone. Quini- 
sexti, (sive Trullani,) A.D. 692, can. 
28. Concilia, tom. vii, co]. 1360, C, D.] 








ON THE CATECHISM. 153 


milk, &c., which was condemned by ancient councils, and First 
some only water, which Epiphanius saith was the heresy of _S®®"=s+_ 
the Ebionites, that began in Africa about St. Cyprian’s Heres, 
time; Ep* iii. lib. ii" is written wholly against them; and ™+" 
St. Chrys., Hom. li. in S. Matth.°, refels the heresy from 
-Christ’s own institution, Christus non bibebat aquam, sed Wine mix- 
vinum. ‘This were enough to free our Church from any cig 
heinous offence, though it uses net commonly to mix water 

with wine, as the Church of Rome doth. And yet, we must 
confess the custom is very ancient, consonant to the figures 

of the Old Testament, which St. Cyprian, Ep. iii. lib. ii., 
reckons up, and of the New, where water and blood issued 

out of Christ’s side; and agreeable (as there is great pro- 
bability) to Christ’s own practice, when He did first institute 

this holy Sacrament; for it is not so likely, that He used 

wine alone in His sacred supper, both because it was the 
custom of the Jews, diluwere vinum, as Prov. ix., Bibite vinum 

quod miscui vobis, and because all the evangelists use the 

name of calix, quod nomen (saith Maldonate?) significat vi- 

num conjunctum cum aqua, juxta ritum. The ancient liturgies 

are all for vinum cum aqua mixtum. So Justin Martyr, Apol. 

‘24%; Iren., lib. iv. cap. 577; and lib. v. initio’; Cypr., Ep. iii. 

lib. ii.t; Ambr., lib. v. de Sacram., cap. 1"; Gennad., de 


m [pvorhpia 5& d70ev TeAodor Katd tionis que est secundum nos accipiens 


plunow tov aylwv év TH exxdrAnola amd 
éviavTov eis eviauToy 81a aSduwv Kal 7d 
&Adro pépos tod pvornplov Sd’ Hdaros 
pdvov.—S. Epiphan. adv. Heres., lib. i. 
tom. ii, Heres, 30. cap. 16. p. 140, A.] 

a [S. Cypr., Ep. 63. ad Cecilium, 
(ed. Erasm., lib. ii. Ep. 3.) Op. pp. 148 
—157.] 

° [nal rlvos everev ody Hdwp emev 
dvaoTas, GAN olvov; %AAnY alpeow mo- 
vnpaw mpdppifov dvarmav, érmeidh yap 
Twes eloly év Tots uvornplos dart Ke- 
Xpnuévor, Sexvis Sri Hvika Ta mvoThpia 
mapédwKev olvoy mapédwxe. kal qvira 
avartas xwpis pvornploy WA rdp- 
weCay mapetibeto lolvw éxéxpnto.—s. 
‘Chrysost., Hom. in Matt. 26. Hom. 82, 
(al. 83.) Op. tom. vii. p. 784, B.] 

P {See Maldonatus, as above. ] 

4 [€reira mpoopéepera TH mpoeoTart 
Tav Gedpay pros, kal worhpiov bdaros 
kal Kpduaros.—S. Justin. Mart., Apol. 
1. (al. Apol. 2.) § 65. Op. p. 82, D.] 

» * [Quomodo autem juste Dominus, 
si alterius patris existit, hujus condi- 


panem, suum corpus esse confitebatur, 
et temperamentum ecalicis suum san- 
guinem confirmavit.—S. Irenzus, cont, 
Heres., lib. iv. cap. 33, (al. cap. 57.) 
Op. p. 170-2.] 

® [drote obv Kal Td KEeKpauévoy To- 
Thpiov, Kat 6 yeyovws &pros émidéxeron 
Tov Adyov Tov Ocod, kal yliyverat 7 €d- 
xapioria c&ua Xpiorod.—Id. ibid., lib. 
v. cap. 2. Op. p. 294. ] 

* [Vinum mixtum declarat, id est 
calicem Domini aqua et vino mixtum 
prophetica voce prenunciat.—S. Cypr., 
Ep. 63. ad Cecilium, (alit. lib. ii. Ep. 
3.) Op. p. 150. 

Sic autem in sanctificando calice 
Domini, offerri aqua sola non po- 
test, quomodo nec vinum solum po- 
test; nam si vinum tantum quis 
offerat Sanguis Christi incipit esse sine 
nobis: si vero aqua sit sola, plebs 
incipit esse sine Christo: quando autem 
utrumque miscetur, et adunatione con- 
fusa sibi invicem copulatur, tune sacra- 
mentum spiritale et cceleste perficitur. 


_ First 


SERIES. 


(154 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Eccl. dogm., cap. 75*; Patres Concil. Trullani¥, and many 
others. Vide notas in Gennadium*. Our Church forbids it 
not, for aught I know, and they that think fit may use it, as 
some most eminent among us do at this day*; yet for the 
approbation of our most common practice, which is to con- 
secrate wine alone without water, we have all this on our 
side; the Greeks did it, Niceph. Callist., lib. xviii. cap. 53°; 
Innocent III., de myst. Miss., lib. iv. cap. 32°; Durand., lib. 
iv. d. 12. g. 54; Lomb., lib. iv. d. 11°; Bonav., ibid.f£; neque 
est de necessitate Sacramenti, saith Aquinas, p. 3. gq. 74, ar. 78; 


“Sic vero calix Domini non est aqua sola, 


aut vinum solum, nisi utrumque sibi 
misceatur.—Ibid., p. 154. ] 


« [Diximus ergo quod in altari con- . 


stituatur calix et panis. In calicem 
quid mittitur? Vinum. Et quid aliud? 
Aqua.—S. Ambros, de Sacr., lib. v. 
cap. 1. § 2. Op. tom. ii. col. 873, C.] 

=x [In eucharistia non debet pura 
aqua offerri, ut quidam sobrietatis fal- 
luntur imagine, sed vinum. cum aqua 
mixtum; quia et vinum fuit in re- 
demptionis nostre mysterio, cum dixit: 
non bibam amodo de hoc genimine vi- 
tis: et aqua mixtum, non quod post 
ccenam dabatur, sed quod de latere ejus 


‘dancea perfosso aqua cum sanguine 


egressa, vinum de vera ejus carnis vite 
cum aqua expressum ostenditur.—Gen- 
nadii Massiliensis de Eccles. Dogma- 
tibus, c.75: ed. G. Elmenhorstius. Ham- 
burg, 1614. Maldonatus cites this as 
Augustine’s, to whom this tract was 
(wrongly) attributed. See S. Aug. Op. 
tom. viii. Append. col. 75, sqq. ] 

Y [émreid) eis yvGow huetépay HAver, 
@s év TH Apueviwy xapa olvoy udvov év 
TH iepa Tpameyy n Tpocdyovow, Bdwp abr@e 
Bn ueyvivtes . . ef tis obv énickoros 
Q mpecBurepos ah kata Thy mapadobet- 
cay brd Tav dmoor drwy Tae Tort, Kad 
Bdwp otve muryvds, oftw thy &xpavrov 
mpocdye: Ouetay, Kabaipetow.— Conc. 
Quinisext. fseu Trullani, cap. xxxii. 
Concilia, tom. vii. col. 13861, B, 1363, 


2 [The notes referred to are those of 
Elmenhorstius, Hamburg, 1614, p. 174, 
where many passages illustrating this 
point are brought together. | 

a [See the note of Bp, Andrewes 
above, p. 105; and the account of the 
furniture of his chapel, Minor English 
Works, Angl, Cath. ed. | 

> [oi be abrol Kal &€vpoy ovK prov 
ev tais iepais ayorelas mpospépovor, 
Kal olvoy &xépacror bSart, play 818 Toro 


giow ev To Xpiorge KararyyehAovT es, 
kal ovx @s nuets kipy@or Thy Evwow dbo 
gvoéwv.—Nicephor. Callist., Hist. Ec- 
cles., lib. xviii. cap. 53. Op. tom. ii. p. 
883, C.] 

¢ [Queritur an irritum sit quod ge- 
ritur si forte pretermittitur aqua. Alii 
concedunt, quod si quisquam non in- 
tendens hzresim introducere, oblivione 
vel ignorantia pretermiserit aquam, ille 
quidem vehementer est corripiendus et 
graviter, non tamen sit irritum sacra- 
mentum. Quod ergo predictum est, 
hoc est, verum vinum solum offerri non 
posse, determinari debet; quia recipit 
exceptionem, hoc modo, non potest nisi 
fiat simpliciter vel ignoranter; vel non 
potest, id est, non debet.—Innoc. III. 
de sacro altaris Mysterio, lib. iv. c. 32. 
fol. 197.] 

4 [Appositio vini non est de neces- 
sitate sacramenti, unde de vino sine 
aqua potest confici, peccaret tamen qui 
scienter non apponeret aquam. Dicitur 
etiam quod Greci aquam non appo- 
nunt, et tamen vere conficiunt.—Du- 
randi de S. Portiano sup. Sententias, 
lib. iv. dist. 11, Quest. 5. § 7. The 
statement about the Greeks is not 
true. The Nestorians only omitted the 
water. | ; 

© [Si quis tamen, &c., (as in Inno- 
cent, who cites Lombard’s words. )—P. 
Swap Sentent., lib. iv. dist, xii, 
§ 8. 

f [Aqua non est de integritate Sa- 
cramenti Eucharistie, sed est quid 
annexum materia, et de congruitate. — 
S. Bonaventure Expos. in Sentent., 
lib. iv. dist. xi, pars ii, art. 1. questi 
3. conclusio, p. 347. Op. tom. vy. 
Rome, 1596. } 

8 [Utrum permixtio aque sit de 
necessitate hujus sacramenti; which is 
decided in the negative.—S. Thom. 
Aquin., Summa Theol., part ili, quest. 


74, art. 7.) 


t 





ON THE CATECHISM. 155 


Paschasius de Sacram. Euch., cap. 11°; Bernard., Ep. 69'; 
Rab. Maurus, de Euch., cap. 11*, e¢ aliz. 

What is the inward part or thing signified ? 

The Body and Blood of Christ which are verily and indeed 


taken, &c.| Neither need there any fault be found with our - 


Church for thus distinguishing the outward sign from the 
thing signified, the bread from the Body of Christ¢ for Mal- 
donate affirms that the Church of Rome never said other- 
wise, de Sacram., p. 125!: Respondendum est, nos nunquam 
dicere, idem esse Sacramentum et rem significatam; nam Sa- 
cramentum vocamus signum quod videtur, rem significatam, 
Corpus Christi quod non videtur ;) which approves of our doc- 
trine, and condemns that gross conceit of the ignorant 
papists, that think they see, and taste, and chew the very 
Body of Christ, corporally, which every man abhors to con- 
ceive, even the best learned among the papists as well as we. 
I cannot see where any real difference is betwixt us about 
this real presence, if we would give over the study of contra- 
diction, and understand one another aright. Maldonate, de 
Sacr., p. 143™, after a long examination of the matter, con- 
cludes thus at last with us all, so the words be not taken ez- 
clusivé, as the puritans will take them, Corpus Christi sumi- 
tur a nobis sacramentaliter, spiritualiter, et realiter, sed non 
corporaliter ; and so have I heard my Lord Overall preach it 
an hundred times. 


h [Ut quid aqua cum vino miscetur 
dum in coena Domini factum non le- 
gitur, is the title of the chapter referred 
to, and expresses its substance. Pas- 
chasius does not go into the question of 
the validity of consecrating wine only; 
but says, Plane aqua in Sanguine quare 
misceatur, dum in natali calicis factum 
fuisse a Christe non legitur.—Pascha- 
sius Radbertus de Corpore et Sanguine 
Domini, c. xi. Bibl. Patr. Max., tom. 
xiv. col. 740, A. ] 

i [The title of the Epistle is, 
Ad Guidonem, qui incuria minis- 
trantium in consecratione calicis erra- 
verat ob defectum vini. Guido had 
said the words of consecration without 
the wine being in the chalice. S. Ber- 
nard incidentally speaks of the water 
to be mixed with the wine, but does not 
discuss this particular question, Epist. 
lxix. Op. tom. i. pp. 70, 71.] 


k [See Rabanus Maurus de Institu- 
tione Clericorum, lib. i. c. 31; de 
Eucharistia, Op. tom. vi. p. 12, E. 
He also gives the reasons for mixing 
water with the wine, but does not treat 
the question of the validity of conse- 
cration with it.] 

1 [Maldonatus, de Eucharistia, quarta 
queestio, col. 85, e. | 

m [ Maldenatus, de Eucharistia, pars 
secunda, col. 97, E. says: He omnes 
propositiones secundum nos sunt false ; 
Christus est corporaliter in hoe sacra- 
mento. And again, col, 98, A., Sequitur 
has tres propositiones simul esse veras: 
Corpus Christi sumitur a nobis sacra- 
mentaliter: Corpus Christi sumitur a 
nobis spiritaliter: Corpus Christi su- 
mitur a nobis realiter. Non enim sunt 
contrarig, si non accipiantur exclusive 
illa adverbia. ] 


First 


SERIES. 


wf 


po 


First 


SERIES. 


_ -vistia) offeratur. 


156 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


As our bodies are by the bread and wine.| So Maldonate 
de Sacram., p. 126": Analogia autem est, quod sicut panis est 
precipuum nutrimentum corporum, ita caro Christi est preci- 
puus cibus anime. 

And there shall be none admitted to the holy Communion till 
such time as he can say the catechism and be confirmed. | 

So Dionys. Areop.°: Pontifex perficit eum chrismate qui 
baptizatus est, et reddit eum participem et capacem Eucha- 
risti@. 

In Const. Johannis Pecham, Archiepiscopi Cant., cap. de 
Sacr. Confirm., sic legitur, Statuimus, ut nullus ad sacramen- 
tum Corp. et Sang. Dominici admitiatur extra mortis articu- 
lum, nisi fuerit confirmatus, vel nisi a receptione confirmationis 
Suerit rationabiliter impeditus. quod m. 6. 


THE SOLEMNIZING OF HOLY MATRIMONY. 


That which St. Paul saith, 1 Cor. vil., cuz vult nubat, tan- 
tum in Domino, the same is here constituted and appointed by 
the Church for married persons to perform. Jn Domino enim 
nubere, is to marry, not as brute beasts go together, or as 
heathen and natural men make marriages, but to marry 
according to the laws and ceremonies appointed us by Christ 
and His Church. Lztus autem ab apostolis mstituti, ab universa 
Leclesia recepti, hi sunt potissimi: primus, ut contrahatur in pre- 
sentia sacerdotis. 2. Ut per sacerdotes im Ecclesis proclametur. 
3. Ut in confederatione matrimonu sacrificium misse (sive Hucha- 
4. Ut a paranymphis ad Ecclesiam ducantur. 
5. Ut contrahentes matrimonium Eucharistiam percipiant, eorun- 
demque manus interventu oscult et velationis conjungantur, de 
quibus Evaristus’ in Epistola sua. Caranza in 18 can. 4. Cone. 
Carthaginensis*. 


n [Id. ibid., sexta questio, col. 86, 


© [él roy ieptpxny abOis amdyourw. 
‘O 5€ TH Ocoupyikwrdty pipw Toy wpa 
opparyicanevos, meToXov amodalve: Aol- 
mov Tis terepoAeoikwrdrns evxapiotlas. 


_ —§. Dionys. Areop. de Eccles. Hier- 


archia, cap. 2. Op. tom. i. p. 169, D.] 
P [Lyndwood, Provinciale, Append., 
p. 27. See Johnson’s Canons, A.D, 


a c. 4. vol. ii, p. 278. Ang.-Cath. 
ed. 
4 [Epistola 1. Evaristi pape (A.D. 
110) ad omnes Africz episcopos, Opus 
Spurium, § 2. Concilia, tom. i. col. 
536, B. The words are cited in the 
next note but one. } 

* [The canon is: Sponsus et sponsa 
cum benedicendi sunt a sacerdote, a 
parentibus suis vel paranymphis ofle- 


‘ 


quod nobis’. 


matrimonium. 





denunciet. 


peremptorie infra talem terminum N.” 
bannis contrahunt, sunt excommunicati. 


rantur. Qui cum benedictionem acce- 
perint, eadem nocte pro reverentia ip- 
sius benedictionis, in virginitate per- 
maneant.— Cone. Carthag. dict. iv. 
ean. 13. Concilia, tom. ii. col. 1438, D. 
The passage cited is not a note of Ca- 
ranza, but of de la Bigne, ibid. col. 
1447, C; as also Concilia, ed. Binius, 
tom. i. pp. 555, 6556. col. Agr. 
1606. } 

, [Aliter legitimum non fit conju- 
gium, nisi ab his qui super ipsam foemi- 
| nam dominationem habere videntur, et 

a quibus custoditur, uxor petatur, et a 
parentibus, et propinquioribus sponse- 
_ tur, et legibus dotetur, et suo tempore 
- sacerdotaliter, ut mos est, cum precibus 
et oblationibus a sacerdote benedicatur, 
_ et a paranymphis, ut consuetudo docet, 
 custodita et sociata, a proximis congruo 
_ tempore petita legibus detur ac solen- 
_Niter accipiatur, &c.—Decret. pars ii. 
5‘ causa 30. quest. 5. can. 1. ap. Corp. 
th sun Can,, tom, ii., citing the spurious 


Pla eee: 
6 Sa eae oe 


ON THE SOLEMNIZING OF HOLY MATRIMONY. 


157 


_tatur, et a sacerdote (1. sacerdotibus| benedicitur. 33. q. 5. ¢. aliters. 
_ Alind est clandestinum, quod fit sine predictis solennitatibus, 30. 
q. 5*, per totum. Cus clandestino matrimonio sacerdos consentiens Clandesti- 
est suspendendus, de cland. despons. ca. cum imhibitio”, quia ex 
eo sequuntur frequentius multa mala, et scandala quamplurima 
oriuntur, ideo ab Ecclesia est inhibitum: et maxime Cone. Trid., 
cap. 1. sess. 34, de Reform. Matrimoniz. 
tinum matrimonium publice erat ratificandum, de cland. desp. 2, 
Unde secundum generalis concilit constitutionem, de 
cland. desp., cap. cum inhibitio®, facienda sunt banna in Eccle- 
 siis per parochum sacerdotem antequam matrimonium contrahatur ; 
et indicendum est per tres dies festivos continuos in missarum so- 
lennits, ut si quis sciat inter tales personas, que inter se contrahere 
debent, esse aliquod impedimentum, infra competentem terminum 
assignandum debeat ipsum producere et manifestare ; in hac vel 
similia verba, viz. “ Ha due persone N. et N. volunt contrahere Forma de- 
Si quis est qui noverit aliquod impedimentum esse 
inter has personas, quod matrimonium inter eos impediat, illud trimoniay. 
Lit de hoe admonemus omnes primo, secundo, tertio, et 


Quod quidem clandes- 


Et alicubi qui sine istis 
Et st apparuerit aliqua 


Epistle of Evaristus already referred 
to. 

t [The whole questio is on this sub- 
ject; the last note contains the be- 
ginning of the passage. ] 

« [Statuimus, ut cum matrimonia 
fuerint contrahenda, in ecclesiis per 
presbyteros publice proponantur, com- 
petenti termino preefinito, ut infra illum 
qui voluerit et valuerit, legitimum im- 
pedimentum opponat: et ipsi presbyteri 
nihilominus investigent, utrum aliquod 
impedimentum obsistat, &c.— Decreta- 
lium, lib. iv. tit. iii. de clandestina de- 
sponsatione, cap. 3. ap. Corp. Jur. Can., 
tom. ii.] 

v [Si matrimonia ita occulte contra- 
huntur, quod exinde legitima probatio 
non appareat: ii qui ea contrahunt, ab 
ecclesia non sunt aliquatenus recipiendi. 
—Ibid., cap. 2.] 

x [See the last note but one. ] 

y {Our present form of publishing 
banns was suggested by Cosin. | 


~ Matrimonium aliud est legitimum, quod est, quando publice et First 
_solenniter contrahitur in facie ecclesia, eum debitis conditionibus 
! Bouisitie scilicet cum uxor a parentibus petitur, desponsatur, do- nium le- 


SERIES. 
Matrimo- 


gitimum. 


num. 


Banna 


nunciandi 
banna ma- 


First 


SERIES, 


158 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


conjectura impedimenti alicujus, interdicendum est illis ne contra- 
hant, donec veritas declaretur, et oppositum constet. Qui autem 


_contraxerint post prohibitionem sibi factam, et impedimentum exti- 


terit, wllegitimos filios procreabunt. Ht sacerdos qui tales inht- 
bitiones facere contempserit, vel regularis qui interfuerit, suspends 
debent ab officio per tres annos. Ht si quis malitiose falsum impe- 
dimentum olyecerit, canonicam ultionem non evadet, ut patet ubi 
supra. Sacerd. Rom., cap. 3. de Matrimonio?. 

The causes for which matrimony was ordained. | 

Tria autem sunt bona matrimoni, proles, fides, [et] sacra- 
mentum. 

1. Proles, ut charitative recipiant filios, et religiose educant. 
2. Hides, ut cum ala persona non coeant. 

3. Sacramentum, ut nunquam nisi per mortem separentur. 

Sacerd. Rom. de Matr., c. 2%. ex Cone. Florent. sub Eugenio 
papa IV.” 

And also speaking unto the persons that shall be married, he 
shall say, I require and charge you, &c.] [. . .] Sacerdos [.. .] 
interroget utrumque in hunc modum; ego ex parte Dei [... | 
mando vobis, quatenus mihi dicatis, st habetis aliquod impedimen- 
tum canonicum, quod possit impedire vos ab hoe matrimonio legi- 
time contrahendo; viz. si estis consanguinet, vel affines usque 
quartum gradum inclusive, et si aliquis vestrum cum aliqua per- 
sona contraxerit per verba de presenti. Si habetis [...| aha 
impedimenta canonica; ut infra (pag. prox.) Sacerd. Rom. de 
Matr., cap. 4°, 


De impedimentis Matrimoni4, 


Lf erther of you know any impediment. | 

Impedimenta matrimonii, que matrimonium impediunt contra- 
hendum et dirimunt jam contractum, sunt 12, et in his versibus 
continentur. 


tum matrimonii, &c. 
xviii. col. 550, D.] 


. ron Rom., fol. 27.] Concilia, tom. 


® [ibid., cap. 1. fol. 27. ] 


> [ Assignatur autem triplex bonum 
matrimonii. Primum est proles sus- 
cipienda et educanda ad cultum Dei. 
Secundum est fides, quam unus con- 
jugum alteri servare debet. Tertium 
indivisibilitas matrimonii, propter hoc 
quod significet indivisibilem conjunc- 
tionem Christi et Ecclesia.—Conc. 
Florent. (A.D. 1438,) Decret. Eugenii 
pape IY. § Septimum est sacramen- 


© [fol. 30. In this and the next ex- 
tract Cosin omitted what is not used in 
our Church. ] 

4 [What follows is derived from the 
Sacerdotale, omitting much, and slightly 
modifying the rest, so as to accommo- 
date it to our use. The words tenetur 
and non tenetur are added by Cosin, to- 
indicate what we do and do not retain. 
See Sacerd. Rom., fol. 28, b, 29, 30, a.] - 





ON THE SOLEMNIZING OF HOLY MATRIMONY. 159 


e. 1. Error. 2. Conditio. 3. Votum. 4. Cognatio. 5. Crimen. 
_ 6. Cultus disparitas. 7. Vis. 8. Ordo. 9. Ligamen. 10. 
; Flonestas. 

11. Si sis affinis. 12. Si forte coire nequibis. 

Primum impedimentum est error,...ut si credatur contrahi 
cum Martino, et contrahitur cum Petro... . (Tenetur.) 

2™, Est conditio, ut quando qui liber est contrahit ignoranter 
CUM SErVA. .. 

3". Lst votum ; quod cum simplex est “ impedit matrimonium 
contrahendum sed non dirimit contractum.” Cum solenne, impedit 
etiam et dirimit contractum. Non tenetur. 

4™, Non tenetur nisi im cognatione carnali ad quartum 
gradum. 

5™, Est crimen, primo, ut adulterans cum conjugata, et machi- 
nans in mortem viri vel e contra in mortem uxoris effectu secuto. 
2°. 82 promittit adultere, vivente ejus viro, ducere eam im uxorem. 
3°. si vivente legitima uxore scienter adulteram superinducit im 
comjugium. 

6™, Ut fidelis non potest contrahere cum Judea aut pagana, 
nisi promittit convert ad fidem. 

7™, Hecludit consensum, sicut metus mortis, &c. 

8™. Non tenetur. - 

9™,. Ut nullus qui legitime nupserit potest vivente prima uxore, 
aliam ducere; et si mter eas fuerunt sponsalia de futuro non 
potest cum alia de futuro spons. contrahere, potest autem per verba 
de presenti. 

10™. Non tenetur sicut nec 11™. 

12. Est impotentia coeundt. 

Impedimenta vero que impediunt matrimonium contrahendum, 
sed non dirimunt contractum, sunt tempus feriarum ab Adventu ad 
Lpiph. et a feria 4° Cinerum ad 8™ Pasche, &c. Nam in alis 
temporibus nuptias celebrare permittit Ecclesia. Quibus olim tem- 

poribus licet matrimonium per verba de presenti contrahi potuerit, 
non licebat tamen traducere uxorem, vel solemnizare nuptias, vel 
| eam carnaliter cognoscere. Aliud impedimentum est interdictum 
| Ecclesia secundum versus : 


Ecclesiz vetitum, necnon tempus feriarum, 
Impediunt fieri, permittunt facta teneri. 


7 
4 


a . 


Qui hac fusius videre et intelligere voluerit, begat Summam 


First 


SERIES. 


First 
SERIES. 





Giving of 
the woman 
to the man. 


The priest’s 


160 


Angelicam®, Sylvestrinam', aliasque. Sacerd. Rom. de Matrim., 


c. 3. 


Who giveth this woman to be married?| Non fit legitimum 
conjugium, ut a parentibus accepimus, et a sanctis apostolis, eorum- 
gue successoribus traditum invenimus, nisi ab us qui in ipsam fa- 
minam videntur dominationem habere, et a quibus eustoditur uxor 
And therefore was. this cere- 


petatur, &c. Evarist., ep. 18. 


_NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


mony of giving the woman to the man used, to shew that 
she had the consent of her parents or governors to wed 


herself. 


Leaving the ring upon the fourth finger.| Among the old 
Romans, when they married it was a custom that the man, 
in token of goodwill, gave a ring unto the woman, which she 
was to wear upon the finger next to the little finger upon 
the left hand, because unto that finger alone a certain artery 
proceedeth from the heart. Awl. Gel.» 

And the minister shalb add this blessing. | 


Among other ceremonies always used in matrimony, this — 


blessing @ was one, that the married persons should receive a solemn 


ceremony 


everused blessing from the priest. Mald. de Matr., p. 278i. Aliter non 
fit legitimum conjugium, ut a S. Apostolis eorumque successoribus 
traditum invenimus, nisi, Sc., et ut mos est a sacerdote benedica- 


in mar- 


riage. 


tur, Evarist., Ep. 1). 


cent I., ep. ii. c. 6%. 


© [The work meant is the Summa 
Angelica de casibus conscientiz, so 
called from its author, Angelus de 
Clavasio. } 

f [The Summa Sylvestrina, que 
Summa Summarum merito nuncu- 
patur, by Sylvester Mazolinus de 
Prierio. ] 

& [See above, p. 156, note q.] 

h [Veteres Greecos annulum habuisse 
in digito accepimus sinistre manus 
qui minimo est proximus: Romanos 
quoque homines aiunt sic plerumque 
annulis usitatos. Causam esse bhujus 
rei Apion in libris A’gyptiacis hance 
dicit, quod...repertum est nervum 
quendam tenuissimum ab eo uno digito, 
de quo diximus, ad cor hominis pergere 
et pervenire. — Aulus Gellius, Noct. 


And the ceremony is taken from the 
blessing that God gave Adam and Eve in Paradise. Inno-” 
So the fourth council of Carthage, can. 
13', Sponsus et sponsa benedicendi sunt a sacerdote, Sc. 


And 


Attic., lib. x. c. 10. tom. ii. p. 29, 30.] 

i [Respondes, semper fuisse in Ec- 
clesia aliquas sacras ceremonias adhi- 
bitas matrimonio. Una erat, ut con- 
juges benedicerentur a sacerdote... 
Maldonatus de Sacramentis, de Matri- 
monio, p. 432, E.] 

j [See above, note g.] 

x [... cum utique uxor ex legis pre- 
cepto ducatur, in tantum ut et in para- 
diso cum parentes humani generis con- 
jungerentur, ab ipso Domino sint bene- 


dicti, et Salomon dicit, A Deo prepa-_ 
rabitur viro uxor. Quam formam etiam — 
sacerdotes omnes servare usus ipse 


demonstrat ecclesiz.—Innocentii Papz 
I. Epist. ii. c. 6, (opus spurium.) Con-— 
cilia, tom. iii. col. 9, C.] . 

1 [Cited above, p. 156, note r.] 








i 
; 
, 





¥ 


ON THE SOLEMNIZING OF HOLY MATRIMONY. 161 


S. Aug., Serm. 243™, Benedictionem eum sponsa sua non mere- 
bitur accipere qui, Sc. 

_ Yet it was the custom of the ancient Church never to add 
t this blessing to persons that married the second time, nor 
; was the priest suffered to be present at the marriage feast. 
Concil. Neocesarien., can. 7"; 8. Amb., 2a 1 Corinth. vii.°; et 
im 2% Tim. .?: Concil. Lateran. Tit. de Nupt.1 Whether it 
were to deter men from second marriages, (as being too in- 
continent, as whosoever did marry the second time was of 
old enjoined a short penance for it. Conc. Neocesar., ean. 8°; 








First 


SERIES. 


Yet not in 
second 
marriages, 


Laodic., can. 1*,) or because they could not iterate the bene- [Mald. de 


diction. 


The minister or clerks going to the Lord’s table. | 

Unde sufficiam ad enarrandam felicitatem ejus matrimonit, sci- 
licet, Christiani, quod Ecclesia conciliat, et confirmat oblatio, et 
obsignatum angeli renuntiant, Pater ratum habet? Tertull. ad 


Uxorem, lib. ii." 


The man and the woman kneeling afore the Lord’s table, &e.] 
If the priest be to stand at the table, and to turn his face 


m [Serm. 289. de Div. § 5, opus spu- 
rium inter Op. S. Aug., tom. v. in ap- 


_ pend. col. 482, F. (aliter Serm, 243. de 


Temp.) } 

" [mpeoBvrepor eis yduous diyapotv- 
Twv wn éoriacbat.—Concil. Neocesar. 
(A.D. cire. 314.) can. 7. Concilia, tom. 
i, col. 1512, C.] 

_° [Denique prime nuptie sub bene- 
dictione Dei celebrantur sublimiter: 
secundze autem etiam in presenti ca- 
rent gloriaa—Comment. in 1 Cor. cap, 
Vii. ver. 39, opus spurium inter Op. S. 
Tyee tom. ii, in append. col. 138, 

P [Homini enim unam uxorem de- 
crevit Deus cum qua benedicatur; nemo 
enim cum secunda benedicitur.—Com- 
ment. in 1 Tim. cap. iii. ver.12, opus spu- 
rium inter Op. S. Ambros., tom. ii. in 
append. col. 295, D.] 

4 [Vir autem vel mulier ad biga- 
miam transiens, non debet a presbytero 
benedici: quia, cum alia vice benedicti 
sint, earum benedictio non debet iterari. 


~—Cone. Lateran. III. (A.D. 1179.) 


Tit. de Nuptiis secundis, cap. 1, Con- 


- Cilia, tom. xiii. col. 505, C.] 


* [wepl tv mAclotois yduols Tept- 
mimrovtwy 6 wey xpdvus caphs 6 


| @picpévos. % 8& avacrpodh Kal h mi- 


oTis abray ovwtéuver tov xpdvor.— 
60SIN, 


Concil. Neocesar., can. iii. ubi supra, 
Rit. *' 

- ® [orep) row Sety kara toy éxxAnoiac- 
TiKOD Kavova Tovs éAcvOepws Kal vouluws 
cuvapbévtas Sevrépors *ydpors, wy Aadpo- 
youlay morhouvtas, dAlyov xpévou Ta- 
perOdvros, kal cxoAacdvTwy Tails mpo- 
cevxais Kal vynorelus Kata ovyyvdunv 
arodlioc0a abrots thy Kowwvlay apira- 
peévnv.—Concil. Laodicen. (A.D. cir. 
564.) can. 1. Concilia, tom. i. col, 
1532, A.] 

* [ Mos fuit semper Ecclesiz, ut cum 
prime nuptiz benedicerentur, secunda 
carerent benedictione, ut constat ex con- 
cilio Neoczsariensi, cap. 7, &c.... 
in secundis nuptiis quamvis essent sa- 
eramenta, duabus de causis benedictio 
non dabatur. Una erat quod Christiani 
illi antiqui severiores ... sicut injun- 
gebant peenitentiam illis qui contrahe- 
bant secunda matrimonia, ut illos de- 
terrerent, aut indicarent esse signum 
incontinentiz; ita etiam privabant eos 
benedictione. Altera causa est, ... 
quod illi, qui contrahebant secundas 
nuptias, jam accepissent aliam bene- 
dictionem in primis nuptiis.—Maldo- 
natus, ibid., col. 440, D. 441, B, C.} 

« (Tertullian. ad Uxorem, lib, ii, 
cap. 8. Op. p. 171, C.] 


Matr., 


p. 291+] 


First 


SERIEs. 


162 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


towards them that kneel before it, then is he not to stand | 
at the north side, (for there he should need no turning,) but 
just before it, between the altar and them that are kneeling 
at the steps thereof. 

Sacerdos vertit se ad sponsum et sponsam coram altari genu- 
flexos, ita quod sponsa sit a sinistris sponsi. Sacerd. Rom. de 
Matr., c. 4%. : 


De exhortatione et admonitione facienda sponso et sponse per 
sacerdotem. 


The new married persons, the same day of their marriage, must 
receive the holy Communion. | 

If the persons to be married were to receive the Commu- 
nion, and to prepare themselves the better before the mar- 
riage-day, they were thus exhorted and admonished by the 
priest at ghostly confession. 

LTortandi sunt sponsus et sponsa ad sacramentalem confessionem, 
et im ea sunt instruendi qualiter in matrimonio vivere debent ; et 
quod cum omni honestate actum conjugiw exerceant ; considerantes 
quod inter eos est Sacramentum S*. matris Ecclesia, quod est ho- 
neste exercendum, juxta dictym B. Pauli Apostoli, 1°”. ad Thes- 
sal., c. 4, Unusquisque vestrum sciat vas suum possidere im sancti- 
jicatione et honore, non in passione desiderii, sicut gentes que 
ignorant Deum; quoniam Deus non vocavit vos im immunditiam 
sed im sanctificationem. Hoc autem fiet, si in actu matrimonir 
procedent, non sicut equus et mulus, sed sicut persone Deum ti- 
mentes, et sacramentum matrimonit honorantes, viz. non ex ardore 
libidinis, sed causa prolis suscipienda, debiti reddendi consortia, 
sicut tenentur, nec tali actu conjugii utantur modo indebito (etiam 
in vase consueto) et tactibus immundis, ut pluries actum ipsum ex- 
ercere possint, vel ut habeant majorem delectationem, nec utantur 
calidis cibaruis et potibus, ut plus ad hoc tententur. Nee vir 
abutatur uxore extra vas debitum, quia im omnibus his peccarent. 
Item quod tempore menstrui non conveniant. Item, quod conentur 
honorare magnas festivitates et pro Dei honore non uti conjugio ; 
et similiter in diebus jejuniorum, et processionum, et per triduum — 
ante, et per triduum post sumptionem 8. communionis. 81 rgitur 
honeste matrimonium exercuerint, Deus illis bona dabit, et prospe- — 

* [Sacerd. Rom. fol. 32.] 

















ON THE ORDER FOR THE VISITATION OF THE SICK. 163 






vabuntur ; et bonos filios generabunt, et diu vivent cum latitia in- 
simul, et vitam aternam eis concedet Dominus Deus noster. Itaque 


mere discant; et cum pace et fidelitate alter altert amorem et 
_ fidem servet. 

Bonum etiam esset si Sacram. Euchar. sumerent ante matrimo- 
nium contrahendum, ut muniti talc viatico cum majore gratia con- 
traherent. 

Tertull., lib. ii. ad Uxorem, meminit oblationis qua matrimo- 
nium in Ecclesia confirmatur. Additio ex Sacerdotali, cap. 4¥. 


THE ORDER FOR THE VISITATION OF THE SICK. 


Then shall the minister, &c. Dearly beloved, know this, The 
Almighty God is the Lord of life and death. | 

Sir Th. More’s Treatise of Comfort in Tribulation hath in 
it many excellent things to this purpose. Vide hbrum, nec te 
penitehit*. 


OF PRIVATE CONFESSION, AND OF THE PRIEST’S POWER 
- TO ABSOLVE. 


Here shall the sick person make a special confession. | 

The Church of England, howsoever it holdeth not. confes- 
sion and absolution sacramental, that is made unto, and re- 
ceived from a priest, to be so absolutely necessary, as without 


| it there can be no remission of sins; yet by this place it is 


manifest, what she teacheth concerning the virtue and force 
of this sacred action. The confession is commanded to be 
special. The absolution is the same that the ancient Church, 
and the present Church of Rome useth. What would they 
more? Maldonate, their greatest divine that I meet with, 
de Penit., p. 194, saith thus: Lyo autem sic respondendum puto, 
mon esse necesse, ut semper peccata remittantur per sacramentum 
penitentia, sed ut ipsum sacramentum natura sua possit peccata 
| remittere, si inveniat peccata, et non inveniat contrarium impedi- 
| mentum. And so much we acknowledge. Our “if he feel his 
y [Ibid., see Tertull., p. 161, note u. ] « [Maldonatus, de Sacramentis, de 
z [See above, p. 77. note f.] Peenitentia, col. 256, E, 257, A.] 
M2 








_sacerdos de talibus eos sapienter et discrete moneat, ut Deum t- - 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


164 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


conscience troubled,” is no more than his s7 inveniat peccata; 
for if he be not troubled with sin, what needs either confes- 
sion or absolution ? 


science; if he hath committed any mortal sin then, we re- 
quire confession of it to a priest, who may give him, upon his 
true contrition and repentance, the benefit of absolution ; 
which takes effect according to his disposition that is ab- 
solved. And therefore the Church of Rome adds to the form 
of absolution, Quantum in me est, et de gure possum, ego te 
absolvo’; not absolutely, lest the doctrine should get head, 
that some of their ignorant people believe, that be the party 
confessed ‘never so void of contrition, the very act of absolu- 
tion forgives him his sins. The truth is, that in the priest’s 
absolution there is the true power and virtue of forgiveness, 
which will most certainly take effect, Nisi ponitur obex, as in 
baptism. 

Who hath left power to His Church to absolve, &c.] 

This is that which the puritans of our days, and their 
fathers the Novatians, old puritans of the primitive Church, 
deny. Novatiani dicebant, fieri injuriam Deo, si sacerdotes ha- 
berent potestatem peccata remittendi, Ambr., lib.1. de Pen., cap. 
2°. They use to scoff at it, What can he forgive me my sins? 
which was the wont of all the old heretics. Mald., de Sacram., 


Venial sins, that separate not from the} 
grace of God, need not so much to trouble a man’s con-}} 





p. 2424, 


The words seem to refer to the reserved 


b [Maldonatus continues after the 
cases of excommunication, &c. ] 


words just cited; Atque hic est sensus 


eorum verborum, ‘Ego te absolvo,’ 
‘quantum in me est, ego te absolvo.’ 
Cosin speaks as if these words were 
added to the form of absolution, which 
does not seem to be Maldonatus’ mean- 
ing. The words used are: Dominus 
noster Jesus Christus te absolvat, et 
ego auctoritate ipsius te absolvo ab 
omni vinculo excommunicationis ma- 
joris vel minoris, suspensionis et in- 
terdicti in quantum possum, et tu in- 
diges, et restituo te unitati, et commu- 
nioni fidelium, et sanctis Sacramentis 
Ecclesiz. Iterur ego te absolvo ab 
omnibus peccatis tuis in nomine, &c. 


¢ [Sed aiunt se Domino referre reve- 
rentiam, cui soli remittendorum crimi- 
num potestatem reservent. Immo nulli 
majorem injuriam faciunt, quam qui 
ejus volunt mandata rescindere, com- 
missum munus refundere.—S. Ambros. 


de Peenit., lib. i. cap. 2. § 6. Op. tom. — 


ii. col. 391, D.] 


4 [See Maldonatus, ibid. col. 254, B, © 


in refuting the argument from the 


words, ‘‘who can forgive sins but God — 
only,’’ he says, ‘‘ Ita respondendum est — 
communi argumenta hereticorum,’’ 


&c. | 








ON THE OFFICE FOR THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD. 165 


i First 
SERIES. 
f De Exequiis et Ritu Funebri. 


“ Et jam fama volans tanti prenuncia luctus” Psalms 

Totius urbis populum ad exequias congregabat. Sonabant 5r8 * 
_ Psalmi, et aurata tecta templorum reboans in sublime quatiebat the quires. 
Alleluia. 

** Hic juvenum chorus, ille senum, gut carmine laudes 

* Femineas, et facta ferant.” 

Non sic Furius de Gallis, non Papirius de Samnitibus, non 
Scipio de Numantia, non Pompeius de Pontigentibus trium- 
phavit. Audio precedentium turmas, et catervatim in Ecelesiis 
ejus multitudinem confluentem. Non platee, non porticus, non 
imminentia desuper tecta capere poterant prospectantes. Tum 
suos in unum populos Roma conspexit. Favebant sibt omnes 
in gloria peenitentis. Nec mirum si de ejus salute homines 
exultarent, de cujus conversione angeli letabantur in ceelo. 
S. Hier., Hp. 30. ad Oceanum, de Fabiolat. 

The priest meeting the corpse at the church-stile, shall say, 
or else the priests and clerks shall sing. | 

The puritans, in their profanation, use to tell us that this 
meeting of the corpse, and going along with it to the grave, 
or to the church, singing or saying the sentences as we go, 
is rather a hallowing of the air than any edifying of such as 
follow the body; seeing the nearest are full of mourning, 
and so not disposed; and the farthest off out of hearing, and 
so not able to attend, and the less because they are all in 
passing, untutored, unchristian men; by the same reason 
King David was much to blame, to carry up the ark into 
the tabernacle, some going before and some behind, with 
hymns and songs of glory, and music of all sorts, and all 
the people following after. If he had consulted with these 
kind of men, they would have told him though he were 
never so near to God’s own heart, that it was a matter of 
superstition, and tended to no edification at all. I wonder 
what flints such men’s souls are made on, that are no more 
affected with this orderly procession and solemn music of 





® [This is a note on the words, “ or f (S. Hieron., Ep. 77, ad Oceanum, 
else the priest and clerks shall sing,” (ed. vet. 30,) cap. 11. Op. tom. i. col, 
&e. } 462, C, D 


First 
SERIES. 


166 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


the choir in order, which the very angels of heaven are in 
love withal. It sufficeth us, that the known benefit thereof 
to devout and quiet Christians doth countervail millions of 


- such inconveniences as are surmised, though they were not 


only surmised, but found withal. 

Aderant Hierosolymorum &, et aliarum urbium episcopi, et sa- 
cerdotum inferioris gradus ac levitarum innumerabilis multitudo; 
omne monasterium virginum, et menachorum chori repleverant. 
... Kt hine non ululatus, non planctus, uti inter seculi homines 


Jfieri solet, sed psalmorum linguis diversis examina concrepabant. 


The use of 
wax lights 
and tapers 
at funerals 
in St. Hie- 
rome’s 
time. Idem 
etiam os- 
tenditur ex 
Nazianz. 
Orat. 2. in 
Julian.® et 
Orat. in 
fun. Cesa- 
rii fratrisi, 


Translataque episcoporum manibus, et cervicem feretro subji- 
cientibus, cum ali pontifices lampadas cereosque preferrent, 
alii choros psallentium ducerent, in media ecclesia spelunce 
Salvatoris est posita. Tota ad funus ejus Palestinarum urbium 
turba convenit; quem monachorum latentium in remo cellula 
sua tenuit? quam virginum cubiculorum secreta texerunt ? sacri- 
legium putabant, qui non tali femine ultimum reddidisset offi- 
cium. .... Hebreo, Greco, Latino, Syrioque sermone psalmi 
in ordine personabant, non solum triduo, donec subter ecclesiam 
et juxta specum Domini conderetur, sed per omnem hebdomadam, 
cunctis, qui venerant, suum funus et proprias credentibus lachry- 
mas. St. Hier., Lp, 27. ad Eustoch. de Paula Matre*. 

Idem fere scribit in Epist. ad Paulam de morte Blesille’, 
dicens illum planctum quem Christiani fecerunt propter Stepha- 
num mortuum Act. vill., non fuisse tantum lachrymas, sed pom- 
pam et externos ritus. And that Christians were always 
wont so to bury their dead, is likewise to be seen by Clem., 
Ep.1™, and St. Dionys. Areop. Eccl. Hier. cap. ult.*, where all 
the ceremonies then used are described. 


& [This is a note on the words, “ and 
clerkes’’ in the rubric last cited. ] 

h [Of the funeral of Constantius: 
6 mév ye wmaparéuretat ravdhuos evpy- 
plats Te Kal wouTats... @dais mavyirxors 
kal Sadouxlas, als Xpicriavol rime 
petrdoracw evoeBh voulCouev.—S. Greg. 
Naz. Orat. v. (in Julianum ii.) § 16. 
Op. tom. i. p. 157, D.} 

i [The passage referred to is this :— 
vexpos émavovmevos, tuvois e& Buvwv 
TOpAMEUMOUEVOS,. +... UNTPYS AaUTpo- 
gopla TH wader thy evocBelay dvTeico- 
youons.—S. Greg. Naz. Orat. vii. (fune- 
bris in Laudes Cesarii fratris) § 15. 
ibid. p. 208, C. Billius’ Latin Trans- 
lation was, Materna cereorum gesta- 


tione, as if he had read Aauradn¢opia. 
See note t, ibid. ] 

k (S. Hieron., Ep. 108, ad Eusto- 
chium, (ed, vet. Ep. 27.) Op. tom. i. 
col. 716, 717. ] 

1 [...Quum et in aetis apostolo- 
rum, jam evangelio coruscante, Ste- 
phano fecerint Jerosolyme fratres 
planctum magnum; et utique planctus 
magnus, non in plangentium exanima- 
tione, ut tu putas, sed in pompa funeris 
et exequiarum frequentia intelligendus 
sit.—S. Hieron., Ep. 39, ad Paulam, 
§ 3. Op. tom. i. col. 179, D.] 

m [...mortuos sepelire, et diligenter 
eotum exequias peragere, pro eisque 
orare et eleemosynas dare.—S. Clem, 


rE eo See 





ON THE OFFICE FOR THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD. 


167 


S. Aug. lib. ix. Confess. cap. 12: Indicat solitum fuisse can- 
tari psalmum centesimum primum ; misericordiam et judicium 


cantabo tibt Domine?. 


And in King Edward’s first Service- 
book’ there be three psalms appointed to be sung, either 
_ before or after the burial of the corpse. Among other cere- 


monies this was ever one, ut Psalmi cantarentur, et recita- 
rentur orationes pro mortuis, Clem., lib. vi. Constit. cap. 30°. 
And therefore St. Hierome calls it the ancient custom and 
tradition of Christians so to do, in Vita P. Eremites, Ob- 
voluto, inquit, et prolato foras corpore, hymnos quoque et 
psalmos de Christiana traditione decantans contristabatur 


Antonius. 


The like we may read in Severus Sulpitius de 


obitu S. Martini‘, in S. Gr. Nyssen., Orat. in Fun. Meleti™, 
and in his Epistle to Olympias de oditu sororis*, in Euseb. de 
Fun. Constantini, lib. iv. ejus vite, cap. 65, 667, in 8. Chrysost. 
Homil. 4. in Ep. 1. ad Timoth., Hom. 70*, ad pop. Antioch.*, 


Epist. 1. (opus spurium) Concilia, tom. 
i. col. 96, B.] 

. [S. Dionys. Areop. de Ecclesiastica 
Hierarchia, cap. vii. 2. Mysterium super 
his qui sancte obdormiverunt, Op. tom. 
i, p. 265, B, C, &c.] 

° [This is a note on the words,... 
‘Clerks shall sing; Man that is born 
of a woman,” &c. } 

P [Cohibito ergo a fletu illo puero, 
Psalterium arripuit Evodius, et cantare 
cepit Psalmum. Cui respondebamus 
omnis domus: ‘‘ Misericordiam et ju- 
dicium cantabo tibi Domine.”—S. Aug. 
Conf., lib. ix. cap. 12. § 31. Op. tom. i. 
col. 168, C.] 

a (“These Psalms, (Ps. 116, 139, 
146,) with other suffrages following, 
are to be said in the church, either be- 
fore or after the burial of the corpse,’’ 
Rubric in the order for the Burial of 
the Dead. Book of Common Prayer, 
1549. ] 

r[...Kal ev rais étddo1s Tay KeKot- 
pnuevwv WddrdrovTes TpoTéuTeTE adTovs, 
éav dow morol év kvpi~.—Const.A post., 
ae vi. c. 29. Concilia, tom. i. col. 412, 

5 

* [S. Hieron. Vit. Pauli Eremite, 
cap. 16. Op, tom, ii. col. 11, B. Cosin 
had provoluto for prolato. ] 

t {Hoc igitur beati viri corpus usque 
ad locum sepulcri, hymnis canora cce- 
lestibus turba prosequitur.— Sulpicii 
Severi Epistola ii. ad Bassulam socrum 
suam (quomodo §. Martinus ex hac 


vita ad immortalem transierit). Op. 
p- 509. Lugd. Bat. 1647.) 

u [rére eriBarddumov viv émitddtov 
&5ouev.—S. Gregor. Nyssen. Oratio 
funeb. in funere Meletii, Op. tom. iii. 
p-. 588, A.] 

x [réte nal 6 péyas AaBld ras idias 
buvwdias Tots Ophvois Expnoev, kal... 
étekadeiro Tovs Ophvous Tots uéAcoww.— 
Id. in funere Pulcheriz Oratio conso- 
latoria, ibid. p. 517, A.] 

y [In these two and the following 
chapters the rites observed after the 
death and at the funeral of Constantine 
are mentioned; but nothing appears to 
be said of Hymns or Psalms.—See 
Euseb. de Vit. Const., lib. iv. e. 65 sqq. 
ap. Hist. Eccl. Script., tom. i. pp. 664, 
sqq.- | 

* [ode Yoaor Odvaroy tév. Odvaror 
pe Suvwy mpoTméeurovat tous GredAOdvras. 
—S. Chrys. Hom. xiv. in 1 Ep. ad Tim. 
§ 5. Op. tom. xi. col. 680, E.] 

@ [S. Chrys. Hom. Ixx. ad pop, Ant. 
Op. Latine, fol. 206. Par. 1546. This 
part of the Homily is made up from the 
4th Homily on the Epistle to the He- 
brews. The words in the original are; 
tl 3¢ of Buvor (BovAovra); obfxe Tov 
@edv dotafouer, nal edxapioToduev Str 
Aorby éotehdvwoe Toy GmredOdvTa, STt 
tav nmévev amhdrdakev, bri THs Serias 
ex Badwy exer mapa Eavtdv.—S.Chrysost. 
in Ep.ad Hebr., Hom. iv. § 5. See Ap, 
Lat. Op. tom, xii. p. 46, B.] 


First 
SERIES. 


Burial ever 
performed 
with saying 
or singing 
of hymns?®. 


First 
SERIES. 


That it is 
the priest’s 
office to at- 
tend at the 
burying of 
the dead, as 
well as at 
prayer and 
preaching 
&c. for the 
living. 


168 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Theod. lib. v. Hist. cap. 86"; in S. Aug. de Civit. Dei, lib. xxi. 
cap. 13°. And so in the third Council of Toledo, can. 21, 
it was decreed on this wise’, [Religiosorum omnium corpora] 
gui divina vocatione ab hac vita recedunt, cum Psalmis et 
Psallentium vocibus debent ad sepulchrum deferri .. . (post) 
... ta spe resurrectionis Christianorum corporibus divinorum 
canticorum impenditur famulatus .... (post) .... sie enim 
Christianorum per omnem mundum humari oportet corpora 
defunctorum. 

The earth shall be cast upon the body by some standing by. | 
In King Edward’s first Service-book it was here ordered, 
that the priest should cast earth upon the corpse®. And 
though it be here altered more for respect of the priest’s 
office, which was thought too high a function to take the 
grave-digger’s spade in his hand, yet the custom prevails in 
most places at this day, and still the priest uses to cast the 
earth upon the corpse, before the clerk or sexton meddles 
with it. No great fault, were it but to keep out that un- 
christian fancy of the puritans, that would have no minister 
to bury their dead, but the corpse to be brought to the grave 
and there put in by the clerk, or some other honest neigh- 
bour, and so back again without any more ado. And this 
rubric, appointing the earth to be cast upon the body by 
some standing by, hath given them occasion to plead for it, 
that there is no need of any priest at a burial, that he 1s not 
a minister ordained for the dead, but for the living; and 
that he hath work enough to look to them with praying and 
preaching, and administering the Sacraments, with reading 
and studying the Scriptures, &c., as if when a man is once 
dead, he belonged no more to the communion of saints or 
the mystical Body of Christ. But whatsoever their meaning 
was that altered this rubric, sure it was not as these new 





® [On the removal of the remains of 
S. Chrysostom: rdy evepyérny vyepalpe 
rots buvois* exer S€ Kowvwvous Tis buve- 
dias tas &SeApas.—Theodoret. H. E. 
v. 36. p. 236. ] 

¢ [There is nothing on the subject 
in this chapter. Maldonatus cites lib. 
xxi. c. 24, in evidence of prayers offered 
for the dead, and Conf. lib. ix. ¢c. 12, 
for a Psalm (Ps. 101) (as it were cus- 
tomarily) sung at a funeral. 

4 (Conc. Tolet. III. (A.D 589), 


cap. 22. Concilia, tom. vi. col. 711, C. 
The words are slightly altered by Cosin; 
they run thus in the council, cum 
Psalmis tantummodo, psallentium vo-« 
cibus debere ad sepulcra, &c.... suf- 
ficiat autem quod in spe, &e. | 

¢ (“Then the priest casting earth 
upon the corpse, shall say: Forasmuch 
as it hath pleased Almighty God,” &c. 
—Rubric in the order for the Burial of 
the Dead. Book of Common Prayer, 
1549. ] 





ON THE OFFICE FOR THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD. 169 


puritans’ humours would have it; for the priest is appointed 


_here to do all the solemn offices that belong to burial, and 
so it was ever the custom of the Church. Semper adhibiti 
_sunt sacerdotes (saith Maldonate, de peenit. p. 166) ad sepe- 
_liendos mortuos ; and he proves it out of St. Amb., Serm. 908, 


and out of Damasus in the Life of Marcellinus®. 

Commit his body to the ground. | 

Et deposito eo in fossam, desuper humum congregans tumu- 
lum ex more composuit, St. Hier., in vita P. Eremite', 

In joy and felicity.| It followed here in King Edward’s 
Service-book on this manner* : ‘ Grant unto this Thy servant, 
that the sins which he committed in this world be not im- 
puted unto him, but that he escaping the gates of hell and 
pains of eternal darkness, may evermore dwell in the region 
of light, &c.; and when that dreadful day of the general re- 
surrection shall come, make him to rise also with the just 
[and righteous], and receive this body again to glory,’ &c. 

That we with this our brother, and all other’, &c.| The 
puritans think that here is prayer for the dead allowed and 
practised by the Church of England, and so think I; but 
we are not both of one mind in censuring the Church for so 
doing. They say it is popish and superstitious; I for my 
part esteem it pious and Christian. The body lies dead in 
the grave, and but by Christ’s power and God’s goodness, 
shall never be raised up again; (and the benefit is so great, 
that sure it is worth the praying for; because then we may 
pray for what we ourselves, or our deceased brethren as yet 
have not™,) therefore doth the Church pray for a perfect con- 


f [Maldonatus’ words are: Ad hee 
adhibiti fuerunt semper sacerdotes ad 
sepeliendos mortuos, ut pro illis ora- 
rent, ut constat ex D. Ambros. Serm. 
90, et ex Damaso Papa, in vita Marcel- 
lini, &c.—Maldonatus, De Sacramen- 
tis. De Peenitentia, cap. 9. De Pur- 

_ gator. Quest. 1. col. 356, A.] 

§ [Venientes autem parentes beatze 
Agne virginis cum sacerdotibus nocte, 
abstulerunt corpus Emeritiane, et se- 
pelierunt illud, &e.—S. Ambros. Epist. 
1. (opus spurium) ed. vett. Serm. xc. 
Op. tom. ii. Append. col. 483, B.] 

 { Marcellus presbyter collegit noctu 
corpora cum presbyteris, et diaconibus 
cum hymnis, et sepelivit via Salaria in 


ecemeterio Priscilla.—Anastasii Biblio- 
thecarii Historia de Vitis Roman. et Pon- 
tificum, Damaso falso ascript. § xxx. 
S. Marcellinus, tom, i. p. 23. ed. Blan- 
chini, Rom. 17381.) 

i [S. Hieron. Vit. Pauli Eremite, 
cap. 16. Op. tom. ii. col. 12, A. Vallar- 
sius reads ‘‘ effossam posuit.’’ } 

k [After the Lord’s Prayer there 
were suffrages, and then the prayer, 
part of which is given here.—Book of 
Common Prayer, 1549, ubi supra. ] 

1 [These words were altered in 1662.] 

m {The words in parentheses were 
added by Cosin after the rest was 
written. } 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


The cele- 
bration of 
the Com- 
munion at 
burials. 


170 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


summation of bliss both in soul and body, to be given to our 
brother departed. We believe the resurrection, and yet may 
pray for it, as we do for God’s kingdom to come, &c. Be- 
sides, prayer for the dead cannot be denied but to have been 
universally used of all Christians, in the ancientest and purest 
times of the Church, and by the Greek fathers that never 
admitted any purgatory, no more than we do, and yet pray 
for the dead notwithstanding. What though their souls be 
in bliss already? they may have a greater degree of bliss by 
our prayers; and when their bodies come to be raised and 
joined to their souls again, they shall be sure of a better 
state; our prayers for them then will not be in vain, were it 
but for that alone. And what if their souls, for the ill lives 
they led here on earth be in torments in hell, Licet nobis 
(saith 8. Chrys. Hom. 21. in Act.») lenius ills, si voluerimus, 
supplicium facere, si preces apud Deum pro illis faciamus. 


The Collect. 


It would be known why this prayer is named the Collect 
more than all the rest. The Collect is to go before the 
Epistle and Gospel, and then the Communion, or the sacri- 
fice of the Church, to follow. Thus it was appointed in King 
Edward’s Service®, (before Calvin’s letter to the sacrilegious 
duke of Somerset got it yielded?,) that there should be a 
celebration of the Sacrament at the burial of the dead. And 
the name of the Collect standing still with such reference 
thereunto, I know no reason but that we might take the 
advantage, and to shew that our Church is not to be ruled 


™ [ori yap, tori, day WéAwuev, Kovpnvy memoration of the departed at the 





avT@ yeveoOa Thy KdAacw' ay obv edxds 
brtp av’rod moimuev cuvex@s’ by éren- 
poobrny &:5Guer.—S. Chrys. in Act. Ap. 
cap. 9. Hom. xxi. § 3. Op. tom. ix. 
p- 174, E, 175, A.J 

° {In the Book of Common Prayer, 
1549, after ‘the Order for the Burial 
of the Dead’ came “the Celebration 
of the Holy Communion, where there 
is a burial of the Dead,”’ in which this 
is the Collect: and 1 Thess. iv. 13—18, 
and John vi. 37—39, (which are alluded 
to in the Collect,) are the Epistle and 
Gospel. } 

P [Calvin does not speak specially 
of the burial service, but of the com- 


Communion; he says: Audio recitari 
istic in coene celebratione oratio- 
nem pro defunctis: neque vero hoc 
ad purgatorii papistici approbationem 
referri satis scio. Neque etiam me 
latet proferri posse antiquum ritum 
mentionis defunctorum faciende, ut 
eo modo communio fidelium omnium 
in unum corpus conjunctorum declare- 
tur... illa vero defunctorum comme- 
moratio que ipsorum venerationem 
vel commendationem conjunctam habet 

. assumentum est, quod in coena 
Domini nullo modo ferendum est.— 
J. Calvinus Protectori Angliz, Oct. 22, 
1548, Calvini Epistole, p. 42.]. 


' 


| 


ON THE OFFICE FOR THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD. 171 


by Calvin, use the old custom still, and after the burial of First 
any man, go to the Sacrament. Sure it was the ancient Renin 
order of all Christians so to do, Concil. Carthag. iii. can. 294; 
Aug. in Ench., cap. 110". Whether it were to confirm 
Christians the better in hope of our certain resurrection 
after death signified by that Sacrament, or to offer up the 
sacrifice of the Church unto God, to apply the effect of 
Christ’s sacrifice unto the party deceased for his resur- 
rection again at the last day, and receiving his perfect 
consummation both of soul and body in the kingdom of 
heaven, as in the prayer before; which but for the virtue 
of Christ’s death, nor he that is dead, nor he that is alive 
can have any hope to enjoy. 


Case Aad banquets, and the dole then used to be given 
to the poor. 


Besides the devout performance of these exequies with Funeral 
the solemn recital of psalms and prayers and lessons here *"4¢t 
ordered, there is a custom among men to give some moderate 
banquet at home unto those that accompany the corpse to 
the grave. A custom taken from the Jews, as they took it 
from natural reason ; it being a comfort of them whose minds 
through natural affection use to be pensive at such a time. 

And in reference to this spake the prophet, Jer. xvi. 7, 
that God would so grieve and vex the people, as men should 
not give them the cup of consolation for their father or for 
their mother; that it should not be with them as in peace- 
able times with others, who bringing their ancestors unto 
the grave with weeping eyes, have notwithstanding means 
wherewith to comfort themselves with the society of the 
living, as Solomon said, Prov. xxxi. 6, “Give wine unto 
them that have grief of heart.” And hereupon arose funeral 





4 [Ut sacramenta altaris non nisi a 
jejunis hominibus celebrentur, excepto 
uno die anniversario, quo Coena Domini 
celebratur. Nam, si aliquorum, po- 
meridiano tempore defunctorum, sive 
episcoporum sive clericorum, sive ce- 
terorum, commendatio facienda est, 
solis orationibus fiat, si illi qui faciunt 
jam pransi inveniantur.—Conce. Carth. 
III. (A.D. 397.) can. 29. Concilia, 


tom. ii. col. 1403, D, E.] 

r [ Neque negandum est defunctorum 
animas pietate suorum viventium re- 
levari, cum pro illis sacrificium media- 
toris offertur vel eleemosyne in eccle- 
sie fiunt. Sed eis hee prosunt, qui, 
cum viverent, ut hec sibi postea possent 
prodesse, meruerunt.—S. Aug. Enchi- 
ridion, cap. 110. § 29. Op. tom. vi. 
col. 238, A.] 


172 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


First 


sermons, that not only the living might be instructed, but 
SERIES. 


the pensive, whom it concerned most, might have words of 
comfort ministered unto them. 

There is another custom of giving alms to the poor at the 
times of funerals whereof Tertullian maketh mention’, and 
other ancient authors, calling such feasts of the poor Agapa, 


Funeral 
doles to the 
poor. 


Love-feasts. 
in Matth.' : 


And it is more plain in S.Chrys., Homil. 32 
Cur post mortem tuorum pauperes convocas? And 


so Paulinieh in Epitaph. ad Pammachium de morte uxoris®, 
commends his devotion for bestowing such large alms upon 


the poor at that time. 
in Acta*: 


And 8S. Chrysostom again, Hom. 21, 
Ticet nobis si voluerimus lenius illi (defuncto) suppli- 


cium facere, si preces apud Deum pro illo faciamus, si eleemo- 


synam demus. 


[ON THE PSALTER. | 


De Psalmis David. 


S. Chrysostomus, Homil. 6, de Penitent.3, querit et admi- 
ratur, quare pre ceteris V. Test. Novique scriptis librum 
Psalmorum David Christiani omnes sic adamarent, atque hunc 


solum ore versari voluerunt. 


Ecclesiis, inquit, pernoctantibus 


primus et medius et novissimus est David, diluculo queruntur 
hymnorum modulationes, et primus, et medius, et novissimus 
est David. Si pompe in funeralibus defunctorum, primus et me- 


dius et novissimus est. 


In monasteriis sanctis choris angeli- 


carum acierum et primus et medius et.novissimus David. In 
cenobis virginum Mariam imitantium et primus et medius et 


novissimus David est, &c. &. 


*[....pro cujus spiritu postulas, 
pro qua oblationes annuas reddis. Sta- 
bis ergo ante Deum cum tot uxoribus 
quot in oratione commemoras? et 
offeres pro duabus? et commendatis 
illos duas per sacerdotem . .. et ascen- 
det sacrificium tuum libera fronte.— 
De Exhort. Cast., c. 1. p. 528, D. 524, 
Aj; see also De Monog., c. 10. p. 531, 
and De Corona, c. 3. p. 102, A. Of 
what was thus offered for the celebra- 
tion of the Holy Eucharist, the re- 
mainder was (probably) eaten by the 
communicants. 

* [wardoy 8& rh wera TadTa wévyTas 


kadets; Kal maparareis iepéas ebtacbat. 
—S. Chrys. in Matt. cap. ix. Hom. xxxi. 
(al. xxxii.) Op. tom. vii. p. 361, E.] 

" {Paulinus, Epist. 13. ad Pamma- 
chium de Morte Uxoris, § 11. Op. col. 
72.) 

* [See above, p. 170, note u.] 

¥ [This homily is only found in 
Latin, and is rejected by the editors of 
Chrysostom. See the Bened. Pref. Op. 
S. Chrys., tom. ii. p, 277. The pas- 
sage is found in the Latin, Op. S. 
Chrys., tom. vy. fol. 55, E, F, G. gee 
1546. ] 





ON THE PSALTER. 


173 


S. Hieron. in Epitaph. Paule, cap. 10%. Mane, hora tertia 
sexta, nona, vespere, noctis medio per ordinem Psalierium 
cantabant, nec licebat cuiquam [sororum] ignorare Psalmos. 

Ps. xvi. 11. Thou shalt not leave my soul in hell, neither 


shalt Thou suffer Thy Holy One to see corruption. | 


“From 


both which Christ returned.” Vide Ep. Wint., p. 569%. 
Ps. xxvi. 6. I will wash my hands in innocency, &c.| Godw., 


in Antiq. Judaicis, fol. 34° ; 


Cluver., Hist., p. 5. 1. 67°; 


Men- 


doz., in Reg., p. 3994, a. 406, &c.; et p. 447; et tom. ii. p. 
426 et 434; Wint. Con., p. 17°, et p. 221, et p. 7448, et 


retro per totam concionem. 


Ps. xlviii. 8. So that he must let that alone for ever.| “No 
habeas corpus from death ; no habeas animam out of hell; you 
must let that alone for ever.” Luc. xvi. 26". 


Ps. Ix. 8. Over Edom will I cast out my shoe. | 


«That is, 


(after the Hebrew phrase,) set his foot upon it and trod it 


down'.” 
v. 9. Who will lead me.] 
yet David cast his shoe. 


“Over Edom, strong as it was, 
..and Bozra, as impregnable a 


hold, as it was holden, yet David wonne it; was led into it, 


and came thence again.” 


A type of Christ’s treading upon 


death, triumphing over hell. Wint. 569*. 


Ibid. into the strong citie.| 


2 (S. Hieron., Epist. eviii., ad Eu- 
stochium (Epitaphium Paule matris), 
§ 19. Op. tom. i. col. 706, B, C. He 
is speaking of the religious societies 
established by Paula at Bethle- 
hem. j 

« (Bp. Andrewes, Serm. xvii. of the 
Resurrection, (p. 567, ed. fol.) Works, 
vol. iii. p. 66. ] 

> [Speaking of the brazen laver and 
the washing in it: Externa illa lotio 
symbolum erat puritatis et innocentiz 
illius quam singulos, quotquot ingre- 
diebantur tabernaculum Domini, in 
corde offerre oportebat: ad hune so- 
lennem ritum propheta alludens, La- 
vabo, &c. (Ps. xxvi. 6.)—Godwin, Sy- 
nopsis Antiquitatum Hebraicarum, p. 
34. Oxon. 1616. ] 

¢ [On the Deluge he says: Ita ex- 
piatus lustratusque aquis est orbis ter- 
rarum.—Johan. Cluveri Stormari, His- 
toriarum totius mundi Epitome, Lugd. 

Bat. 1631.] 
_ 4 [The editor has not been able to 


The whole country of Edom 


identify the passages referred to in 
Mendoza. | 

e [A man may hear a story, and 
never wash his hands; but a mystery 
requireth both the hands and heart to 
be clean, that shall deal with it.—Bp. 
Andrewes, Serm. iii. of the Nativity, 
(P. 17, ed. pa bers vol. i. p. 32.] 

. mysteries ... our hands are 
to be ‘clean washed, yet we offer to 
touch them.—Ibid. (p. 22, ed. fol.) p. 
43 

o [In innocency, that is, in steadfast 
purpose of keeping ourselves clean.— 
Id., Sermon xiii. of the Sending of the 
Holy. Ghost, (p. 744, ed. fol.) Works, 


vol. iii. p. 359. The sermon is on 
Christ’s coming ‘‘ by water and 
blood.’ } 


P [See above, p. 80, note q. ] 
' [These words are Bp. Andrewes’, 
being part of the next extract. ] 
« [Id. Sermon xvii. on the Resur- 
rection, (p. 569, ed. fol.) Works, vol. 
ii. p. 66.] 


First 


SERIES. 


First 


SERIES. 


174 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


was known and called by the name of Uz, that is, of strength, 
and Bozra was the strongest hold of that country. ‘They 
write, it was environed with huge high rocks on all sides; 
only one cleft to come to it by; and when you were in, there 
you must perish, no getting out again. For all the world 
like to hell, as Abraham describes it to him that was in it. 
Luce. xvi. 26!. [. . .] Edom here setteth before us the king- 
dom of darkness, and of the strong city, even hell itself.” 

Ps. lxxiii. 9,10. In the hand of the Lord there is a cup, &c.| 
* We find (1 Cor. x. 21) calix demoniorum. The devil hath a 
cup. Adam must needs be sipping of it; erttis sicut Dei, 
went down sweetly, but poisoned him; turned his nature 
quite. For Adam was by God planted a natural vine, but 
by the cup degenerated into a wild strange vine, which 
instead of good grapes brought forth dabruscas ... grapes of 
gall and bitter clusters... by which is meant the fruit of our 
[deadly] sins. But as it is Esay v., where God planted this 
vine first, He made a wine-press in it. So the grapes that 
came of this strange vine were cut and cast into the press ; 
thereof came a deadly wine, (the cup and wine whereof the 
Psalmist here speaketh,) and the sinners of the earth are to 
drink it, dregs and all; the cup of God’s wrath: these sinners 
were our fathers and we. It came to bibite ex hoc omnes. 
They and we were to drink of it all, one after another, 
round. And good reason, to drink as we had brewed; to 
drink the fruit of our own inventions, the fruit of our own 
words and works which we had brought forth. 

“ About the cup went; all strained at it; at last to Christ 
it came. He was none of the ungodly, or sinners, but was 
found among them; and by His good will He would have had 
it pass by Him, transeat a Me calix iste. Yet rather than we, 
than any of us, should take it, (it would be our bane, He 
knew,) He took it; off it went, dregs and all, in His Passion. 
So here is Christus in torculari right. Alas, the myrrh they 
gave Him at the beginning, the vinegar they gave Him at 
the end of His Passion, were but poor resemblances of this 
cup, such as they were. This another manner of draught ; 
and we know it cast Him into so unnatural a sweat of blood 


1 [This is extracted with slight alterations from the same sermon, p. 65.] 








ON THE PSALTER. 175 


all over, as if He had been wrung and crushed in a wine- 
press, it could not have been more. 

“Out of which wine so pressed out of Him, came another 
cup; the wine was red, the cup of the New Testament in His 
blood. So our cup did Christ drink, that we might drink of 
His; He the cup of wrath, that we the cup of blessing: set 
first before God, as a libamen, at the sight or scent whereof, 
He smelleth a savour of rose, and is appeased: after, reached 
to us (in the Eucharist both) as a sovereign restorative, to 
recover us of the devil’s poison, (for more or less we are ever 
supping at the caliz demoniorum; and but for this cup of 
Christ’s blood, should be put to sup at the cup of God’s 
wrath,) no way but this to cure us of the one, and to pre- 
serve us from the other.” Wint. 572™. 

Ps. xci. 4, 5. | 

See a large discourse upon these three verses in Sir Th. 
More’s 2nd book of Comfort in Tribulation, cap. 11—17”. 

Ps. eviii. 9, '10.]'°" Vide Ps. Ix. 8;'9°. 

Ps. cxxxii. 6.] Vide the Christian Directory, p. 210°. 

Ps. exxxvii. 7.] “The Edomites were the wickedest people 


under the sun; if there were any devils upon earth it was 


they, and if the devil of any country, he would choose to be 
an Edomite. No place on earth that resembled hell nearer, 
for all that nought was. The Edomites were of the posterity 
of Esau; the Jews and they came out of two brethren. So 
they were the nearest akin to the Jews of all nations, and so 
should have been their best friends. But the grief was Edom 
was the elder, and the Jews coming of the younger brother 
had enlarged their border, got them a better seat and 
country by far than the Edomites had. Hence grew envy ; 
and an enemy out of envy is ever the worst: so were they, 
the most cankered enemies that Israel had. 

“For they were ready to do them all the mischief they could 


should be born, saith, I will not, &c. 
And then the mystery being revealed 
unto him, he saith presently, Behold 
we have heard of it now in Ephrata (or 


m (Ibid, pp. 71, 72, slightly al- 
tered, } 

» [Sir T. More’s Works, pp. 1179— 
1211.] 


° [See above, pp. 173, 174.] 
P [ Parsons’ Christian Directory, lib. 


a i. part 1. chap. 4. consid. 2. § 4. on the 
_ place appointed for the birth of Christ: 


“being desirous to know where He 


Bethlehem), &c., and to shew how he 
reverenced it for that cause, he addeth 
immediately, We will adore the place 
where His feet have stood,’’ &c.] 


First 


SERIEs. 


176 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. . 


First invent, all they were able to do themselves, and what they 
_SERIES: were not able, yet to shew their good-will for it they set on 
others. And when they had won Jerusalem they said, Down 
with it. Cruel enemies; no less would serve them. And 
when it was on the ground, they insulted over it without 
measure. (Remember the children of Edom ;) this is right 

the devil’s property, guarto modo.”. Wint. 5694, 


MISCELLANEA’. 


Deimmu. Conc. Tolet. 1V. can. 46°. Precipiente Domino nostro Sis- 

ona ag senando Rege id constituit sanctum concilium, ut omnes ingenut 
clerici pro officit Religionis ab omni publica indictione atque 
labore habeantur immunes, ut liberi Deo serviant. 


Quod’pres- Conc. Hispal. II. can. 5'. Relatum est nobis de quibusdam 
ra clericis, quorum unus ad presbyterium, duo ad Levitarum 
dinare. ministerium sacrarentur, Episcopus oculorum dolore detentus 
fertur manum suam supra eos imposuisse tantum, et presbyter 
guidam illis contra ecclesiasticum ordinem benedictionem de- 
disse. Qui licet propter tantam audaciam poterat accusatus 
damnari, si adhuc viveret : tamen quia jam ille examini Divino 
relictus, humano judicio accusari non potest, hi qui supersunt, 
gradum sacerdoti vel Levitict ordinis, quem perverse .adepti 


sunt, amittant. 


De nomine Misse, ejus origine, usu, appropriatione varia 
lege Mald. de Sacr., p. 336". 


4 fBp. Andrewes, ubi supra, Works, words of the canon are, Domino, atque 


vol. iii. pp. 64, 65.] excellentissimo Sissenando, &c. ] 

* [These notes are written on a fly- * (Cone. Hispalense II. (A.D. 619.) 
leaf at the end of the Common Prayer- can. 5. Concilia, tom. vi. col. 1405, A, 
book. } 


B.] 
§ (Cone. Tolet. IV. (A.D. 633.) can. « [Maldonatus, de Sacramentis, de 
47. Conc., tom. vi. col. 1463, B. The Eucharistia, col. 227, E—230, E.} 





NOTES AND COLLECTIQNS 


IN 


AN INTERLEAVED 


BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 


PRINTED A.D. 16388. 


CCSIN. N 


i 


9 
ie 


ARE b 
7 


Tusa 
ys 











he 


On the Act for the Uniformity of Common Prayer, &c. 


Uniformitie.| Quod ad formulam precum et rituum Eccle- Srconp 


siasticorum attinet valde probo ut certa illa extet, a qua pastoribus 
discedere in functione sua non liceat, tam ut consulatur quorun- 
dam simplicitati et imperitie, quam ut certius ita constet om- 
nium inter se ecclesiarum consensus ; postremo ut obviam detur 
desultorie quorundam levitati, qui novationes quasdam affectant, 
uti eo pertinere catechismum ipsum dizi. Sic igitur statum esse 
catechismum oportet, statam Sacramentorum administrationem, 
publicam item precum formulam. Caly., Ep. 87. ad Protect. 
Anglia, 1548+. 

Antequam Libris de Religione tribuatur auctoritas, hec Regula 
sequenda est, sacerdotum hujus ret primam curationem esse, ut 
vera a falsis discernant ; postremam senatus et ipsius adeo prin- 
cipes. Porro que in ea re illegitime decreta sunt, retractanda 
esse. In causa religionis nihil transit in rem judicatam, quod 
preter hane regulam actum sit. Airod.® Quare data est 
primum cura selectis episcopis ut librum hune Liturgicum 
emendarent, deinde ad senatum et principem ut illum auctoritate 
publica et penis propositis stabilirent, allatus est. 

Refuse to use, &c.| Hoc ideo dicitur quia st absens fuertt a 
sua parochia, vel infirmus, vel alia rationabili de causa impeditus 
non incurrit penam sequentem. Linw. de Const. x. st sponte®. 

Wilfully and obstinately, &c.| “Nam tales impediunt finem 
quem legislator intendit. Ubi tamen non voluntarie nec contempti- 
biliter, sed ex causa rationabili aliquis transgreditur” preceptum 
legis, penam subscriptam non incurrit. Linw. de Const. x. 0b- 


« [Calvini Epist. Protectori Angliz. 
Epist. et Respons. p. 41. ed. Amst. 
1667. ] 

» [P. Hrodius, Decretorum libri vi. 
lib. i, tit. 2, de fide et religione, c. 12. 
pp. 17,18. The words cited are the 
heading and the last words of the 
chapter slightly modified. ] 

© {Lyndwood, Provinciale Anglica- 


num, lib. i. tit. 2. De Constitutionibus, 
p. 13, note c, on the words, ‘si sponte 
circa hoc fuerint negligentes.’ In this 
and the other extracts, the words which 
speak of a bishop, are altered so as 
to apply to this case, e. g. ‘parochia’ 
for ‘diocesi,’ and ‘ poenam sequentem’ 
for ‘hance peenam,’ and in other respects 
the expressions are modified.] , 


N2 


SERIES. 


SEcoNnpD 


SERIEs. 


180 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


servari4, Item, si non voluntarie aut scienter, sed potius ex 
quadam desidia et in consideratione quod erat agendum aliquis 
omiserit, tune non videtur proprie contemnere legem, sed potius 
negligere. Modicum tamen distat in hoc contemnere et negligere. 
Linw., ib. y. neglexerit®. 

Private Chappels or Oratories.| Que ideo populo patere 
debent. Nam aliter quomodo coercebuntur sacra illegitima, si 
sint tantum domestica? Legitima ut prosint ad imitationem, et 
ne sub obtentu orationis fiant scelerata conventicula, ibi esse 
oportet ubi frequentari possint, et omnibus pateant. Brodit‘. 

Shall lose and forfeit, &c.| Ht sic ista lex peenalis est, vide- 
licet pene jam late. . .et nota quod utiliter adjicitur pena, 
quia alias lex nisi sit poenalis modicam utilitatem adfert.... 
Unde imperfecta dicitur lex que poenam contravenientibus non 
imponit. Linw.® 


Or by other open words declare or speak anything in the de- 


rogation, &c.| Qui antigua, legitima, atque ordinaria sacra 
audet in controversiam et contemptum adducere, non audiendus, 
nist periculo capitis. Airodi, 1. i. c. 22. de reb. judicat.®.... 
In hoc enim crimine, non solum levitatis est culpa, verum etiam 
quadam contagio sceleris. Cicero pro Sylla‘'.... Apud Locros 
(que urbs in Italia justissime omnium regebatur, inquit Plato in 
Timeo*) lege a Zaleuco lata’, Qui adversus instituta majorum, 
legesque communi usu approbatas novarum rerum auctor esse 
vellet, et laqueus peroranti proponatur, ni persuadeat. Quibus 
equidem rationibus atque conditionibus si nos presertim hoc tem- 
pore uteremur (quo is demum nihil scire et illiberalis esse dicitur, 


cui non placent absurdissima queque, modo recentissima) non ita 


plane res incerte essent ac turbulente, neque tam multi multarum 
partium, factionum, opinionum auctores essent ; cum suo saltem 


4 [Id. ibid., p. 11, note c. Lynd- 


tracted from it. ] 
wood’s words are, .. . transgreditur 


i [Cicero Orat. pro P. Sulla. c. 2. 


canonem, &c. non peccat mortaliter. ] 

€ [Id. ibid., p. 15, note r.] 

f [ £rodius, rerum ab omni antiqui- 
tate judicatarum Pandectz, lib. i. tit. 2. 
de fide et religione, c, 13, fol. 10. Paris. 
1588. ] 

& [Prov. Angl., ibid., p. 11, note i. 
ad verba sub peena. Cosin substitutes 
‘lex’ for ‘ constitutio.’ ] 

» [ HErodius, ibid., c. 22. fol. 12, 18. 
The words cited are the heading of the 
chapter, and the rest of the note is ex- 


p- 168, 2.] 

k [ebvouwrdrns wérews THs ev "Irarig 
Adxpidos.—Plat. Tim., c. 3. p. 20, A.] 

1 (édy tis BovAnta Tay Keimévwy v6- 
pov Kiveiv, } &AdAov cicdépew vépor, 
eis Bpdxov elpas toy Tpdxnadov, AeyéT@ 
Tois woAlrais wep) avTod.... édy Be 
6 mpovrdpxwyv BSoxh Karas exewv, } 6 
ciopepduevos 4 Bdikos, TeOvdvar Tov 
Kiwoovta 2) ciopépovta vduov, émoma- 
obévros Tod Bpdxov.—Stobeus, tit. xliv. 
§ 22. p. 280.] 


. 
———— ee ee ee 








ON THE ACT OF UNIFORMITY. 181 


* 


periculo, ea discerent amare (colere pacem, patriamque, leges ac Sxconp 


principes) que odio sane prosequuntur. 

Upon paine and punishment.| Vide que supra notantur ad x. 
Shall lose and forfeit™. 

And for due execution hereof, &c.| Scilicet in executione 
penarum consistunt criminum remedia; que licet bene et sancte 
provisa sunt, a paucis tamen execution mandantur, et potest esse 
ratio, quia 

Prelati muti de jure suo male tuti, 


Licet cornuti, non audent cornibus uti.— 
Linw. de Consuet. c. Hujus x provisa." 


And it is ordayned §c. that all and every Justice of Oyer, &c.| 
Quia contra pacem publicam in hac re delinquitur, ideo ad Ju- 
dices seculares cause cognitio refertur. Sed nunquid etiam clert- 
corum delicta ad judicem secularem referenda? Responde, licet 
postulatur clericus, non tamen hic de crimine. Ecclesiastico ac- 
cusatur, sed de pace et lege publica violata. Nihil de religione 
agi, nihil de doctrina et disciplina ecclesiastica versari in hoc 
judicio, crimen tantum violate legis ut in delinquentes animad- 
vertatur poena corporali, quam viris ecclesiasticis (qui puniunt 
solum propter salutem anime penis tantum spiritualibus) infligere 
non licet. Sed quod ad clericos et sacerdotes attinet, si delinquant, 
non ideo sacerdotes esse, ne possint legibus interrogari. Alia qui- 
dem synodice tractanda ; et ea, veluti mysteria quedam religionis 
judices seculares cognoscere non debere. Sed cum adversus Rem- 
publicam, et pacem regni, in quo ipsa Ecclesia est, et adversus 
communem hominum societatem, qua clerici continentur clerict, 
tpsi deliquerant ; publice interesse publice in eos animadvertt, 
hoe est, ea formula, eo jure, et loco, quo adversus quemlibet. 


iirodi°. 
Quoties de Religione agitur, Episcopos convenit agitare. 


— 


Ceteras causas que ad ordinarios cognitores, vel ad usum publict — 


juris pertinent, audire legibus oportet, que in hune finem late 
sunt. Idem?. 

Provided always, &c. that all and every Archbishop and 
Bishop, &c.]  Quia in rebus ecclesiasticis, et in clericum nihil 
Jit invito episcopo. Airod.4 At fortasse aliquando ad veteres 


m [See above, note g. ] eap. 9. fol. 23; modified by Cosin. ] 
2 | Lyndwood, ibid., lib.i. tit. 2. ¢. 3. P [Id. ibid., fol. 23, b.] 
p- 18, note f.] 4 (Id. ibid., fol. 24, a. ] 


° [Arodius, ubi supr., lib. i. tit. 4. 


SERIES. 
hiassgseadaliniion 


a 


182 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Seconn canones revertemur, quibus, si sit Ecclesiasticum crimen, Epi- 


SERIES. 


[eorum. ] 


scopus, si civile, judex cognoscit. Idem’. 

Having any peculiar Ecclesiasticall Jurisdiction.) Sane 
equidem accidit, ut quo plus minusve apud principem aut papam 
valuerunt, aut visi sunt et habiti sanctiores virt Ecclesiastict, eo 
jurisdictioni episcoporum detraheretur vel attribueretur pluri- 
mum*, 

Within their Jurisdiction.| Quia extra territorium sibt non 
est parendum. Id., de Jurisd. om. jud. l. fin.* 

Enquire, et infra, and to punish.| Quaro, qui sunt hi ordinarit 
ad quos spectat. Inquirere...? videtur quod ad solos Episcopos 
vel aliorum [l. eorum] superiores hoc spectat. Nam officialis 
Episcopi non inquirit de hujusmodi excessibus, nist ad hoe habeat 
commissionem in specie ab Episcopo.... Unde videtur quod ts 
qui inferior est officiali in jurisdictione non possit inquirere 
saltem ad hune finem, ut peccatum corrigat, vel puniat. Cut 
convenit quod notatur per Hostiensem in summa extr. de accus. 
Super Rube de Inquisit. §. quis possit inquirere"; ubi dicit 
quod inquirere possint hi, qui possunt corrigere, ut episcopi et 
eorum superiores Archiepiscopi et Patriarche, per hoc, ut videtur, 
innuendo, quod inferiores de talibus inquirere non possunt ; dicit 
tamen quod quandoque is qui non potest corrigere inquirit ad 
hoc, ut superiort denunciet, non tamen auctoritate propria, sed 
superioris sui....H contra videtur quod inferiores episcopo 
possunt inquirere, saltem hi qui habent ordinariam jurisdictionem, 
de consuetudine, privilegio, vel de jure. Nam... lli qui possunt 
corrigere crimen subditi, possunt super ejus excessu inquirere, sed 
multi sunt inferiores Episcopis qui possunt corrigere (nam capi- 
tulum potest corrigere crimen canonici de capitulo ... et per 
consequens inguirit de criminibus canonicorum) sed illud obtinet 
de consuetudine; secus tamen est de jure communi, secundum 
quod solus Episcopus tanquam ordinarius cognoscit de causa 
criminali..... Sie etiam ea que de consuetudine pertinent ad 
Archidiaconum non sunt ei auferenda. Lindw., de Consuet. 
x. Inquirere*. 


* Id. ibid. The former words come 
next after the last citation. ‘The rest 
are part of the title of the chapter. | 

§ (Id. ibid., fol. 23, b.] 

* [This reference the editor has not 
found. ] 


" (Henrici a Segusio Cardinalis 


Hostiensis Aurea Summa, lib. v. tit. de 
Inquisitionibus. Rubrica, § 2. col. 
1309. ed. Colon. 1612.] 

* (Prov. Angl., lib. i. tit. 3. de Con- 
suetudine, c. 1. (exterior habitus) p. 17. 
note a. Accommodated by Cosin.] 





ak ates ore 


a 








ON THE ACT OF UNIFORMITY, 183 


| Inquisitionis ... due sunt species, una preparatoria; alia 
solennis. Preparatoria regulariter fit in genere, et sine ex- 
actione juramenti. ... Solennis vero fit cum juramento. Quod 
autem hic dicitur ‘inquirant?? potest intelligi de inquisitione 
preparatoria. Quod si per hane inquisitionem inveniatur ali- 
quis contra legem deliquisse, bene potest ex hoc ulterius pro- 
cedi ad ejus punitionem (prout hie sequitur) per inquisitionem 
solennem, vel aliter prout de jure fuerit procedendum. Linw., 
ab. x. Inquirant’. 

Chancellor.| Cui generaliter committitur causarum cognitio 
per Episcopum dicitur Cancellarius, et talis officialis habet idem 
auditorium cum Episcopo ipsum deputante. De Appellat. c. 
Romana in prince. lib. vi.2 Unde a tali officiali non appellatur 
ad ipsum Episcopum, sed ad eum ad quem appellari debet ab 
ipso Episcopo, prout legitur in eod. c. Linw., de Const. x. 
vel eorum officiales*. 

Ordinaries.| Nota quod hee dictio Ordinarius principa- 
liter habet locum de Episcopo et aliis superioribus, qui soli 
sunt universales in suis jurisdictionibus 11, g. 1, de persona’. 
Et de jure communi solus Episcopus est Ordinarius super omnes 
subditos suos.... Sed sunt sub eo alii Ordinarii, hi videlicet, 
guibus competit jurisdictio ordinaria de jure, based ied vel 
consuetudine. Linw., de Consuet. x. Ordinarii®. 

Deprivation.| Sed nunquid omnes possunt ordinarii depri- 
vare? “Die quod inferiores Episcopis de consuetudine pre- 
scripta possunt corrigere et punire correctione plana et 
simplici, scilicet quando poena non est talis, que inducit 
depositionem vel perpetuam suspensionem: quia talis correctio 
sive punitio est imprescriplibilis. ab inferiori LEpiscopo.”’ 
Linw., 2b. y. Inquirere*. 

Other censures.| As Suspensio, qua est ab officio aut a bene- 
ficto, aut ab utroque simul, de qua re vide Linw., de Const. x. 
Suspensiones®. LEpiscopus punit in suo foro, aut jejunio, aut 
suspensione a divinis, aut exauctoratione. Airodi‘’. Potuerunt 


y [Ibid., p.17, note e. The words b (Decret. pars ii. causa 11. quest. 
in parentheses are Cosin’s, ] 1, c. 38. ap. Corp. Jur. Can., tom. i. ] 

z (Lib. Sext. Decretalium, lib. ii. tit. ¢ [Lyndwood, lib. i. tit. 2. p. 16, 
15. c. 3. ap. Corp. Jur. Can., tom.iii.] note |. | 

* [Lyndwood, lib. i. tit. 2. p. 14, 4 [ Ibid., lib. i. tit. 3. p. 17, note a.] 


note c. His words are: Hic sumitur © [ Ibid., lib, i. tit. 2 hi p- 11, note 
officialis pro eo cui, &c.; the words | 
‘dicitur cancellarius’ are inserted by [ Hrodius, ubi supr., fol. 24, a. ] 


Cosin. ] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


Srconp 
SERIES. 


An desue- 
tudo in hoe 


casu ex- 


cusat. 


2 


18h 


olim Episcopi in monachos verberibus animadverte (ut Conc. 
Venetico et Aurelian. 1. continetur) in sacerdote non item. 
Airodis. 

Queene’s Ecclesiasticall Lawes.| Itaque non suo jure habent 
ordinartt imperium in subditos, sed concesso a principibus. 
Akrodi, 

Shall not for the same offence, &c.] Nemo enim bis punitur 
in id ipsum. 

Such ornaments of the Church and of the ministers thereof 
shall be reteyned, &c.| Sed quid si istud quod hie mandatur 
et alibi non fuerit moribus utentium observatum, immo 
guodammedo abit in desuetudinem ; nunquid ex hoe excusentur 
non servantes hance legem? vel alias peccent, et sint tanquam 
legis transgressores puniendi? Videtur quod sint excusabiles ; 
nam ubt lex moribus utentium non approbatur, non facit reum 
ejus transgressorem, sicut legitur in 4 dist. Leges.... Contra 
tamen dicendum. Nam cum lex ista contineat preceptum, ergo 
eam non servans peccat, et ut transgressor puniendus est...» 
Unde nec consuetudo nec desuetudo excusare potest in hoc casu 
...presertim cum hee legis clausula ab initio lgabat, nec 
tempus est modus tollende obligationis. L. Obligationum, ff. de 
Act. et Oblig. 2. §. placett. Linw., de Const. yx. injun- 
gendok. 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


[4 Proclamation for the authorizing of an Uniformity, &c.] 


This Proclamation was penned by Sir Thomas Lake, (at 
that time one of the king’s principal secretaries,) with the 
advice of divers bishops}. 

Yet the same being now by us reduced to a settled form.] 
Upon the Conference at Hampton Court, where all the ex- 
ceptions that were brought against the doctrine and disci- 
pline of the Church of England had been duly heard, 
considered, and answered. 


g [Id., lib. i. tit. 4. c. 16. fol. 27, a. 
The canon referred to is the 6th of the 
Council of Vannes, A. D. 461, (Con- 
cilia, tom. v. col. 80, D,) repeated not 
in the Council of Orleans, but of Agde, 
(Concil. Agath.) A. D. 465, can. 38. 
(ibid., col. 527, D.)] 

h (Id. ibid., c. 9. fol. 24, a.] 

* (Tempus non est modus tollende 


obligationis.—Digest., lib. xliv. tit. vii. 
de Obligationibus et Actionibus, Leg. 
44, § 1. Placet etiam, note i. ] 

k [Proy. Angl., lib. i. tit. 2. p. 13, 
note f.] 

' [The proclamation was dated 
March 5, (1604.) The Conference at 
Hampton Court was held Jan. 14 (and 
the following days) previous, 





ON THE PREFACE. 185 


THE PREFACE. 


The number and hardness of the rules called the Pie, &c.| 
De Breviario Romano, si quis meam opinionem et judicium 
flagitet, libere et ingenue profiteor, ita videri molestam et 
difficilem versiculorum, responsorum, antiphonarum, hymnorum, 
et aliarum que sequuntur orationum investigationem, ut mihi 
aliguando singulas volventi paginas, mentis impetus et ardor 
defervescat, priusquam ad designatum a rubrita locum per- 
venire queam. Neque certe illis ulla ratione assentire potero, 
gui tn hac contorta et spinosa via, in istis gyris ac circum- 
flexionibus, hominum ingenium et industriam acui, ac pietatem 
fructuosius exerceri arbitrantur. H. Howardus, in Epist. ad 
Dom. Guil. Cecilium Enchirid. precum prefixa. MS.™ 

And where heretofore there has been great diversity.| And 
the diversity was no less in other countries than it was in 
England. Socr., lib. v. cap. 22": In universam certe, et in 
omnibus observationibus piarum precum, non possunt due 
Ecclesia inveniri, que prorsus inter se consentiant. Idem., 
ibid.°: Videtur mihi multa, modo .in his regionibus, modo in 
allis consuetudinem obtinuisse. 

Salisbury use.| Osmond, bishep of Salisbury, in the time 
of William the Conqueror and William Rufus, first composed 
that order of service in his church, (which had newly been 
built by him,) and there it was daily used; being so well 
approved, that afterwards it came to be used by most of the 
other churches in the realm, and was a pattern followed by 
many other churches abroad; from whence proceeded the 
common saying of secundum usum Sarum. Baker, p. 38°. 
In the third year of Henry V. the order of Church Service 
throughout England was changed from the use of Paul’s to 
the use of Salisbury, to the great misliking of many in those 
days. Baker, p. 58, in the life of H. V.4 De Banachorensis et 
Sarisburiensis Ecclesiarum Officiis ita judicavit H. Howardus, 


m [This appears from the letters MS. © [éuol 5¢ daiverar bri dowep HAAG 
to have been in manuscript. The editor moAAd kara xdpas cuvfbeay EAKaBev.— 
has not been able to trace out anything Idem. ibid., p. 292.] 
respecting it. } P [A Chronicle of the Kings of Eng- 

™ [xadArov perro mayvTaxod Kal mapa land, by Sir Richard Baker. William I. 
mdoas Opnokelas tev evxav ok Zorw Affairs of the Church in his reign, p. 28. 
evpeiy cundwrdvoas GAAHAaS Sb0 éxt Td ~— ed. Lond. 1730. ] 
avrd.—Socrates, Hist. Eccles., lib, v. 4 [Ibid., p. 177.] 
cap. 22. p. 297. ] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 
SERIES. 





186 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


in Epist. ad Dom. Gul. Cecilium™. Quam multa non obscure 
superstitiosa, si non nimis ridicula, ne quid dicam gravius, vel 
librariorum vitio, vel pastorum negligentia in istos libros ob- 
repserint, vel me tacente ipsi lapides angulares, ipse Ecclesia- 
rum columne vociferabuntur. 

Now from henceforth, all the whole realm shall have but one 
use.| Ne diversitas plebem huc illuc divelleret, et Ecclesiastice 
unitati, cut unice studere oportet, officerct. Quin et preclarum 
est quod Constantinus M., lege tulit ut uno cetu, una Ec- 
clesia, Christiani omnes uterentur ; non alibi Phryges, alibi 
Valentiniani, alio loco aut modo Marcionite, Paulinive, alio 
orthodoxi convenient. Ho enim modo fore, ut tandem con- 
suetudine loci, rituumque et supplicationum earundem, idem 
sentirent universi, qui paria sequerentur. Sozomenus’®. 


All Priests and Deacons shall be bound to say daily the 
Morning and Evening Prayer.| Et hec dictio Teneatur ne- 
cessitatem importat. Linw.* 

Or some urgent cause.| Puta infirmitatem. Et nota quod 
debilitas non prestat tantam excusationem sicut infirmitas. 
Linw., de Const. ver. nisi infirmitas®. 


OF CEREMONIES. 


Some, &c.... are worthy to be cut away, and clean rejected. | 
And this was the rule prescribed in the decrees of the Church, 
set forth by Gratian, Dist.63*. Quia sancta. Sicut scriptura 
quogue divina dicit, quod Hzechias dissipavit excelsa et con- 
trivit statuas, et succidit lucos, et fregit serpentem eneum, 
quem fecit Moyses, [videlicet] quia illum serpentem, quem 
Deus fiert jusserat, ne serpentina morte populus interiret, 
[deo] tpse populus colere et venerari [eum] ceperat; et 


* [See above, note m. ] 

8 [7d 5 "Apelov Séyua, ei kal woAAots 
év Tais Siardteow eomovddtero otrw cis 
Wiov Siexéxpito Aady, 7) dvoua Tov evpdv- 
ToS’ GAAG wdvTes Gua exxAnolavoy Kab 
€xowavouv ; wAnY Navatiavav Kal Tov 
émikadounevay Ppuvyav, OvrAcytway TE 
kal Mapkiovicotév kat Wavacavay, cal 
elrives Erepor Etrépas H5n nipnuevas aipé- 
gels emAhpovy’ Kata TovTwy dé mdyTwY 
véuov Oguevos 6 Bacldeus mpocératey 
apapeOiva: avtay Tovs evetyplous ol- 


kous, kal Tals éxkxAnolas cvvdrrecOau, 
kal unre év oiklas idiwrdv, whre Snuo- 
aig exxanoidgew’ KdAALov 5¢ TH KabdAov 
exxAnola Kowwvely eionyeito Kab eis 
Tavrny ouviévar cvveBovAevoe.—S0z0- 
men. Hist. Eccl., lib. ii. cap. 32. p. 90.] 

* [Lyndwood, Prov. Angl., lib. i. 
tit. 8. De Constitutionibus, p. 6, notea, 
ad verb. teneatur. ] 

u (Id., ibid., p. 6, note b. ] 

x [Decret., pars i. dist. 63. c, 28. 
Corp. Jur. Can., tom. i. ] 


ee eee et tees ee 


Ty ent. Fe ee 


7 Ene 


f 





ON THE PREFACE, &c. 187 


idcirco destruxit iste, quem jubente Deo fecerat ille. Et per 
hoc magna authoritas ista est habenda in Ecclesia, ut si non- 
nulli ex predecessoribus et majoribus nostris fecerunt aliqua 
que illo tempore potuerunt esse sine culpa, et postea vertuntur 
in errorem et superstitionem, sine tarditate aliqua, et cum 
magna authoritate a posteris destruantur. So that the 
Church of England used no other liberty herein, than 
what was allowed both by the Scripture, and the canons 
ecclesiastical then in use. 

And though the keeping or omitting of a ceremony, in itself 
considered, is but a small thing.| At nihil in religione tam 
leve est, quo pretermisso reliqua pedetentim non negligantur, 
atque in contemptum veniant. Non tamen adeo superstitiost 
sumus aut ceremoniarum tenaces, quam vel fuit antiquitas 


gentilis, vel sunt hodie papiste. Publius Celius, M. Cornelius, 


M. Cethegus, et C. Claudius, propter exta parum curiose ad- 
mota aris, et presertim eo tempore cum bellis Romana res 
publica distringeretur, sacerdotio abire jusst et coactt sunt. 
Sed et Q. Sulpit. flaminio ‘excidit, quod inter sacrificandum 
apex e capite temere excidisset. Pars aliqua impietatis, in- 
curia est, contemptus discipline et ordinis multo major. 

Except he be... authorized thereunto.| As the Church of 
England was and is, having power over her own customs 
and ceremonies, to appoint and alter them, as there is just 
cause given: for she prescribes not any ceremonies to other 
churches, nor has she abrogated any that were instituted 
by Christ, or His apostles, and were generally received by 
the whole Church of God. And as for other ceremonies, 
taken up either by her, or by other particular Churches, 
it is not true which the Roman doctors say, That traditions 
may not be changed, or abolished without the general con- 
sent of the whole Church; for without any such consent, 
they have changed or abolished many themselves; and such 
ceremonies, as they never grew together at one time in all 
places, so can they not at one time, and in all places to- 
gether, be lightly abolished. 

St. Austin in his time complained.] His words concerning 
this matter are pregnant and plain’: Hoc nimis doleo quia 


y [s. Aug. Ep. 55. ad Januarium, (aliter Ep.119,) cap. 19. § 35. Op. tom. ii. 
col, 142, D.] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


188 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


multa, que in divinis Libris saluberrime precepta sunt, 
minus curantur; et tam multis praesumptionibus sic: plena 
sunt omnia. And again*: Quamvis ista contra fidem non 
sint, tamen ipsam religionem, quam paucissimis et manifes- 
tissimis celebrationum Sacramentis misericordia Dei liberam 
esse voluit, servilibus oneribus ita premunt, ut tolerabilior sit 
conditio Judzorum, qui etsi tempus libertatis non agnoverint, 
legalibus tamen sarcinis, non humanis praesumptionibus sub- 
jiciuntur. 8. Aug., Ep. 119. 

And he counselled, &c.| Omnia talia, &c. ubi facultas 
tribuitur sine omni dubitatione resecanda existimo. Idem, 
ibid.* 

And here is also to be noted, that in this table, and where 
any Psalms are appointed, the number is expressed after the 
great English Bible.| The Bible was translated into the 
Saxon tongue, for the service of God, by the commandment 
of Athelstan, king of England, about the year of our Lord 
930. Bak. Hist., p.13>. But this great English Bible was 
set forth in the time of King Henry VIII. by Cuthbert 
Tonstall, bishop of Duresm‘, and Nicholas-Heath, bishop of 
Rochester‘, a° 1540, and a® 1541, used in all churches, in 
the time of King Edward VI. And out of this Bible were 
the Epistles and Gospels, and the Psalms taken that are in 
this Book of Common Prayer. In the beginning of Queen 
Elizabeth’s reign that Bible was reviewed, and another set 
forth, which in that time was called the Bishops’ Bible. 

Except there fall some Feast that has its proper.| When 
the Feast-day falls upon a Sunday, it was ordered in the 
Service of Sarum® that the Sunday Service should give way 
to the Proper Service ordained for the Festival, except some 


« [Ibid., col. 142, E.] 


* [Ibid., D.] 

b [Baker, Chronicle, p. 10.] 

¢ [The Great Bible was first printed 
in 1539. The edition of 1541 bore on 
the title-page the words ‘ overseen and 
perused by the commandment of the 
King’s Highness, by the Right Rev. 
Father in God, Cuthbert, Bp. of Dur- 
ham, and Nicolas, Bp. of Rochester ;’ 
but there was no difference in the 
text.—See Lewis’ History of the Trans- 
lations of the Bible, pp. 122, sqq., and 
140, 141; ed. 1739.] 


4 (See Lewis, pp. 235, sqq.] 

© [There was more than one Mass 
said, and Mass for the Sunday might 
give way to that of the Festival and yet 
not be transferred, which the Sunday 
Service does not appear to have been; 
also the dignity of the Festival and of 
the Sunday affected the practice. The 
rubric is long and complicated and un- 
intelligible without an acquaintance 
with the many ritual phrases occurring 
in oc Sigaagea Sarisb. Sanctorale, fol. 
v. b, ‘ 





ON THE TABLE OF PROPER LESSONS. 189 


peculiar Sundays only, and then the one or the other was Srconp 
transferred to some day of the week following: vid. Rubric. m8 
post Festum 8S. Felicis in Mense Januari. 


ON THE PROPER LESSONS. 


Whit-Sunday, first lesson at Evensong, Wisdom i.] Which [For Sun- 
. : . days. ] 
is appointed to be read, in regard of these words that are 
contained in that chapter, Spiritus Domini replevit orbem 
terrarum, &c., which is the introit in the order of Sarum 
for this festival’. 

Monday in Easter-week at Morning Prayer, Exod. xvi.] For the 
This lesson is appointed to be read in reference to the Sacra- fou 
ment of the Eucharist, at this time of Easter generally cele- Lessons. 
brated, whereof the manna was a type, and wherein the words 
of the Psalmist are verified: Portas celi aperuit Dominus, et 
bluit illis manna, panem celi dedit eis ; panem angelorum man- 
ducavit homo. Ps. |xxviii. 25, 26. There is the like reason for 
the appointment of the first lesson at Evensong, Exod. xvii., 
concerning the water of the rock, a type of the Blood of 
Christ, whereof we drink in that Sacrament, 1 Cor. x.: “ And 
they all drank of the same spiritual Rock. And that Rock 
was Christ.” Psalm []xxxi.16.] “And He fed them with honey 
out of the stony Rock.” Good meditations these upon the 
Sacrament that we receive at Easter. 

Monday in Whitsun-week, Gen. xi.2] Upon Whitsun-eve 
they were wont (by the order of Sarum) to say this prayer in 
the Church of England: Presta quesumus Domine, ut gen- 
tium facta dispersio divisione linguarum, ad unam confessionem 
Tui nominis celesti munere congregetur, per Dominum nostrum, 

&c. And from hence was this lesson appointed to be read. 


f [This Lesson was changed in 1662. sale Sarisb. fol. evi. ] 
The Sarum Officium or Introit is, Spi- & | This is one of many prayers used 
ritus Domini replevit orbem terrarum, after nones on Whitsun Eve; it begins, 
alleluia; et hoc quod continet omnia Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, qui 
scientiam habet vocis, alleluia, alleluia, paschale Sacramentum quinquaginta 
alleluia. Then Ps. 68, Exurgat Deus, dierum voluisti mysterio contineri; 
which we use as a proper Psalm.—Mis- presta, &c,—Ibid., fol. cv. 2.] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


190 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


ON THE PROPER PSALMS. 


Ascension-day, Psalm Ixviii."] Chosen chiefly for these 
words contained in that Psalm, “Thou art gone up on high, 
Thou hast led captivity captive ;” which was one of their 
verses peculiarly sung this day in the order of Sarum. _ 


The supputation of the year of our Lord in the Church of 
England'....| Dionys. Exiguus codicis canonum Ecclesia uni-. 
versalis collector, annorum supputationem ab incarnato Christo 
prinus instituit, et paschales cyclos suos hinc orditur. Noluit 
enim (sicut antea factum erat) a calendis Januariis computare, 
sed a 25 Martu, quando Dominus incarnatus est in utero 
B. Virginis, propter notitiam exordii reparationis humane 
conservandam. 

... Beginning the 25th day of March.| Romani annum suum 
auspicabantur ad calendas Januarias. Idem faciunt hodierni 
Romani, et qui in aliis regnis pape authoritatem agnoscunt. 
Ecclesia autem Anglicana sequitur supputationem antiquam a 
Dionysio Exiguo inchoatam, Anno Christi 582. 

The same day supposed to be the first day upon which the 
world was created.| Parum inter se consentiunt, qui rationem 
temporum investigatam ediderunt. Quod cum vel Dei nutu, vel 
vitio vetustatis evanuit, calumnia carere debelit. Sulp. Sev.* 

Mazima disceptatio est de anni tempore quo mundus con- 
ditus.. Scaliger', ewmque secutus Calvisius™ multis rationibus 
asserunt, autumno conditum, et designant diem 26 Octodris. 
Alterius opinionis Greci fuerunt qui 25 Mart. vocant npyépav 
mpwToKtiaTov, et ea mundum conditum, Christum incarnatum 
et crucifixum volunt. Quam hic Ecclesia Anglicana opinionem 


h fAlleluia; ascendens Christus in 1741. The words in the text are cited 


altum captivam duxit captivitatem, 
dedit dona hominibus, was sung after 
the lection from the Acts of the Apo- 
stles, which was in place of the Epistle. 
—Ibid., fol. ciii. 2. ] 

i [This is a note at the bottom of 
the Almanack for xxxix years, in the 
Prayer-books before 1662; the words 
which follow in the next three notes are 
a continuation of them. ] 

k [Sulpicius Severus, Historia Sacra, 
lib. i. c. 2, Op. tom. ii. p. 3, ed. Verone, 


from him. The next note is chiefly 
from Hornius’ annotation on the pas- 
sage. Sulp. Sev. Hist., Lugd. Bat., 
1647. ] 

1 [Jos. Scaliger, opus de Emenda- 
tione Temporum, lib. v. § de conditu 
mundi, p. 368. ed. Genev. 1629. ] 

m [Sethi Calvisii opus Chronologi- 
cum. Isagoge, pars iv. c. 34, de tem- 
pore mundi conditi, p. 133, ed. Fran- 
cof. 1650. | 


ON THE BEGINNING OF OUR ECCLESIASTICAL YEAR. 191 


secuta est. Ceterum hec tam intricata sunt, ut mirum non sit 
chronologos adeo in diversas sententias abire. 

The day when Christ was conceived in the Virgin Mary. | 
Beda®, Usuardus®, Wandelbertus?, Ado‘, et nonnullt alt in 
martyrologiis suis ad diem 25 Mart. Idem Beda in Lid. de 
Ratione Temp., cap. 28°, ubi dicit, quod perplures Ecclesie 
magistri tradiderunt, 8° cal. Apr. Dominum conceptum et 
passum in aquinoxio verno. Et in Comment. in Luc. super 
illud, cap.1*. In mense autem sexto missus est angelus Gabriel 
a Deo, Mensem autem sextum (ait) Martium intellige, cujus 
25 die Dominus noster et conceptus, traditur et passus ; 
sicut et 25 mensis Decemb. natus. In eadem sententia citatur 
B. Cyrillus Alex. in Ep. ad Synod. Carthag.*, e¢ B. Hieron.” 
Vide Jo. de S. Bosco* in libello de anni ratione, c. de fest. mobi- 
libus. Eandem etiam opinionem tenent Gul. Durant. in Ra- 
tionali Divin. 1. vi. c. 77. n. 289, e¢ c. 86. n. 117. 1. vi. c. 9. 
n. 8; Tho. Aq. super Joan. c. ii. 1. 3. in illa verba 46 
annis’; Antoninus, in Chron., tit. 5. c. 7°; Platina de vit. 








Pontif.4 


B. Joh. Chrysostomus®, in Serm. de Nat. Joh. Bapt. circa 


Sinem. 
die-et passus est. 


Martio 8 cal. Apr. 


" [Bede Martyrologium viii. Ca- 
lend. April., p. 352. ed. Smith. ] 

° [ Usuardi Martyrologium, eod. die, 
p- 171.] 

P [Wandelberti Diaconi Martyrolo- 
gium (metricum) in diem. ap. Dacherii 
Spicilegium, tom. ii. p. 46. ed. 1723.] 

4 [Adonis Martyrologium in diem. 
ap. Bibl. Patr. Max., tom. xvi. p. 814. 
Lug. 1677.] ' 

* {....viil. Kalendis Aprilis in 
zequinoctio verno Dominum concep- 
tum et passum.—Bedz lib. de Tem- 
porum ratione, cap. 28. Op. tom. ii. 
p. 60. ] 

s [Mensem autem sextum Martium 
intellige, cujus vicesimo et quinto die 
Dominus noster et conceptus traditur 
_ et passus,—Id. Comm. in Lue. (ce. i.) 
lib. i. cap, 3. Op. tom. v. col. 223.] 

_  * [This reference the editor cannot 
understand. | 

* (viii. Kal. Apr. Annunciatio Sancte 
_ Mariz per angelum.—Martyrolog. in 
__ Martio, opus spurium S. Hieron, ascript. 


Qua enim die (inquit) conceptus est Dominus, eadem 
Eadem ipsa dies cena pura fuit (h. e. feria 
sexta) in qua et luna 14 occurrit. 


Conceptus est enim mense 


Op. S. Hieron. tom. xi. col. 487, B.] 

x [This work has not been met 
with. | 

y [Crucifixus est eadem die qua 
conceptus est de Virgine, scil. in sexta 
feria, Kalendas Aprilis—Durand. Ra- 
tionale div. Off., lib. vi. c. 77. de die 
Parasceues, n. 28. p. 322. ] 

* [Id. ib., c. 86. de sancto die Pasche, 
n. 11. p. 343, to the same effect. ] 

@ (Id. ib., lib. vii. c. 9, de annuncia- 
tione V. M. n. 3. p. 404.] 

> [S. Thom. Aquin. Comment. sup. 
Joan. cap. 2. Lectio 3. fol. 8. H. Op. 
tom. xiv. Venet. 1593. } 

¢ [Antonini Episc. Florentini Sum- 
ma Historialis seu Chronica, tit. v. cap. 
7. sub init. tom, i. p. 319. Lugd. 1586.] 

4 [Platina de Vitis Pontif. Rom. p. 3. 
In a life of Christ, with which the 
work begins. ] 

¢ [Serm. in Luc. i. de Nat. Joh. Bapt. 
S. Chrys. ascript. Latine tantum extat. 
—Op. S. Chrysost. Latine, tom, ii. fol. 
274, M, ed. Par, 1546.] 


SECOND 
SERIES, 





SECOND 


SERIES. . 


192 


Supposed to be the first day.| [Molanus in additionibus ad 
Usuardi Martyrolog. p. 44. 25 Martit Annuncratio Domt- 
nica. Hodem die genesis mundi, einicrnas Isaaci, et transi- 
tus Israel per mare Rubrum*.| 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


CALENDARIUM. 


De Commemorationibus et diebus Anniversariis Martyrum et 
Confessorum. 


De confessoribus in vinculis et carcere mortuis in hune 
modum suo clero absens scribit Cyprianus, patrum Latinorum 
post Tertullianum antiquissimus; Epist. 37%; Dies eorum, 
quibus excedunt, annotate, ut commemorationes eorum inter 
memorias martyrum celebrare possimus. Et Epist. 34>; De 
Laurentino et Ignatio, qui palmas a Domino, et coronas 
illustri passione meruerunt, sacrificia (i.e. gratiarum actiones) 
[pro ws] semper offerimus, quoties, martyrum passiones, et 
dies anniversaria commemoratione celebramus. 

Deo igitur dicebantur laudes et agebantur gratia, quod in 
tanto et tam arduo certamine vires eis, et tandem gloriosam 
victoriam largitus est. Hine Augustinus, lib. xxii. de C. D. 
cap. 10%. . . . “ Uni Deo et martyrum et nostro sacrificium 
(laudis) immolamus: ad quod sacrificium sicut homines Dei, 
qui mundum in Ejus confessione vicerunt, suo loco et ordine 
nominantur, non tamen a sacerdote invocantur.”  Atque huc 
verba canonis Romani pertinebant, “ Communicantes et me- 
moriam venerantes imprimis gloriose Virginis Marie, Ge- 
netricis Dei et Domini nostri Jesu Christi, sed et beatorum 
apostolorum et martyrum Tuorum Petri, Pauli, &c.”* 

Inde erat, quod in Ecclesia antiqua diaconus ta dimrvyxa, 
hoc est, sacras tabulas quibus defunctorum martyrum, aposto- 


f [This note is one of the first series, 
in which it was omitted by mistake.— 
Molanus in Usuardi Martyr. Mar. 25. 
(Apol. 44. ed. Antw. 1583.) ubi supra, 
p- oe 4, | 

& [S.Cyprian., Ep. xxxii. p. 50. ed. 
Ben. Ep. xii. p. 27. Fell. ] 

h [Id., Ep. xxxiv. p. 47. ed. Ben. 
Ep. xxxix. p. 77. Fell. The words 
(i.e. gratiarum actiones) are the writer’s 
explanation. ] 


i [S. Aug. de Civitate Dei, lib. xxii. 
ce. 10. Op. tom. vii. col. 674, A. The 
words ‘sacrificium immolamus’ are 
omitted in the Benedictine edition as 
not being in the MSS., the word sa~ 
crificamur having occurred just before ; 
the word laudis is added by the writer, 
from whom (as it seems) this is ex- 
tracted. | 

* [Missale Romanum,Canon Missz. ] 





ON THE KALENDAR. 193 


lorum, confessorum, episcoporum, et sanctorum in fide Christi 
mortuorum catalogus continebatur, clara voce coram omni 
cetu fidelium legebat, ut eorum memoria celebraretur, et gra- 
tiarum actiones Deo fierent pro illorum felict excessu. 

Episcopis imprimis post apostolos et martyres ille com- 
petebat honos, ut postquam rebus humanis essent exempti 
nomina eorum diptychis inscriberentur, et ex tis recitarentur. 
Et hine inter Grecos et Latinos sub finem seculi quinti enatum 
schisma acerbum et molesium, eo quod Romani Episcopi e sacris 
diptychis eradi omnino vellent nomen Acaciit Constantinopo- 
litant Episcopi, qui communionem Petri Mongi Alexandrini 
Patriarche heresin dissimulantis, per errorem et impruden- 
tiam admisisset, quamvis Catholicam doctrinam ipse semper 
amplexus esset: Constantinopolitani vero, ad existimationem 
decessoris sui, quem orthodoxum novissent, tuendam, invitis 
Romanis retinerent. Et hoc primum fuit inter Latinos et 
Grecos, quod in nervum erupit, schisma. C.' 


JANUARY. 


21. Agnes™.| This virgin was a Roman of a noble family 
there, professing the ancient Christian religion. A person of 
so much outward beauty, besides her inward virtues, that the 
pretor’s son, an eminent gentleman in the city of Rome, 
albeit he was a pagan, and a persecutor of the Christians, 
fell in love with her, and desired her in marriage. Where- 
unto she refusing to consent, he took so great an indignation 
against her, that first he got her to be called into question 
for her religion, and then cast into prison; where continuing 
constant, he procured her to be condemned to the fire, and 
there to be burnt alive. But when the fire had, by God’s 
will, no power over her, she was slayed with the sword, and 
had her head cut off. This was done in the tenth general 
persecution under the emperor Diocletian, A° D™ 306. 12 
Calend. Febr. About 550 years after, Baldrick, the bishop 
of Utrecht in Holland, being then at Rome, brought some 
of her relics home with him, and put them in a shrine (for 


_ ! [This paragraph, ‘Episcopis im- § xlv. Helmstadt. 1644. ] 
prinis,’ &c. is an extract from Geor. m [See the Bolland:sts in diem; Acta 
Calixtus’ Evercitatio de SacrificioChristi Sanctorum, Jan., tom, ii. p. 355.] 
semel in cruce oblato et initerabili. 

COSIN, QO 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SeRIEs. 


194, NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


such was the fashion and superstition of those times) within 
his own church; where this day of her martyrdom, and the 
Ath day of September for her translation, were appointed to 
be observed festival, A° D" 966. 

But John Beleth" tells us another tale of the occasion 
which they took at Rome, to make this day a festival there, 
(Beleth, de Offic. Div., cap. 75,) for he says, there was a mira- 
culous vision seen at her tomb, which, after him Antoninus 
describeth in this manner, (Tit. viii. cap. 1. § 39°,) telling us, 


- that eight days after the death of this virgin martyr, her 


parents going to lament and pray at her tomb, where they 
continued watching all night long, there appeared unto them 
a vision of a choir of virgins, arrayed with most glittering 
and glorious garments; among whom they saw their own 
daughter so likewise apparelled, and a lamb as white as the 
driven snow standing by her, (which is the reason that the 
painters picture her now with a lamb at her side); and there- 
upon the Roman ladies went every year (as now they do) to 
offer and present her this day, the two best and purest white 
lambs that they could find or procure to be sent them. These 
they offer at St. Agnes’ altar (as they call it), and from thence 


‘the pope hath taken order, to have them put in the choicest 


pasture about the city, till the time of sheep-shearing come, 
at which season they are clipped, and their wool is hallowed, 
whereof a fine white cloth is spun and woven, and conse- 
crated every year by the pope himself, for the palls which he 
useth to send unto every new archbishop: and dearly does 
every such archbishop pay for it; for until they have pur- 
chased it, they must not by the pope’s law exercise any ec- 
clesiastical jurisdiction. For the better knowledge of these 
palls, (which were formerly so costly here in England, when 
the popes bore the sway there,) what they are, and what ori- 
ginal they had, I thought it not amiss to declare here all the 
whole story, such a one as it is. 


" [Ejus autem solennitas celebrari 
ccepta est propter quoddam miraculum 
quod octavo die suis cont:git parentibus, 
ad ejus tumulum lamentantibus.— 
Joan. Beleth, Divinorum Officiorum 
Explicatio, cap. xxv. ad cale. Durandi 
Rat. Div. OfF Lugd. 1574. ] 

° [Cum vero octavo die parentes ejus 


juxta tumulum ipsius vigilarent orando, 
viderunt chorum virginum, fulgidis ves- 
tibus radiantem, inter quas viderunt 
beatam Agnetem simili veste fulgen- 
tem, et a dextris ejus agnum nive can- 
didiorem.—Antonini Archiep. Florent. 
Summa historialis, tit. viii. cap. 1. § 39. 
tom. i. p. 555, Lugd, 1586.] 


ON THE KALENDAR. 195 


There is mention made of this vision in the sermons attri- 
‘buted to St. Ambrose, Serm. 90”. But that collection of his 
sermons is censured by Erasmus‘, to be a supposititious 
‘work; and by Baronius' himself, to be of a very gens) 
credit. 


MARCH. 


25. Annunc. of Mary.| Angelus Gabriel in oppido Na- 
zareth nunciat B. Virgint Marie incarnationem Messie ex 
ipsa nascituri. Hoc igitur die conceptus est Jesus Curistus 
Dominus noster in utero B. Virginis, adumbrante, operante, 
admirandamque illam incarnationis actionem AE ef Spi- 





ritu Sancto, S. Luc. 1. 


27. Initium Regis Caroli, A.D. 1625.] Qui TANTA BONA 
PRESTITIT, ET TANTA MALA PERTULITS. 


22. XVI. 
2 Si 
24, XIII. 


gb. Annun. Dominica; Miss. Sarum. 


26, II. 


27. X. Utilitas hujus tabule hec est. 


Vide per quem 


numerum luna currit, sive prima, et consimilem numerum sume 
in hac tabula, et Dominica sequenti erit Pascha: quod si idem 
numerus super Dominicam evenerit, ad sequentem transibis. 


28. XVIII. 
29. VIL. 


P (Igitur dum parentes sancte Agnez 
assiduis pernoctationibus vigilarent ad 
sepulcrum ejus, vident in medio noctis 
Silentio exercitum virginum, ... inter 
quas etiam vident beatissimum Agnem 
Similiter fulgentem, et ad dexteram 
jus agnum stantem.—Epist. ad sacras 
Virgines (ap. edd. vett. Serm. xe.) § 16. 

Opus spurium inter Op. S. Ambros. 
tom. ii. in Append. col. 483, E.] 

4 [Tertius hic tomus exhibebit ora- 
_tiones, epistolas et conciones ad popu- 
dum breves, quas supposititias esse 


nihil addubito.—Erasmi Rotod. Prefat. 
in tert. tom. Op. S.Ambros. Basil. 1527, 
&c. | 

* [Hec ibi: sed perperam Ambrosii 
nomine consignata.—Baronii Annales 
Ecclesiast. ad ann. 324. n. 207. ] 

s [S. Aug. Epist. 220, ad Bonifa- 
cium, § 8. Op. tom, ii. col. 814, E. See 
the whole passage cited below, page 219, 
note. | 

t ( Annunciatio Dominica is the name 
of the day in the Kalendar of the 
Sarum Missal. ] 


02 


Second 
SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


196. NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


APRIL, 











» MILE. 

4. Ambrose*.| | Memorabile est illud quod in Ecclesias- 
tica Historia de Ambrosio et Theodosio Imperatore legitur. 
Apud Thessalonicam, auriga in carcere detinebatur, quod juve- 
nem de stupro appellasset. Populus, cum Circensium dies ad- 
venisset, postulavit ut dimitteretur, quia celebritati et ludis 
necessariam tllius operam existimabant. Ke non impetrata, 
propterea quod populi favore, et variis vocibus, noxios a presi- 
bidus dimitit non oportuit, sed principem consuli, Thessalo- 
nicenses tantam seditionem excitarunt, ut et Bothericus ipse 
totius Iilyrie prefectus, et alit plerique illustrissimt viri, in 
tumultu et a furenti plebe interfecti sunt. Theodosius motus 
hac indignitate, nocentem vi eximere voluisse, magistratui vio- 
lentas manus attulisse plebem; cum furori tamen, non crimint 
vindictam querit, incidit ipse in magis atrox et acerbum faci- 
nus. Etenim Alexandri Phereorum Tyranni, et Ant. Cara- 
calle crudelitatem erga Alexandrinos imitatus, ac si ludos in- 
staurare vellet, gussit populum invitare. Ibi indicta causa, 
neque in sceleris auctores inquisitione facta, neque habito ullo 
discrimine civium aut peregrinorum, honestiorum aut plebeio- 
rum, sexus vel etatis, milites armatos jubet in confertam ple- 
bem irruere, et obvium quemque lacerare et discerpere. Itaque 
sepiem millia dicuntur hoc crudelissimo mandato cecidisse. 
Inter a‘ia vel hoc etiam evenisse (ut in triumviratu de Aquiliis 
Floris) ut dum quidam paterfamilias se interficiendum, et pre- 
« [This note was omitted by Nicholls. ] 


ao. fe ee 


ON THE KALENDAR. 197 


\terea omnem pecuniam militibus objiceret, ea lege ut duo filii 
lservarentur, vicariam mortem ptissimi parentis milites non ad- 
lgitterent, nisi simul alter e liberis moreretur ; ttaque in hoc 
ambiguo, quo pietas ipsa nesciebat quem peteret, trucidasse 
ambos, “et patrios feedasse funere vultus.” Quis igitur hujus 
criminis judex inter imperatorem et subditos ? Imo quis omnino 
judex apud quem is qui solutus est legibus interrogari possit ? 
Sane apud Episcopum, si modo vere sit Episcopus. Nam cum 
Theodosius, pro more Christianorum ad Ecclesiam veniret ; 
Ambrosius Mediolanensis Episcopus occurrit, atque aditu et 
communicatione sacrorum, gravissima habita oratione prohi- 
buit. Neque enim hic potuisse obtendi, quod Dominus prece- 
perat adversus Israelitas, qui sibi conflaverant vitulum, deli- 
|querant omnes. Valuit hec animadversio que nocenti ab inno- 
jcentissimo et piissimo Antistite profecta est. Theodosius per 
octo menses abstinuit Ecclesia, et increpationem (neque enim 
solenniter excommunicatus est) tamdiu tulit, quousque ad Nata- 
litia Christi, pro foribus stans absolutionem et indulgentiam 
criminis, hac conditione interposita, impetravit, ‘‘ Si amplius 


\\lege in posterum caveret, ut a se damnatorum supplicia, et si 
\|\quid postea severius pronunciasset, in diem trigesimum differ- 


retur, ita enim fore misericordia, aut penitentie locum. Tulere 


\|}cum Theodosio Gratianus et Valentinianus. Paruit imperator 


atque dixisse fertur, “se unum Ambrosium invenisse, qui vere 
| Episcopus esset’.” 





19. Alphage.| Archbishop of Canterbury, who was cruelly 
}murdered by the Danes, (after their massacre done at Can- 


\terbury, where they slew nine hundred religious persons, 











j}and of the lay-people about five thousand,) for that he 


\refused to charge his tenants with the great sum of money 
| that they imposed upon him for his ransom. They stoned 
jhim to death at Greenwich. Bak., p. 18”. 

| _ [A man* of a most holy and austere life; which was 
jthe more admirable in him, because he was born of great 
|parentage, and began that course of life in his younger 
time. He was first abbot of Bath, then bishop of Win- 


|echester, and afterwards archbishop of Canterbury ; where, 


Y [See Sozomen. Hist. Eccl., lib. vii. * [This passage in brackets is part 
¢, 25. p. 315, sqq.; Theodoret. Hist. of the first series of notes, in printing 
| Eccl., lib. v. c. 17, 18. p. 215, sqq. ] which it was omitted by mistake. ] 
| [Baker’s Chronicle, p. 14.] 





SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


198 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


a little before the Conquest, he was cruelly handled by- 
the Danes, he and his church at Canterbury, which they | 
burnt, together with the city; and when they had mur- 
dered his monks, and almost all the people thereabouts, 
they martyred him also, and fetched the vengeance of God 
upon them for it not long after. He was made a saint, and 
allowed this day for his festival. Eadmerus in vita Anselmi3.] | 

25. Mark Evang.| Marcus Evangelista, interpres Petri, 
Christum annunciat Alexandria et in Aigypto, A° DY 44. 
Euseb. Jdem Eusebius refert mortem Marci Evangeliste ad 
A? Christi 633. 





MAY. 


1. Philip and Jacob.| That is Philip and Ja ames the iad 
both apostles. 

Martyrium Philippi apostoli, qui apud HMierapolin Asie 
‘civitatem, dum evangelium populo nunciaret, cruci affixus lapi- 
dibus opprimitur, A° D™ 53. Euseb.” _ 

Jacobus minor frater Domini dictus, et Jacobus justus, qui_ : 
putatur fuisse filius Marie illius que soror matris Domini’ 
dicebatur, et episcopus Hierosolymitanus ab apostolis consti-— 
tutus, martyrio coronatur, A° D™ 63. E_ templi fastigio 
precipitatus dicitur, atque inter lapidandum fullonis fuste 
percussus atque occisus. Euseb.¢ aliorum veterum testimoniis 
revit Ecclesiam HMierosolymitanam annis 30. De eo etiam 
vide Josephum Antiq., lib. x. cap. 16% | 

Fratres Domini fuerunt iste Jacobus, Joses, Simon et Judas, 


y [Eadmerus de vitaS, Anselmi,pp.10, 
11. ad cale. Op. S. Anselmi, Paris 1721. 
The passage referred to is a conversation 
between Lanfrane and Anselm on the 
Saints peculiar to the English Church, 
about whose right to be held Saints 
Lanfrane had doubts. Anselm shews 
that Alphage ought to be raya asa 
martyr. | 

2 [ rovrov 5¢ Mdpkov, mp@rov paaty, 
ém) tis Aiydmrtouv ore:Aduevoy, Td evay- 
yéAuov, d 5) Kal cuveypdato nnpdta.— 
Euseb. Hist. Eccles., lib. ii. cap. 16, 
p. 65.) 

ai | Népwvos dé bySoov uyovros TIS 
Bactrclas @ros, mp@ros pera Mdpov 
tov °Andatrodor kal ebayyedorhy TIS 
év ’AdckavSpela maportias, "Avuiavos Thy 
Acitoupylay SiadéxeTo1.—Id., ibid., lib. 


ii. cap. 24. p. 82.] 

& [Sfrurmor toy Tay BéddeKa dmoord- 
Awy os KeKoluntat év ‘lepamdAeu—Id, 
ibid., lib. iii. cap. 31. p. 125. et lib. v. 
cap. 24. p . 243. ] 

° [avaBderes obv KaréBadoy roy sed 4 
Katov .... Kat AaBov tis am adTay 
els TGV ywadéwy Td gvAoy ev @ dmemieve , 
Ta iudria HveyKne kata THs Kepadrgs TOU 
dixaiov.— H egesippus, ap. eundem. ibid. j ; 
lib, ii. cap. 23. p. 80.] ‘ 

@ ("Avavos.. - rabilger ouvédpiov Kpi-— 
Tov" Kal maparydyay eis avTd Toy GdEA- | 
pov *Incov tod Acyouevou Xpisrod, "Id- | 
KwBov abtoy Kal twas érépous, ws Tas 
pavounodyTwy Karn‘yoplay momnodmevos 


mapedwKe AevOnooucvous.— J osephus, | 
Antiq. Jud,, lib. xx. cap. 9, § 1. Op. 
p. 976.] 





] 





ON THE KALENDAR. 


(Matt. xiii. 55; Mark vi. 3.) Nati dicuntur ab aliis* ex 
Josepho Deipare Virginis sponso, qui quemadmodum credebatur 
et dicebatur Salvatoris pater, ita quoque ejusdem filii, beatae 
virginis privigni credebantur, et dicebantur Servatoris fratres. 
Horum precipuus erat Jacobus, qui peculiariter elogio fratris 
Domini cohonestatur, (Gal.i.19.) Maritum autem et uxora- 
tum illum fuisse (sicut plerique alii fuerunt apostoli) ex irrefra- 
gabilt S. Pauli testimonio (1 Cor. ix. 5) certissimum est. 


199 


3. Invention of the Cross'|, which is fetched from a story of. 


more credulity than certainty. “//elena Crucem imvenit; S. Amor. 
in Orat. funebri Theodosii®. Htsi Gelasius hance de Crucis inven- 
tione historiam palam perstringit®; Dist. 15. e. Sancta Romana. 


Sed esto, idem tamen ipse Ambrosius, qui Helenam invenisse Cru- , 


cem scribit, adorasse negat “quia hic Gentilis est error, et vanitas 
impiorum'.” Ita Helena nobiscum est. ILllorum autem non est, 
qui signum Crucis more gentilium et impiorum adorant, et Karpéva 


omnes adorandum esse docent, quod omnem veterum idololatrarum 
Et tamen hic patres commemorant atque . 


superstitionem superat. 
jactant. Quasi ullus unquam catholicus senserit, aut dixerit 
Crucem eodem genere cultus adorandum esse, quo Christus adoratur. 
Non sum nescius cruces olim in 


¢ [Origen. Comment. in Matt. tom. x. 
§ 17. Op. tom. iii. 462, E. speaks of 
this as an opinion of some persons de- 
rived from apocryphal books, and after 
him it is repeatedly mentioned as held 
by some persons. ] 

f [A few lines only of this note were 
printed by Nichols. The note is on 
several interleaved pages. | 

g (S. Ambros. de obitu Theodosii 
Oratio. § 43, sqq. Op. tom. ii. col. 1210, 
squ. 
h Item scripta de Inventione Sancte 
Crucis Dominicz et alia scripta de In- 
ventione capitis S. Joh. Bapt. novellz 
quidem revelationes (sive quedam 
relationes) sunt, et nonnulli eas Ca- 
tholici legunt; Sed cum hee ad Ca- 
tholicorum manus pervenerint, Beati 
Pauii Apostoli sententia procedat, om- 
nia probate, quod bonum est tenete. 
{Decretum, pars i. dist. xv. ¢. 3. ap. 
Corp. Jur. Can. These words of the 
canon are written in the margin of the 
original. | 

Tradunt hoe preter S. Ambrosium 
Paulinus ad Severum Sulpit. xi. 
{Paulini Epise. Nolan. Epist. xxxi. 
ad Severum, (script. A.D. 403.) § 5, 


aliquo pretio habitas esse, quia 


sqq. Op. col. 192, sqq. This letter 
was sent with a portion of the Cross 
given him by the bishop of Jerusalem ; 
to be placed by Severus in a church 
that was about to be consecrated. | Ruf- 
finus, c. 8. Eccl. Hist. [ Ruffin. Hist. 
Eecl., lib. i. c. 7, 8. Opusc. pp. 200, 
201.] Theodoret, i. 10. [Theodoret, 
Hist. Eccl., lib. i. c. 18. p.47.] Sozo- 
men, ii. 2. [Sozomen, Hist. Eccl., 
lib. ii. c. 1. p. 43, sqq.] Socrates, i. 13, 
[ Socrates, Hist. Eccl., lib. i. ce. 17. p.46.] 
Nicephorus, viii. 29. [Niceph. Hist. 
Eccl., lib. viii. c. 29. p. 593. He gives 
the accounts both of the cure of the 
dying woman and of the dead man. ] 
Simeon Metaphrastes in vita Helene. 
[ This the editor has not found.| Cas- 
siodorus, ii. [Cassiodorus, Historia 
Tripartita, lib. ii. ¢. 18. p. 282.] Con- 
sentiunt alii omnes recentiores. Solus 
Salmasius contra est in Epistolis de 
cruce. [See below, notesm,n. This is 
a marginal note added by Bp. Cosin. } 

i [Invenit ergo titulum, regem ado- 
ravit, non lignum utique, quia hie gen- 
tilis est error, et vanitasimpiorum. Sed 
adoravit Illum qui pependit in ligno.— 
S. Ambros. ubi supr. § 46, col. 1211, A.] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SEcoND 


SERIES. 


200 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Christiant probrum itlud et dedecus Crucis subire atque im se susci- 

pere cupiebant, ut veros se esse Christi discipulos, quos non tlius 
Crucis pudeat, quam hostes religionis ac nominis Christiani con- 
temnebant, clarissime demonstrarent. Ab ullo autem itlis tempo- 
ribus Christiano ipsam Crucem divino cultu adoratam esse nun- 
guam ostendetur.”” Whitak., contra Dur.* 

Hoe festo Graci carent, nulla enim illius mentio fit in eorum 
Menelogiis, nec in Sanctionibus Emanuelis Comneni Imp. de festis 
apud Th. Balsam. in Nomoc. Phot. tit. 7. ¢. 1." 

 Fabulam esse” (ait Salmasius™) “‘ aperte convincit Eusebius ; 
Narrat ile [| ... | purgatum struendo templo locum; de cruce 
ibidem inventa ovdé ypv. An tacuisset, si quicquam tale tune 
Jando accepisset ?”? Catera enim ab Helena gesta ibidem sigilla- 
tum describit. An rem tam notabilem et insignem tacuisset, si 
sanationis miraculo crux vera cognita ?” 7 

“ Mirum vel quomodo hoc latere Eusebium potuerit, qui alia 
omnia tam probe rescivit. Inventio igitur hac Crucis imventum 
plane et commentum furt sequentis saculi, et fortasse an cujusdam 
fierosolymitani Episcopi, qui ut hine fabule auctoritas a magno 
nomine constaret, Helene adfinxit.’ Id." 

About thirty-nine years after the death of Christ, Jerusa- 
lem was destroyed by the Romans, and all the places both 
within the city and round about it were left desolate, until 
Adrian the emperor built it again, (and called it ¥lia,) 
A.D. 130, sending a sort of infidel pagans to inhabit it, who, 
for the great hatred that they had to the person and religion 
of Christ, placed the statue of Venus in that very piece of 
ground where He had been crucified by the Romans and the 
Jews; and the statue of Jupiter over the grave where He had 
been buried by Joseph of Arimathea. And those two idols 
continued there® 180 years together; so that all this while 
the Christians never sought after the Cross. But about ten 


k [Gul. Whitakeri responsionis.... 


defensio contra confutationem J. Durei, 
lib. x. § 13. Op. Theol., tom. i. p. 236. 
Genev. 1610. The whole of this para- 
graph is extracted from that work. ] 

! (Photii Nomocanon, cum commen- 
tariis Theodori Balsamonis, tit. vii. ¢. 1. 
Scholion. pp. 920, sqq. ap. Biblioth. 
Juris canonici veteris, Paris. 1661.] 

m [Cl. Salmasii Ep‘stola de Cruce, 

p- 279. ad caleem Bartholini de Latere 
Christi aperto Dissert. Lugd. Bat. 


1646. ] 

» [Salmasius, ibid.] 

© §. Hieronym. Ep. ad Paulinum. 
Ab Adriani temporibus usque ad im- 
perium Constantini per annos circiter 
180 in loco Resurrectionis simula- 
chrum Jovis, in Crucis rupe statua ex 
marmore Veneris a gentibus posita ce- 
lebratur. [S. Hieron. Epist. lviii. ad 
Paulinum, § 3. Op. tom. i. col. 319, B, 
C. The extract and reference is in the 
margin of the original. ] 





ON THE KALENDAR. 201 


years after, when the emperor Constantine became a Chris- 
tian, his mother Helen had the curiosity to make a voyage 
to Jerusalem, and to see the places where Christ had been 
born, lived, and died. When she came there she found that 
the infidels had laid and raised a great quantity of earth over 
the sepulchre of Christ, of purpose to abolish the memory 
thereof; having likewise polluted it with many of their pagan 
idolatries, which, by the commandment of the emperor, being 
all taken away, and the earth removed from that place, the 
sepulchre of Christ appeared to the view, and in the same 
place Helen built a temple over it for the Christians. All 
this is reported by Eusebius, (lib. ii. de vita Constantini, 
cap. 25 and 27?,) who was familiar both with the emperor 
and his mother, dwelt at Czsarza, not far from Jerusalem, 
and had been an ocular witness of their actions. But he 
speaks not a word either of Helen’s seeking or finding the 
Cross, which puts Baronius to a stand, (ad ann. 326. § 424,) 
and well it might; for it was the whole business that Huse- 
bius propounded to himself in that book to recite all the 
memorable actions that were done in the time of Constan- 
tine; whereof if the invention of the Cross had been one, 
it is not probable that he would have ever omitted it. 
Baronius*, and Bellarmine® after him, say for answer, that 
though Eusebius doth not mention it in his story, yet in his 
Chronicle we find it, “That Helen, being admonished by 
heavenly visions, found the most blessed Cross, whereon 
the Saviour of the world was crucified.” But this passage is 
no part of the Chronicle that Eusebius wrote, for in his 
Greek copy there is no such matter to be found; and the 
Latin translation wherein this passage is added, Baronius‘ 
himself acknowledgeth to be much corrupted; nor is it likely 
that St. Hierome" (to whom the translation is attributed) 


P [Euseb. de Vita Constantini, c. 25 
—27. pp. 592-594.) 

4 [Magna plane tenet omnes admi- 
ratio, quid sit quod Eusebius... de 
cruce ab ea inventum ne verbum qui- 
dem, &c.—Baronii Annales Ecclesias- 
tici, ad ann. 326. n. 42.] 

® ( Baronius, ibid. ] 

® [Bellarm. Controv. iv., lib. ii. cap. 
27. Op. tom. ii. p. 414. b. A.] 

* [. .. Eusebii Chronicon a librariis 
admodum esse depravatum ostendimus, 
—Baronius, ibid. } 


" [The words in the printed Latin 
of Jerome’s translation of the Chronicle 
of Eusebius were, Helena Constantini 
mater divinis monita visionibus beatis- 
simum crucis signum, in quo mundi 
salus pependit apud Hierosolymas in- 
venit. (Eusebii Chronicon S. Hieron. 
interprete. S. Hieron. Op. tom. viii. p. 
780.) These are printed in italics in 
Vallarsius’ edition; and in the notes we 
read: Hee sunt ab aliena manu que 
neque nostri MSS. habent, &c. ] 


SEcoND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


202 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


would add more than he found in the original. Yet we find 
that about threescore years after this voyage of Helen to 
Jerusalem, the invention of the Cross began to be received 
as a known truth, or at least as a matter of pious credulity, 
among many people. But they that report it (St. Ambrose, 
Ruffinus, Socrates, Theodoret, and Sulpitius Severus) tell not 
all one tale. Sulpitius (and with him Paulinus, Epist. xi. 
ad Severum*) say that in digging the ground crosses were 


found, and when doubt was made which of them was that 


whereon Christ was crucified, that they applied them all to a 
dead man, who at the first touch of Christ’s Cross revived, 
(Hist. Sacr., lib. 11.¥); but St. Ambrose says, that His Cross 
was known by the title written and left still upon it, (Orat. 
in obit. Theodosit”,) whom the rest contradict ; for they say, 
that the Cross of Christ was known and distinguished from 
the other two by the approach of a sick woman, who, coming 
to it, was instantly cured of her infirmity, (Socr., lib. i. c. 134; 
Ruffin., lib. i. c. 7°; Theodoret, lib. i. c. 18°.) And there- 
fore Gelasius, with his council at Rome, gave no credit to this 
story. And St. Jerome (in cap. xxiii. 8. Matt.4) condemns 
those superstitious women that wore little pieces of the Cross 
about their bodies, as having zeal without knowledge. But 
the credit of this story, that Helen found the Cross, got most 
head when men went to the holy war at Jerusalem, and 
from thence sent many pieces of it, which they sold very 
dear to their friends in the west. Haillon®*, in vita Philippi, 
et Gaufrid.! in vita Ludovici IX. 

6. John Evang.| Johannes ante portam Latinam. Refert 
enim Tertullianus’, quod Rome ante portam Latinam missus 


x [Paulinus, ubi supr. § 5. col. 193, 
B, C. See above, note p. 199. ] 

y [ Severus, ubi supr. pp. 190, 191.] 

z [...titulo crux patuit salutaris.— 
S. Ambros, ubi supr. § 45. col. 1210, 
®* [H amobvhokovoa evOds aveppdaOn. 
—Socrat. Hist. Eccl., lib. i. c. 17. 
p- 46. ] 

> [foeminam seminecem jacere... 
ut hee mulier que semiviva decumbit, 
a mortis januis revocetur ad vitam, &c. 
—Ruffin. ubi supr. | 

© [yuvak) wepipavel, vdom KaTexo- 
évn yaxpG.—'Theodoret. Hist. Eccl. 
ubi supr. 

@ [Speaking of the Pharisees wearing 


phylacteries, he says: Hoc apud nos 
superstitiose muliercule, in parvulis 
evangeliis, et in crucis ligno, et istius 
modi rebus. . . usque hodie factitant.— 
S. Hieron. Comment. in Matth. lib. iv. 
c. 23. (v. 6.) Op. tom. vii. col. 184, A, 
B 


¢ [This the editor has not found. 
The author's name is indistinctly 
written, and uncertain. ] 

f (Quam immensis laboribus et ex- 
pensis ... obtinuerit a Constantinopo- 
litano imperatore . . . partem maximam 
sancte crucis, &c.—Gaufridus, vita et 
conversatio Ludovici, &c. ix. c 24, 
p. 49. Paris. 1617.] 

& [See above, p. 31, note a. ] 








ON THE KALENDAR. 203 


~ est in ferventis olet dolium, unde purior et vegetior exierit 
guam intraverit. Cum autem in hoc oleo ignito nihil passus 
esset, in. Patmum insulam relegatur, ubi vidit Apocalypsim. 
Euseb." Accidit istud in secunda persecutione Christianorum 
sub Domitiano imperatore, Anno Christi 96. 


JUNE. 


29. Peter Apostle.| Petrus et Paulus apostoli a Nerone 
martyrio coronantur, A° D“ 68. Petrus dicitur crucit affixus 
pedibus in celum erectis. Paulus vero capite truncatus. 
Utrique eodem hoc die, sed an eodem etiam anno incertum 
est. Vid. Onuphr. in Comment. Fast., lib. i. Alii referunt 
hoc martyrium ad 29 mensis Juli. 


JULY. 


25. James Apostle.| Martyrium Jacobi majoris*, fratris 
Johannis evangeliste, quem interfecit Herodes Agrippa, Act. 
App. xii. Anno Christi 48. Observa (1) Herodes. Magnus 
interfecit infantes Bethlemiticos. (2) Herodes Antipas occidit 
Johannem Baptistam. (3) Nepos Herodis Magni Agrippa 
major necavit Jacobum majorem apostolum. 


AUGUST. 


15. Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary}.| Omitted 
in our kalendar, because there had been so many fabulous 
and superstitious stories devised about it in the Roman 
Church, where they now observe this day with more festival 
solemnity than they do the Ascension of Christ Himself. 

But they have no certain ground for their feast; for, first, 


b [év rodtw Katéxe: Adyos, Tov dmd- 
oToAoy dua Kal edaryyeAoThy "lwdvyny, 
ert TG Bly evdvarpiBovra, ris eis Tov 
Oetov Adyov Evexev paptupias Tdéruov 
vikely KaradicacOjva. Toy vijcov.— 
Euseb. Hist. Eccl., lib. iii. cap. 18. 
p- 109.] 

i [Annus DCCCXX.... Hoe anno 
iii. cal. Julii beatiss. Apostoli Petrus et 
Paulus Rome martyrio coronati sunt. 


—Onuphrius Panvinius in quinque Fas- 
torum libros Commentarii, lib. ii. p. 204. 
ed. 1588. ] 

k [This is the day of the translation 
of the remains of S. James to Com- 
postella. He was probably martyred a 
little before Easter. ] 

1 [This note was omitted by Ni- 
chols. ] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 
SERIES. 


Breviar. 
Rom. in 
festo as- 
sumptionis 
B. Marie 
Virginis 
xv. Au- 
gusti™, 


204 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


how long the blessed Virgin Mary lived, and at what time 
or place she died, no account can be given out of the holy 
Scriptures, which say nothing either concerning the time of 
her nativity, or the day and manner of her death. Nor 
is there, secondly, any mention made hereof in all the 
writings of the ancient fathers during the first five ages 
of the Christian Church. But in after times there rose 
up a generation of men, who, being not content with the 
former silence of Scripture and antiquity herein, fell to sur- 
mise and make many stories about it of their own heads, 
fancying to themselves rather what they would have had 
done, than what was truly and really done in this matter. 
The fable is set forth at large in the Roman Breviary, at 
the service which they use there upon their Assumption-day 
(as they call it) to this purpose. “It hath been received 
(they say) from ancient tradition, that when the blessed 
Virgin was ready to die, all the holy apostles, who were at 
that time dispersed from one another to preach the Gospel 
over the whole world, being suddenly taken up, and in a 
moment carried through the air, met all at once in the 
city of Jerusalem. Where, finding the Virgin Mary near 
upon the point to depart out of this life, they saw a multitude 
of heavenly angels melodiously singing about her; and at 
the same instant the blessed Virgin in that glorious manner 
delivered up her soul into the hands of God; her body (of 
which her Son Christ, the Son of God, had been born) was 
forthwith carried out in a strange and ineffable manner, (the 
angels and the apostles together following it with sacred 
hymns,) and laid in a sepulchre at Gethsemane; where the 
choir of heaven continued their songs of melody three whole 
days together without ceasing. But after these three days, 
when the angels left off singing, St. Thomas came, (who had 
not been there before,) and being desirous to see and adore 
that holy body, which had brought Christ into the world, 
the rest of the apostles went and opened the sepulchre, 
wherein they found no body remaining; only the linen 


m [ What is referred to is the lections turno. De Sermone Sancti Joannis Da- 
for the second nocturn on the fourth day masceni. Orat. 2. de Dormit. Deipare, 
within the octaves of the Assumption. — sub fine, lect. iv. v. vi. The text is a 
Breviarum Romanum: Quartadie intra translation of these lections. ] 

Oct. Assumptionis B. Marie, in ii. Noc- 





ON THE KALENDAR. 205 


clothes, wherein it had been wrapped, were left behind, which 
sent forth a marvellous sweet odour; and thereupon they 
closed up the sepulchre again, being astonished at the 
miracle, and concluding among themselves, that He who 
was the King of glory and had taken flesh of that pure and 
uncorrupted body, which He had hitherto preserved in an 
entire and perpetual estate of virginity, had now also been 
pleased to preserve it from further corruption in the grave, 
from whence, before the general day of resurrection, He had 
taken it up to heaven and translated it unto eternal felicity.” 
And all this they pretend to have been recorded by Damas- 
cen, in whom there is no such matter to be found®. 

They add that Hierotheus, Timothy, and Denys the Areopa- 
gite, (whom St. Paul had converted at Athens,) were then 
present with the apostles; and for that purpose they produce 
a passage out of that personated St. Denys in his pretended 
book®, de Divinis Nominibus, where he seemeth to affirm as 
much. But Hilduinus the abbot (in his Areopagetics, written 
by the command of the Emperor Ludovicus Pius, and lately 
set forth by Matth. Galenus) read and applied this passage 
to the sepulchre of Christ, and not to the sepulchre of the 
Virgin Mary. Nor can the Roman Catholic writers? at this 


» [The Breviary cites the words from 





the second Oration of Damascene de 
Dormitione Deipare. In the edition 
of Damascene’s works, Basilez, 1548, 
these orations do not appear; there are, 
however, two in the edition of Damas- 
cene and Cassian, Bas'lexw, 1575, (see 
p- 455,) translated by Raphael Volla- 
terranus; and the original Greek of 
these two and a third on the same 
subject are in Le Quien’s edition of 
Damascene, vol. ii. pp. 857, sqq. 
Paris, 1712; see the note at p. 857. 
The passage given in the Breviary is 
itself cited by Damascene from the 
Historia Euthymiaca, lib. iii. cap. 40. 
(see Hom. ii. § xviii. ibid. p. 879, C, 
D, sqq. and the note.) ] 

° Dionys. Areop. in lib. de divinis 
nom., cap. 8. Quum convenissemus ém 
Thv Onxnv (num legunt 6éav) Tod Sw- 
apxikod Kal Oeodoxod caHmaros, ad se- 
pulchrum corporis, a quo principium 
vite, sive quod Deum recepisset; ad 
sepulchrum scilicet in quo aliquan- 
do conditum fuerat corpus Domini. 
[The writer is addressing Timothy, 


and speaking of Hierotheus; he says: 
fvixa kal jets, ws olaGa, Kai avrds, Kar 
ToAAol Tay iepav GdeAMGr, em) Thy Oar, 
K. 7. A... Tapyy 5 Kal 6 ddeApdecos 
"IdkwBos Kal Tlérpos, 4 Kopudaia nar 
mpeoButarn Tov Oeorddywv &xpoT7S,K.T.A. 
—Pseudo- Dionys. Areop. de Divinis 
Nominibus, lib. iii. § 2. Op. tom. i. 
p- 343. ] 

P Halloix in notis ad vitam Dion. 
Areopag. { Vita S. Dionys. c. vi. Nota- 
tiones ad cale. Op. S. Dionys., tom. ii, 
p- 114, who enumerates the different 
opinions of these writers. } 

Joh. Scotus, primus Dion. Areop. 
interpres in Ep. ad Carol. Mag. [ Hie- 
rotheus ... cum quo multisque aliis 
sanctis in unum convenientibus, Chris- 
tum post resurrectionem corporaliter est 
contemplatus.—Fragmentum Epistole 
Johannis Scoti...scripte ad Carolum 
Magnum, ap. Dionys. Carthusianum 
super Dionys. Areop. libros comm. ver- 
sioni pref. Colon. 1536. } 

Matth. Galenus in editione Hilduini 
3. [In quo (lib. de Div. Nom.) osten- 
dit se apud sanctam civitatem penes 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


206 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


day agree what other certain sense is to be given of those 
words; which, what sense soever they may bear, can carry 
no great authority with them, for these books of Dionysius‘ 
were not (in all probability) written before the sixth age of 
the Church; it is five hundred years after the Areopagite at 
Athens had been converted by St. Paul. Besides, if the 
blessed Virgin died in the sixty-third year of her age, as 
the common opinion of the Roman Catholics is she did, 
it can no way be true, that this St. Denys was present at 
the time of her death, together with the apostles; for at 
the time he was not yet converted to be a Christian. 

They cite also for the greater colour of this their assump- 
tion story the Chronicle of Eusebius; in which they say 
he hath recorded the time of the blessed Virgin’s death 
(A° Christi xtvi11.°) ; adding, moreover, these very words 
concerning the assumption of her body into heaven: Maria 
Virgo, Jesus Christi mater ad filium in celum assumitur, ut 
quidam fuisse sibi revelatum scribunt. Which nevertheless 
is nothing else than a spurious addition of some later pen 
to the ancient text of Eusebius’s Chronicle; which, in the 
edition that Scaliger™ wrote out both in Greek and Latin, 
according to the most perfect copies that could be found of 
it, hath no such passage in it. And Arnoldus Pontacuss, 
who with great pains and diligence compared his copies and 


more than twenty old manuscripts of it together, ingenuously | 


confesseth, that in them all there was nothing to be seen 





sepulcrum Jesu, vite Principis, a Ja- 
eobo fratre Domini, &c.—Hilduini ab- 
batis Areopagitica, c. 11. ap. Surium, 
Oct. 9. fol. 232. The editor has not 
seen Galenus’ edition. ] 

Barradius in Harm., tom. i. lib. vi. 
e. 14. (Sebast. Barradii Commentaria in 
Concordiam et Historiam Evangelicam, 
tom. i. lib. vi. c. 14. Op. p. 303, Mo- 
gunt. 1618. He recites the opinions of 
these and other writers. ] 

4 Riv. in Crit. Sacr., lib. i. ¢. 9. et 
sqq. [Andreas Rivetus, Critica Sacra, 
lib. i. de libris auctoribus primi seculi 
suppositis, c, ix.— xi. de libris Dionysii 
Areopagitz, Opera Theol. Lat., tom, ii. 
p- 1079, sqq. Roterod. 1652. ] 

® Chronicon Eusebii a Jos. Scali- 
gero editum Gr. Lat. Lugd. Bat. 
1605. [It is also wanting in the second 
edition. See p. 160, and p. 204, Amst. 


1658. } 

* Chronicon Eusebii a Pontaco edi- 
tum Burdigal. in notis ad pag. 158. 
[In the text, p. 158, A.D. 48, there 
is in italics, ** Maria Virgo, Jesu Christi 
Mater ad Filium in ceelum assumitur, 
ut quidam fuisse sibi revelatum scri- 
bunt.” In the notes on this place, 
p. 565, he says; Non extantin A. L. M. 
&c. (enumerating 23 MSS.) et merito 
delenda, si vera est Epiphanii et Cedreni 
opinio, D, Mariam obiisse anno etatis 
sue 72, vel secundum alios an. 62 vel 
63 vel 57 vel 58 vel 59. Nam ita va- 
riant scriptores. Verum nil immutan- 
dum duximus, quod nil certi constet ex 


' priscis auctoribus de tempore et modo 


obitus ipsius.—Chronica trium illus- 
trium auctorum, Eusebii,&c. ab Arnaldo 
Pontaco, Episc. Vazalens. Burgidale 
1604.] i 


ON THE KALENDAR. 207 


concerning this pretended assumption of the blessed Virgin, 
which therefore ought to be defaced and omitted in all those 
copies that had lately inserted it, as it was ordinary and 
obvious for any bold hand to do in books of that nature 
where many void spaces were left. Nor shall we find it in 
the edition set forth by Aubertus Mirzus‘, a canon of 
Brussels, who, if he had not thought it to be a spurious 
addition to the original text, would never have lost the ad- 
vantage of it, and left it out, we may be sure, for in other 
matters he is partial enough ; but in this matter he durst not 
venture, having read not only what Scaliger and Pontacus, 
but what the Jesuit Suarez" had said about it, ‘‘ That those 
words of the blessed Virgin’s assumption were not likely 
ever to have been written by Eusebius, who was never wont 
in any of his writings to make use of such uncertain revela- 
tions.” And it is to be seen that Eusebius, in all his Kccle- 
siastical History, wherein he treateth of the peregrinations 
and actions of the apostles, maketh no mention of this story, 
which he would never have omitted if he had seen any record 
of it before him. It is therefore a great injury done to 
Eusebius, when both Baronius* in his Annals, and CocciusY 
in his Thesaurus, put this assumption story upon him, 
whereof neither he, nor St. Hierome that translated his 
Chronicle, ever said one word. | 

There is in Epiphanius? a passage of certain words, 
whereby he seemed to doubt, and to rest uncertain, whether 
the blessed Virgin be yet dead or no; which he saith he is 





* Chronicon Eusebii a Mirzo edi- 
tum, ad Ann. Christi 48. [Rerum toto 
orbe gestarum Chronica, auctoribus 
Eusebio, &c. Studio et cura Auberti 
Mirei, canonici et scholarche Antver- 
piz, ad Olymp. cevi. Antwerp. 1608. ] 

« Suarez in3, tom. ii.q. 37.art. 4. disp. 
21. sect. 1. [Illa adnotatio videatur po- 
tius ab aliquo addita, quam ab Eusebio 
scripta...nunquam enim Eusebius hu- 
jusmodi incertis revelationibus uti solet. 
— Suarez Comment. et Disputat. in ter- 
tiam partem D. Thome, tom. ii. quest. 
87. art.4. Disputat. 21. sect. 1. p. 197. ] 

* Baronius in Annal. ad an. Christi 
48. sect. 9. [Eusebius habet in Chro- 
nico his verbis, &c.—Baronius, Annales 
Eecl. ad ann. 48. n. 4. ] 

* ¥ Coccius in Thesaur., tom. i. art. 3. 
de B. Virg. [Jodocus Coccius, Thesau- 


rus Catholicus in quo controversiz fidei, 
&c. explicantur,tom. i. lib. iii. de Deipara 
Virgine, Art. 3. Marie Virginis glorio- 
sam in ccelum assumptionem, asserunt 
patres Greci. This passage is cited 
first as out of Eusebius’ Chronicon. 
p. 285. ed. Colon. 1599. ] 

 Epiphan. Her. 78. [od mdvtws 
5¢ dplfoua todro, Kal ov Aéyw Srt 
Odvaros Euewev’ GAN ore SiaBeBa- 
odmat ef TéOvnKev. wepéBadre yap 7 
ypaph tov voov roy avOpdmwvov, kal ev 
peredpw elace, «x.t.A.—S. Epiphan. 
adv. Her., lib. iii. tom. ii. Her. 78. 
§ 11. Op. tom. i. pp. 1043, D, 1044, 
A. It is to be observed that Epipha- 
nius is examining the question out of 
the prophetic statements only respecting 
S. Mary, and says that they leave the 
point uncertain. } 


SECOND 


SERIES. | 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


208 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


neither able to affirm or deny, because the Scripture is silent 
in it. Had there been any such tradition of the Church in 
his time, as is now pretended to be in ours, that her body 
was first buried at Gethsemane, and within three days after 
taken out of the sepulchre, and assumed into heaven, for the 
solemn memory whereof the Christians were to keep this 
feast, as the Roman Catholics do now, upon the fifteenth 
day of August, certainly Epiphanius (who of all other the 
ancient fathers was the best skilled in ecclesiastical rites 
and antiquities) could not have been so ignorant of all this 
tradition, as not to know anything that in his days was 
yet made known, or delivered to the Church, concerning the 
death of the Virgin; for the assumption of her body out 
of her grave presupposeth both her death and her burial, 
whereof Epiphanius had no certainty. 

The truth is, that the story of her assumption, now so 
much celebrated and generally believed in the Roman 
Church, is grounded only upon uncertain fables, first de- 
vised by men that gave their minds to vanity and super- 
stition; of which kind the world never wanted store. And 
how many of them had started up in the Church before the 
end of the fifth century, we have it made clear by the sanc- 
tion that Pope Gelasius and his council of seventy bishops 
at Rome made against them; wherein, (as Gratian hath re- 
corded it in his Decree*,) among other fabulous and spurious 
writings, “The book that was called 7ransitus B. Marie,” 
is branded with the term of an “ Apocryphal Book,” or 
a writing of no authority in the Church. This is the book 
which is now set out in the Bibliotheca Patrum? under the 
name of Melito the ancient bishop of Sardis, near upon the 
apostles’ times. But that he wrote no such book, is not only 
confessed by Card. Bellarmin‘, but by all other learned men 
besides amongst the Roman Catholics themselves, who judge 





® Gratian. dist. 15, c. Sancta Ro- 
mana. Liber qui appellatur Transitus 
B. Marie apocryphus. { Decretum, pars 
i, Dist. xv. c. 38. ap. Corp. Jur. Can., 
tom. i. ] 

> BB. patrum, tom. ii. editionis pri- 
mz Bigniane. [Sancti Melitonis Epi- 
scopi Sardensis, de transitu  Virginis 
Mariz liber. Bibliotheca Patrum, (de 
la Bigne) tom. ii. col. 519, Paris. 1575 ; 


and tom. vii. p. 1511, ed. 2, Paris, 1587. 
See the censura prefixed to it. ] 

© Bellarm. lib. de Script. Eccl. in 
Melitone Sard. Indignus liber, qui 
tanto viro tribuatur. [Tribuitur etiam 
Melitoni liber de transitu B. Virginis 
.... Sed indignus liber est, qui, &c.— 
Bellarm. de Scriptoribus Ecclesiasticis, 
sec. ii. De Melitone, 150. Op. tom. vii. 
p. 34, a, E.] 





ON THE KALENDAR. 209 


it to be altogether unworthy of the accension. And yet the 
composers of the Spanish Expurgatory Index are willing 
enough to let it pass, upon condition that some expressions 
in it, wherewith they were much displeased, might be blotted 
out of it*: as where it maketh the blessed Virgin to be sub- 
ject to the like passions of fear that other mortals are. For 
though the author there feigneth that she was raised by her 
Son Christ out of the sepulchre, and carried up by His angels 
in paradise, yet it is likewise said, that she made this prayer 
to Him as she went, “O Lord, receive Thine handmaid to Thee, 
and deliver me from the powers of darkness, that Satan may 
do me no violence, and that I may not meet any of his evil 
spirits by the way.” For this, and some other absurd passages 
in that feigned book, the Spanish Expurgators commanded, 
that thereafter it should be printed without them; which, for 
all that, is not yet done. 

But our countryman Venerable Bede*® hath long since 
confuted and condemned the whole treatise as being a fabu- 
lous invention, worthy of no credit, and said they were heed- 
less and rough persons that received it and gave any assent 
unto it. Which is a censure that may very fitly be applied 
to Simeon Metaphrastes, (whose fabulous lives of the saints 
Lippoman and Surius have set forth in Latin‘,) an author 
in the judgment of Bellarmin® and Baronius", besides many 


4 TIndex Expurgatorius, ‘‘ Deleantur 
ex Melitone illa verba, In solatium 
ferendum angustiis que superventure 
sunt mihi.—Deleatur etiam a cap. 8. ad 
finem Tractatus,” ubi habetur ista pre- 
catio; Suscipe me Domine, &c. et li- 
bera me a potestate tenebrarum, &c. 
nec videam tetros Spiritus occursantes. 
[In the Index Librorum Expurga- 
torum, &c. Madrid, 1583, fol. 20, b; 
the words are; Ex tractatu de transitu 
Beate Marie, qui falso ascribitur 
D. Melitoni, cap. 6. deleantur, &c. In 
the Novus Index libb. probib. et ex- 
purg. Madrid, 1640, p. 151, referring 
to the second edition of the Bibliotheca 
Patrum, the words are, col. 1511, post 
prefationem adde; Opus apocryphum, 
et falso inscriptum Melitoni. col. 1514, 
litera B. post illa verba, cum eis Paulus, 
dele usque ad, ex circumcisione conver- 
sus, exclusive. Col. 1515, litera A. 
post illud;. Vos huc adduxit, dele us- 
que ad, nunc ergo deprecor, exclusive. 
Eadem colum. lit. D. dele caput 8. et 


COSIN, 


sequentia capita usque ad finem operis, 
exceptis annotationibus. The passage 
at col. 1515 is that which is expunged 
in the earlier Index, but it will be ob- 
served that the words to be expunged 
are not given in the later Index, which 
also adds the expurgation of the words 
necdum scientia fidei plene instructus, 
between Paulus and ex cireumcisione. ] 

© Beda in Retract., cap. 8 et 13. novi 
nonnullos prefato mendaci volumini 
incauta temeritate adsensum pre- 
bere. [ Beda, Retractatio in Acta Apo- 
stolum in ¢. viii. Op. tom. vi. col. 14, 
16. Ibid. in c. xiii. col. 20.] 

f [De vitis sanctorum ab Aloysio 
Lipomano olim conscriptis, nune a 
F. Laurentio Surio emendatis et auc- 
tis.—Venet. 1581, in diem Aug, xv. 
tom. iv. fol. 202. ] 

& Bellarm. de Scrip. Eccl. in Sim, 
Metaph. [See Bellarminus de Scripto- 
ribus Ecclesiasticis, sec. ix. Simeon 
Metaphrastes, 950. Op. tom. vii. p. 
289. | 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


210 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


others, that is full of idle vanities, and one that deserveth 
not to have any belief given to his tales. In him we find 
the relation of the Virgin Mary’s assumption made by 
Andreas Cretensis', and by another bishop of Jerusalem), | 
besides that of Damascen*, before rehearsed out of the 
Roman Breviary, of whose books to this purpose the world 





never heard before, and hath no reason to acknowledge them 
now. 

And yet from these feigned and apocryphal writings hath 
this fable of the Virgin’s assumption been derived to the 
later Greeks, Michael Glycas! and Nicephorus Callistus™, 
a couple of inconsiderate collectors, that carry no credit in 
their histories, but where they are asserted and backed by 
the authority of better authors, as this story is not. In the 
meanwhile the present Greek Church in their Menology 
do not call this day the Assumption of the Virgin, but only 
the day of her rest, or departure out of this life. 

Among the Latins there is an epistle falsely attributed 
to St. Hierome®, and printed in the ninth tome of his works?, 
wherein this matter is made doubtful, and left to every man 
to judge of it as he please. And another book there is that 
bears the name of St. Augustine, being sent out with his 
works at Basil4, under the title of “The Assumption of the 
Virgin Mary;” but a book that carries this mark upon the 


. » Baronius in Annal. ad an. 44. n. 
38. [See Baronius, Annales Ecclesias- 
tici, A.D. 44. n. 38 and 50.) 

i{S.P.N. Andree Cretensis, Archiep. 
Hierosol. Encomium de dormitionesanc- 
tissime Deipare. Habetur et in Sime- 
one Metaphraste-—Lipomani in diem, 
tom. iv. fol. 207, b.] 

) [Andrez Archiep. Cretensis Hiero- 
solym. aliud Encomium de dormitione 
Sanctissimz Domine nostre Deipare. 
Est etiam in Simeone Metaphraste. 
Ibid. fol. 209. It is by the same An- 
dreas Cretensis. | 

k [Ibid, fol. 211.] 

1 [ Michael Glycas, Annales ab ex- 
ordio mundi, &c., parsiii. pp. 231, 232. 
Paris. 1660. ] 

.™ [Nicephorus Callistus, Hist. Eccl., 
lib. ii. ce. 21—23. pp. 168, sqq. Paris, 
1630. } 

2 [% kolunots ths brepevddtou dec- 
molvns judy Geordxov.— Menologium 
Grecorum, Aug. 15. 

° [Ad Paulam et Eustochium de 


Assumptione Beate Marie Virginis 
Sermo, cap. 2. opus Spurium. Op. S. 
Hieron., tom. xi. col. 93, B. After 
speaking of the different opinions en- 
tertained, whether the body of the 
blessed Virgin was taken up to heaven 
or not, he says, Veruntamen quid 
horum verius censeatur, ambigimus. 
The writing is placed later than the 
eighth century, for it speaks of the 
feast of the Assumption as celebrated 
in the churches, which the editor says 
was not till the eighth century. Ad- 
monitio in Epistolam, ed, Vallars. ] 

P Edit. Mar. Victorii. [by Marianus 
Victorius, ix.tom. Rome, 1564—1572. ] 

4 Tom. ix. censura ibidem, ‘ Ne 
pilum quidem habet S. Augustini,’ 
[De Assumptione Beate Marie Vir- 
ginis Liber unus. Ad _ Lectorem. 
Hic libellus ne pilum quidem habet 
Augustini. Op. S August., tom. ix. col. 
904. Basile, 1556. Incerti auctoris ac 
pii; annot. in ed. Ben. tom, vi. Append, 
col. 249. ] 


ON THE KALENDAR, 211 


front of it, “that there is not a word of St. Augustine’s in 
it.’ As little is there in one’ of those sermons which go 
under his name also, and is cited as treating of the same 
story, but it is neither any sermon of his, for he quotes 
Isidore in it, who lived 300 years after him*; nor makes it 
anything to the present Roman purposes, for it leaves all at 
an uncertainty, and concludes that men ought not* to pre- 
sume upon fables and fictions to confirm that which God 
hath not revealed, and which no Catholic story hath made 
known or delivered to us. 

In St. Bernard there be five sermons made upon this day’, 
but in them all there is not a word of the empty sepulchre, 
nor of translating the Virgin’s body into heaven. Arnoldus 
of Chartres, who was St. Bernard’s contemporary, and his 
peculiar friend, wrote a treatise, De Laudibus B. Marie 
Virginis’, wherein he speaks of the assumption of her soul 
as a most certain truth; but for the assumption of her body, 
he says there is no canonical authority to assert it. About 
the same time Durand wrote his book, De Divinis Officiis”, 
wherein we have a conclusion of the whole matter, veritas 
est, &c. “The truth is, that the blessed Virgin’s soul was 
taken up into paradise ; but whether her body was assumed 
thither or no we cannot certainly say; and it is better 
piously to doubt of it than rashly to affirm it, or to define 
anything about it,” as since his time the new Roman 
Catholics have presumed upon their own authority to do, 
being thereto led by the apocryphal and fabulous relations 





* Tom. x. Homil. 35. de Sanctis. 
[Sermo de Assumptione Beatz Marie. 
S. August. Op. tom. x. col. 1234, 
ed. Basile, 1556.—tom. v. Append. 
Serm. 208. col. 343. ed. Ben:, attributed 
there to Fulbert, bishop of Chartres. } 

’ [Hine et Isidorus: “ Incertum 
est,”” &c. citing a work of S. Isidore 
of Seville, fl. A.D. 600, de vita et 
obitu Patrum (c. 68. § 112. Op. tom. vy. 
p- 180.) ibid. § 3. col. 344, A. 

* [Quo ordine hie ad superna tran- 
sierit regna, nulla catholica narrat 


t ; historia.... Restat ut homo menda- 


eiter non fingat apertum, quod Deus 


-voluit manere occultum.—Ibid. § 2, 


§ 3. col. 343, 344, A.) 
u S. Bernard. AoD™.... [There 
are four sermons on the day of the As- 


sumption and one within the Octave 
of it.—Op. S. Bernardi, tom.i. col. 1001 
—1018.] 

Y Arnoldus Carnotensis ejusd. tempo- 
ris. [Arnoldi Carnotensis abbatis Bonz 
Vallis, de Laudibus Mariz; ap. Biblioth, 
Patrum Max., tom. xxii. p. 1281, sqq. 
Lugd. 1677. ] 

w Durandus Mimatensis, in Rat. Div. 
Off. lib. vii. c. 24, initio; vixit sub finem 
xii. seculi. [Veritas tamen est, quod 
primo assumpta est in anima; utrum 
vero corpus in terra remansit, incertum 
habetur, et melius est pie dubitare,quam 
aliquid circa hoe temere definire; he 
adds, however, pie tamen credendum 
est, eam totaliter fuisse assumptam.— 
Durand. Rationale Div.- Off, lib. vii, 
c. 24, n. 1.] 


P2 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


212 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


which they found only in the legendary stories of Simeon 
Metaphrastes and Nicephorus Callistus: for they have no 
other whereon to ground the observation of this their As- 
sumption festival, which they keep with more solemn cere- 
monies and superstition than they do any other day of the 
year. 

And it is somewhat pleasant to hear their whole story 
about it, how finely and curiously they set it forth, with all 
manner of circumstances belonging thereunto: all to affect 
and delight the vulgar people with it, which they do in this 
manuer, as I have here collected out of their Bernardinus de 
Bustis in his Mariale*, and Pelbartus de Temeswar in his 
Historical Process of the Death, Sepulture, and Assumption 
of the Blessed Virgin’; wherein they promise to tell nothing 
but the very certain truth, and to let pass all apocryphal 
stories; which how well they perform let any reader judge. 

1, First they set it down for certain that she died in the 
58th year of her age, and upon a Sunday, when the sun 
entered into Virgo, in the month of August. 2. That not 
long before her death she desired her Son Christ to make 
an end of her life in this world, and to take her into heaven, 
where she might perpetually be with Him in His glory. 
3, That hereupon an angel was sent to her, who told her 
that Christ expected her coming to Him, and that three days 
after her death and burial, which should presently follow, 
He would come and assume her out of her grave; in token 
whereof He had now sent her the branch of a palm-tree that 
grew in paradise, to be carried before her hearse to the 
sepulchre together with the funeral vestments for all them 
that were to wait upon her corpse. For she had desired that 
all the apostles might be gathered together and come to 
attend her burial; which the angel promised her should be 
done. But when she intreated also, that her soul, departing 
from her body, might meet with no malignant spirit by the 
way, nor the devil have any power over her, the angel replied, 





x Bernardinus de Bustis, in suo 
Mariali, part xi. serm. i. p. 5. 
[Mariale., . .. Bernardini de Bustis 
....de singulis festivitatibus Beate 
Virginis per modum sermonum trac- 
tans.—Pars xi, Serm. i. pars 5, 6. Ar- 
gent. 1502. ] 


yY Pelbartus, in Stellario Corone, 
lib. x. part 4. art. 1. [Pelbartus de 
Themeswar; Stellarium Corone B. V. 


M. in laudem ejus pro singulis pre - 


dicationibus elegantissime coaptatum. 
De Assumptione, &c. Hagen. 1508. ] 





ON THE KALENDAR. : 213 


O my dear lady, why should you be afraid of any evil spirits 
of Satan, whose head you have already trodden in pieces 
under your feet? Be it as you will, you shall see none of 
them. And with that saying the angel went up to heaven 
with a great shining light about him. 4. That as soon as 
he was gone, the blessed Virgin, being full of joy, forgot 
what he had said to her, went and called all her holy kindred, 
virgins, and other women together, to whom she signified 
the message that had been brought her concerning her 
instant departure out of this world; and bade them be of 
good comfort, for when she was in heaven they should fare 
the better by it. 5. That while these things were done at 
Jerusalem, St. John was preaching at Ephesus; and imme- 
diately the air thundering over him he was taken up in a 
white glistering cloud, and carried with a sudden rapture to 
the very door of the Virgin Mary’s habitation in Jewry, 
when she was so glad to see him, that she could not abstain 
from tears, and having saluted him, she told him of her death 
approaching, and commended her body to him, to be de- 
cently interred; at which words he fell prostrated down 
before her upon the ground, weeping and crying out, Alas! 
O Lord my God, wherefore wilt Thou bring this great 
tribulation upon us? Why wilt thou take away from us 
the lady and mistress of our religion? the mirror of sanctity, 
and the holy solace of our hearts? But the Virgin raised 
him up, and shewed him the palm-branch, (the leaves whereof 
glistened as if they had been so many silver stars,) and the 
mourning apparel, that the angel had left with her behind 
him; and St.John, receiving her charge to see that palm- 
branch carried before her to her sepulchre, he wished for the 
rest of his fellow apostles, that they might all be brought 
there together, ready to attend her; and forthwith they 
were every one rapt up through the air in white clouds, and 
placed at the blessed Virgin’s gate, where they wondered to 
see one another, till St. John came forth and told them what 
the matter was. Whereupon breaking forth into tears, they 
went in and adored the Virgin, saying, Hail, Mary, full of 
grace, &c.; to whom she replied, And hail to you all, the 
elect disciples of my Only-begotten Son. But when she saw 
St. Paul among them, she saluted him in particular by his 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


214 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Seconp own name, and he, falling down upon his knees, made his 
SEMIES: adoration to her, and said, Hail, O thou that hast obtained 
for me my joy and comfort. And then, St. Peter be- 
ginning to sing an anthem, all the apostles together made 
up the choir with him, and answered, Yea, all hail, O queen 
of heaven, the spouse of the Celestial Bridegroom, &c. 
6. That as soon as the anthem was ended, the blessed Virgin 
gave them all her benediction, and presently receiving both 
the Sacrament of the Eucharist and’ Extreme Unction, she © 
commended her soul to God, and prayed her Son that He 
would take up her body to Himself; and so, sitting upright 
on her knees, she composed herself to give up the ghost. 
And immediately (it beg then about the third hour of the 
night) that the Lord Jesus came from heaven, with all the 
several orders of angels, patriarchs, prophets, martyrs, con- 
fessors, and virgins also about Him, who filled the chamber 
with a most odoriferous and pleasant scent; and presenting 
themselves all in manner of a choir before the Virgin Mary’s 
bed, that they sung a sacred hymn to her, Christ Himself 
Ps. xl. 8. beginning it, and saying, Come My chosen fair one, I will 
set thee upon My throne, which is prepared for thee. 
Gen. iii.15. Whereunto she replied, Lord, I come; for in the beginning 
of the volume it is written of me, that I should fulfil Thy 
will, O my God. And with these words she expired, her 
soul flying into the arms of her Son, who presently gave His 
apostles order to carry her body into the valley of Jehosha- 
phat, and there to lay it in a new sepulchre; charging them 
further to wait upon it there three days, and then to expect 
His return. When He was gone, that a wonderful miracle 
ensued; for though He had carried away the blessed Virgin’s 
soul with Him, yet her dead body spake still, as if it had 
been alive’, and said, I give Thee thanks, O Lord, that I am 
Thy creature, and Thy glory; there being so great a splen- 
dour about it, that when the attendant virgins came, as the 
manner was, to wash it and to make it ready for burial, they 
only touched it with their hands, but could not at all see it. 
And this is the story which they tell of her death. 
Then for the manner of her burial, this is the description 
which they make of it. 1. Where first they tell us that 


Y Cosma in lib. de x. Stell. Coron. part iv. art. 1. [2] ° 














ON THE KALENDAR. 215 


St. John offered St. Peter the honour of carrying the palm 
before the hearse, (which Christ had sent from paradise for 
| that purpose,) because he was the chief of all the apostles ; 
but St. Peter refused it, and told him, that he being a virgin, 
it was most fit he should bear the palm before the Virgin, 
choosing rather himself to carry the body alone upon his 
own shoulders till St. Paul requested him that he might be 
admitted to assist him in that office: whereunto he agreed, 


appointing all the rest of the apostles to go in order round 


about the coffin, and to sing the Psalms which he began, 


SECOND. 
SERIES. 


saying, “‘ When Israel came out of Egypt,” &c. And forth- Ps. exiv. 


with the angels came down from heaven, and joining with 
them in their sacred melody, crowned them all with a cloud, 
wherein they went along to the grave without being seen 
of other men; for the Jews of the city hearing the noise in 
the air, and being told that the disciples of Christ were all 
gone out together to bury His Mother, they ran forth in 
great numbers, with a resolution to kill them, and to burn 
the dead body of the blessed Virgin. But when the Jews 
came near, they were all struck with blindness, except the 
high-priest only, who offering to lay his hands upon the 
holy hearse, they were presently dried up, insomuch that 
he was forced to cry out for St. Peter’s help with great 
lamentation, whereupon St. Peter advised him to adore and 
kiss the coffin, and to say he believed in Jesus Christ, the 
Son of that blessed Virgin; which being said and done, his 
hands were restored whole to him again, and receiving like- 
wise a leaf of the palm, which, by the direction of the great 
apostle, St. John gave to him, he touched the people’s eyes 
_ with it, and cured them of their blindness that were willing 
_ to believe in Christ, but no other. 2. When this was done 
_ the apostles went on with the hearse, and came to the vale 
of Jehoshaphat, where they found a sepulchre like to the 
_ sepulchre of Christ, and there they laid the dead Virgin’s 
_ body with great reverence, sealing it up, and tarrying by it 
three days together; during all which time they continued 
to celebrate her obsequies with hymns and prayers. 38. And 
when the third day came, suddenly they saw a bright cloud 
descend round about the sepulchre, and heard a choir of 
angels sing melodiously, to the great amazement of them 


StconpD 


SERIES. 


Her As- 
sumption. 


216 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


all. Whereupon Christ Himself came down among them, 
and having first saluted His apostles, and said, Peace be 
unto you all, He asked them, What glory and honour 
they would think most meet to be given unto His blessed 
Mother? To whom they returned this answer, It is meet 
and just, O Lord, that as Thou Thyself hast overcome death, 
and now reignest in everlasting life, so Thou shouldst raise 
up Thy Mother’s body out of her grave, and place it at Thy 
own right hand, in the highest heavens. Which was pre- 
sently done; for they saw her Son enter in to her: and as 
soon as Christ had uttered these words, Come my fair, and 
arise from thy sepulchre, O thou vessel of grace, and taber- 
nacle of glory, in which there is no spot at all; as therefore 
thou hast been free from sin, so shall thy body be free from 
corruption,—she came out of her grave in a most glorious 
and triumphant manner. 

After this they tell us yet more strange and incredible 
things concerning her Assumption, and say, with as much 
confidence as if they had stood by and seen: 1. That the 
souls came flying up out of purgatory, with angels in their 
company to wait upon her. 2. That all the glorious armies 
of the patriarchs, prophets, martyrs, confessors, virgins, and. 
angels, every one in their order, came down to meet her and 
to attend her by the way. 3. That there was not a person 
left in heaven, not so much as the Three Persons of the 
blessed Trinity itself, but They all came to salute her in her 
passage, and made speeches to her, every one apart. 4. That 
as she went up through the orbs of the seven planets, they 
all courted her to stay with them, because she had the virtues 
and proportions of them all, in a more eminent and spiritual 
manner than any they had; among whom Venus was more 
earnest in her persuasive speeches for that purpose than all 
the rest, wooing her to it by all the terms of love and beauty, 
far excelling her own, to fix there, and go no further; inso- 
much that the angels (fearing belike lest the blessed Virgin 
should hearken to this enticing planet) came in between 
them and said, O thou blessed of the Lord, stay no longer 
here, for Venus is an adulterous strumpet, and thou art an 
immaculate virgin. She inflames the world with lust, but 
“ou with charity. Wherefore ascend up higher to a more. 














ON THE KALENDAR. 


glorious habitation, which is prepared for thee. 


217 
5. That 


thereupon she went forward, and when she came to heaven 
that all the angels shouted for joy, and there the sacred 
Trinity placed her in a throne of glory, where she was to 
have prayers and supplications presented to her for ever 


after. 


All which narration, though in every particular the masters 
of the Roman Catholic assemblies do not make it a matter 
of faith, which every one is bound to hold under pain of 
damnation, yet are they willimg enough that the common 
people should give credit to it, and make what use of it they 


_ please; commending it to them for good catholic probability, 


and the tradition of their Church, though not altogether so 


certain as some other matters are among them’. 


In the 


meanwhile the whole story having no true ancient author 
to own it, is grounded only upon the conceit and fancy of 
some later men, who do not only put their own devices upon 
the world, as if they were all true, but fancy likewise a kind 
of necessity that they must be true, and that God could not 
in prudence order those matters otherwise than they have 
related them, or than they would have done them all them- 
selves if they might have had the ordering of them. 

' And for this consideration it was, that the Church of 
England did by public authority abrogate this feast of the 
blessed Virgin’s Assumption’, whose soul nevertheless we 
believe to be assumed in paradise, there expecting the resur- 
rection of her body (which was the choicest vessel of God’s 
grace that ever the world had among all His saints) for the 
consummationrof her endless felicity. 


2 Barrad. Harm., tom. i. lib. vi. c. 
11. [Ut supr., pp. 293, sqq. ] 

Coster. Medit. 36, 37. [{ Franc. Cos- 
terus, de Vita et Laudibus Deipare 
Marie Virginis Meditationes 4. Med. 
36, 37. pp. 333, sqq. Ingolstad. 1588. ] 

Sotus in 4™, dist. 43. q. 2. art. 1. 
[Hee opinio... inolevit, nondum ta- 
men inter fidei articulos creditu ne- 
cessarios relata est: quamvis sit pien- 
tissime credendum; nam ut in collecta 
illius festi ait ecclesia, quod nexibus 
Mortis deprimi non potuit, &c.— Do- 
min. Soto in quartam Sententiarum 
Commentarii. Distinct. xliii. quest. 2. 
Art. 1. p. 807. Duaci, 1613.] 

Canus, loc. Theol., lib. xii. cap. 10. et 


alii multi. [Beatam Virginem non esse 
in ccelis cum corpore assumptam ; quod 
licet fidei minime adversum sit, sed 
quia communi ecclesiz consensioni re- 
pugnat, petulanti temeritate diceretur. 
— Melchior Canus de locis Theologicis, 
lib. xii. cap. 10, p. 282. Op. Bassani, 
1776. 

* Secuta in hac re regulam ab Adone 
et Usuardo in suis martyrologiis tra- 
ditam. Plus (inquit) elegit sobrietas 
ecclesi#... pietate nescire, quam ali- 
quid frivolum et apocryphum inde te- 
nendo dolere. [This I do not find in 
Ado, but in Usuard. Martyr. ubi sup. 
in diem, Aug, xv. | 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


218 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


The Martyrology of Usuard” and Ado‘, and the Menologies 


of the Greek Church‘, call not this day the Assumption, | 


but the Dormition, that is, the sleep or death of the blessed 
Virgin. And in the Capitular of Charles the Great*, where 
all the feasts of the year are numbered, this of the Assump- 
tion is left as doubtful. So that in the Latin Church it was 
not yet in his time established or generally observed. And 
afterwards, when they began more usually to keep it, (as they. 
did in the time of Ludovicus Pius,) it cannot be proved that 
the keeping of it related farther than to the soul of the blessed 
Virgin, till the monks and friars made stories of taking her 
body also out of her grave, as hath been before mentioned. 
28. Augustine’.| The day of his death, which by the sup- 
putation of Prosper’, in his additions to the Chronicle of 
Eusebius, fell upon the 5th day before the calends of Sep- 
tember, in the year of our Lord 430, Theodosius the Second 
and Valentinian the Third being then emperors, the year 
before the third general council held at Ephesus. At which 
council St. Augustine was designed to have been one of the 
chief assistants®; but before the writ and messenger which 
the emperor sent to him for that purpose came to Carthage, 
he was dead at Hippo, the head city of his own bishopric 
in Africa’, at that time besieged, and within a year after 


destroyed by the Vandals. 


b Martyrolog. Usuardi. [Dormitio 
Sancte Dei Genetricis Marie, cujus sa- 
cratissimum corpus etsi non invenitur 
apud terram, tamen pia mater Ecclesia 
venerabilem ejus memoriam sic festivam 
agit ut pro conditione carnis eam mi- 
grasse non dubitet.— Martyrologium 
Usuardi, xviii. Kal. Sept. p. 468. ] 

¢ Adonis. [Sancta Marie Dormitio. 
Adonis Martyr. xviii. Kal. Sept. Bibl. 
Patr. Max., tom. xvi. p. 873, A. Lugd. 
1677. The previous day however is 
noted as Vigilia Assumptionis Sanctz 
Maria, ibid., p. 872, G.] 

' Rom. ad 15 diem. [Rom. is wrongly 
added in this note. In the Martyro- 
logium Romanum of this day (ed. 
Antw. 1589) it is Assumptio Sanctis- 
sime Dei Genetricis Marie. | 

4 Menolog. Gr. ad eundem diem. 
[See above, p. 210, note i. ] 

_¢ Capitul. Carol. Magni, lib. i. c. 
163. [De Assumptione Sancte Marie 
interrogandum relinquimus.—Capitu- 


The story whereof (because 


larium Carol. M. et Ludov. P. libb. vii. 
lib.i. c. 158. De festivitatibus in anno, 
fol. 732, ed. Baluz. ] 

f [ This note was omitted by Nichols. } 

¢ Prosper in supplemento chroni- 
co Eusebiano subjuncto. {Thesaurus 
Temp. Eusebii, &c. ed. Scaliger, A.D. 
430. p. 194. Amst. 1658. ] 

h Liberatus in Brev. cap. 5. [Scrip- 
sit Imperator sacram et beato Augus- 
tino Hipponi-regiensi episcopo per 
Ebagnium magistrianum, ut ipse con- 
cilio prestaret suam presentiam. Qui 
Ebagnius veniens, Carthaginem Mag- 
nam audivit a Capreolo ipsius urbis 
antistite, beatum Augustinum ex hoc 
mundo emigrasse ad Dominum, &c.— 
Liberati Diaconi Breviarium cause 
Nestorianorum et Eutychianorum, ce. 
5. p. 17. ed. Garnier, Paris, 1675.] 

* Called the Royal Hippo in the 
province of Numidia, to distinguish it 


from another town of the same name 


that was nearer to Carthage. 








| 








ON THE KALENDAR. 219 


St. Augustine was so much concerned in it) we will take 
occasion here to insert. 

There were in those times two great and famous men, who 
had the chief command over the imperial armies, the one in 
Italy, and the other in Africa. He in Italy was Aetius, a 
special favourite of the Emperor Valentinian, and his mother 
Placidia. He in Africa was Boniface, the emperor’s favourite 
also, and a great lover of St. Augustine, who honoured him 
much, and wrote divers epistles to him/. But these two com- 
manders (as among men of such eminent place and dignity 
will often happen) fell into so great an emulation of one 
another’s power and glory in the world, that Aetius, by the 
help of Placidia the emperor’s mother, procured Boniface to 
be suspected and adjudged (but without any just cause) for a 
traitor. Who, in the mean while, to defend and quit himself 
from this calumny, stood upon his guard, and used all other 
the best friends he could make to pacify the emperor, that 
upon the false suggestion of Aetius had sent force to apprehend 
him. In this state were his affairs (the whole country round 
about being in great trouble for him) when St. Augustine 
wrote his 70th epistle to him*; wherein “deploring the 
miserable condition of Africa, and not willing to meddle in 
his particular case, or to judge of the injuries which, as he 
himself said, his enemies had done him, he exhorted him to 
make his peace with God, and to look upon the public cala- 
mity, which the common sins of that nation had brought 
upon them all; urging him further to consider, how many 
good things (though temporal and transitory) he had for- 
merly received from the Roman empire, and how disagree- 


i S. Augustini Epistole 70. [$. Aug. timere, ne offendas. Nam causas ego 


Epist. 220. (ol. 70.) Op. tom. ii. col. 
812. See also Ep. 186, 189.] 

K Ibid. Epist. 70. [ Ep. 220. § 8. ibid. 
col. 814, D, E, F.] (Quis non deplorat 
calamitatem A frice e rebus jam pertur- 
batis exortam?) Sed forte ad ea re- 
spondes, illis hoc esse potius imputan- 
dum, qui te leserunt, qui tuis officiosis 
virtutibus non paria sed contraria red- 
diderunt. Quas caussas ego audire et 
judicare non possum. Tuam causam 
potius adspice et inspice, quam non 
cum hominibus quibuslibet sed cum 
Deo te habere cognoscis; quia cum 
Christo fideliter vivis, ipsum debes 


superiores potius attendo, quia ut Africa 
tanta mala patiatur, suis debent homi- 
nes imputare peccatis. Veruntamen 
nolim te ad eorum numerum pertinere, 
per quos malos et iniquos Deus flagellat 
peenis temporalibus, &c. ... Tu Deum 
attende, Jesum Christum considera, qui 
tanta bona prestitit et tanta mala per- 
tulit,&e. ... Si ergo bona tibi prestita 
sunt, quamvis terrena et transitoria, ab 
Imperio Romano, quod et ipsum terre- 
num est, noli reddere mala pro bonis: 
si autem mala tibi irrogata sunt, noli 
reddere mala pro malis, 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SEcoNnD 


SERIES. 


220 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


able it was both to the law and to the example of Christ | 
(who did so much good and suffered so much evil) to render 
either evil for good or evil for evil.” 

But notwithstanding this good advice that St. Augustine _ 
gave him, Boniface being still desirous to assert and main-_ 
tain his own innocence, and finding himself too weak to — 
repel the imperial forces that were then sent out against | 
him, he invited the Vandals, a fierce and warlike people, 
out of Spain, to come and aid him; which proved to be his 
ruin, and the undoing of all Africa; for the Vandals, hoping 
hereby to enlarge their dominion in a new soil, prepared 
themselves to go over to him in great multitudes, and forth- 
with passing through the narrow straits of the Herculean Sea, 
under the command of their king, Genseric, they landed 
fourscore thousand in number upon the African shore. 

Not long after their arrival here in Africa, the fraudulent 
conspiracy that Aetius had made against Boniface in Italy 
was detected. And thereupon being reconciled to the 
emperor, he endeavoured by the offer of large sums of 
money to send back those guests whom he had so lately 
invited over to him; but they utterly refusing to return, and 
intending to settle themselves where they now were, made 
head against him, and when he brought his army upon 
them, to drive them out by force, they gave him battle, and 
got the better of him, driving both him and his army to shift 
for themselves, and to retire into the city of Hippo, (where 
St. Augustine, being their bishop, then inhabited,) a strong 
place situated upon the sea-side, and so well fortified that 
Boniface thought himself there secure enough. But Gen- 
seric and his Vandals followed him thither with all their 
power, and straitly besieged the city. : 

Which gave St. Augustine so great a trouble of mind, 
fearing what would follow, that in the presence of all his 
family he made it his earnest request and humble prayer to 
God, “either to deliver them all from that present calamity, 
or to give them courage and strength to endure it, or pre- 
sently to make an end of his days and take away his life 
from him!.” 


' Possidius de vita et obitu S.Au- nus familiaribus suis dixit, Noveritis 
gustini, c. 25. Obsessa urbe Augusti- mehoctemporenostre calamitatisDeum 





ON THE KALENDAR. 221 


This last part of his prayer was heard; for in the third 
month after the city began first to be besieged he fell sick of 
a fever, and died in the lxxvi"" year of his age, after he had 
served God in the office of a priest and a bishop of the 
Church forty years together. All which story we have here 
collected out of B. Procopius™ and Victor of Utica", together 
with Possidius°, the bishop of Calama, not far distant from 
Hippo, who, being of St. Augustine’s familiar acquaintance, 
fled thither in the time of the African trouble, and standing 
by him at his death, not long after wrote a book of his life, 
and the manner of his departure out of this world. From 
whose relation we are further informed that this city of 
Hippo, fourteen months after it began first to be besieged, 
was taken and burnt by the Vandals; who from that time 
became lords and masters of all Africa for an hundred years 
together, till Justinian the emperor, by the valiant prowess 
of Belisarius, overcame and destroyed them all. But in the 
meanwhile St. Augustine lived not to see their barbarous 
oppression, and ruin of his country. ‘ 

How great a man this St. Augustine was both in piety 
and learning, severe in the one and exact in the other, the 
works that he hath left behind him (for sharpness and wit 
and soundness of argument not to be paralleled by any 
other writer, either of the Greek or of the Latin Church) 
do abundantly declare. St. Hierome, who was older than 
he, reverenced and admired him above all other men. 
Paulinus the bishop of Nola?, and Celestine’ the bishop of 
Rome, who lived in the same age with him, gave him no less 
titles than these—The Salt of the Earth, The Light and 
Splendour of the World, and The Chief Master among all 
the Doctors of the Church. And the like testimonies are 
given of him by consent of all other writers that have lived 


rogare, ut aut hance civitatem ab hosti- 
bus circumdatam liberare dignetur aut 
certe me de hoc seculo ad se accipiat. — 
{Ad cale. tom. x. S. Aug. Op. ¢. 29. 
col. 278, F.] 

™ Procopius de bello Vandalico, lib. 
i. [c. 3. Historie sui Temporis, p. 
183. Par. 1662. ] 

" Victor Uticensis de persecutione 
Africana, lib. i. [Victor Vitensis de 
persecutione Africana, lib. i. through- 
out; ed. Chifflet. Dairony. 1664. ] 


© Possidius de Vita S, Augustini. [c. 
28, &c. col. 277, sqq. ad cal. tom. x. 
Op. S. Aug. ] 

P [See Paulinus, Epist.iv. ad Augus- 
tinum, § 1. O vere sal terre, &c. Op. 
col. 13, C.] 

4 [Ceelestinus, Epist. 1. ad Episco- 
pos Galliz, § 2. Augustinum, quem, 
&c. ... ut inter magistros optimos 
etiam a meis decessoribus haberetur.— 
Apud Concilia, tom. iii. col. 469, D.] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


222 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


since his time. They that desire to know more, and to see 
both the beginning and the progress of his life, let them 
read his Book of Confessions. 


SEPTEMBER. 


8. Nativity of Mary B. Virg.| Maria Domint nostri 
Jesu Christi Mater vel concepta vel nata traditur ex patre 
Eli, qui et Joachim sive Eliakim dicebatur, et matre Anna, anno 
ante Christum ea eadem B. Virgine natum 15, vel 16. Vivit 
ergo ante Christum annos 15. Post Hjus resurrectionem visit 
etiam totidem, cum Christo 33, in wniversum 68. 

21. St. Matthew.| Mattheum in Palestina regione mansisse 
annos aliquam multos post Christi Ascensionem (octo minimum ut 
Graci aluque illius evangelii exscriptores fine libri annotaruut) 
magno antiguorum consensu traditur.  Quare par credi est, 


_ scriptam ab eo evangelicam historiam eo sermone gui ea im regione 


Srequentabatur. Nam quod quidam magno conatu probatum eunt, 
Gracum id quod habemus esse ipsius Matthai primitivum, im eo 
nullis gustis de causis maximam pie antiquitatis consensionem 
repudiant. Nam Papias', Ireneus*, Origenes', atque alii, quibus 
ejus rev veritatem quam nobis exquirere promptius fuit, pro com- 
perto tradiderunt, scripsisse Mattheum Hebraice. Addit ex 
Pantano Eusebius” idipsum evangelium Hebraicis literis scrip- 
tum apud Indos servatum fuisse, quibus illud tradiderat Bar- 
tholomeus. Grot.* 

Lliud quoque Hebraicum evangelium quod a Tilio¥, et alterum 
quod a Munstero* est editum, non esse Matthai adeo certum est, ut 


* [Maréatos uty obv “EBpatd: diaréerw 
Td Adyia Tuveypdaro.—Papias, ap. Eu- 
seb. Hist. Eccl., lib. iii. e. 39. p. 138. ] 

8 [6 uev 8) MatOaios év Tots ‘EBpatos 
TH iia Siaréerwm abtav, Kal ypaphy 
etfveyney ebayyeAlov. — S. Irenzus, 
cont. Her., lib. iii, cap. 1. § 1. Op. 
p- 174.] 

' [...Mar@atov, exdedwrdra ard 
Tots amd "lovdaicuod morevoast, ypdu- 
hacw ‘EBpakots suvreraypévov.—Ori- 
gen. Comment. in S. Matt. fragm. tom. 
i, Op. tom. iii. p. 440. 

_ ™ [av eis yevouévos nat 6 Mdvravos 
kal eis *lydovs éAOeiv Aéyerat? ev0a Adyos 
cipely aitoy mpopOdcay Thy abTod ma- 


pouctav, rd kata Mar@aioy ebaryyéAov 
mapa tTiow avTd0 tov Xpioroy éweyvw- 
kédow" ols BapPoropuatoyv tay ’ATooTéAwy 
éva Knpdta avrois Te ‘EBpalwy ypdu- 
pact THY TOD Mar@aloy KaTadcipat ypa- 
g¢nv.—Euseb. Hist. Eccl., lib. v. cap. 
10.] 
x [Grotius, Comment. in Matt. cap, 
1. apud Critic. Sacr. tom. vii. col. 36. 

y [Evangelium Matthei, recenter 
Judzorum penetralibus erutum, cum — 
interpretatione Latina, &c. Paris. 1555. 
See the dedicatory address by John — 
Tilius, (Tilet,) Bishop of Brieux, to 
the Cardinal of Lorraine. ] | 

* [Evangelium secundum Mattheum — 


ON THE KALENDAR. 223 


‘narrat Hieronymus, omuino arbitror ex ipso Matthai codice 
fluxisse. Idem.* 


OCTOBER. 


17. Etheldred.| The eldest daughter of Anna, king of the 
East Angles, who was chiefly memorable for the holiness of 
his children; among whom his son Erkenwald was bishop 
of London. This his eldest daughter, Ethelred, was twice 
married, and yet (as the stories go) continued a virgin still, 
and at last became a nun; and is remembered to posterity 
by the name of St. Audry. Bak. Hist., p. 9°. 


NOVEMBER. 


20. Edmond, King.| The 15th king of the East Angles, 
who being assaulted by the Danes (after their irruption into 
England) for the possession of his country, was more cruelly 
assaulted for the profession of his faith; for continuing con- 
stant in his Christian religion, those pagans first beat him 
with bats, then scourged him with whips, and afterwards, 
binding him to a stake, shot him to death with their arrows ; 
whose body was buried in a town where Sigebert, the Hast 
Anglian king, one of his predecessors, had built a church, 
and where afterwards (in honour of his name) was built 
another more spacious; and the name of the town upon that 
occasion was called St. Edmund’s Bury. Bak., p. 9°. 


DECEMBER, 


25. Christmas.| Anno mundi conditi 3970 Jesus Christus 
| Deus Filius ex Patre natus ab aterno, hoc anno nascitur in 
| Bethlehem ex Beata Maria Virgine verus homo. Ex libris nume- 
| ralibus reperies annum mundi, 3970. Bucholzerus4. 


) in lingua Hebraica, cum versione La- » [Baker’s Chronicle, p. 7. ] 
tina atque succinctis annotationibus ¢ (Ibid. ] 
| Sebastiani Munsteri. Basil. 1537.] 4 | Abrahami Bucholceri Index Chro- 


| *® [Grotius, ibid. col. 37.] ‘nologicus, &c, p. 127. Francof. 1612. ] 





_nullis indigeat argumentis. Sed vetus illud Nazareorum Berea Sxconp 


. ‘ ° ; ° S : 
habitantium, quod a se consultum translatumque in linguas alias ~~ 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


224 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Distat hie annus a Natali Virginis Marie annis 15, plus 
minus completis. Vid. Annotata. ad 8 Sept. et 15 August. 

27. St. John.] Johannes et apostolus et evangelista, et pro- 
pheta fut. Apostolus quia scripsit ad Ecclesias, ut magister + 
evangelista quia librum Evangelit condidit, quod excepto Matthao | 
alii ex duodecim apostolis non fecerunt: propheta, vidit enim 
im Patmo wsula, in qua fuerat a Domitiano principe 0b Domini 
martyrium relegatus, Apocalypsin infinita mysteria continentem. 
S. Hier. in 1. adv. Jovin., c. 148, 

Johannes cum in oleo ignito Rome demersus nihil passus esset, | 
im Patmum insulam relegatur, ubi vidit Apocalypsin, A° Chr‘ 96. | 
Ab exilio redit Ephesum sub Nerva imperatore, A° Chri 98. | 
Ibidem scribit Evangelium, A° 99, et moritur A° 100. Clausit | 
ataque beati mors S. Joh. Evangeliste primum Christi centena- 
TUM. | 


€ [S. Hieron. adv. Jovinianum, lib. i. cap. 26. Op. tom. ii. col. 279, 280. ] 








THE KALENDAR‘*, 








JANUARY. 
Clavis Septuagesime, 
Luciani Presbyteri. 
Prisca, Virg. et Mar. 
Fabian et Sebast. 
Agnes, V. et M. 
Vincent, Mart. 
Clavis Quadragesime. 





mw 





FEBRUARY. 


Blasii, Ep. et M. 

Agathe, V. et M. Ubicunque 
prima luna fuerit post diem 
S. Agathe, proxima Dominica 
erit Dominica Quadragesime. 

Valentin., Ep. et M. 

Uliima Septuagesime. 

Ver oritur. 

Locus bissex. 








MARCH. 


David, Ep. et Con. 

Cedde, Ep. et Con. 

Perpetuz et Felicitatis V. et 
Martyrum. 

Clavis Pasche. 

Ultimum Quadragesime. 

Edward., R. et Mart. 

Benedict., Abb. 

Primum Pascha. 

Init. Reg. Caroli. 











APRIL. 


Richard, Ep. et C. 

Ambrose, Ep. et D. Loe Sun- 
day. 

Clavis Rogationum. 

Alphage, Ep. et M. 

S. George, M. 

Extremum Pascha. 

Clavis Pentecostes. 





MAY. 
John Evang., ante portam Lat. - 
Dunstan, Ep. et C. 
Ver finitur. Ineipit estas. 
Augustini, Angl. Epise. 





1 
20 
22 








JUNE. 


Nicomede, M. 

Boniface, M. 

Barnabe. Non est Festum. 

Edward, Transl. 

Albani, Protomart., non habetur 
in statuto. 


























JULY. 
3 | Martin, Transl. 
15 | Swithune, 7’. 
20 | Margaret, V. et M. 
26 | Anne, Matr. M. 
AUGUST. 
1 | Lammas, sive ad vincula S. Petri. 
10 | Laurent., Mart. 
15 | Assumptio B. Marie. 
21 | Astas finitur. Incipit autumnus. 
28 | Augustine, Ep. et D. 
SEPTEMBER. 
1 | Giles, 4bd. 
4} Transl. S. Cuthberti. 
14 | Holy Cross exalt. 
17 | Lambert, Ep. et M. 
30 | Hieron., Presb. et D. 
OCTOBER. 

1 | Remig., Episc. Tob. v. The 
First Lesson was altered for 
part of Exod. vi. by the king’s 
direction, at the Conference in 
Hampton Court. 

6 | Faith, V. et M. 

9 | Dennis, Mart. 

13 | Edward, Transl. 
17 | Ethelred, V.: 
NOVEMBER. 
2 | Commemoratio Animarum. 
11 | S. Martini, Ep. et C 
13 | Brice, Ep. et Conf. 
15 | Machute, Ep. et C. 
17 | Hugh, Bishop, Ep. 
19 | Nat. K. Charles. 
20 | Edmund, King, M@. 
23 | Cicily, Virg. et M. 
24 | Clement, Ep. R. M. 
26 | Katharine, V. e¢ M. 
DECEMBER. 
6 | Nicholas, Bish., C. 
8 | Cone. of B. Mary. 
13 | Luci. Virgin, M. 
29 | Th. Becket. 





@. £ [The words here printed in italics are inserted in MS, in the Kalendar of 








the Prayer-book by Cosin.] 


COSIN, 





Q 





SEconD 


SERIES. 


226 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


HOLYDAYS. 


These to be observed for holydays, and none other.| The 


abrogation of new holydays. Puilchre Nicol. de Clemangus®. 
Novis enim celebritatibus, plerumque artantur veteres ; which 
was found too true in our Church. 

A brief declaration when every term beginneth and endeth”.] 
This declaration of the terms, which is here annexed to the 
observation of holydays, was first made and set forth by the 
Injunctions of King Henry VIII. and the convocation of the 
clergy, A°. 1536', where it was ordered, that the people might 
freely go to their work upon all such holydays (as were usually 
before kept) which fell either in the time of harvest, (counted 
from the first day of July to the 29th of September,) or in 
any time of the four several terms when the king’s judges 
sat at Westminster. But yet these holydays (here in our 
book mentioned) are specially excepted by those Injunctions 
of King Henry VIII. and his clergy-convocation, and com- 
manded to be kept solemn and holy by every man, the har- 
vest-time and the term-time notwithstanding. And there- 
fore I see no use of this declaration when the terms begin 
and end to be added to our holydays in this place, for neither 
was it permitted in King Henry the VIIIth’s time, nor is it 
in ours, that any man should go to his work upon these days 
appointed to be kept sacred, whether they fall in term-time 
or no. 

Circumetsion.| Dissimulare non poteram prapostere celebrari 
Christi Circumersionem, praterito Mortis die; ac imscite ac per- 
peram ab indoctis hominibus fabricatam esse. Calv. Hpist. 128*. 


® [This is taken by Cosin from Airo- 


dius, Pandecte, lib. i. tit. ii. de fide et 
religione, c. 21, p. 26, who says: Ne 
vero nove celebritates instituantur, 
pulchre, &c. The words Novis, &c. 
are those of /Zrodius. See Nicolaus de 
Clemangis, Tractat. de novis celebri- 
tatibus non instituendis. Op. pp. 158, 
159. Lugd. Bat. 1613.] 

h [This was omitted in 1662. ] 

‘ [This was an “‘act’ of the king 
and convocation. The words referred 
to are: *‘ Also, that all those feasts or 
holydays which shall happen to oc- 
curre either in the harvest-time, which 
is to be counted from the first day of 
July unto the 29th day of September, 
or else in the term-time at Westmin- 


ster, shall not be kept or observed from 
henceforth as holydays, but that it may 
be lawful for every man to go to his 
work or occupation upon the same as 
upon any other work-day, except always 
the feasts of the Apostles, of our blessed 
Lady, and of Saint George; and also 
such feasts as wherein the king’s judges 
at Westminster Hall do not use to sit 
in judgment; all which shall be kept 
holy and solemn of every man, as in 
time past have been accustomed.’’— 
Wilkins, Concilia, tom. iii, pp. 823, 
824. | 

k [ Epist. Calvini ministro Burensi. 
Epist. et Respous., p. 63. col. 1, Opera, 
ed. Amst. 1667. The passage is at fol. 
138 in the edition of Geneva, 1617.] 


ON THE PLACE FOR SAYING THE DAILY PRAYERS. 


227 


The Order where Morning and Evening Prayer shall be read. 


Shall be used in the accustomed place, &§c.| Which word 
“accustomed!” was added here of purpose, that it might 
refer to the use of former times, and not to the later 
alterations, that some of the ordinaries and people had 
made in or after the fifth year of King Edward the VIth. 
For the second liturgy then compiled hath not this word 
* accustomed” put into the rubrics™. 

And that accustomed place was the quire, as appeareth 
by the first words of the first book, set forth in the 
second year of King Edward the VIth.: “The priest being 
in the quire, shall begin the Morning Prayer with a loud 
voice.” But since that time, at the instance of the pa- 
rishioners, many ordinaries, in most places, have other- 
wise determined and ordered it, as here they had leave 
to do. And from hence it was, somewhat after the be- 
ginning of Queen Elizabeth’s reign, that the minister had 
a desk or a smaller pulpit set up for him, whereat to read 
divine service and the lessons, in the body of the parish 
church, whereas aforetimes he performed all his office at his 
own seat in the chancel, and so in divers places, where the 
ordinary did not alter it, he doth still, turning himself only 
towards the people that be in the body of the church, when 
he readeth the lessons. 

Except it shall be otherwise determined by the ordinary "of the 
place.| But note here, that their power was limited and re- 
strained to the reading of. Morning and Evening Prayer only; 
so that the Communion-service was by this very order and 
law here reserved to the chancel, neither had any ordinary a 
liberty or power given him to bring it, or give leave to have 
it brought, into the body of the church, and to place the 
communion-table there, as in divers parish churches of this 
realm, and especially in cities or other great towns, they, and 
the churchwardens, with their ministers, have presumed to 





1 [This paragraph is a marginal note 


on the word accustomed. | 


m [The rubric in the second book of 
Edw. VI. was, ‘*The Morning and 


| Evening Prayer shall be used in such 


place of the church, chapel, or chancel, 
and the minister shall so turn him, as 


the people may best hear. And if there 
be any controversy therein, the matter 
shall be referred to the ordinary.” This 
was altered to “in the accustomed 
place’’ on the accession of Elizabeth, 
and stood so when Cosin wrote this 
note. | 


Q 2 


SEcoND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


Transfe- 
renda hee 
sunt ad no- 
tas super 
hee verba 
in‘ Com- 
munione: 
Draw near 
and take 
this Holy 
Commu- 
nion, 


228 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 


do at their own pleasure. Nor had the ordinaries any power 
neither to alter the accustomed place of the Morning and 
Evening Prayer, but only where there was some controversy 
about it, what place was the most convenient for the reading 
thereof. Vide Lit. 2. Edw. VI., hoe loco”. 

And the chancels shall remain as they have done in times past. | 
That is, distinguished from the body of the church by a 
frame of open-work, and furnished with a row of chairs or 
stools on either side; and if there were formerly any steps 
up to the place where the altar or table stood, that they 
should be suffered to continue so still, and not to be taken 
down and laid level with the lower ground, as lately they 
have been by violence and disorder, contrary to law and 
custom. 

Optime omnium quomodo ista olim et antiquitus se habuerint, ex 
Listoria Eusebii, lib. x. cap. 4. ubi panegyricum inserit, quo de- 
scribitur Templum Tyri, opera Paulini Episcopi extructum?® ; 
Gluum templum (inquit) absolvisset, thronisque sublimibus in ho- 
norem presidum, et deinde subselliis ordine et decore exornasset, 
et post omnia sanctum altare in medio (ante thronos et subsellia) 
collocasset, ista rursus ut essent populo inaccessa, ligneis retibus 
sive cancellis (unde appellatio nostra Chancel) circumdedit. Addi 
possunt multa ex Chrysostomo et Theodoreto aliisque priscis patri- 
bus huc facientia?. | 

Ambrosius’ vetuit Theodosium, postquam obtulit, sedere aut 
manere tatra cancellos sacerdotum, et interiora templi, que patent 
(inguit). sols sacerdotibus. Paruit imperator, atque dixisse fertur, 
se unum Ambrosium invenisse qui verus episcopus esset ; sed hoe 
paulo morosius quam oportuit, neque enim alius episcopus hoe 
unquam prokibuit. Et in 6 Syn. Constantinopolitana, can. 69°. 
sic continetur. Nulli liceat laicorum intra sacrarium ingredi, ab 
eo tamen nequaquam prohibita majestate et authoritate imperatoris, 


" [See the words cited in note m.] 

© [GAAG Kal Bde Kal roy vewy émite- 
Aéoas, Opdvors Te Tos Gvwrdtw eis THY 
TaY Tpoedpwy Tidy, Kal rpooéTt Bauors 
év tdget Tots Kal’ GAov Kata Td TpéroV 
Koophoas, ep &raci te Td THY aylwr 
&yiov Ovoiacrhpiov ev pwéow Gels, abOts 
kal Tdde ws ky ein Tots ToAAOts UBara, 
Tois amd EdAov mepiepparre SikTboLs.— 
Euseb. Hist. Eccles., lib. x. cap. 4. p. 
474], 
P [See Bingham, Antiq., book viii. 


ch. 6. sect. 6, 7, 8.] 

4 [Theodoret. Eccl. Hist., lib. v. ¢. 
18. p. 218.] 

* [uh ekéorw Twi tev amrdvTev év 
Aaikots TeAodyT: Ev5ov fepod eiorévar 
Ovoiacrnpiov' pundauads em) rovTw Tijs 
Bacirrkjjs cipyouerns eEovoias kal adbder~ 
tias, qvixa by Bovrnbein mpocdia Sapa 
TG wWAdoavtTt, KaTd Tia a&pxaoTaTnv 
mapd5ocw.—Cone. Const. vi. (Quini- 
sextum) can. 69. Concil., tom. vii. 
col. 1380, B.] 





SERRE Le 


clerus, ibi etiam wse sacra mysteria perciperet ; 


ON THE ORNAMENTS IN THE TIME OF DIVINE SERVICE. 229 


quando voluerit Creatort dona offerre, et consecrata accipere ex 
antiqua ecclesie consuetudine. Theodosius igitur sese excusavit 
Ambrosio respondens, quod nulla arrogantia inductus intra can- 
cellos substitisset, sed morem secutus Ecclesiae Constantinopoli- 
tane, in qua is honor imperatori habitus, ut intra cancellos ubi 
sed reversus 
Constantinopolin, quum festo die templum adiisset, rh tepa tparé Cn 
Ta d@pa TpoceveyKav adOis eLeAyjAvdev, et ne invitatus quidem 
manere intus voluit. Theodoretus in Hist., lib. v. cap. 17%. 


And here 1s to be noted, that the minister at the time of the com- 
munion, and at all other times of his ministration, shall use such 
ornaments, §c.| Religio divina alium habitum habet in minis- 
terio, alterum in usu vitaque communi; S. Hieronym. im 44, cap. 
Eizech.*| Debemus munda conscientia et mundis vestibus tenere 
Domini Sacramenta. Vestibus liners utuntur Afgypti sacerdotes, 
non solum intrinsecus, sed extrinsecus ; Idem. 16" Item’ advers. 
Pelag., cap. 19%. hee sunt ejusdem Hieronymi verba, Que sunt, 
rogo, inimicitia contra Deum, si tunicam habuero mundiorem, st 
episcopus, presbyter et diaconus, et reliquus ordo ecclesiasticus 
(sive clerici) in administratione sacrificiorum cum candida veste 
processerint ? Chrysost., etiam Hom. \x. ad Pop. Antioch.¥ M:- 
nistrantes alba et splendida tunica indui solitos innuit. Cone. 
Carthagin. IV. can. 48%. jubet diaconum tempore oblationis vel 
lectionis alba uti. Optatus Milevitanus, lib. vi.* Quis fidelium 
nescit im peragentis my sterits erie ligna (sive mensam sacram) 
linteamine cooperiri ? 

De cereis etiam accensis, idem Hieronymus. adversus Vigilan- 
tium, cap. 9°, Per totas Orientis Eeclesias, quando legendum est 


* [Theodoret, ubi supra. ] 

t {S. Hieron. Comment. in Ezech., 
lib. xiii. cap. 44. v. 17, &c. Op. tom. v- 
col. 548, A.] 

™ [{Idem, ibid., col. 547, A. | 

v [The remainder of this note is 
from Calixtus de Sacrificio Christi, &c. 
§§ lvi., lvii., except the last words, which 
are adapted to our case. | 

* [Id. Dial. cont. Pelag., cap. 29. 
t tom. ii. col. 713, D.] 

Y [Cosin quotes ‘these words from 
the Latin edition of Chrysostom, tom. 
v. p. 196, E. ed. Par. 1546. The homily 
as it stands there is made up of por- 
tions of two of the homilies on St. 
Matthew. See Duczus’ edition, in his 


catalogue of the homilies prefixed to 
the seventh volume. The original of the 
passage is: tovtTo buav fh akla, TotTo 7H 
aopdrea, TodTe 6 oTépavos &ras, ovxX 
tva Acukdy xiTwvicKoy Kal &rooTiABovra 
meptBarrduevor mepitnre.—S. Chrysost. 
Hom. 82. in Matth. § 6. Op. tom. vii. 
p- 789, D.] 

z [Ut diaconus, tempore oblationis 
tantum vel lectionis, alba utatur.— 
Cone. Carthag. IV. can. 41. Concilia, 
tom. ii. col. 1441, A.] 

« [S. Optatus de Schism. Donat., lib. 
vi. cap. 1. Op. p. 93. ] 

> (S. Hieron. ‘bdere Vigilantium, cap, 
8. Op. tom. ii. col. 894, D.] 


SECOND 


SERIES. | 


> 


SEconD 


SERIES. 


230 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


evangelium, accenduntur luminaria jam sole rutilante, non utique 
ad fugandas tenebras, sed ad signum latitie significandum. 

Nempe peculiari isto apparatu et antiqua et nostra Ecclesia n- 
dicium facere voluit, non esse rem vulgarem, aut communem qua 
instituatur actionem, sed solennem, sacram et mysticam, atque adeo 
ut animi omnium eo magis itenti essent, et de dignitate ac mag- 
nitudine tante celebrations et rerum divinarum admonerentur. 
fecte tamen monet prefatio nostra de ceremoniis, hosce ritus ad 
essentiam religionis non pertinere, nec necessarios esse, sed adia- 
phoros, qui durante Ecclesia mandato, quum ad ordinem et deco- 
rem fuciant, observari debent. 

The minister.| Hoc intelligas de iis, quibus regimen plelis est 
commissum.... Minister namque generaliter dicitur, qui quod 
mandat superior exequitur ...et proprie refertur ad eos, qui officia 
ecclesiastica administrant ; ut scilicet minister sumatur pro rectore 
vel gubernatore Ecclesia, juxta notata per archidiaconum m cap. 
prasenti. x. ministris. de Off. ord., lib. vi. e¢ c. licet canon. de 
Electione, x. gregis. Linwood, in Glossa x. ministra de sum. 
Trin. ¢c. ignor. sacerd.* Istud ergo vocabulum non est primo a 
reformatoribus nostris inventum, aut usurpatum. 

At the time of the Commuuion.| And at the celebration of the 
holy Communion it was ordained, by the rules and orders of 
the first liturgy set forth by the Church of England, and 
confirmed by authority of parliament, in the second year of 
the reign of King Edward the VIth?: ‘That the priest who 
shall then execute the holy ministry, shall put upon him the 
vesture appointed for that ministration; that is to say, a 
white alb plain, with a vestment or cope: and, ‘that other 
priests and deacons, who shall help him in that ministration, 
shall have upon them likewise the vestments appointed for 
their ministry ; that is to say, albs with tunicles:’ but ‘if he 
be a bishop, who either celebrateth the holy Communion, or 
executeth any other public ministration, that then he shall 


© [Lyndwood, Provinciale Anglica- 
num, lib. i, tit. 1. de Summa Trinitate 
et Fide Catholica, cap. 1. p. 2, note b. 
ad verb, Ministri. The references to 
Archidiaconus are to the Commen- 
taries of Guido de Baiso on the sixth 
book of Decretals, lib. i. tit. xvi. c. 11, 
and lib. i, tit. vi. c. 13.] 

@ [See above, p. 43, note c. The 
first part of the rule is in the rubric at 


the beginning of the Communion-office 
in the Book of Common Prayer of 
1549. The latter part is from “ Certain 
notes for the more plain explication and 
decent ministration of things contained 
in this book,’’ at the end of the Book of 
Common Prayer of 1549, beginning 
‘And whensoever the bishop shall 
celebrate,”’ &c.] 





ON THE ORNAMENTS IN THE TIME OF DIVINE SERVICE. 231 


have upon him, besides his rochet, a surplice or alb, and a 
cope or vestment; and also his pastoral staff in his hand, or 
else borne or holden by his chaplain.’ 

And at all other times of his ministration.| That is, (as is 
set forth in the first liturgy of King Edward before men- 
tioned®,) ‘in the saying or singing of matins and evensong, 
baptizing and burying, the minister in parish churches, and 
chapels annexed, shall use a surplice. And in all cathedral 
churches and colleges, the deans, archdeacons, provosts, mas- 
ters, prebendaries, and fellows, being graduates, may use in 
the quire, besides their surplices, such hoods as pertain to 
their several degrees which they shall have taken in any 
university within this realm; and when they do preach, it is 
seemly also that they should wear their hoods belonging to 
their degrees.’ 

The word “all” here had been divers years omitted in the 
editions of this book, contrary to the true copy of it, set forth 
in the first year of Queen Elizabeth, (which was done either 
by the negligence of the printer or upon design,) until King 
Charles the First, in the first year of his reign, commanded 
it to be restored, and sent me to his printing-house to see it 
done; ever since which time it has so continued. 

In the church.| For “in all other places,” as it was declared 
by the same authority in the second year of King Edward the 
Sixth‘, “Every minister shall be at liberty to use any sur- 
plice or no.” 

As were in use, &c.| Among other ornaments of the church 
that were then in use, the setting of two lights upon the 
communion-table or altar was one, appointed by the king’s 
Injunctions’, (set forth about that time, and mentioned or 
ratified by the act of parliament here named®,) whereby all 
other wax-lights and tapers, which in former times of super- 


© [These rules are ‘found in the 
** Certain notes,’’ &c. at the end of the 
book of 1549, referred to in the last 
note. } 

f (Ibid.] 

& [Injunctions given by Edward VI. 
(A.D. 1547.) § 3. Wilkins, Concilia, 
tom. iv. p. 4: ‘* They shall suffer from 
henceforth no torches nor candles, ta- 
pers or images of wax, to he set afore 
any image or picture, but only two 


lights upon the high altar, before the 
Sacrament, which for the signification 
that Christ is the very true light of 
the world, they shall suffer to remain 
still.’? ] 

h [The act referred to is 2 & 3 Edw. 
VI., c. 1. The Book of Common Prayer 
is confirmed; but it does not appear 
that these Injunctions are, as Cosin 
states, either ratified or mentioned. See 
the next series of notes. | 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


232 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


stition men were wont to place before their shrines and 
images of saints, being taken away and utterly abolished, it 
was required, that two lights only should be placed upon the 
altar, to signify the joy and splendour we receive from the 
light of Christ’s blessed gospel. Bene B. Lutherus in formula 
misse sive Communionis, quam Wittenburgensi Ecclesia anno 
superioris seculi vicesimo tertio prescripsit, Nec candelas 
(inquit) nec thurificationem prohibemus, sed nec exigimus ; esto 
hoc liberum'. 

By authority of parliament.| Which confirmed both the 
first liturgy and the Injunctions of King Edward the Sixth‘. 

In the second year of the reign of King Edward the Sixth.| 
For it is here to be noted, that in his time there were two 
several liturgies, and two several acts of parliament made to 
confirm them. One in the second year, and another in the 
fifth year of his reign. In which fifth year, (upon the disuse 
which some men made of the former ornaments, or upon the 
displeasure that other men took against them both at home 
and abroad,) it was appointed by the second liturgy, and 
enacted by parliament authority’, “That the minister, at the 
time of the Communion, and at all other times in his minis- 
tration, should use neither alb, vestment, nor cope; but 
being an archbishop or bishop, should have and wear a 
rochet ; and being a priest or deacon, should have and wear 
a surplice only.” And yet this latter book, and act of par- 
liament thereunto annexed, did not condemn either the orna- 
ments, or any thing beside that was appointed in the former 
book, but acknowledged it all to have been “a very godly 
order, agreeable to the Word of God and the primitive 
Church™.” Whereupon, by authority of parliament, in the 
first year of Queen Elizabeth”, albeit it was thought most 
meet to follow and continue the order of divine service in 
Psalms, lessons, hymns, and prayers, (a few of them only 


i [This Latin is from Calixtus, ubi 
supra, § lvii. The reference is to the 
Formula Missze seu Communionis pro 
Ecclesia Wittenbergensi ad ‘ Lectio 
Evangelii.’ Lutheri Op. tom. ii. fol. 
384. Witteb. 1562. ] 

k [See the last note but one. } 

1 [See above, p. 43. ] 

m (‘*Where[ as | there hath been avery 
godly order set forth by authority of 


parliament for common prayer and 
administration of the Sacrament,”’ (re- 
ferring to that of the second year of 
the king’s reign,) “to be used in the 
mother tongue within the Church of 
England, agreeable to the Word of 
God and the primitive Church,’’ &c, 
Act , Parliament, 5 & 6 Edw. VI. 
c. 1. 

» [Act of 1 Eliz. ce. 2, § 1 and 13.) 





ON THE ORNAMENTS IN THE TIME OF DIVINE SERVICE. 233 


yet for the ornaments of the church, and of the ministers 


thereof, the order appointed in the second year of his reign 
was retained, and the same are we bound still to observe. 


Which is a note wherewith those men are not so well ac- 
quainted as they should be, who inveigh against our present 
ornaments in the church, and think them to be innovations 


introduced lately by an arbitrary power, against law; whereas, 


indeed, they are appointed by the law itself. And this Judge 
Yelverton acknowledged and confessed to me, (when I had 
declared the matter to him, as here I set it forth,) in his 
circuit at Durham, not long before his death, having been of 


another mind before. 


According to the act of parliament set forth in the beginning 
of this book.| § penult.°, in these words: “ Provided always; 
and be it enacted, that such ornaments of the church,” (where- 
unto the adorning and decent furniture of the communion- 
table relate,) “and of the ministers thereof,” (as the alb or sur- 
plice, vestment or cope, with the rochet and the pastoral staff 
before mentioned,) “shall be retained and be in use, as was 
in this Church of England, by authority of parliament, in the 
second” (not the fifth) “year of the reign of King Edward 
the Sixth; until other order shall be therein taken, by the 
authority of the queen’s majesty, with the advice of her com- 
missioners appointed and authorized under the great seal of 
England, for causes ecclesiastical, or of the metropolitan of 
this realm.” Which other order, so qualified as is here 
appointed to be, was never yet made. 


Of the Morning and Evening Prayer. 


With a loud voice.| Ut possit recitans ab omnibus audiri. 


[On the Confession. | 


According to Thy promises declared unto mankind in Christ 
Jesu, &c.| Jesus interpretatur salvator. Christus idem est 
quod unctus, a quo dicimur Christian. Ratio autem quare 
dicimur a Christo Christiani, et non a Jesu Jesuant, assignatur 


infra in ordine Baptismi ad verb. Christian Man. 


° [§ 13 of that Act, 1 Eliz. c. 2, being the Act of Uniformity prefixed to 
the Book of Common Prayer. } 


_varied,) which was set forth in the fifth year of King Edward; pRconP 
SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


Amen. 


234 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


[On the Absolution. ] 


Power, &c., to declare and pronounce, §&c.| 

Non est igitur potestas peccata suo arbitrio remittendi, (quod 
tantum gus Christo homini concessum est) sed annunciandi ve- 
niam, que Nathani etiam ad Davidem, et prophetis aliis man- 
data fuerat. 

Then shall the minister begin the Lord’s Prayer.| 

The Lord’s Prayer. Quam Tertullianus vocat fundamen- 
tum precum?; the prayer upon which all other prayers are 
builded. Non enim precepit Christus, ut non alia verba reci- 
temus, quam que in hac oratione prescribuntur (quanquam id 
quoque aliquando fiert cum fructu potest) sed ut materiam pre- 
cum hinc petamus. Ht sane nihil est dignum oratu, quod non 
in partes hujus formule tanguam in locos suos recte digeri pos- 
sit. Oratio enim hec (ut idem Tertullianus loquitur ) “ quan- 
tum substringitur verbis, tantum diffunditur sensibus.” Docent 
autem nos ea que ex Hebreorum libris ab aliis sunt citata, non 
tam formulam hance a Christo suis verbis conceptam, quam in 
eam congestum quicquid in Hebreorum precibus erat laudabile. 
..~ Lam longe abfuit ipse Dominus Ecclesie ab omni affecta- 
lione non necessarieé novitatis. Grot.* 

For Thine is the kingdom, &c.| Quod in Mattheo sequitur, 
Quoniam Tuum est regnum, &c., cum in vetustissimis exempla- 
ribus Grecis non extiterit (extat autem et in Syriaco, et in 
Latino contexiu, et in Arabico) argumentum nobis exhibet, 
unde discamus, non Arabicam tantum et Latinam versionem, 
sed et Syriacam factam postquam Ecclesiarum Xevroupyia for- 
mam certam acceperat. Nam ex Grecie consuetudine ceptum 
est ascribi hec Doxologia, magis quam pars precationis Latinis 
omnibus ignota. Grot.* Quos in suo divino officio Ecclesia 
Anglicana, Occidentis Ecclesia pars, hic sequitur. 

Sed et Amen, apparet non a Christo additum, sed ex more 
veteris Ecclesie publicam vocum recitationem ea voce appro- 
bantis. Id enim factitasse Christianos veteres docemur, 1 Cor, 

P [Quoniam tamen Dominus pro- _ tione, cap. 9. Op. p. 133, A.] 
spector humanarum necessitatum seor- 4 [ Idem, ibid., cap. 1. Op. p. 130, A. 
sum post traditam orandi disciplinam, * [Grotius, Comment. in Matth. vi. 
Petite, inquit, et accipietis, et sunt que 9. apud Criticos Sacros., tom. vii. col, 
petuntur pro circumstantia cujusque, 


premissa legitima et ordinaria oratione, * [Id., ibid. in ver. 18, col. 272.] 
quasi fundamento,—Tertullian. de Ora- 





| by David Chytrzus, to a Missal for the 


| Sacrificio Christi, § x. ] 


ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER. 235 


xiv. 16. idgue ut mulia, exemplo Hebreorum, Deut. xxvii. 15. 
Grot.* 

As in cathedral or collegiate churches, or where there be 
“many priests and clerks together, that are skilful to do it. 
Melodias autem simplices, graves, concinnas, et verbis textus con- 
gruentes in ecclesiis conservari oportet. Nec cuivis cantori liceat 
suo libitu musicos modos variare, ne dum quilibet symphonista 
suam propriam phantasiam sequitur, musica perinde ut Africa 
quotidie novam feram producat. C.* 

Te Deum laudamus.| Iste hymnus vulgo refertur ad SS. 
Ambrosium et Augustinum qui in ejusdem S. Augustini baptismo 
illum ex tempore ediderint et decantaverint. Proferturque hujus 
opinionis author et assertor §. Dacius episcopus Mediolanensis in 
Chronico, qui floruit tempore Justiniani Imperatoris, cujusque 
meminit S. Greg. lib. iii. Dial. ce. 4.* sed quicquid sit de veritate 
hujus historia, certum est hoc Chronicon non esse hujus Dacii, 
(Mireus de Canon. Regul. cap. 15.) quia probari non potest ullum 
Chronicon ab eo scriptum fuisse, nedum citatum, tam quia non 
redolet stylum illorum temporum, tum quia falsum est quod ibi 
continetur, quod S. Augustinus audiens 8. Ambrosium de Incar- 
natione ad populum tractantem “ et predicantem, tremens ac pal- 
lens, omnibus qui aderant videntibus, obriguerit, ac etiam finita 
monitione, quam ad populum B. Ambrosius ministrabat, primus 
ad eum Augustinus pervenerit,” &c. Adversatur enim S. Augustini 
et Possidii scriptis, nec poterit in mentem viri alicujus eruditi ac 
sapientis, qualis fuit hic Dacius, venire. Quare anie 8. Benedic- 
tum* et Teridium* S.Cesarii Arelatensis episcopi discipulum, 
qui de hoc hymno in suis regulis locuti sunt, nullus veterum illius 
mentionem fecit. Menard.» 


t [Grotius, ibid. ] 


nicorum Regularium ord. S. Aug. ori- 
« {This is an extract from a preface, 


gines et progressus, Cap. ii. pp. 6, 7. 
Colon. 1614. ] 

« [See above, p. 64, note b. ] 

* [Dicite Matutinos: ... Laudate 
Dominum de celis. Te Deum lauda- 
mus. Gloria in Excelsis Deo: et ca- 
pitellum. Omni Dominica sic dicatur. 
—Regula S. Cesarii Arelat. per S. Te- 


use of the Protestant Churches of Wit- 
tenberg, by Matt. Ludecus; Cosin de- 
rived them from Georg. Calixtus, de 


* [S. Greg. M. Dialog., lib. iii. c. 4. 


5 


| Op. tom. ii. col. 285, A. On Dacius’ 


| Chronicon, see above, p. 64, note z. ] 


__¥ [These words in parentheses are in 
the margin of Menard, and ought to 


| have been placed against “ profertur 
} hujus opinionis auctor,” as it is Mi- 
| reus who cites Dacius, in his Cano- 





tradium, ap. Holsteny Cod. Regularum 
Monast., tom. i. p. 146.] 

> [S. Gregorii Pape Liber Sacra- 
mentorum, cum notis H. Menardi; 
Note et observationes, p. 400. Paris, 
1642. ] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


Ruffinus in 


Expo:it. 
Symb.f 
Ambros. 
Serm. de 
Jejun. 388, 
Augustin. 
1. i. ad Ca- 
techumen®, 


236 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Benedicite.] In the order of Salisbury, it was appointed only 
to be said upon the Saturday in Ember-week (post Cinerum 
diem) after this manner (loco Tract. ad Missam.°) ) 

Duo clerici. . . ad gradum chori dicant, Benedictus, &e. 
Benedicite omnia opera Domini Domino, §c. chorus autem post 
unumquemque versum respondeat, Hymnum dicite et superex- 
altate Dominum in secula, 

. De hoc cantico S. Chrysost. in Homilia cui hic est titulus 
‘Quod si seipsum non ledit nemo ledere possit®’ hac habet verba r 
Cumque nec templum (iterum enim eadem dicam) neque aliare, 
non patriam, non sacerdotes, non prophetas haberent, in aliena et 
barbara regione, in medio camini, totiusque illius exercitus, rege 
harum rerum authore spectante, splendidum statuerunt tropheum, 
et insignem reportarunt victoriam, admirabili illa, et énopinata 
cantione decantata, que ex illo etiamnum ubique terrarum can-— 
tatur, et cantabitur etiam in postera secula. | 





De Symbolo Apostolorum. 





Credidit antiquitas, Apostolos priusquam ab Hierosolyma dis- | 
cederent, composuisse Symbolum fidei, quod hodie Apostolicum | 
vocamus. tsi autem Acta Apostolorum hujus ret mentionem — 


¢ [In saying that the Benedicite was 
appointed only to be said on the Sa- 
turday in Ember-week, Cosin confined 
his observation to the Sarum Missal; 
where it is appointed to be said after a 
Lectio at mass, as he states; but in the 
Breviary it is ordered to be said every 
Sunday at Lauds, to which our morn- 
ing prayer in part corresponds. The 
Saturday in the Lent Ember-week, on 
which the Benedicite is to be said, is 
not Sabbatum post Cinerum diem, but 
the Saturday after—See the Missale 
ad usum Eccl. Sarisb. Sabbato quatuor 
temporum, fol. xxxix. b.] 

4 [ Missale Sarisb. ibid. ] 

© [kat ore vady, mdAw yap Td abra 
€p&, obre Ovaracrhpioy, ov rarpida, ody 
iepéas, ov mpoptras, txovres, év &AXO- 
tpia kat BapBdpw xépa, év adr uty odv 
Keon Kaulve perath) tod orpatorédou 
mayvtTos éxelvov, a’tod Tod Bacihéws TOD 
Taita épyalouevov Oewpodytos, Aaumpoy 
Gveoticavto tpdémaor, Kar TEepipavhA 
vikny tipavto, thy Cavpacthy éxelyny 
kal mapddofov doavres Bdhy, Thy Kar 
KEXpt TOD viv €E éxelvov mayTaxod Tis 
oixoupévns ddopévny, xa doOnoouevny dt 


‘censuri estis et reddituri. 


kal eis Tas weTa TadTa yeveds.—S.Chry- 
sost. Lib, (al. Hom.) Quod qui seip-_ 
sum non ledit nemo ledere possit, § 16, 
Op. tom. iii. p. 462, D.] q 

f [Discessuri ab invicem normam_ 
prius future sibi predicationis in com= 
mune constituunt... omnes igitur in 
uno positi, et Spiritu S. repleti, breve — 
istud future sibi predicationis indi-— 
cium, conferendo in unum quod sen-_ 
tiebat unusquisque, componunt, atque 
hance credentibus dandam esse regulam 
statuerunt.— Ruffinus in Symbolum. — 
Opuscula, p. 169.] F 

8 [Ipsa autem ipsa clavis quam fidem — 
dicimus, videamus quemadmodum con- — 
stet, et quemadmodum consolidata sit, — 
Arbitror illam duodecim artificium 
operatione conflatam; duodecim enim — 
Apostolorum Symbolo, fides sancta con= 
cepta est, qui velut periti artifices in ~ 
unum convenientes, clavem suo con- — 
silio conflaverunt.—Serm. 33. de jeju-_ 
niis § 6. (aliter 38) opus spurium inter — 
Op. S. Ambros., tom. ii. in Append. col. 
455, F.] 

» [Hoe est enim Symbolum quod re- 


* 


Ista verba — 

















a, 


ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER. 237 


non faciunt; nec hoc Symbolum ad verbum, et eodem orationis Szconv 

. «| yep ; . SERIES, 
|contextu in sacris libris extet ; tamen nemo sanus negaverit, esse -————_ 
| compendium fidei Christiane, ut brevissimum tta et absolutissi- 
| mum, cujus singule partes sacris literis firmissime innituntur. 





All devoutly kneeling.| Est acrior Tertullianit objurgatio (Rubric 

in eos, gui sedentes orant. “Cum enim (inquit) perinde faciant Greed) 
|| nationes adoratis sigillaribus suis residendo, vel propterea in 
|| nobis reprehendi meretur, quod apud idola celebratur. So ad- 
ponitur et irreverentie@ crimen, etiam ipsis nationibus, siquid 
saperent, intelligendum, siquidem irreverens est adsidere sub 
consvectu ejus, quem cum maxime reverearis et venereris ; 
quanto magis sub conspectu Dei vivi Angelo adhuc Orationis 
adstante, factum illud est irreligiosissimum, nisi quod eapro- 
bramus Deo, quod nos oratio fatigarit.’ Tert. de Orat., c. 12%. 
Ubi ex tribus capitibus format reprehensionem : 1°. quod per- 
inde faciant nationes, quas imitari, meretur in nobis repre- 
hendi. 2°. quod etiam inter homines irreverens sit, coram et 
contra eum sedere cui debes venerationem ; 3°. denique quod 
| Signum sit anime languentis et oratione fatigata. The ancient 
} Christians performed all their service standing or kneeling; 
sitting they allowed not. 


--— 





The Lord be with you.—And with thy spirit.| 8S. Chryst. 
Hom. 18. in 2 ad Corinthios). Bene precatur sacerdos populo, 
et populus sacerdoti. Nam ‘Cum spiritu tuo’ nihil aliud est 
quam hoc. 

Ante primam orationem semper dicitur ‘ Dominus vobis- 
cum,’ &c. Sarum*, | 

Let us pray.| Sarum’, 
humiliate capita vestra. 


Sive flectamus genua, levate corda, 


qu audistis, per Scripturas divinas 
Sparsa sunt; sed inde collecta et ad 
unum redacta, ne tardorum hominum 
Memoria laboraret: ut omnis homo 
| possit dicere, possit tenere quod credit. 
—S.Aug. Serm. de Symbolo ad Catech., 
ap. i. § 1. (aliter lib. 1. de Symbolo 


| ad Catech.) Op. tom. vi. col. 547, B.] 


i (Tertullian. de Oratione, cap. xii. 
| Op. p. 134, B.], 

4 [er aitaév nédAw trav opimwdeord- 
| Twv pvotnpley emevxetar 6 icpels TH 
i ee 


> 
S 
pen 





Aag, émevyerou 5¢ 5 Aads TE fepet* rd 
yap, weTa TOU rveduaTds Gov, ovdéev BAAO 
éotiv.—S. Chrysost. in 2 Cor. cap. viil. 
Hom. xviii. Op. tom. x. p. 368, C.] 

k (Cosin here refers to the Missale 
in usum Eccl. Sarisb., in which the 
words, Dominus vobiscum. R. Et cum 
spiritu tuo, are said before the first col- 
lect except the contrary is ordered, ] 

1 [This also refers to the Oremus, 
which generally precedes the collects 
in the Missale. | 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


238 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


The second Collect for Peace.| In Ord. Sarum hee oratio 
est post-communio in Missa pro Pace™. 

Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Ideo autem omnes col- 
lecte terminantur per Jesum Christum Dominum nostrum, ut 
omne quod datur a Patre, intelligamus per Filium ejus nos acci- 
pere, cujus hereditas sumus. Alcuin. de Div. Officiis®. Quod 
in fine orationis subjungitur, per Dominum nostrum, eo re- 
spectu sit, quod Christus mediator est Dei et hominum; et 
impossibile est eterna Dei beneficia per aliam viam decurrere 
ad nos quam per ipsum; per ipsum ergo petimus et impe- 
tramus. Rupert. de Div. Off., lib. i. cap. 31°. 


The second Collect at Evening Prayer.] In Ord. Sarum 
hec oratio est collecta in Missa pro Pace?, 


DE SYMBOLO S. ATHANASITI4, 


Nor dividing the substance.| Et nota quod in hoc... tollitur 
error sive heresis Ari, qui posuit, quod Patri, et Filio, et Spiritut 
Sancto, sicut sunt diversa nomina, ita sunt diverse substantia. 
24. g. 3. ¢. Quidam. x. Ariani. Linwood'. 

Lor there is one Person of the Lather, another of the Son, and 
another of the Holy Ghost.| De quibus ... dicitur, Tres sunt qui 
testimonium dant in celo, Pater, Verbum, et Spiritus Sanctus. 
1 Jo. 5.... Et im hoe destruitur error Sabellii, qui posuit unam 
essentiam, sed negavit Trinitatem personarum, dicens, quod una 
persona quandoque dicitur Pater, quandoque dicitur Filius, quan- 





doque dicitur Spiritus Sanctus. 
lian. Linw.* 


™ [ Deus, auctor pacis et amator, quem 
nosse, vivere: cui servire regnare est: 
protege ab omnibus impugnationibus 
supplices tuos; ut qui in defensione 
tua confidimus nullius hostilitatis arma 
timeamus ; per, &c.—Missa pro pace; 
post-communio. Ibid. Commune, fol. 
Xxxix., b.] ; 

n [Albini Flacci Alcuini de Divinis 
Officiis, c. 40. ap. Hittorp. p. 68. col. 





2 


° [Ruperti Abbatis de Divinis Offi- 
ciis, lib. i. c, 31. ap. Hittorp. p. 473. 
col. 1, B.] 

P [Deus a quo sancta desideria, 
recta consilia et justa sunt opera; da 
servis tuis illam quam mundus dare 
non potest pacem; ut et corda nostra 


24. g. 3. e. Quidam. x. Sabel- 


mandatis tuis dedita, et hostium sub- 
lata formidine, tempora sint tua protec- 
tione tranquilla, per, &c.— Missa pro 
pace, Oratio, Miss. Sarisb. ubi supr. ] 

4 [Instead of these notes on the 
Creed of S. Athanasius, Nichols sim- 
ply put, Vide Lindwood, lib. i. tit. 1.] 

* [Lyndwood Provinciale Anglica- 
num, lib. i. tit. i, ec. 1. (De Summa 
Trinitate c. Ignorantia) p. 2, note m. 
The reference at the end is to the De- 
cretum, par. 2. caus, 24. quest. 3. c. 39. 
gq Ariani. ap. Corp. Jur. Can. tom. i.] 

[ Lyndwood, ibid., note n, in verb. 
trium personarum sc. Patris, Filii, et 
Spiritus Sancti, quoting the Decretum, 
ibid., { Sabelliani. } 











poreeceney 


a 
a 
7 ON THE CREED OF ST. ATHANASIUS. 239 
7 
4 


And yet They are not three eternals, but one eternal.| “ Pro 
_clariori intellectu pracedentium et subsequentium ... nominum 
wil Trinitatem pertinentium, ... nota, quod omne nomen quod de 
| Deo dicitur, aut est essentiale, aut personale, aut notionale.... 
| Nominum essentialium (qualia sunt Deus, Deitas, Essentia, Sub- 
| stantia, Natura,) quedam sunt substantiva, quedam adjectiva : 
| substantiva sunt, ut Divinitas, Deus, Creator et similia, et horum 
| quedam sunt abstracta, quedam concreta, quedam media: ab- 
_stracta sunt que absolute significant Divinam Essentiam, ut Essentia, 
Deitas, Bonitas, et hujusmodi, et de his datur hee regula, quod 
semper supponunt et significant Essentiam, nec possunt traht per 
aliquod conjunctum ad supponendum pro persona ; unde talia no- 
mina conjuncta cum prepositionibus, vel nominibus, vel verbis, vel 
participiis notionalibus reddunt propositiones falsas in quibus po- 
nuntur;... ut, Essentia generat, vel generatur ; Essentia est de 
Lssentia, vel Essentia est apud Essentiam, et hujusmodi. Et est 
tenendum, quod ista nomina abstracta, puta essentialia, pradi- 
cantur de qualibet persona per se, et de omnibus simul singula- 
riter, sed non pluraliter ; verbi gratia, Pater est Deitas, Filius est 
Deitas, Spiritus Sanctus est Deitas, et hi simul sunt una Deitas, et 
non tres Deitates. Concreta dicuntur que significant quasi formam 
in subjecto, ut Deus, Creator, et similia; et de his hee datur 
regula, quod generaliter significant Essentiam,.... licet quan- 
doque ponuntur pro persona. Media sunt que habent modum et 
formam et significationem abstractorum, sed usum et officium con- 
eretorum, ut Lumen, Sapientia, Principium et hujusmodi. Ista 
enim sicut abstracta predicantur de qualibet persona per se, et de 
omnibus simul singulariter, sed non pluraliter, ut supra dictum ; 
ltem supponunt pro personis sicut concreta, ut cum dicitur Lumen 
de Lumine... et hujusmodi. Adjectivorum nominum alia signi- 
ficant pure Essentiam nihil connotando, ut Ens, bonus, &c., alia 
aliquid connotando, ... quorum quedam connotant aliquid priva- 
tive, quedam positive; privative, ut Eternus, Immensus;... et 
de his datur eadem regula que de premissis [scil.| Quod predi- 
_catur de omnibus personis insimul et divisim, singulariter et non 
I pluraliter, ut Pater est aternus, Filius est aternus, Spiritus 
Sanctus est aternus, non tamen tres aterni, sed unus eternus.? 

De reliquis nominibus personalibus et nominalibus lege Linwood 


in gloss. de Sum. Trin. c. 1. ad verb. procedentemt. 
is 











‘ [Id. ibid., p. 4, note d. That is the passage in the text is extracted. 
he note from the former part of which It ought to be observed that Cosin 





SECOND 


SERIES. 


SEconD 
SERIES, 


240 


And the Holy Ghost is God.| Ex hoc confunditur error 
eee qui dicebat Spiritum Sanctum non esse Deum. 15 
Dist. c.1*. 

Nor begotten.) Ingenitus, sie dictus eo quod ab alio non sit, 
unde S, Aug. lib. xv. de Trin. “ Pater (inquit) solus non est de 
alio, ideo solus appeltatur ingenitus, non quidem in Scripturis sed 
tn consuetudine disputantium, et de re tanta sermonem, qualem 
valuerint, proferentium .”-- Linw.* 

The Holy Ghost is of the Father, and of the Son.] Non ut a 
duobus principiis, sed ab uno principio*. 

But proceeding.| Bene exprimitur in Const. Provine. Anglia 
t. i.e. de Sum. Trin. A Patre et Filio pariter procedeus, hoc est, 
“non a duabus spirationibus, sed una spiratione [supra quo habes 
textum| extr. eod. tit. c. fideli, in lib. vid” 

Ali men shall rise again with their bodies, and shall, Se. | 
In hoe articulo confunditur error multorum qui negabant resurrec- 
tionem generalem, et precipue eorum qui dicebant, quod anima re- 
sumerent alia corpora; contra quos dicit Apostolos, Oportet cor- 
ruptibile hoc induere immortalitatem. 1 Cor. xv.* 

And they that have done good, shall go into life everlasting ; 
and they that have done evil, into, &c.] Id quod Christus ait, 
Matth. xxv. Ibunt hi in supplicium eternum, justi autem in vitam 
aternam®*: h.e. unusquisque percipiet, prout hic im corpore gessit, 
sive premium, sive penam. Psalm. Tu reddes unicuique secun- 
dum opera sua. 

Everlasting fire.| Adverte quod de aterna hac pena non fit 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


mentio nec in Symbolo Apostolorum nee in Symbolo Ecclesia (post . 
evangelium recitato), saltem per expressum, (licet per oppositum : 
intelligitur eterna damnatio, ut in hoe Symbolo Athanasir. ) Prov. | 


Angl. de Summa Trin. et Tinw. ibid.” 














omits portions of Lyndwood, and oc- 
casionally makes explanatory or other 
slight alterations. ] 

« [Id., ibid., note a, in verb. esse 
Deum, referring to the Decretum, pars 
i. dist. 15. cap. 1.] 

 (Ibid., p. 8, note e, ad verb. inge- 
nitum. ‘The passage of S. Aug. is in 
his work De ‘I'rinitate, lib. xv. c. 26. 
§ 47. Op. tom. viii. col. 1000, D.] 

x [Ibid., p. 4, note c, ad verb. pari- 
ter procedentem. | 

Y [Ibid., being the continuation of 
the passage last cited. The reference 
is to the Lib. Sext. Decretalium, lib. i. 


tit. i. de Summa Trin. cap. unic. apud 
Corp. Jur. Can., tom. iii., from which 
the words of these two extracts are — 
taken. ] e | 

2 [Ibid., p. 5, note r, ad verb. in © 
carne et anima. } 2 

* (Ibid. This passage is made up of ~ 
extracts from these notes of Lyndwood, 
p. 5, note q, ad verb. gloriam eternam; 
note p, ad verb. Ecclesiw; p. 6, note c, — 
ad verb. zterna damnatio. } S| 

» [Id., ibid, p. 6, note ce, The — 
words in parentheses, and of the last 
clause, licet, &c., are added by Cosin.] _ 








ES ee 








ON THE LITANY. 241 


ON THE LITANY. 


By Thy Cross and Passion, &c.| The ancient fathers of the 
Greek Church in their Liturgy, after they had recounted all 


the particular pains in Christ’s passion, as they are set down 


in the four Gospels, and by all, and by every one of them, 


‘called for mercy and deliverance (as here we do), added after 


all, and shut up all with this petition, 4c’ dyywot@v KoTa@v Kal 
Bacavav érénoov Kai caoov judas: By Thine unknown sor- 
rows and sufferings, Good Lord, have mercy upon us, save 


and deliver us;” for He felt more of them than we know, or 


can distinctly express. 

And in the Day of Judgment, Good Lord deliver us.| This 
petition and prayer referreth to us after we are dead; and 
supposeth, that being dead, we are still capable of God’s 
mercy and favour when the last day of the general judgment 


shall come: for when that time comes, “‘ we must every one 
_(be we alive, or be we dead) stand before the tribunal-seat of 


Christ, and then shall all men give an account severally for 


their own deeds, every person for himself,” Rom. xiv. 10, 


12; 2 Cor. v. 10; even for “every idle word that he hath 


spoken,” Matt. xii. 36. It doth, therefore, concern us to 
| pray for ourselves, (as here the Church of England, therein 


following the religious order and example of many Churches 
abroad, hath directed us,) not only as we consider ourselves 
in this present state of life, or “at the hour of our death,” 


but likewise as we shall be hereafter in the future state of 


dead persons, and in expectation of our final sentence, when 
we shall be examined for every thing we have done or said 
amiss, at the last day of judgment. Which examination 
being yet to come, and to follow us when we be dead, we 


| may lawfully pray, that after death we may be delivered from 


the rigour of it; and that God would have mercy on us, both 
before we die (considered as persons here alive), and after- 
wards (considered as persons that have been long dead), when 


| we shall come to render up our account “in the day of judg- 
ment.” At which time, Christ will not sit upon His tribunal- 


COSIN. R 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SEconpD 


SERIEs. 


242 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


seat only to execute a former sentence given “at the hour of 
death,” but proceed further, and call every one to a reckoning 
for what “ they have done in their bodies, whether it be good, 
or whether it be evil,” Eccles. xii. 14; 2 Cor. v.10. “For 
the Son of Man shall come in the glory of His Father, with 
His angels, and then (not before) He will reward every man 
according to his works,” Matt. xvi. 27. “Behold I come 
quickly, and My reward is with Me, (with Him when He 
comes,) to give every one according as his work shall be,” 
Apoce. xxii. 12; that is, shall be then found to be upon the 
account which they must then make to Him. And “ who 
can abide the day of His coming,” (Joel ii. 11,) if He shall 


proceed strictly with them, by the rules of justice and judg- 


ment? Knowing therefore this terror, (as the apostle speaks, 
2 Cor. v. 11,) we pray here for mercy and deliverance there, 
that at this last day of judgment the strictness and rigour of 
His discussing, examining, and sentencing our words and 
deeds, may be graciously mitigated, and that He would “ be 
merciful to us in that day,’ as St. Paul prayed for Onesi- 
phorus, (2 Tim. i. 18,) being then most probably dead; or 
whether he were dead or no, that prayer related to him, as 
he should be in the state of death, and wherein that day of 
judgment should find him: and so do we consider Cursarvea 
here in making the same prayer, and saying, “ in the day off 
judgment, Good Lord deliver us.” It is a part, therefore, of 
the piety and religion of the Church of England, (as it hath | 

been likewise of the universal Church of Christ heretofore : — 
S. Aug., Lib. de Cura pro Mortuis, c. 1° and 4°,) to pray for 
mercy after death, and not to doubt, (for otherwise we may ~ 
be sure she would never set us to pray and petition here for 
it,) but that such as are dead in Christ, and in the Catholic — 
communion of His Church, be capable of it. Nor can we 


© Non parva est universe Ecclesia, 
que in hac consuetudine claret, autho- 
ritas, ut in precibus sacerdotis locum 
suum habeat commendatio mortuo- 
rum. [S. Aug. Liber de Cura gerenda 
pro Mortuis, Cap. i. § 3. Op. tom. vi. 
col. 516, G. This passage is in the 
margin of the original. | 

@ Et iterum, Non sunt pretermit- 
tendz supplicationes pro spiritibus mor- 


tuorum, quas faciendas pro omnibus in 
Christiana et Catholica societate de-— 
functis, etiam tacitis nominibus sub ~ 
generali commemoratione suscepit Ec-— 
clesia, ut quibus ad ista desunt parentes — 

aut filii, aut quicunque cognati vel” 

amici, ab una eis exhibeantur pia matre — 
communi. [Idem, ibid., cap. 4. § 6.— 
col. 519, F. This is also in the margin 

of the original. } | 














ON THE LITANY. 243 


; conceive a more probable interpretation of these words, than 


b that there is mercy and favour to be found in the day of 
‘judgment. But as we offer, and have set forth this inter- 
pretation, because none other appear to us to be more pro- 
“bable; so because it is not any fundamental point or article 
of faith, necessary to salvation, we will leave it free for every 
man to think and judge of it as he shall see cause. Only if 
he findeth not a more solid and certain interpretation, let 
him take this. 

Vide que annotavimus ad illa verba, “that we, and all 
that are departed in the true faith, may have our perfect 


| consummation of bliss,” &c. in Officio et Sepultura mor- 


tuorum®. 

That it may please Thee to keep,—our most gracious King, 
‘&ec.] De his precibus Tertullianus Latinorum patrum anti- 
quissimus, Apologetic., cap. 39; ‘Oramus etiam pro impe- 
ratoribus ; pro ministris eorum et potestatibus, pro statu seculi, 
et pro rerum quiete” Lt ad Scapulam® ; ‘ Itaque et sacrifica- 
mus pro salute imperatoris, sed Deo nostro et ipsius, sed quo- 
modo precepit Deus, pura prece” Huc etiam spectant verba 
Cyrilli Hierosolymitani; Catech. Mystag. v..: ‘ Obsecramus 
Deum pro communi Ecclesiarum pace, pro tranquillitate mundi, 
pro regibus, pro militibus, pro sociis, pro egrotis et afflictis, et 
im summa pro his omnibus qui egent auxilio; egemus autem 
omnes,’ 

That it may please Thee to bless and keep the magistrates. | 
Those that are subordinate, and have no authority but from 
the king: of ancient time, the word magistrate had no other 
signification; howsoever, of late days they use it and take 
it commonly for the chief governor in a kingdom; contra 
Latine vocis usum; nam Romanis magistratus minorum sem- 
per potestatum nomen est; as here it is. 


¢ [See below, notes on the Office for tartp orpatiwtay kal cuupdxwr* trip 


the Burial of the Dead.] Tay ev acbeveias’ bTép THY KaTaTOVOU- 
f [ Tertullian. Apolog. . cap. 89. Op. pévwv" Kal amatawaA@s trip mdvTwr 
p- 31, A.]} Bonbetas Seonévwy Seducda mavTes jets, 
& [Idem ad Scapulam, cap. 2. ibid. al radtny mpoopépouey thy Ovolay. 
Pp 69, C.] —S. Cyril. Hierosol. Catech. 23. (Mys- 


s [mapaxarodpev Tov Gedy & bmep kol- tag. 5.) cap. 8, Op. p. 827, D. 328, A. 
vis THs exKAnoT LOY ciphyns® irtp tis The Latin version used by Cosin is 


a 700 Kéopou evaTtabelas’ imép BaciAcwy* obviously incorrect. ] 


R2 





é 
ie 


SECOND 
SeRIFS. 


SECOND . 
SERIES. 


{ Ecclus. 
vii. 15. ] 


244 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


The magistrates are here but the ministers or servants 
under the king, for secular affairs. 

That it may please Thee to bring into the way of truth, 

. . to strengthen such as do stand, &c.| S. Aug. ep. 107': 
Vitalem Pelagianismo affinem increpans ; ‘ Audis sacerdotem 
Dei orantem pro incredulis, ut eos Deus convertat ad fidem, et 
pro catechumenis, ut eis desiderium regenerationis inspiret, et 
pro fidelibus, ut in eo quod esse ceperunt ejus munere perse- 
verent, subsannat has pius voces? et non respondebis Amen ?? 
And St. Chrysostom gives us a good reason for the use of this 
prayer, Homil. 72. in S. Matthi: Nam quoniam nostra ipsi 
peccata cognovimus, pro aliis qui peccarunt, quique peccare 
possunt, nos clamamus. 

O Lamb of God, O Lamb of God, O Christ, &c.| Excep- 
tion is taken against these repetitions, as being a custom of 
the heathen, forbidden by our Saviour, Matth. vi. 7, “ When 
ye pray, use no vain repetitions.” Sed eo loco non vetamur 
id quod sollicite expetimus aliquoties repetere, quod Christus 
ipse fecit;...at prohibemur tantum Deo verba annumerare, 
quasi ille preces ex prolixitate potius et labore externi istius 
operis quam ex intimo animi affectu (cui excitando, non indi- 
cando, verba in precibus inserviunt) metiretur. ...Ideo Christus 
hic docet preces concisas esse debere, id quod extat apud Si- 
rachidem, 2) Sevrepoons Noyov év mpocevyh cov, ubi Sevte- 
poov Tov Aoyov idem est quod Battaroyeiv. Exemplum vero 





vitandi moris ab exteris gentibus hic petite (Judei enim erant 


huic vitio minus obnoxii, quod hodieque extat apud Aben Es- 


dram initio ad Ecclesiasten, et in aliis tpsorum libris) quibus” 


id erat perquam familiare, unde illud in Comediak* : 


Obe jam desine Deos.... obtundere, 
. nisi illos tuo ex ingenio judicas, 
Ut nil credas intelligere, nisi idem dictum sit centies. 


Contra eum morem est illud Plauti in Penulo', 


Paucis verbis rem divinam facito, 


i [S. Aug. Epist. 217. (al. 107.) ad - abrot Bodpyev.—S. Chrysost. in S. Matt. 
Vitalem. § 2. Op. tom. ii. col. 799, F.] cap. xxii. Hom. 72. (al. 73.) § 4. OP. 
i [éreidh yap adrol nareyvdxauev tom. vii. p. 700, A.] 
éavTdv Guapthuara, brép uty Ta TOAAG t (Terentius, Heaut. v. 1. 6.] 
Huatnkdtwy, kal éyKAnojvar dpetAdvTwv ' [Plautus, Penulus, i. 2, 196.) 








ON THE LITANY. 


SEN 





Centies idem dicere est Battonoyetv. Grotius™. Sperabant 
rophane gentes ideo se exauditum iri, quia longe orationis 
tedio (ut sacerdotes Baal) se defatigant, roddtroyou autem 
solent iidem esse BattoXoyot, quia ut multa dicant necesse ha- 
bent sepe jam dicta repetant. At que nihil, nisi opus est, 
‘complectitur oratio (ut hic) non potest mrodvXoyos dici®. 

Let us pray.| In sacris paganorum admonitio erat, hoc 
‘agite; in nostris, attendite. Et si plebi istud predicatur, 
\guanto magis sacerdoti? Sane virgines Veste certo tempore 
jibant ad regem sacrorum, hisque verbis solennibus apud cum 
jutebantur, Vigilasne rex, Vigila; propterea quod qui religiont 
inserviunt, quam vigilantissime ac curiosissime agere oportet. 
| Pars aliqua impietatis incuria est°. 

O God, merciful Father.| Hee oratio habetur in Ord. Sa- 










245° 




















Foc et ipse volet. 
Deo minor est.’ 


m [Grotius, Comment. in loc. ap. 
Critic. Sacr., tom. vii. col..268.] 

1 (Id., ibid. ] 

-° [There is a word, probably the 
name of the author of the passage ex- 
tracted, crossed out here. } 

P [Deus qui contritorum non de- 
| spicis gemitum, et mcerentium non 
| spernis affectum ; adesto precibus nos- 
tris quas pietati tue pro tribulatione 
) nostra offerimus, implorantes ut nos 
| clementer respicias, et solito pietatis 
) tuz intuitu tribuas ut quicquid con- 
} tra nos diabolice fraudes atque hu- 
| Manz moliuntur adversitates, ad nihi- 
} lum rediges ; et consilio misericordize 
} tue allidas; quatenus nullis adversi- 
tatibus lwsi, sed ab omni tribulatione 


| et angustia liberati, gratias tibi in ec- 











‘rum ad Missam de tribulatione cordis?”. 


Sic Op- 


Almighty and everlasting God.| Habetur hec oratio in Ord. 


clesia tua referamus consolati: Per 
Dominum, &c.—Missa pro tribulatione 
cordis, Oratio: Missale Sarisb. Com- 
mune, fol. xxx. | 

4 [The collect is as follows: Que- 
sumus, omnipotens Deus, ut famulus 
tuus rex noster N. qui tua miseratione 
suscepit regni gubernacula, virtutum 
etiam omnium percipiat incrementa ; 
quibus decenter ornatus, et vitiorum 
voraginem devitare, et hostes superare, 
et ad te, qui via, veritas et vita es, gra- 
tiosus valeat pervenire: Per Domi- 
num, &c.—Missa pro Rege, Oratio: 
Miss. Sarisb. ubi supr. fol. xxx. ] 

 [S. Optatus de Schism. Donat., lib, 
iii. cap. 3. Op. p. 52. ] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


A prayer for the King’s Majesty.| In Ord. Sarum similis [These 
| oratio habetur pro Rege Hen. VIII. in Missa pro Rege4. 

The only ruler of princes.|_ Solius enim Det imperio subdi 
}regem dicimus, nec inter homines habet superiorem. 
tatus Milevit™ : ‘ Super imperatorem non est nisi solus Deus qut 
fecit imperatorem” Et Tertullianus’ : ‘ Colimus imperatorem 
sic, gquomodo et nobis licet, et ipsi expedit, hominem a Deo se- 
cundum, et quicquid est a Deo consecutum, solo Deo minorem. 
Fic enim omnibus major est, dum solo vero 


Prayers 
were at 
the end 

of the Li- 
tany before 
1662.] 


[ For the 
Clergy and 
People. } 


* (Tertullian ad Scapulam, cap. 2.— 


Op. p. 69, E.] 


SECOND 


SERIES, 


246 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Sarum inter Memorias faciendas per totum annum, sub tit. pro 
Episcopis vivis et subditis, in Missa de B. Maria in ejusd. ca- 
pella‘, et in Missa pro Prelatis [et| subditis®. 

For rain, if the time require, for fair weather, &c.*| In 
the Order of Sarum for all these things following, there was 
a special mass said. 

In the time of any common plague or sickness.| In the 
Order of Sarum, they were wont for this purpose to say a 
special mass, which they said was made by Pope Clement V. 
at Avignon’. The people were appointed at this mass to 
kneel, and to hold a burning wax candle in their hand all 
the while, and to let it burn (in the church or their houses) 
five days together. This if they did, they were promised by 
the pope large indulgences; and were assured by their parish 
priests to be delivered from sudden death: for they told 
them, Hoc est certum et approbatum in Avinione, et in parti- 
bus circumvicinis. In this mass they used for the epistle” or 
first lesson, the 24th chapter of the 2nd of Samuel; and for 
the gospel or second lesson, the 4th of St. Luke; Surgens 
Jesus, usque ad, quia ideo missus sum. And they used divers 
prayers for the aid of St. Sebastian*, that he would be pro- 
pitious to England, as he was to Lombardy, where they were — 
made to believe that he freed the whole country from the 





t [Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, qui 
facis mirabilia magna solus, pretende 
super famulos tuos pontifices, et super 
cunctas congregationes illis commissas 
spiritum gratie salutaris, et ut in 
veritate tibi complaceant, perpetuum 
eis rorem benedictionis infunde; Per 
Dominum, &c.—Memorie per totum 
annum in capella B, M. V. Pro epi- 
scopis vivis et subditis: Oratio. {Ibid., 
fol. xxvii. b. See fol. xxv.] 

«" [Memoriz communes; Pro pre- 
latis et subditis: Oratio. Ibid., fol, 
XXXVii. b.] 

* [Missa pro serenitate aeris, ibid. 
fol. xxxiv. ; pro pluvia petenda, ibid. b; 
tempore belli, ibid. fol. xxxv.; con- 
tra mortalitatem hominum, ibid. fol. 
XXXVi.; pro peste animalium, ibid. b. ] 

y [The introductory rubric is as fol- 
lows :—Missa pro mortalitate evitanda 
quam dominus noster papa Clemens 
fecit et constituit in collegio cum om- 
nibus cardinalibus, et concessit omni- 
bus peenitentibus vere contritis et con- 


fessis sequentem missam audientibus, 
eclx. dies indulgentiz. Et omnes au- 
dientes sequentem missam debent por- 
tare in manu unam candelam ardentem 
dum missam audiunt per quinque dies 
sequentes, et tenere eam in manu per 
totam missam genibus flexis; et eis 
mors subitanea nocere non poterit; et 
hoc est certum et approbatum in Avi- 
nione, et in partibus circumvicinis.— 


Ibid., fol. liv. Cosin seems not to have 


understood the rubric correctly. | 

2 (See ibid., fol. liv. b. andlv. The 
calling the Epistle, (or lection used be- 
fore or instead of the Epistle,) and the — 
Gospel, the first and second lesson, is © 
incorrect. | 

* [This refers to the next Missa: — 
Missa de Sancto Sebastiano tempore 
pestis. In the Gradual there occur 
these words: ‘*O Sancte Sebastiane, — 
Christi martyr egregie, cujus meritis | 
tota Lombardia fuit liberata a peste 
mortifera; libera nos ab ipsa, et a 
maligno hoste.—Ibid., fol. lvi.] 





ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 247 


plague. All which the Reformed Church of England hath Szcoxp 
_ now abolished, and by this one prayer (pura prece, as Ter- ai 
 tullian” calleth it) seeketh in such a time the mercy of God. 


Tue Couiects, EristLes, AND GOSPELS, TO BE USED, &c. 


1. COLLECTS. 


Collecta, sic dicta, quod in unum vota populs colligerent, vel Collecte. 
quod fierent populo jam in unum collecto. For though the people 
come slowly to church, and do not make up a full congrega- 
tion or collection of themselves together at the beginning of 
divine service, yet before it has proceeded thus far, they are 
usually a full-collected assembly. Tertullian, in his Apolo- 
getic, cap. 39°; Coimus in cetum et congregationem, et ad Deum 
quasi manu facta precationibus ambimus orantes. Hae vis Deo 
grata est. Oramus igitur, &e. 

Collecta autem, si Alcuino nostro, Beda nostratis discipulo, 
Carolique magni imperatoris preceptori et familiart, credimus, 
dicta est a collectione, eo quod ex auctoritate divinarum Scrip- 
turarum sit collecta: ... vel quod ex multis sermonibus una colli- 
gatur oratio; sive a collectione vel societate popult, qui tunc in 
unum concurrens colligitur. de Divin. Offciis*. 





2. EPISTLES AND GOSPELS. 


* Post hae commentaria apostolorum, et scripta prophetarum Epistolz et 
leguutur.’ Just. Mart... Vocat hee Tertullianus fomenta fidei, irs. cas 
ab interlectione Scripturarum. Ex quo preterea liquet lectiones 
eas e Scriptura sumptas que tempori congruerent. “ Cogimur (in- 
quit, Apol., cap. 39'.) ad divinarum literarum commemorationem, 
si quid prasentium temporum qualitas aut premonere cogit, aut 
recognoscere. Certe fidem sanctis vocibus pascimus, spem eri- 
gunus, fiduciam figumus.” 

Justissimis de causis veteres Christiani Commentaria de rebug Nomen 


Christi (que ad explicandam, illustrandam et confirmandam doc. ®¥*™8*t- 
q p ; 2 

* > [ Tertullian. ad Scapulam, c. 2. Op. e [ral ra Gmouynwoved mara. % Tay’ Amo- 

y Pp. 69, C.J) oTdrwy, 7) re ovyypdumara TeV Tpodn- 

oe RE Apolog., cap. 39. Op. trav avaryryvdoKerat BEX pis ey Xwpet.— 

. p. 31, A.] S. Justin. Mart. Apol. i. § 67. Op. p. 


i @ [ Alcuinus de Div. Off, c. 40. ap. 83, D.] 
_ Hittorp. p. 68. col. ii. D.] f { Tertullian. ubi supra, } 








SECOND 


SERIES. 


248 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


trinam a Christo annunciatam pertinent, omnes Hjus xnpvypatos 
circumstantia) Evangelium appellavere: ut so quoque nomine 
admoneretur populus quanto dulciora hae annunciatio et historia 
Christi contineat, quam prophetarum vaticinia, quorum pleraque 
triste illud nomen swry sibi prescribunt. Hsse autem antiquis- 
simum, et ab ipsis apostolicis deductum temporibus Evangel titu- 
lum docet nos Justinus in Apologia’ pro Christianis. Grotius®. 

Quando singulis dominicis et festis diebus singule et certa@ lec- 
tiones cum ex apostolicis propheticisque scriptis, tum ex evangelicis 
adsignate fuerint, liguido non constat ; nam Hieronymi lectiona- 
rium dubia fidei est. Solet referri ad evum Caroli Magni, quin 
ad ipsum Carolum. Sed ejus auspiciis non nisi homilias patrum, 
quibus textus ili Scripture exponerentur, delectas esse, scribit 
Sigebertus ad annum 807". 


3. GOSPELS. 


Ritus usitati ad lectionem evangelii. 

Antiqui moris est, ut fideles, dum evangelium legitur, starent 
capite aperto, arma, si que habuissent, aut baculos deponerent, in 
signum remisse omnis vindicta, ac deposite odi. - Versus Hilde- 








berti episcopi Cenomanensis :— 


Inde sinistrorsum Domini sacra verba leguntur ; 
Plebs baculos ponit, stat, retegitque caput *. 


Gratian in Decreto, de Consecr. dist.i. cap. 68': ‘ Hvangelium non 


sedendo, sed stando audire debemus. 


Citat Anastasit primi pape 


epistolam ad episcopos Germ. et Burg.™ sicut ante eum fecerunt et 


& [of yap amdoroAa év Tots yiwvome- 
vols OT avTay amrouvnpovebuacw, & Ka- 
Acira edvayyéAra.—S. Just. M. Apol. i. 
c. 66. Op. p. 33, B.] 

» (Grotius, in loc. Matth. cap. i. 
apud Criticos Sacros, tom. vii. col. 36. 
Grotius has hos libros instead of com- 
mentaria. Cosin had originally written 
this, but crossed it out, and wrote com- 
mentaria, but did not alter qui into 
que. 

i [Sigebert’s words are: Karolus 
imperator, per manum Pauli diaconi 
sui, decerpens optima queeque de scrip- 
tis catholicorum patrum, lectiones uni- 
cuique festivitati convenientes, per cir- 
culum anni in Ecclesia legendas com- 
pilari fecit,.—Sigeberti Gemblacensis 


monachi Chronica, ad ann. 807, p. 98. 
ap. Mirzi Chronica. Antw. 1608. ] 

k [ Ven. Hildeberti versus de Mys- 
terio Misse; (de Evangelio) 1. 49. 
Op. col. 1137, Paris, 1708. } 

1 [Ap. Corp. Jur. Can., tom. i.] 

m [Anastasius episcopus cunctis 
Germanicis et Burgundiz regionis epi- 
scopis in Domino salutem... . Signi- 
ficastis enim quosdam sacerdotes in 
ecclesia, quando evangelia leguntur, 
sedere, et Salvatoris Domini verba non 
stantes, sed sedentes, audire: et hoc ex 
majorum traditione se accepisse nar- 
ratur, Quod nullatenus deinceps fieri 
sinatis apostolica auctoritate manda- 
mus; sed, dum sancta evangelia in 
ecclesia recitantur, sacerdotes et czteri 





M4 
t 





3 


ENN OTR He 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 


249 


_ Burchardus®, lib. i. c. 103, e¢ Ivo, p. 2. ¢. 188°, e¢ p. 6, c. 93. 
sed illa epistola non est Anastasii. Blond. 
_ et in Corpus Juris (quod in hac parte ab Ecclesia Anglicana reci- 
_ pitur) relata*. 


Antiqua tamen est, 


Habetur in ordinario Misse secundum usum Sarum hee regula 


(post Gloriam in Excelsis) ; Notandum est, quod omnes clerice 
tenentur stare ad Missam, nisi dum legitur epistola’. 


FIRST SUNDAY IN ADVENT. 


Oratio in Miss. Sarum. 


Lxcita quesumus, Domine, poten- 
tiam Tuam, et vent; ut ab imminentibus peccatorum nostrorum pe- 


riculis, Te mereamur protegente eripi, Te liberante salvari, qui vivis 


et regnas cum Deo Patre in unitate Spiritus Sancti Deus, per. 
Amen. 


omnia secula seculorum. 


The Epistle. This also we know, the season”, &c.] 
Sic incipit epistola hujus dominice in Missali Sarum. 


And make no provision for the flesh, to fulfil the lusts thereof. | 


Ante hee verba finitur epistola in Miss. Sarishuriensi. 
After the epistle’ (which was read every Sunday, and 
some other solemn times, by the sub-deacon upon the pulpit 


that stood in the midst of the quire, but at other times upon 
the steps at the upper end of the quire) followed the Gradual,. 
sung by two quiresters upon 


omnes, non sedentes, sed venerabiliter 


curvi in conspectu evangelii stantes, 
dominica verba intente audiant et fide- 
liter adorent.—Anastasii I., Epist. i. 
apud Concilia, tom. ii. col. 1428, 1429.] 

» (Burchard. Ep. Wormat. Decre- 
torum libb. xx. lib. iii. ¢. 103. p. 99. 
ed. Paris. 1549. ] 

° [Decretum, pars ii. cap. 138, Op. 
Ivonis Carnotens., pars i. col. 72. ed. 
Paris. 1647. ] 

P (Ibid., pars vi. cap. 93. col. 204. ] 

4 { Blondel, Pseudo-Isidorus et Tur- 
rianus Vapulantes, p. 557. Genev. 
1628. ] 

r [ This is one of the decretal epistles, 
forged in the ninth century. ] 

* (Ordinarium Misse ap. Missale 
Sarisb., fol. exlii. b. The words of the 
rubric are, Nisi dum lectio epistole 
legitur, et graduale, et alleluia, vel 
tractatus cantatur. | 

* [| Missale Sarisb., fol. i. b.] 

« [The epistle begins, Fratres sci- 


the same pulpit. And the 


entes quia hora est; and ends at sed 
induimini Dominum Jesum Christum. 
Ibid., fol. ii. b.] 

v [The rubric referred to is as fol- 
lows: Incepta vero ultima oratione 
ante epistolam, subdiaconus per me- 
dium chori ad legendam epistolam in 
pulpitum accedat. Et legatur epistola 
in pulpito omni die dominica, et quan- 
docunque chorus regitur per totum 
annum, et in die coene, et in vigilia 
pasche et pentecostes, et in comme- 
moratione animarum. In omnibus vero 
aliis festis et feriis, et in vigiliis, et in 
quatuor temporibus extra hebdomadam 
pentecostes ad gradum chorilegatur tam 
in quadragesima quam extra quadra- 
gesimam. Quando epistola legitur, 
duo pueri in superpelliciis .... ante 
gradum chori in pulpito per medium 
chori ad graduale incipiendum se pre- 
parent, et suum versum decantandum. 
‘“—Ibid. ] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


250 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Gradual* (so called, because it is sung before the Gradus, or 
steps of the quire) was only a verse of a Psalm. After which 
followed another, that they called the Verse ; and after that 
an hymn, which they called the Prose Tract, or Sequence, 
sung by the whole quire, so called, because all the words of 
it seem to follow one another in the same tract or manner 
of expression. 

In these Sequences there be prayers made to the saints 
upon those days which bear their names: the chief reason 
why the Church of England has omitted them, as sometimes 
they were also omitted in Sarum Missal. Non male monet syno- 
dus Coloniensis habita A°. 1536. p. 2. c. 11%, nonnullis olim 
usurpatis sequentus aliquid labis adhesisse, et propterea ab iis 
recte posse abstinert. Prosas, ait, indoctas nuperius missalibus 
caco quodam judicio invectas pretermittere per nos liceret. Sunt 
tamen inter eas que spiritu et vita non carent*, 

All these the Church of England thought fit to omit, as 
parts of the service that were neither needful nor of ancient 
use. 

The Gospel, Matth. xxi. 1.] 

Habetur hoc idem evangelium in Missali Sarum, quod etiam in 
pulpito im medio chori collocato legebat diaconus versus Aqui- 
lonem*. 

Blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord. 

Hie finitur evangelium in Miss. Sarum”. - 


In Salisbury Missal, there was a special epistle and gospel 
relating to Christ’s Advent, appointed for Wednesdays and 
Fridays during all that time®. 





x [The rubric in the Missal. Sarisb. 
directs: Post versum chorus repetat 
gradum, Notandum est quod per to- 
tum annum repetatur graduale post 
suum versum, ad missam de die: nisi 
in festis duplicibus, et nisi in quinta et 
sexta feria hebdomad. pasche, et in 
quatuor temporibus, post lectionem, 
ubi graduale habetur post lectionem, et 
quando tractus decantatur; repetatur 
etiam in die nativ., &c.—Ibid. | 

y {Prosas indoctas nuperius missa- 
libus ceco quodam judicio invectas 
pretermittere per nos liceret.—Conc. 


Colon. I. ann. 1536. par. ii. st ll. 


tom. xix. col. 1227.] 


z [The passage in parentheses is a 
note added on the word Sequence. It 
is made up out of Calixtus de Sacrificio 
Christi, &c., § lix. lx.] 

* [Missale Sarisb., fol. iii. b. The 
rubric referred to is on the preceding 
page, as follows: Et sic precedens 
diaconus per medium chori, ... ad pul- 
pitum accedat ... quandocunque enim 
legitur epistola in pulpito ibidem le- 
gatur et evangelium: ...et semper 
legatur evangelium versus aquilonem, 
id est, boream. } 

> [ Ibid. } 

© [Ibid. et sqq.] 








ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 251 
SEconD 
THE SECOND SUNDAY IN ADVENT. SERIES. 


| Oratio in Miss. Sarum. FEreita, Domine, corda nostra ad 
| preparandas Unigeniti Tui vias, ut per Ejus adventum purificatis 





MNS Rae RE SST 


Titi mentibus servire mereamur, qui Tecum vivit et regnat, Sc. 


The Epistle, Rom. xv. 4.] 


Habetur hae eadem epistola in Miss. Sarum?. 


The Gospel, Luke xxi. 25.] 


Habetur hoe idem evangelium in Miss. Sarum‘. 


THE THIRD SUNDAY IN ADVENT. 


In Miss. Sarum habentur eadem Oratio, eadem Epistola, 1dem 


Evangelium’. 


And in this week (being Ember-week) there was a special 
service, epistle, and gospel appointed for the Wednesday, 
Friday, and Saturday, all relating to the Advent}. 

Ubi et hee habetur rubricai: Semper jejunia quatuor temporum 
in tertia hebdomada adventus Domini celebrentur. 


THE FOURTH SUNDAY IN ADVENT. 


In Missali Sarum hac eadem habetur Oratio, Epistola eadem 


et idem Evangelium*, 


After this, there is in the Missal of Salisbury a peculiar 


service for Christmas-even]. 


4 [Ibid., fol. iv. b.] 

€ [Ibid., fol. v.] 

f ( Ibid. ] 

® [Before 1662 the collect for the 
third Sunday in Advent was: Lord, 
we beseech Thee, give ear to our 
prayers, and by Thy gracious visitation 
lighten the darkness of our hearts, by 
our Lord Jesus Christ. In the Salisbury 
Missal it is, Aurem tuam, quesumus, 
Domine, precibus nostris accommoda ; 
et mentis nostre tenebras gratia tue 
Visitationis illustra; qui vivis et reg- 
nas, &c.—Ibid., fol. vi., where see also 
the epistle and gospel. | 

h ( Ibid., fol. vi. b,—ix. ] 

i [Ibid., fol. ix. The first words of 
the rubric are: In quacunque feria 
dies uativitatis Domini contigerit, sem- 
per, &c. ] 


k [Before 1662 the collect ran thus: 
Lord, raise up, we pray Thee, Thy power, 
and come among us, and with great 
might succour us, that whereas through 
our sins and wickedness we be sore let 
and hindered, Thy bountiful grace and 
mercy (through the satisfaction of ‘Thy 
Son our Lord) may speedily deliver us, 
to whom, with Thee and the Holy 
Ghost, be honour and glory, world with- 
out end. The collect in the Salisbury 
Missal is: Excita, quzsumus, Domine, 
potentiam tuam et veni, et magna no- 
bis virtute succurre, ut per auxilium 
gratiz tue, quod nostra peccata pre- 
pediunt, indulgentiz tuze propitiationis 
acceleret, qui vivis, &c.—lIbid., fol. ix. 
See the epistle and gospel, ibid. ] 

1 [Ibid., fol. x. b.] 


SECOND 


_ SERIES. 


-NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


CHRISTMAS-DAY. 


Christmas.| Id est, Christi Missa. Sic enim vulgus Teutonum et 
Anglorum festos dies plerumque nominare solebat, a publico Ecclesia 
ministerio, seu liturgia, in qua cum complures missa, seu dimis- 
siones, modo catechumenis, modo ponitentibus et energumenis, modo 
jidelibus olim denunciarentur, quodque vulgus Latinorum hane ob 
causam missam, seu missarum solennia compellavit, in hominum 
usum ita ea res transit, ut dies festi, dies missa, sicut nundine 
celebresque mercatorum conventus misse@, dicerentur. Flor. Har.™ 

In the Missal of Sarum there be three services appointed 
for Christmas: .one, ad Galli Cantum; another, in Aurora; 
and.a third, 7x Die; which third the Church of England 
now only useth". 

Oratio Sarum®: Concede, quesumus, omnipotens Deus, ut Uni- 
geniti Tui nova per carnem nativitas liberet, quos sub peccati gugo 
vetusta servitus tenet [per eundem Dominum, &c.| qui Tecum, 
§e. | 
 Epistola Sarum eadem est cum hac nostra?. 

In Miss. Sarum idem habetur Evangelium4, 


ST, STEPHEN’S DAY. 


Oratio eadem est in Miss. Sarum’. 

Then shall follow the collect of the Nativity.| As it was 
appointed in the Missal of Sarum: Sequitur memoria de Na- 
tiwitate®. 

Epistola Sarum. 

Livang. Sarum”. 


ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST’S DAY. 


FEadem Oratio in Miss. Sar.* 


. ™ [Probably Florentius Vander Haer, 
in his Antiquitatum Liturgicarum Ar- 
eana; but the editor has not found the 
passage. } 

» [ Missale Sarisb., fol. xi.—xiii. ] 

- © [Ibid., fol. xiii. ] 

P [ Ibid., fol. xiii. b.] 

4 [ Ibid. } 

* [Before the last revision, the col- 
lect was, Grant us,O Lord, to learn to 
love our enemies by the example of 
Thy martyr St. Stephen, who prayed 
for his persecutors to Thee which 


liveth, &c. In the Salisbury Missal it is, 
Da nobis, quesumus, Domine, imitari 
quod colimus, ut discamus et inimicos 
diligere, quia ejus natalitia celebramus 
qui novit etiam pro persecutoribus ex- 
orare Dominum nostrum Jesum Chris- 
tum Filium tuum, qui tecum, &c.— 
Ibid., fol. xiv. ] 

§ [ Ibid. ] 

t (Ibid. ] 

u [Ibid., fol. xiv. b. ] 

* [The collect for St. John’s Day, 
before 1662, was in these words: Mer- 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 


253 


Loco hwjus Epistole habetur im Miss. Sarum lectio ex xv, Second 


Ecclesiastict. 
Evangelium Sarum?. 


INNOCENTS’ DAY. 


In Missal. Sarum Oratio eadem*. 


Eademque Epistola’. 
Et idem Evangelium. 


THE SUNDAY AFTER CHRISTMAS-DAY. 


Miss. Sarum: Sexta die a Nativitate Domini, sive Dominica 


Juerit, sive non. 


Oratio Sarum': Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, 


dirige actus nostros in beneplacito tuo, ut in nomine dilecti Filia 
tua mereamur bonis operibus abundare, qui, Se. 


Epistola eadem®. 


— Evangelium habetur ex 2 cap. S. Lue.: Erant Joseph et Maria 
mater Jesu mirantes super his que dicebantur de Illo, Sc. usque 


ad, Lit gratia Dei erat in Itlo'. 
The Gospel, Matth. i. 1. 


The book of the generation®.| 


Ebionite heretict deleverunt totam genealogiam, et que sequuntur, 
ad locum ubi Christus baptizatur, plane sicut Marcio hereticus 


ciful Lord, we beseech Thee ‘to cast 
Thy bright beams of light upon Thy 
Church, that it being lightened by the 
doctrine of Thy blessed apostle and 
evangelist John, may attain to Thy 
everlasting gifts, through Jesus Christ 
our Lord. In the Missale Sarisb. it is, 
Ecclesiam tuam, quesumus, Domine, 
benignus illustra, ut beati Joannis apo- 
stoli tui et evangelistz illuminata doc- 
trinis ad dona perveniat sempiterna, 
per, &c.—Ibid., fol. xv. ] 

y (Ibid. The passage is Ecclus. xv. 
1—6. ] 

2 [Ibid., but the gospel in the 
Missal. Sarisb. ends at ‘* we know that 
his testimony is true.’ 

® {Before 1662, the collect for Inno- 
cents’ Day was, Almighty God, whose 
praise this day the young Innocents, 
Thy witnesses, have confessed and 
shewed forth not in speaking but in 
dying, mortify and kill all vices in us, 
that in our conversation our life may 
express Thy faith, which with our 
tongues we do confess, through Jesus 


Christ our Lord. In the Missal. Sa- 
risb.: Deus, cujus hodierna die pre- 
conium innocentes martyres non lo- 
quendo sed moriendo confessi sunt ; 
omnia in nobis vitiorum mala morti- 
fica, ut fidem tuam quam lingua nostra 
loquitur etiam moribus vita fateatur; 
Qui cum Deo Patre et Spiritu Sancto 
vivis et regnas, per, &c.—Ibid., fol. 
xv. b. 

> (Ibid. ] 

¢ [ Ibid. } 

4 [In the Salisbury Missal there is 
no special office for the Sunday after 
Christmas. The only day within that 
week that had not a particular festival 
was Dec. 30, this Dies sexta.—See 
ibid., fol. xvi. b.] 

© [Ibid.] 

f [ Ibid. ] 

& | Before 1662 the gospel for this 
day began at the first verse of St. Mat- 
thew’s Gospel. This note is from 
Grotius, in Matt. cap. i. ver. 1. apud 
Criticos Sacros, tom. vii. col. 38.] 


SERIES. 


——$——_——————— 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


254 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


prima §. Luce capita induxit. Fecerunt autem hoc pro suo in- 
stituto, quia Dominum Jesum Christum credi vellent purum homi- 
nem et ex Josepho natum; virtutum autem merito consequutum 
unctionis gratiam. 

Salmon begat Booz of Rachab.| Hoc ex traditione Judaorum. 
Grot.® 

David the king begat Solomon of her that was the wife of 
Uriah.| Mulieres in hoe censu obiter pauce nominantur, ex- 
traneo ortu aut criminibus nobiles, quarum historia ad vocationem 
idololatrarum et criminosorum per Christi Evangelium proludit. 
Idem‘. . 

Josias begat Jechonias, and his brethren.| Omnes calamitate 
sua nobiles ; neque id ab hoc loco alienum, ne quis miretur regiam 
stirpem ad humilem fortunam detrudi. Idem*. 

That it might be fulfilled, §c.| Quod non ita intelligi debet, 
quasi Deus Christum ex Virgine nasci voluerit, ut quod Esaias 
diverat fieret ; cum potius, quia Deus id voluerit fieri, ideo et vo- 
luerit per Isaiam dici: nam vox iva, ut sepe, non finem agentis, 
sed solum rei consequentiam significat. Grot. 


THE CIRCUMCISION OF CHRIST. 


Oratio Sarum™ : Deus qui nobis nati Salvatoris diem celebrare 
concedis octavum, fac nos quesumus Ejus perpetua divinitate mu- 
nui, cujus sumus carnalis commercio reparati, qui, &c. 

Limstola Sarum: Apparuit gratia Dei, §c.™ 

And when the eighth day was come, §c.| Hic incipit evan- 
gelium in Miss. Sar.° 

Tf there be any Sunday between the Epiphany and the Circum- 
cision, then shall be used the same collect, epistle, and gospel at 
the Communion, which was used the day of Circumcision.] Non 
habetur in Miss. Sarum?. 


h (Id., ibid., in v. 5. col. 39.) verse of our gospel.—Ibid., fol. xvii. 

i [Id., ibid., in v. 6. : 

k [Id., ibid., in v. 4. P [There was no need for any such 

1 [Id., ibid., in v. 22. col. 49.] provision, as the days between the Cir- 

m [{Missale Sarisb., fol. xvii. | cumcision and the Epiphany are the 

» [The Epistle in the Sarum Missal octaves of St. Stephen, St. John, the 
is Tit. ii, 11—14.] Holy Innocents, and St. Thomas of 


© [The gospel in the Sarum Missal Canterbury.—See the next series of 
is one verse, Luc. ii. 21, i.e. the last motes on this point. ] 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 255 


SECOND 


THE EPIPHANY. _ SERIES. 


The Collect.| Sarum4. 
_ The Epistle.| Sarum’. Isa. lx.: Surge illuminare Jeru- 
_ salem, &c., which is our first lesson. 

The Gospel.| Sarum’. 


FIRST SUNDAY AFTER THE EPIPHANY. 


Collect.| Sarum. ; 

Episile.| Sarum". 

The literal sense of the Epistle. 

I beseech you therefore, brethren.| Because the apostle had 

_ set forth in all his epistle before, the chief points and myste- 
ries of our Christian religion, therefore he descends now to 
the duties of a Christian life, that the one may be answerable 
to the other; which is the method and order that the Church 
here hath followed ;—after the setting forth of the chief 
solemnities and feasts of the year, (wherein the principal 
mysteries of Christianity are contained,) to go on, (as St. Paul 
doth,) and to give us his good lessons for our lives; for by 
the word “therefore” there is a dependence made of one 
following upon the other, to make now a right use of the 
grace that hath been by Christ bestowed on us. 

Your bodies a quick sacrifice.] For God does not now re- 
quire any more Levitical sacrifices, which were made of brute 
beasts, but He requires the sacrificing of ourselves, not by 
killing our bodies, but by mortifying and destroying our 
carnal affections, and by sanctification of life, to offer up and 
consecrate ourselves to Him. St. Aug. in Psal. 1*.: Habes in 





PO TO ee ee a EA ye 


4 [Deus qui hodierna die unigenitum 
tuum gentibus stella duce revelasti, con- 
cede propitius, ut qui jam te ex fide 
cognovimus, usque ad contemplandam 
speciem tuz celsitudinis perducamur: 
per eundem Dominum.—In die Epi- 
phanie, Oratio. Missale Sarisb., fol. 
xviii. b. 

* (Lectio Esaiz Prophetz, in place 
of the epistle-—Ibid. ] 

* [Ibid., fol. xix. ] 

t [Vota quesumus, Domine, sup- 
plicantis populi ccelesti pietate prose- 
quere, ut et que agenda sunt videant, 
et ad implenda que viderint conva- 


lescant, per Dominum.—Dom. i. post 
octav. Epiph., Oratio. Ibid., fol. xx. 
Our first Sunday after the Epiphany 
is the Sunday within the octave, of the 
Sarum Missal, and the service was the 
same as that for the Epiphany itself. 
Our service for the first Sunday after 
the Epiphany is that of the first Sun- 
day after the octave of the Sarum 
rule. ] 

u [Tbid.] 

x {Noli extrinsecus pecus quod 
mactes inquirere, habes in te quod 
occidas. —S. Aug., Enarr. in Psal. |. 
v. 18, § 21. Op. tom. iv. col. 473, E.] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


256 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


te quod occidas, i.e. you have always somewhat in yourself 
to kill. ' 
Be not conformed to this world.] Which is wholly set upon 


what is evil; 1 Joh. v. 19, seeking after honours, pleasures, 


and riches. 

Be ye changed.| By quitting those bad affections, and 
giving no assent to them. 

May prove &c. what the will of God is.| That is, by sub- 
mitting your own wills to His, and by preferring His precepts 
before these vile affections. : 

That no man should stand high in his own conceit.| Pleasing 
himself in his endowments and gifts that he hath above other 


men, and searching after secrets, &c. 


But to judge of himself, &c.| This is to be wise unto, 


sobriety, not affecting to meddle with other men’s offices, 
‘nor to be curious in such things as do not pertain to his 


own. Whereunto the similitude which followeth serveth 
most aptly. 

The Gospel.| Sarum’. 

The exposition of the literal sense of the Gospel. 

The feast-day.| That is, the feast of the Passover, which 
He, and His parents, and the Jews from all quarters, were 
wont and bound duly to observe, Deut. xii. 

Sitting in the midst of the doctors.| Not that He sat (as 


the pictures commonly set Him out) in one of the doctors’ 


chairs, and the highest of all the bench; for neither would 
they have permitted Him to do it, nor was it agreeable to 
the minority of His age, but that He was there sitting or 
present among them, (as John i. 26, He is said to be “ stand- 
ing in the midst among the Jews;” and Matt. xvii. 20, “I 
will be in the midst of them,”’) in the manner of an auditor 
or a disciple, observing that order which was accustomed, 
hearing them, and asking them questions; though in the 
meanwhile He shewed Himself to be such a disciple with 
them, that He posed the masters, and taught them much 
more than any of them knew before, herein declaring Him- 
self to be more than a man; for they were astonished at Him, 
asking such questions and making such answers, as that the 
power of His Deity shewed forth itself in Him, 
y [Ibid.] 





ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS, 257 


How happened it that ye sought Me? Wist ye not, &c. An 
answer that seems to be somewhat short, and more quick 
than a mother would have expected from a son; but such 


_were His usual returns, when she took upon her to shew any 


authority over Him, to let both her and His reputed father 


| know, that He had another manner of Father in heaven, 
whose divine affairs were not to give place unto any human 


authority ; which though they understood not for the pre- 
sent, yet in this answer they rested, and His mother, the 
blessed Virgin, laid it up in her heart. 

And was obedient unto them. When He had given this 
testimony of His power and greatness that was to come, and 
afterwards make itself more manifest, shewing already that 
His authority was above theirs, presently He returns to His 
wonted subjection, and teacheth all persons what reverence 
and obedience we owe to our parents. 

And Jesus prospered (or grew) in wisdom. <A text which 


is urged by the Arians and the Socinians, but it will not 


serve their turn: for Christ being a person that consisteth 
of two natures, it is no derogation to His Godhead if here 
He be said to grow and prosper in respect of His manhood ; 
which could not neither be said so to prosper in wisdom and 
knowledge, as if in the minority of His age He had been 
ignorant of anything that He came to know after; for He 


had in Himself the full knowledge of all things communi- 


cated to His human understanding by the Divine Nature 
united thereunto; but because from time to time He was 
pleased to manifest that knowledge by degrees, and not 
otherwise to let it be seen or known unto the world, there- 
fore in regard of other men’s taking notice of it only, is He 
here said to have grown up or prospered in it. And whereas 
they object that the text [says], He prospered 1 in wisdom as 
He did in age, which was not in a seeming manner to all 
other men, but truly and really as all mankind doth besides ; 


we are to answer, that every word in a context is not to be 


taken in the same sense that another word is which is joined 
to it; as for example, Matt. viii. 22, “Let the dead go and 


_ bury their dead ;” John xx. 7, “I ascend to My Father, and 
_ your Father ;” where the same words are to be understood 
after a different manner. And so it is here. 


COSIN, g 


SECOND 
SERIES. 


1TIn Ni- 
cholls, but 
not in the 
original, 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


258 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Mstorical Observations upon the Gospel*. 


This is the first story that we have of Christ after His re- 
turn out of Egypt, whither His father and mother fled with 
Him, to avoid the massacre that Herod made of the innocent 
children in Bethlehem, and all the coasts about it. 

And Jesus prospered (or grew) in wisdom. In the ancient 
Church there were a sort of men (numbered for heretics, as 
Liberatus tells us, in his Historical Breviary, cap. 10%.) that 
had the name of Agnoete, or Ignorants, given to them; for 
they said and held it to be good gospel, by virtue of these 
words which they found there, and interpreted at their 
pleasure, that Christ’s human nature was (especially in this 
His minority of age) ignorant of many things, and that His 
understanding or knowledge was not perfect in Him at the 
first, but came to Him by degrees, as His age and years did. 
Of this sect Themistius, a deacon, was the author; concern- 
ing whom we read in the epistle of Sophronius, patriarch of 
Jerusalem, (Synod. v. act.11,) after this manner”; “Anathema 
(or a curse) be upon Themistius, who was the most wicked 
father and first disseminator of that heresy which attributeth 
ignorance to Christ as He was man;” for His human nature 
being always united to His divine, this new doctrine could 
no way subsist. 


2 [These observations are placed in 
the MS. at the end of the Sundays after 
Epiphany, with the heading, “ Histo- 
rical observations upon the Gospels of 
every Sunday after the Epiphany.” It 
is thought best to place them now un- 
der the Sundays to which they belong. 
Cosin had designed to write some on 
each Sunday, and had set down the 
names of the second and third Sundays 
with blank spaces after each. ] 

@ [The statement of Liberatus is in 
c. 19, speaking of Timotheus, bishop 
of Alexandria, A.D. 519: Cui cum 
diceret Themistius diaconus ejus, si 
corpus Christi corruptibile est, debe- 
mus Eum dicere et aliqua ignorasse, 
sicut de Lazaro. Hoc Timotheus ne- 
gavit dicendum. A cujus communione 


Themistius desciscens, schisma fecit. 
Et ab ipso dicti sunt in A.gypto The- 
mistiani.—Liberatus Diaconus, Brevia- 
rium cause Nestorianorum et Euty- 
chianorum, ¢c. 19. p. 137. ed. Paris, 
1675, and in the collections of coun- 
cils. } 

b [This should be Synod vi. In the 
third council of Constantinople, the 
sixth general council, A.D. 680, a 
letter of Sophronius, bishop of Jerusa- 
lem, A.D. 634, was read, in which an 
anathema was pronounced on @exuloTios, 
6 ths ayvolas marhp Kal yevyntwp Kar 
omope’s &0ecudtaros, bs ayvoeiv Xpiorov 
Tov GAnOwoy @cly judy Thy Nuepay 
epanvagme tis Kplorews, K.T.A—Cone. 
Constant. III. act. xi. Concilia, tom. 
vii. col. 924, D.] 


2. _ ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 259 


SECOND 
SERIES. 
THE SECOND SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. 


The Collect.| Sarum’. 
The Epistle.| Sarum‘. 
The literal sense. 

The gift of prophecy, or interpreting the Scriptures, (for so 
is prophesying understood, 1 Cor. xiv.) 

That it be agreeing to the faith, [i.e. to} the articles of the 
Apostles’ Creed, then generally preached over all the world, 
as containing all things necessary to salvation, and being the 
sum of the whole Scripture. 

An office, or ministry, which is properly the deacon’s 
office. 

With singleness, or sesiphioity: that is, to them who need, 
without respect of persons, and performing the trust reposed 
in him with all faithfulness. 

He that ruleth. This is to be understood of those pres- 
_ byters, of whom the apostle speaketh, 1 Tim. v. 17, “The 

presbyters that rule well are worthy of double honour ;” 
from whence they came afterwards to be bishops over others. 
These presbyters were of one sort, and there was another 
sort of them that laboured in the preaching of the word. 

The rest of this Epistle is plain and easy to be understood. 

The Gospel.| Sarum‘. 

What have I to do with thee? Ita enim Latini aiunt, quid 
tibi mecum est. At Hebreis aliud significat ; nimirum, cur 
mihi molestiam exhibes? quod clare apparet, 2 Sam. xvi. 10, 
et 2 Paralip. xxxv. 21. Hoc autem si ex usu Latini sermonis 
interpretaris, contemptum videtur inducere. Grot.‘ 

This beginning of miracles. A miracle is so called, because 
it begets admiration; and yet everything that is or deserves 
to be admired, must not presently be called a miracle; for 
many things done by art and the power of nature may be 

_ wondered at, and yet they are no miracles, which are and 


¢ [Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, qui fol. xxi. b.] 


| ccelestia simul et terrena moderaris, a [ Ibid. ] 
| supplicationes populi tui clementer ex- e [ Ibid. ] 
| audi, et pacem tuam nostris concede f [Grotius Comment. in Matt. cap. 8. 


_ temporibus, Per, &c.—Dom. ii. post v. 29. apud Criticos Sacros, tom. Vii. 
 octay. Epiph,, Oratio; Missale Sarisb., col. 331. ] 


‘ $3 2 





SECOND 


SERIES, 
—_—_—_—_—————— ee 


260 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 


can only be done by the power of God, above the faculty, 
and beyond the order of nature, to which He is not tied. 
This miracle, therefore, so done by Christ, was a manifest 
argument of His divine power and Godhead. 

And shewed or manifested forth His glory. For these 
words’ sake it is, that this gospel is appointed by the Church 
for one of the gospels to be read and published in the time 
of Epiphany, which gives the name to all these five Sundays; 
for Epiphany is nothing else but the manifesting forth of 
Christ’s glory and Deity, whereof this gospel is a testimony. 
And because it was the first Epiphany that He so made of 
Himself after His baptism and beginning to preach, there- 
fore was it also appointed to be the second lesson at even 
upon the day of Epiphany itself. 


THE THIRD SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. 


The Collect.| Sarum. 

The Epistle.| Sarum’. 

For in so doing thou shalt heap coals of fire upon his head. 
Which is an Hebrew proverb, and we read it Prov. xxv. 22, 
the sense whereof is, that either we shall gain our enemy 
by heaping benefits upon him, which may inflame or kindle 
his reciprocal charity towards us; or else, if that cannot be 
done, yet at least he will burn in his own conscience, and 
tell himself that we deserve not his hatred. 

The Gospel.| Sarum*, 

The literal sense. 

Tell no man. Which at other times Christ also enjoined 
to them whom He had healed, Matt. ix. 30, Mark v. 43; yet 
are not they reprehended that divulged those things which 
He did for them. Even this leper in St. Mark i. 45, and in 
St. Luke vy. 12, went and told it abroad, notwithstanding 
Christ’s prohibition to the contrary. And to the demoniac- 
Christ Himself gave a command, that he should go and tell 
what great things God had done for him, Mark v. 19, Luke 


& [See Bp. Cosin’s Sermons, Serm. tue majestatis extende: Per Domi- 


iii. Works, vol. i. p. 45. ] num, &c.— Dom. iii. post octav. Epiph., 
.» [Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, in- Oratio; Miss. Sarisb., fol. xxii, b.] 
firmitatem nostram propitius respice, , [Ibid.] 


atque ad protegendum nos dexteram k [ Ibid. ] 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 261 


vill. 839. But the resolution and reconciling of these seeming 
contrarieties is well given by St. Chrysostom’, who saith, that 
Christ forbade the publishing of His own fame, but com- 
manded the glory of God to be openly declared to all men. 


For He had regard both to the indiscretion of the incon- . 


siderate multitude, who might otherwise have made ill use 
of it, as they did, John vi. 15, when they went about sedi- 
_ tiously to make Him a king, and to the desire of vain-glory 
that some men use to take in it, when they do any good for 
another, and therefore He would not have His own fame 
divulged ; but He had regard withal to the acknowledgment 
which every one receiving a benefit from the hand of God is 
to make to Him, and therefore, in that respect, He com- 
manded the thing itself to be told, and thankfulness to be 
duly returned to Him who is the author of all goodness 
to us. 

Go and shew thyself to the priest. St. Hierome™ thinks that 
this was done in regard of the priests themselves, that either 
they might hereby be the sooner brought to believe in Christ, 
or else be so much the more inexcusable, if seeing the leper 
cleansed by Him, they would not believe. But the truer 
sense is, that Christ hereby had regard to the law of Moses, 
Levit. xiv., which He commanded the leper to observe. 

For a witness or testimony. That is, for a law or a statute 
to be duly kept; for in the 119th Psalm God’s laws and 
statutes are often called His testimonies. 

There came unto Him a centurion. It is said in St. Luke vii. 
18, that not the centurion himself in person, but that others 
came to Christ for him; that is to say here, what a man doth 
by another, it is the same as if he did it by himself. 


1 [obde yap exe? dvaxnptrrew éavrdy rent munera sacerdotibus. Deinde, ut 


éxércvoev, GAAG Sotvat Sdtav TH OcG.— 
S. Chrysost. in loc. in Matt. Hom. 25. 
§ 2. Op. p. 309, A.] 

m [Varias ob causas mittit eum ad 
sacerdotes. Primum propter humili- 
tatem, ut sacerdotibus deferre honorem 
videatur. Erat enim lege preceptum, 
ut qui mundati fuerant a lepra, offer- 


mundatum videntes leprosum, aut cre- 
derent Salvatori, aut non crederent. Si 
crederent, salvarentur: si non crede- 
rent, inexcusabiles forent. Et simul ne, 
quod in eo szpissime criminabantur, 
legem videretur infringere.—S. Hieron, 
Comment. in Matth., lib. i. cap. 8. v. 
4, Op. tom. vii, col. 44, A, B.] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 
femcaecmet mote ri un 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


262 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


THE FOURTH SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. 


The Collect®.| | Sarum. 

The Epistle.| Epistola Sarum est initium Epistole nostre 
in 1 Dom. Adventus?. 

The Gospel.) Sarum P, 

Both winds and seas obey Him.| Hic finitur Evangelium 
Sarum. 

The literal exposition. 

In the sea. The sea of Galilee, or the sea of Tiberias. See 
the Historical Notes that follow. 

But He was asleep. The disciples being in such great danger, 
Christ seemeth to take no care of them. After this manner 
He proveth us often in other afflictions and dangers, that He 
suffereth to come upon us, intending thereby to make us 
more sensible of our own miserable condition in this life, 
and the more solicitous of seeking after Him who hath both 
power and goodness enough to help us in our greatest dis- 
tresses. For though for a while He may seem to neglect us, 
yet being importuned by continual prayer, He will arise out 
of His sleep, and still the storm for us. 

Two men possessed, &c. St. Matthew says here, they were 
two men; but St. Mark, iv. 35, and St. Luke, viii. 224, (where 
the same story is repeated,) say there was but one, and that this 
one was possessed with a whole legion of devils, which made him 
so fierce and so famous in the country, that in comparison of 
him the other was not greatly noted among them, being not 
possessed after so extraordinary a manner as this his fellow 
was. But two they were. 

To torment us before the time. By which words they de- 
clare that they were not ignorant of the damnation which 


» [Before 1662 the Collect for the 
fourth Sunday after Epiphany was: 
‘¢ God, which knowest us to be set in the 
midst of so many and great dangers, 
that for man’s frailness we cannot 
always stand uprightly, grant to us the 
health of body and soul, that all those 
things which we suffer for sin, by Thy 
help we may well pass and overcome, 
through Christ our Lord.” In the Mis- 
sal. Sarisb. it was: Deus qui nos in tantis 
periculis constitutos pro humana scis 


fragilitate non posse subsistere, da no- 
bis salutem mentis et corporis ut ea 
que pro peccatis nostris patimur, te 
adjuvante vincamus, per, &¢.—Dom. 
iv. post octav. Epiph., Oratio; Miss. 
Sarisb. fol. xxiii. ] 

° | The Epistle in the Missale Sarisb. 
is from Rom. xiii, 8—16, ibid. ] 

P (Ibid. ] 

4 [Mark v. 2; Luke viii, 27. The 

text is as in Cosin’s MS. ] 


b 
[ 
| 





ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 263 


waited for them at the time appointed in the end of the 
world, till when they are reserved in chains of darkness, to 
be punished after that day, when they, and all wicked per- 


sous who have followed their suggestions, shall be tormented 
_ for ever, in another manner and a far greater degree than 
_ they are now, 2 Pet. ii. 4; Jude, ver.6. But they are afraid 
_ lest it should come upon them sooner, and therefore here they 
_ entreat it may be put off to the last, that in the meantime 


they may do the more mischief; however, herein they ac- 


_ knowledge and fear the divine power and majesty of Christ, 
_ whom they implore that if He would not suffer them still to 


possess these two men, He would at least permit them to 
run upon the herd of swine feeding hard by, and not send 
them out of the Gergesites’ country to which they were 


_ accustomed, into the place of hell, where they knew well 


they were for ever to be tormented. 

And He said, Go your ways. Christ, though He came to 
undo the works of the devils, yet He came not then to ex- 
ecute His last judgment and condemnation upon them. And 
therefore they obtain their desire of Him for a time. 

And behold, the whole herd of swine was carried headlong 
into the sea. Hereupon it appeareth, 1. That they were true 


_ devils, delighting to do mischief, wherever they can be per- 
_ mitted, even upon beasts, or any other creature that God 


made. 2. What a great deal more they would do, even to 
the destruction of all mankind, (if God did not restrain them 


_ from it,) as they did to these swine that perished by them. 


3. That they can do no more than God is pleased (for the 
sins and trial of men) to suffer them. 4 and 5. That they. 
chiefly affect to be with swine, that is, such men as live like 


_ swine; and such were the Gergesites. 


Historical Observations on the Gospel. 


Into the country of the Gergesites. That which is here 
called the country of the Gergesites is named in St. Mark vy. 
and St. Luke viii. the country of the Gadarens, for they were 
both conterminate, and joining one to the other. And these 
were the Gerasens (for that was another name they had) 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


264 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


mentioned by Josephus, (lib. ii. Belli, cap. 20',) and dwell- 


SERIES. 


ing in the eastern part of Galilee, upon the borders of Perea. 
(Id., lib. iii. cap. 28.) Gadara was their metropolitan city in 
that region, and a strong fortified place, remembered by 


Pliny, (lib. v. cap. 18',) and by Ptolemy in his Geography, 


(lib. v. cap. 15".) It was seated beyond Jordan, in the divi- 
sion of Manasseh’s tribe, and touched upon the lake which 
in the Gospel is called the sea of Tiberias. 

And there was a herd of swine feeding. It is made a ques- 
tion, and a kind of wonder that swine should be there fed; 
for to the Jews that creature was unclean and abominable. 
But most likely it is, that these swine belonged to some 
other strangers that there inhabited among the Jews, for the 
Arabians were close by, and might well be the owners of 
that herd. 

The whole city came out, and besought Him that He would 
depart from their coasts. This they did either out of the 
sense of their own unworthiness to have such a guest as 
Christ was among them, or out of the fear they had to lose 
yet more of their worldly goods in that and other kinds be- 
sides. “And Christ went His way ;” but He left the demoniac 
whom He had cured behind Him, as well to upbraid their 
ingratitude as to put them in mind to amend their lives, (for 
some of them were idolaters, and the rest were brutish in 
their manners,) lest a worse matter should befal them. 


THE FIFTH SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. 


The Collect.| Sarum®*, 
The Epistle.| Sarum’, 


¥ [Tepacnvol re ote eis Tovs eupel- 
vavTas érAnumeAnoay, kal Tovs éeAOeiv 
eOeAfoavTas mpoéweuay pmexpt TeV 

dpwv.— Josephus, Bell. Jud., lib. ii. 
cap. 18. § 6. (aliter cap. 20.) Op. tom. 
ii. p. 199.] 

. § [pds avarornv ApaBia re kad SiA- 
Bovitid: mpds 5¢ biraderAgnr7 rai Tepa- 
cots amworéuvera.—Ild. ibid., lib. iii. 
cap. 3. § 3. (aliter cap. 2.) Op. tom. ii. 
p. 223.] 

* [Decapolis: Gaddara Hieromiace 
prefluente, et jam dictum Hipponius 
Dion, &c,—Plin. Hist. Nat., lib. -y. 


c. 20.) 

" (KotAjjs Suplas (AexardéAews 1d- 
Aets aide)... Tépaoa... Tddwpa.—Cl. 
Ptolemzus, Geographia, lib. v. cap. 15. 
p- 160. ap. Bertii Theatrum Geogr. 
Vet. Amstel. 1618. ] 

x [Familiam tuam, quesumus, Do- 
mine, continua pietate custodi: ut que 
in sola spe gratie ccelestis innititur, 
tua semper protectione muniatur: Per, 
&ce.—Dom. v. post octav. Epiph. Ora-’ 
tio: Miss. Sarisb. fol. xxiv.] 


y [Ibid] 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 265 


The Gospel.| Sarum’. 

b The literal sense of this parable. 

It is only to tell us that wicked men, stirred up by the devil, 
‘will be in the Church, mixed among them that are there 
truly religious, and that, by the permission of God, this shall 
so continue to the end of the world. 


_ The Sixth Sunday (if there be so many) shall have the Collect, 
Epistle, and Gospel that was upon the Fifth Sunday.| In 
Sarum the third is taken?. 


SUNDAY CALLED SEPTUAGESIMA. 





Sar.» Sciendum est quod officitum hujus diet nunquam differ- 
tur propter aliquod festum, nisi cum Purificatio (aut Dedicatio 
Ecclesia) hac die contigerit, tum enim differtur ad fer. iv. 

The Collect.| Sarum®. 

The Epistle.| Sarum’. 

. The literal sense. 

Perceive ye not, &c. As they at Corinth might easily do, 
for they were accustomed there to celebrate and to be spec. 
tators of such games, wherein the runners contended to get 
the victory and carry away the prize. See the Historical Ob- 
servations hereafter. 

But one receiveth the prize. That is, he who outran the 
rest and came first to the end of the race. 

So run. Not so, as in their secular races, where one only 


getteth the reward; but so, as he there doth, who never 
¥ 


2 [Ibid.] 

* {The words cited were the rule be- 
fore the last review. In the Sarum Mis- 
sal there is a provision for six Sundays, 
as the first Sunday after the Epiphany is 
there the Sunday within the octaves; 
and our second Sunday would be the 
first after the octaves, and so on, so that 
we use each Sunday’s service a week 
_ earlierthan they did. The Sarum ser- 
vice for the fifth Sunday after the oc- 
taves (our sixth after Epiphany) has the 
Officium, Gradual, &c., “ut in Dom. 
iii.,’’ but the Collect, Epistle and Gospel 
of our fifth Sunday after the Epiphany. 
This has probably led Cosin to make the 
statement in the text; the editor has not 


found any other rule which could be so 
understood. | 

b (This is a rubric in the Sarum 
Missale, fol. xxv., with slight but im- 
material variations. Cosin had fer. iii. 
instead of iv. This has been corrected 
in the text. ] 

¢ [Preces populi tui, quesumus, 
Domino, clementer exaudi: ut qui 
juste pro peccatis nostris affligimur, 
pro tui nominis gloria misericorditer li- 
beremur,PerDominum,&c.— Dominica 
in lxx. Oratio, Missale Sarisb. ibid. ] 

4 fibid. Cosin has omitted to notice 
that the Epistle in the Sarum Missal 
is continued to ch. x. 4, “and that 
Rock was Christ.’’] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SEcOND 


SERIES. 


266 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


giveth over till he cometh to the end. In this the race of 
religion ought to be like the race at Corinth, but in the other | 
respect not so; for whereas they gave the reward but to one > 
alone, who outran all his fellows, in the race of the Church 
all that run and hold out to the end shall have their reward. 

Every man, &c. A second similitude; the other was of 
running a race, this of wrestling in a theatre, which were 
frequently celebrated near Corinth and the places about, and 
became famous abroad in the world, as in the Histor. Odserv.® 
is set forth. 

Abstaineth from all things that may lessen or hinder the 
use and strength of his body, as gluttony, drunkenness, and 
lust will do, and useth a temperate and an exquisite diet pro- 
portioned to his purpose. 

A crown that shall perish. Such as were used to be given 
to the victors in the Olympic games. See the Hist. Odserv. 

But we to obtain an everlasting crown. Much more therefore 
ought we to abstain from anything that may hinder us. 

I therefore so run, not as, &c. For our better encourage- 
ment, he giveth himself for an example, and for our direction 
he telleth us how to run, not negligently, not despairingly, 
but with force and labour, and with aiming continually at 
our mark. 

So fight I, against concupiscence and worldly affections; 
not as one that beateth the air, as they fight that miss their 
strokes, cutting the air instead of their enemy, and flourish- 
ing with the sword in their hand to no purpose. 

But I tame my body. Which is by subduing the affections 
of the flesh, with continual mortification thereof, and ab- : 
staining from vice. 

A castaway. That is, not to be a partaker of the fruit and 
price of the gospel, which is eternal blessedness. 

The Gospel.| Sarum.’ 

The literal sense. 

The kingdom of heaven, &c. This parable is spoken by Christ 
for the explaining of the two last sentences that are annexed to 
it, (“So the first shall be last,” &c. “for many are called,” &c.) 
That is to say, as it happened to them that came last into 


_¢ [These Historical Observations for them. ] 
were never written ; there is space left f [ Missale Sarisb., fol, xxv. ] 


f ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 267 


tthe vineyard, (which is the Church of Christ,) that beyond 
‘the expectation of all men they should have their reward first 
given them, and a reward greater than they could hope for 
themselves, having not wrought so long as the other labourers 
‘did; and on the contrary, that they who came first to labour 
‘should be last of all rewarded, and though they had travailed 
‘all the day long, yet their reward should be less than they 
expected, wherein nevertheless there was no injustice or 
wrong done to them; so shall it be in the latter days of the 
world, when they that are reputed here to be the first, shall 
be accounted of by Christ much less than they that are 
thought to be the last, and the last in men’s account shall be 
preferred before the first, without any injustice on God’s part, 
whose benignity it is to promise and to give any reward at 
all, because men merit nothing by their works; and yet it is 
their duty to do all that they are set to do, and God will 
give no reward to them that stand idle, and do no service in 
_ His Church. 
For many are called, but few are chosen. This is the reason 
given how it cometh to pass, that in the end, “many who 
be now first shall then be last; for though they be all 
called, yet they are not all chosen, because they murmur 
against their master, and envy the bounty that He sheweth 
to others; not so much regarding His free and liberal good- 
ness, as their own merits and deservings for their works. 
But as men here err on one side, who say that God hath 
absolutely elected some particular persons, without any re- 
spect had therein to their faith in Christ, which is never 
true, unless they live in His obedience; so do they err like- 
wise on the other side, who say (both ignorantly and im- 
properly) that God hath generally elected all persons of the 
world, therein confounding His universal good-will towards 
all, whereby He gave His Son for the redemption of the 
world, with His election of them that believe in Him, and 
obey the truth of His gospel, which is a condition always 
annexed to His act of election. And as the first opinion ex- 
cludeth both Christ and the redemption that He made of 
mankind, so the second is repugnant to the very word of 
Christ here used, which no man can otherwise take or under- 
stand, than of those that are segregate and chosen out of 





Srconp 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 
——— ee 


268 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


the common multitude, as all those are that unfeignedly 
love and serve Christ, according to the gospel that He hath 
given them. 


SUNDAY CALLED SEXAGESIMA. 


Lhe Collect.|  Sarums. 
The Epistle.] Sarum», 
The literal sense. 

Ye suffer fools gladly, Sc. This is said by an irony, for 
seeing they thought themselves so wise that they despised all 
others, and yet suffered them to glory over their own wis- 
dom, and to magnify their credit, they might as well suffer 
him also, that could glory (if that were aught worth) above 
them all. 

Ye suffer if a man bring you into bondage, if aman devour, 
if, &c. Not simply this, but in regard of the contumely that 
you suffer by them; for though they do not really devour 
you, or smite you upon the face with their fists, yet such 
things they do to you, that you are no less abused by them 
than if they did those things indeed. 

As though we had been weak, Sc. That is, they object to 
you our mean and low condition of living among you, bring- 
ing a calumny upon our humility towards you. 

I speak foolishly. Excusing himself that his adversaries 





put him to rehearse those things, which though they seem to 
abase him, yet he might justly glory in them. 

They are Hebrews. So did they use to boast, and say of 
themselves. 

They are the ministers of Christ. 
to be. 

Lam more. Above them in truth and deed, being able to 
shew the works and signs of an apostle, which they cannot. 


So they pretended 


€ [The Sarum Collect (ibid., fol. 


xxvi.) is: Deus, qui conspicis quia ex 
nulla nostra actione confidimus; con- 
cede propitius, ut contra adversa omnia 
doctoris gentium protectione rauniamur: 
Per, &c., this day being regarded as a 
kind of commemoration of St. Paul, as 
in the epistle; instead of the words in 
italics we have “ by Thy power.’’] 

-» [Ibid. But the Sarum Epistle (2 


Cor. xi. 19, sqq.) for the Sunday con- 
tinued to chap. xii. verse 9, ‘That the 
power of Christ may rest upon me;” 
only at the place where our epistle ends 


there is a division, and a rule at the | 


end, Hee epistola tota legatur hac die 
tantum: quando vero dicitur per heb- 
domadam semper incipiatur ab ista 
clausula, Damasci prepositus (i. e. at 
chap. xi. 82, where ours ends.) ; 





| 
| 
| 
| 
| 
| 
| 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 269 


_ In death oft. That is, in dangers that threatened present 
| death. 

Forty stripes save one. The law in Deut. xxv. 3 was, that 
the stripes given for the punishment of a malefactor should 
not exceed the number of forty. The Jews, to be the surer 
of not transgressing this law, took one less; and it was not 
therefore lawful among them to exceed thirty-nine, which 
St. Paul suffered five times over. 

Thrice was I beaten, &c. I was once stoned, I suffered 
thrice shipwreck, &c. Of these we have no story in the Acts 
of the Apostles, where St. Luke omitted many things that 
concerned St. Paul’s sufferings, but here they are summed 
up. 

My infirmities. Indeed his true glory, though his ad- 
versaries, who had their ease and lived at their pleasure 
in worldly prosperity, thought them to be low and mean 
infirmities, as all such matters are in the eyes of the 
world. ; 

The Gospel.| Sarum’. 

Which for a while believe, and in time of temptation go 
away.| Sub Anastasio imperatore vir potens Rome, Theude- 
ricus Afer, opinionis Ariane, habuit diaconum orthodoxum, 
quem unice diligebat. Is diaconus, quo Theuderico omnibus 
partibus et gratior et acceptior esset, dum se ad illius mores et 
ingenium fingeret, transit, deserta opoovaia fide, ad Arianis- 
mum; Theudericus, qui deprehendit mutationem istam, non ex 
animi sententia sed decipiendi et adulandi causa proficisct, 
prefatus, QUI DEO NON SERVASTI FIDEM, QUI MIHI HOMINI 
FECERIS? jussit diacono caput amputari. Sed in hac re 
omnino memorabile est eremplum Constantit imperatoris patris 
Constantini Magni; nam ut de tis periculum faceret, qui in 
comitatu vere et bona fide Christiani essent, convocatis pala- 
tinis edixit, ut qui pariter cum eo diis sacrificarent, hi in 
palatio manerent, ibique et gradum et dignitatem obtinerent, 
qui detrectassent discederent, cum hoc beneficio, quod liceret 
impune ; itaque alii Christianam religionem prodiderunt, ali 
abesse maluerunt. Imperator reduxit tenaces, et quia obser- 
vaverint fidem, censuit eos sibi identidem fidos amicos, consi- 





i [Miss. Sarisb., fol. xxvi. b.] 


SEconD } 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


270 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


liariosque fore, alios, ut impostores effeminatosque ablegavit, 
Euseb.§ Sozom! 


THE SUNDAY CALLED QUINQUAGESIMA. 


Oratio Sarum™. 
~ Preces nostras quesumus, Domine, clementer exaudi, atque 
a peccatorum vinculis absolutos, ab omni adversitate custodi ; 
per, &c. . 

The Epistle.| Sarum®. 

The literal sense. 

With the tongues of men. The apostle intending to teaclr 
us, that all things without charity are nothing worth, be- 
ginning with the tongues and several languages of the world, 
wherein most men covet (as the Corinthians did more than 
others) to be skilful. 

And of angels. That is to say, if the angels had any 
tongues, or peculiar use of languages by themselves; which 
is but an emphatical expression, that the apostle here useth 
in the manner of an hypothetical hyperbole, the like whereof 
we may read Rom. viii. 38 and Gal. 1. 8. 

And have no love. That is, if I use not those tongues 
(and all that follow after) to the use and profit of others. 

Though I could prophesy, either by having the gift of fore- 
telling things to come, or of explaining the word of God by 
special revelation. 

Had all faith. That is, the faith to do miracles; for here 
he speaketh not of a justifying faith, which is never severed 
from charity. 

My goods to feed the poor. That is, do the external works 
of charity itself, as the Pharisees gave alms to be seen. 

And give my body to be burnt, as the heathens threw them- 
selves into the fire for vain-glory. But the martyrs of Christ 
gave their bodies to be burnt out of the love they had to 
God and His true religion, whereby they edified and con- 
firmed others. 


k [Euseb. Pamph. in Vita Constan- cap. 6. Ibid., tom. ii. p. 15.] 
tine, lib. i. cap. 16. ap. Hist. Eccles. | ™ [Miss. Sarisb., fol. xxviii.] 
Scriptores, tom, i. p. 508. ] “» [Ibid.] 

1 {Sozomen, Hist. Eccles., lib. i. 








ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS, 271 


It profiteth nothing. 'That is, these gifts, and all these 
actions, how specious soever they are in the eyes of men, yet 
unless charity and a religious use and purpose go along with 
them, they are but so many fruitless vanities. 

Love suffereth long, &c. Which are the works of charity, 
opposed to the common vices of the world, and especially to 
such as were rife among the Corinthians, an angry, malig- 
nant, envious, obstinate, proud people. 

Seeketh not her own. That is, preferreth the pleasuring of 
others rather than pleasing her own desires. 

Suffereth all things. That is, all the common infirmities of 
others, not their enormous and wilful misdoings. 


Believeth all things. That is, is not suspicious of men’s’ 


evil doings, nor believeth them till they be apparent. 

Hopeth ali things. That is, despaireth not even of their 
amendment and salvation, who for the present are wicked 
and evil doers. 

Endureth all things. That is to say, all things which with 
a good conscience may be tolerated. For otherwise, blas- 
phemies against God, and the truth of His religion, charity 
suffereth not; nor will she nourish the pravities and vices of 
others by flattery and connivance. 

Though prophesying fail, &c., yet love falleth never away. 
Charity begins in this life, and shall continue for ever in the 
other, both towards God, and all His saints. . But prophecies 
shall cease there; for there will be no use of them, nor of 
any interpretations of the Scriptures, after the consummation 
of this world. Tongues shall cease. That is, there will be no 
diversities of speaking hereafter in heaven. 

And knowledge vanish away. That is, such knowledge as 
is here acquired by industry and experience; for our know- 
ledge will be perfect in the other life, where all imperfection 
of knowledge, such as we now have in this, shall vanish 
away. | 

Now we see in a glass. Our knowledge of God here is by 
revelation and the effects of His power, and therefore we call 
it abstractive; hereafter we shall know Him more perfectly, 
as the angels now do, and that we call intuitive. 

Now abideth faith, hope, and love. That is, all other gifts 
and graces shall endure but for a time, as long as it is God’s 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


272 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


see pleasure to let them continue; but these three shall endure 
———— to the end, and never cease, whereof charity is the greatest; 
because that shall continue also in the life to come, where 
there will not be the like use of faith and hope. 

The Gospel.| Sarum idem Evang. habet°®. The literal sense 
whereof is clear, and needeth no explication. 


THE FIRST DAY OF LENT. 


Sar. Miss. Feria 4°, in capite jejunii ; Post sextam, imprimis 
Jiat sermo ad populum, si placuerit?, 

The Collect. 

This Collect is made up out of three or four other Collects 
in the Order of Sarum 4, 

The Epistle, Joel ii. 12.] Sarum’. 

The Gospel, St. Matt. vi. 16.] Sarum’, 

After this day followeth in the Order of Sarum a service 
for every day throughout the whole time of Lent *, 


THE FIRST SUNDAY IN LENT. 


Oratio Sarum". Deus qui Ecclesiam tuam annua Quadra- 
gesimali observatione purificas, presta familie Tue, ut quod a 
Le obtinere abstinendo nititur, hoc bonis operibus exequatur, 
Pers ei. . 

To use such abstinence.| Voluerunt majores nostri prisci 
Christiani et prime Ecclesie antistites, nos tota Quadragesima, 
non modo sobrie et commessationum, crapuleque expertes, vi- 
vere, quomodo alioquin vivendum semper est, sed sumptionem 
cibi ultra consuetam horam differre, et per integrum diem sola 
frugali cena (nisi tamen corporis aut operis nonnullorum ratio 
evidenter et necessario aliud exegerit) contentos esse; atque 


© [Ibid.] nitentiam, &e. The other Collects pray 

P [ Lbid., fol. xxviii. b. ] in varied expressions for penitence and 

4 [The opening of the Collect is from pardon. See Miss, Sarisb., fol. xxx. b, 
one of many Collects used on this day fol. xxxi. a.] 


in the Sarum office, Omnipotens sem- r (Ibid. ] 
piterne Deus, qui misereris omnium et 8 [ Ibid. } g 
nihil odisti eorum que fecisti, dissi- t [Ibid., fol. xxxii. sqq.] 


mulans peccata hominum propter pee- u [Ibid,, fol. xxxiv.] 





Serer 
ss a 





ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 273 


‘adeo corpus jejuniis et abstinentia attenuare, ut mens ad Deum 
eo liberior et purior feratur. C.* 

That our flesh being subdued by the spirit, we may ever 
obey, &c.| Est hee ratio jejuniit finalis, sed non formalis. 
Quum ergo 8. Aug., Tract. 17. in Joh’, perfectum jeyunium 
vocat, abstinere ab iniquitatibus, et illicitis voluptatibus seculi ; 
Magnus item Basilius’, Serm. priore de jejunio, verum appellat 
jejunium a viliis esse alienum; et Serm. poster.*, Verum jeju- 
nium (ait) est immunitas a vitiis, continentia lingue, cohibitio 
ira, segregatio concupiscentia, obtrectationis, mendacit, perju- 
rit ;—ita intelligendi sunt, quod verum quidem et proprie dictum 
jejunium, si rationem formalem spectes, est abstinere a cibis, at 
abstinere a vitiis est jejunium metaphoricum, et improprie dic- 
tum; nihilominus hoc ipsum, si finem (qui est Deo obedire, 
pretatem et justitiam operari) respicias, est jejunium verum, 
z.e. Deo maxime acceptum. 

Epistle and Gospel.| Sarum». 


THE SECOND SUNDAY IN LENT. 


The Collect, Epistle and Gospel.| Sarum’. 


THE THIRD SUNDAY IN LENT. 


The Collect.| Sarum’, 
The Epistle.| Sarum®. 
The Gospel.| Sarum’. 


x [Calixtus, de Sacrificio Christi, ynoreta eorly GAnOjs. "Ev rovrois pev 


&e. § 1.) oiv % vyngtela Kaddv.—ld., Homil. 2, 
y [Jejunium autem magnum et ge- de Jejun. § 7. Ibid., p. 15, D.] 

nerale est, abstinere ab iniquitatibus et b [ Missale Sarisb., fol. xxxv. b. ] 

illicitis voluptatibus seculi, quod est ¢ |The Sarum Collect is: Deus qui 


perfectum jejunium: ut abnegantes  conspieis omni nos virtute destitui, in- 
impietatem et seculares cupiditates, terius exteriusque custodi; ut ab om- 
temperanter et juste pie vivamus in  nibus adversitatibus muniamur in cor- 
hoc szculo.—S, pus: in Johan., ane pore: eta pravis cogitationibus mun- 
5. Tract. 17. § 4. Op. tom. iii. par. 2, demurin mente; Per Dominum, &e.— 


col. 424, C.J Miss. Sarisb., fol. xl. See the Epistle and 
® fu mévrot éy Th aroxh pévn trav Gospel, ibid., b.] 
Bpwpdtay td ex ris vnotelas Giryadby d [Quesumus, omnipotens Deus, 


opifou. Nyotela yap aAnohs % t&v vota humilium respice: atque ad de- 


kak@v dhAoTptwots.—S. Basil., Homil.1. fensionem nostram dexteram tuz ma- 


“dl de Jejunio, § 10. Op. tom. ii. p.9, B.] —_jestatis extende; Per Dominum, &c.— 


* [GAnOhs vnorela h Tod Kakod GAAO- Dom. iii. Quadrag. Oratio; Miss, Sa- 


 ‘Tpldois, eykpdrera yAdoons, Ounod éro- _risb. fol. xlv.] 
Xa, emriOumidy Xepiopos, Kararadias, e [ Ibid. ] ; 
— WebSous, emopxias. “H tovrwy ede f ( Ibid. ] 


COSIN, , 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SEconD 


SERIES, 


274: NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


In all goodness, righteousness, and truth.| Hie finitur 


Episiola secundum usum Sarum, 


THE FOURTH SUNDAY IN LENT. 
Sarum, Dominica media Quadragesimeé. 
The Collect.| Sarum», 
The Epistle.| Sarum hie incipit, It is written that Abra- 
ham had two sons. Sar. Epistola addit in fine, Qua libertate 


- Christus nos liberaviti, 


The Gospel.| Sarum", 


THE FIFTH SUNDAY IN LENT. 


Sarum, Dominica in Passione Domini’, 
Collect.| Sarum™. 
Epistle.| Sarum*, 
Gospel.| Sarum?®. 


THE SUNDAY NEXT BEFORE EASTER. 


Sar. Dominica in Ramis Palmarum. Wherein, before this 
Missal Service, they had.the benediction, distribution, and 
procession of palms round about the church, with many 
prayers and ceremonies, justly taken away from the usage of 


our Church?, 

Evang. ad initium. 
Collect.| Sarum‘. 
Epistle.| Sarum’. 
Gospel.| Sarum’. 


& [This is the title of the Sunday in 

the Sarum offices. Ibid., fol. li.] 
_ & [Concede, quesumus, omnipotens 
Deus, ut qui ex merito nostre actionis 
affligimur, tuz gratiz consolatione re- 
spiremus; Per Dominum, &c.—Dom. 
media Quadrag. Oratio; ibid. ] 

i (Ibid. ] 

k [Ibid., fol. li. b.] 

1 [Ibid., fol. lvii.] 

m [ Quzsumus, omnipotens Deus, fa- 
miliam tuam propitius respice, ut te 
largiente regatur in corpore, et te ser- 
vante custodiatur in mente; Per Do- 
minum, &c.—Dom. in Passione Do- 
mini, Oratio; ibid. ] 

a { Ibid.] 

° [Ibid., fol. lvii. b. ] 

P [See the Missale Sarisb., fol. 1xii., 


We call it now Passion-Sunday, vide not. in 


Non dicitur, Gloria Tibi Domine’. 


1xiii. ] 

4 [Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, qui 
humano generi ad imitandum humi- 
litatis exemplum salvatorem nostrum 
carnem sumere et crucem subire fecisti, 
concede propitius, ut et patientiz ipsius 
habere documenta et resurrectionis ejus 
consortia mereamur; Per eundem Do- 
minum, &c.—Dom. in Ramis Palma- 
rum, Oratio; ibid., fol. 1xiii. b. ] 

 [Ibid. ] 

* {Ibid., fol. lxiv., sqq. “The portion 
read on this day in the Sarum Office 
was Matt. xxvi. 1—xxvii. 61. The 
Gospel in our books before 1662 was 
xxvi. 1—xxvii. 56, viz., what is now 
the First.Lesson and Gospel. } 

* [This is the rubric before the Pas- 
sio, ibid., fol. Lxiv. ] 





275 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 


Sar. Passio Domini nostri Jesu Christi*. 

All this week long the sad story of Christ’s Passion is 
read, together with other Scriptures of the prophets and 
apostles that refer thereunto: which though it ought always 
to be in our minds, as a matter whereupon our Christian 
religion and our eternal salvation chiefly dependeth, yet hath 
the Church designed and set apart these last days of Lent 
for a more peculiar meditation upon that mysterious and 
blessed Passion of our Saviour, who suffered it for us at this 
very time of the year, wherein we are now appointed to recount 
it, that so it may the more powerfully affect us, and work a 
true repentance in us of all our sins, for which we see Christ 
crucified, or represented to us in all this story, as if He was 
crucified before our eyes. 

Yielded up the Ghost.| In ordine secundum usum Sarum 
hic inclinat se diaconus*, vel prosternit versus Orientem, et 
dicit privatim Pater noster, Ave Maria, In manus tuas, Do- 
mine, commendo spiritum meum, Redemisti me, Domine Deus 
veritatis. Deinde surgit et postea residuum Passionis legit. 

Pergit Ordo Sarum usque ad, Sedentes contra sepulchrum. 
Sequitur Evangelium, Altera autem die, usque ad, signantes 
lapidemy, 


MONDAY BEFORE EASTER. 


Sar. Feria 2* Hebdomade Sancta’. 

The Epistle, Is. lxiii. 1. 

Sarum Epistola est que in hoc nostro libro habetur die 
Martis usque ad, by his God*, 

The Gospel, Mark xiv. 1. 

Evang. Sarum est Joh. xii. Ante sex dies Pasche, usque ad, 
et abscondit se ab iis”, 


" (Ibid. -This is the title of this 
portion of Scripture in the Sarum Mis- 
sal; the proper Gospel follows.] 

* [Ibid., fol. Ixvi, Cosin cites the 
words of the rubric, but has altered 
inclinet into inclinat, and so through- 
out. ] 

Y [See Miss. Sarisb., fol. Ixvi. b.] 

* [In the edition of the Sarum Mis- 


sal of 1555 the title of this day is 
Feria ii. post Dominicam in Ramis 
Palmarum; in that printed at Rouen 
1506, it is Feria secunda post Ramos 
Palmarum. ] 

® [i.e. Is. 1. 5—10; see Missale Sa- 
tisb., fol. 1xvii.] 

> [Ibid. ] 


T2. 


SECOND 


SERIES, 


_SEcOND 


SERIES, 


276 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 


TUESDAY BEFORE EASTER. 


The Epistle, Is. 1. 5. 


Epistola Sarum, Jer. xi.° Domine demonstrasti mihi, usque 
ad, causam meam, Domine Deus meus. 


The Gospel, Mark xv. 1. 


Sarum habet Evang. precedens una cum presenti, 
Which came up with him to Jerusulem.] Hic finitur in 


Ordine Sarum®. 


WEDNESDAY BEFORE EASTER, 


The Epistle, Heb. ix. 16. 


Habet Sarum hie Epistolam, que apud nos habetur die 


Lune’, 
The Gospel, Luke xxii. 1. 


Sarum habet hoc die et istud et sequens Evangeliumé. 


THURSDAY BEFORE EASTER. 


Sar. Feria quinta in Cena Domini. 


Ubi imprimis fiehat 


reconciliatio peenitentium, per episcopum aut sacerdotem®, 
The Epistle, 1 Cor. xi. 17.] Zpistola Sarum, 


The Gospel, Luke xxiii. 1. 


Sar. habet hoc die Evangelium Joh. xiii. de lotis pedibus 


apostolorum, 


And the veil of the temple did rent.| Sar. Et cum dixerit 
diaconus, Velum templi scissum est, velum ante altare cadere 


permitiatur'. 


¢ (Jerem, xi. 15—18. 
Ixviii.] 

4 [That is, in the Sarum Office, both 
chapters xiv. and xv. to v. 41, entitled 
the Passio secundum Marcum, are 
read; chap. xv. 42—46, coming after- 
wards under the title Evangelium. Ibid. 
fol. Ixviii—lxx. ] 

€ [ Ibid. ] 

f [Rather Is. lxii. 11, and Ixvili. 


Ibid., fol. 


. 1—7; after that is a second Collect, 


and then Is. liii. Ibid., fol. Ixx. b.] 

& [That is, the whole of the Passio 
secundum Lucam is read, chap, xxii. 1 
to xxiii. 49, The portion which follows, 


vi. 50—53, comes after under the title 
Evangelium. Ibid, fol. lxxii., Lxxiii.] 

» [These are the words of the rubric, 
ibid., fol. 1xxiii. b.] 

' (Tbid., fol, Ixxiv. b.] 

k (John xiii, 1—15, is read as the 
Gospel for this day in the Sarum Cffice, 
ibid,, fol. Ixxv. Then after vespers 
(see below) another Collect is said, and 
John xiii. 16, to the end of chap. xiv. 
is read, ibid., fol. Ixxvi. b., Ixxvii., while 
they drank the potum caritatis. ] 

! (This is in the Wednesday service 
in the Sarum Missal, fol. Lxxiii. ] 


Pry 





Peps Se 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 277 


Wherein never man before had been laid.| Hic finitur 
Evangelium pro die Mercurit in Ordine Sarum™. 

Post Evangelium (in Ordine ad usum Sarum") ponebantur a 
subdiacono tres hostie ad consecrandum ; quarum due reserva- 
bantur ad crastinum, una, de qua. percipiebat sacerdos, altera, 
que posita fuit cum cruce in sepulchro. 

Cantata Communione statim incepte sunt vespere [...] ante 
post-Communionem et finem Misse, simulque cum illo finie- 
bantur. 

Post prandium conveniebant clerici in Ecclesia, ad altaria 
abluenda, et faciendum Mandatum. 

Altaria abluebant vino et aqua. 

Mandatum faciebant in capitulo, ubi lecto Evangelio (Joh. 
xii.) et habito sermone, duo sacerdotes omnium pedes lavabant, 
unus ex una parte, et alter ex altera parte chori, ipsique invi- 
cem laverunt sibi pedes. Interim chorus cantabat antiphonas. 

Peracta vero ablutione pedum, et dicto iterum sermone acci- 
prebant caritatis potum. Deinde dicebantur preces. Sed dum 
fratres sumebant poculum charitatis, legebatur Evangelium (Joh. 
xiii. e¢ xiv.) Amen, Amen dico vobis, non est servus major 
Domino suo, &c. usque ad, Surgite, eamus hinc; et ita rece- 
debant?, 


GOOD FRIDAY. 


This day, in respect of what Christ suffered, was an 
evil day to Him, and ought to be a day of great sor- 
row to us. But in respect of that which He hath ob- 
tained for us by it, it is (as we rightly call it) a good day, 
and ought to be a day of great joy to us. To Him, indeed, 
the day of the fierceness of God’s wrath; but to us, the day 
of the fulness of God’s favour; and, as the apostle called it, 
a day of salvation. 

The Collects. 

First Collect.| Sar. Oratio in fine Misse ad feriam 4%? 


m [Ibid.] P [ Respice, quesumus, Domine, su- 
" [This is a rubric at the end of the per hance familiam tuam, pro qua Do- 
proper Gospel, ibid., fol. Ixxv.] minus noster Jesus Christus non dubi- 
© [See the Rubrics, Miss. Sarisb., tavit manibus tradi nocentium, et crucis 


fol. Ixxv—lxxvii. It should be noted subire tormentum; Qui tecum, &c. 
that on this day Mass was not said till This Collect is appointed at the end of 
after nones. } the service for the Wednesday before 


SEcoND 


SERIES. . 


SeEconpD 


SERIES. 


278 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Second Collect.| He relique sumpte sunt ex pluribus que 
habentur in Ord. Sar.4 

We offer before Thee for all estates of men.| Vide que 
annotata sunt ad Orationem pro statu Ecclesie in terra mili- 
tantis, infra post Offertorium. 

Have mercy upon all Jews, Turks, infidels, &c.| The like 
prayer was used by the Church in St. Augustin’s time, as 
appeareth in his 107th Epistle’, Nunguid ubi audieris sacer- 
dotem Dei ad Ejus altare orantem clara voce, ut incredulas 
gentes Deus ad fidem suam venire compellat, non respondebit 
Amen? And he saith none but a Pelagian will find fault 
with this prayer. tem Gennadius Massil. Lib. de Eccl. 
Dogmatibus, cap. 30°; Quum sanctarum plebium presules 
mandata sibi legatione fungantur, apud divinum clementiam 
humani generis agunt causam, et tota secum Ecclesia conge- 
miscente, postulant, et precantur, ut infidelibus donetur fides, 
ut idololatre ab impietatis sue liberentur erroribus, ut Judeis, 
ablato cordis velamine, lux veritatis appareat, ut heretict 
Catholice fidet perceptione resipiscant, ut schismatict Spiritum 
redivive charitatis accipiant, ut lapsis penitentie remedia 


conferantur, et celestis misericordie aula reseretur. 
In Ordine Sarum ad hance Orationem, non flectuntur 


genua', 


The Epistle.| Sarum loco hujus. Epistole habentur due 
lectiones, una ex Osee vi., altera ex Exod. xii." 


The Gospel.] Sarum*, 


Easter, (Miss. Sarisb., fol. lxxiii. b.) 
and is appointed to be used also on 
Good Friday. Ibid., fol. ]xxxi. b.] 

4 [The second Collect for Good 
Friday corresponds with the following 
in Miss, Sarisb.; Omnipotens sempi- 
terne Deus, cujus Spiritu totum corpus 
Ecclesie sanctificatur et regitur, exaudi 
nos pro universis ordinibus supplican- 
tes, ut gratiz tue munere ab omnibus 
tibi gradibus fideliter serviatur; Per 
Dominum nostrum Jesum Christum 
(qui tecum vivit et regnat) in unitate 
ejusdem, &c.—Orat. 6. in Fer. vi. in die 
Parasc. Ibid., fol. lxxx. b. The third 
Collect is like the last six Sarum Col- 
lects, Pro hereticis, pro perfidis Ju- 
dzis, pro paganis. Of these the second 
begins, ‘ Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, 
qui salvas omnes homines, et neminem 
vis perire;’ the last is similar to it, and 


the substance of the prayers is like ours. 
Ibid., fol. lxxxi.] 

® (S. Aug. Epist. 227, ad Vitalem 
(aliter Ep. 107.) cap. 7, § 26. Op. tom. 
ii. col. 808, A. ] 

§ (Gennadius Massiliensis, liber de 
Eccles. Dogmat. c. 30, pp. 16, 17. ed. 
Hamburg. 1614. ] 

* (The rubrie at the Collects, pro 
perfidis Judzis, is, Non dicitur hic, 
Flectamus genua, Levate. Ibid., fol. 
lxxxi. ] 

u {The First Lesson is the last clause 
of Hosea v. and the first six verses of 
Hoseavi. The Second, Exod. xii. 1—11. 
—Ibid., fol. lxxvii. b., Ixxviii.] 

x [The Passio in the Missal. Sarisb. 
on Good Friday, was St. John xviii. 
I—xix. 37, after which the Evange- 
lium continued the sacred narrative to 
the end of the 19th chapter. 





Py a *¢ 
ie seam 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 279 

In Ordine Sarum’ sequitur adoratio crucis plane idololatrica. 
In Missa nulla fit consecratio; sed hostia pridie reservata, 
postquam in calicem vino et aqua mixtam immissa fuerit, a 
sacerdote sumitur. Dicuntur Vespere mane et finitur Missa. 
Deinde crux et hostia reponuntur in sepulchro, ante quod ac- 
cenditur cereus, gui continue ardet usque ad vigiliam Pasche, 
guando novus ignis benedicitur, et cereus Paschalis accenditur, 
continens 36 pedes in longitudine. 


EASTER-EVEN“%, 


In vigilia Pasche, benedicitur ignis et thumiama. De hoc 
novo igne accenditur cereus, ceteris luminaribus prius ex- 
tinctis ; sequitur benedictio cerei Paschalis, qui accensus ardet 
continue per hebdomadam Pasche, dominicis et festis usque ad 


ascensionem Domini. 


Deinde cantatur a pueris septiformis Litania, et pulsatis 
omnibus campanis in classicum, incipit Missa. Que omnia non 


immerito a nobis ablata sunt. 


In the Service-books before 1662 
also the Gospel was St. John xviii. 1, 
to the end of ch. xix. ] 

y [The rubric in the Missal. Sarisb. 
orders, Deinde procedant clerici ad cru- 
cem adorandam nudatis pedibus, inci- 
pientes a majoribus.... His finitis, de- 
portetur crux per medium chori a pre- 
dictis duobus sacerdotibus ubi a populo 
adoretur ante aliquod altare. 

Deinde sacrificio super altare more 
solito deposito et incensato cum aque 
et vini infusione in calicem; scilicet 
post ablutionem manuunm, dicat, &c. 
.-.+- Postea demittat in calicem sicut 
solet partem hostiae....Statim com- 
municet se sacerdos. Deinde post lotio- 
nem manuum dicant vesperas.... Et 
sic missa et vespere simul finiantur. 
.... Finitis vesperis, sacerdos reponat 
crucem in sepulchrum pariter cum 
corpore dominico, scilicet in pixide. 
«.- Exinde ardebit continue unus ce- 
reus ad minus ante sepulchrum usque 
ad processionem que fit in resurrectione 
Dominica in die pasche: ita tamen 
quod dum psalmus ‘“ Benedictus” ca- 
nitur, et cetera que sequuntur in se- 
quentinocte extinguatur. Similiter ex- 
tinguatur in vigilia pasche dum bene- 
dicitur novus ignis usque dum accen- 
datur cereus paschalis xxxvi. pedes 
continens in longitudine. ] 


Z [Before 1662 there was no Collect 
appointed for Easter-even. The ru- 
brics of the Missal. Sarisb. give the 
following instructions: Sabbato sancto 
in vigilia Pasche. . . fiat benedictio 
ignis ab executore officii.. . . Sequatur 
benedictio thumiamatis sive incensi. 
Post benedictionem incensi impleatur 
thuribulum de carbonibus cum incenso 
et incensetur novus ignis. Postea ac- 
cendatur solus cereus super hastam de 
novo igne, ceteris luminaribus ecclesiz 
prius extinctis. Deinde sequatur be- 
nedictio cerei Paschalis..... Ardebit 
cereus Paschalis continue per hebdo- 
madam Pasche ad matutinas et ad 
missas et ad vesperas. Similiter, fiat 
in octavo Pentecostes. Omnibus yero 
dominicis ab octavo Pasche: usque ad 
ascensionem Domini ad missam tantum 
accendatur ; etiam in festis Sancti Marci 
Evangeliste, Apostolorum Philippi et 
Jacobi-ad missam tantum. In annun- 
ciatione Beate Marie et in inventione 
sancte crucis sicut in octavo Pasche 
accendatur. After certain Lessons and 
Collects follows the rubric: Deinde 
sequatur septiformis litania que in 
medio chori a septem pueris in super- 
pelliciis dicitur. Finita litania, inci- 
piatur missa sollenniter a cantore sine 
regimine chori.. . . Tune pulsentur 
omnes campanz in classicum.] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 





280 
The Epistle. 


- NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER; 


In Ordine Sarum habetur Epistola que apud nos legitur in 


die Pasche*, 
The Gospel?, 


In Ordine Sarum habetur Evangelium ex xxviii. Mat.Vespere 
autem Sabbati, &c. usque ad, predixi vobis. 
Dicuntur etiam Vespere cum Missae. 


EASTER-DAY. 


The Collect.| Sarum eadem Oratio4, 
Lhe Epistle.| Epistola® in Ord. Sar. 1 Cor. v. Expurgate 
vetus fermentum, usque ad, in azymis sinceritatis et veritatis. 


The Gospel.| 


Evang. in Ord. Sarum!, 8. Mare, xvi. In illo tempore Maria 
Mag. §c. emerunt aromata, &c. usque ad, sicut dixi vobis, 


_ MONDAY IN EASTER-WEEK. 


The Collect.| In Ord. Sarum habetur alia Oratio’. 


The Epistle, 
children of Israel, &c.] 


Ye know the preaching that God sent unto the 


Mie incipit Epistola in Ord. Sarum». 


The Gospel.| Sar. idemi, 


TUESDAY IN EASTER-WEEK. 


The Collect.| In Ordine Sarum habetur alia Oratios, 


The Epistle. 


In that He has raised up Jesus again.] 


Hie 


Jinitur Epistola in Ordine Sarum*. 


* [The Epistle in the Order of Sarum 
is part of that which we have appointed 
for Easter-day, Coloss. iii. 1—4.—Ibid., 
fol. Ixxxviii. | 

> (Matt. xxviii, 1—7. Ibid., fol, 
Ixxxviii. ] 

* (Ibid., b.] 

4 [The words of the Collect in the 
Missal. Sarisb. are: Deus qui hodierna 
die per unigenitum tuum eternitatis 
nobis aditum devicta morte reserasti, 
vota nostra que preveniendo aspiras, 
etiam adjuvando prosequere, per eun- 
dem Dominum, &c.—lIbid., fol. xci.] 

© [ Ibid. ] 

f [ Ibid., b.] 

& [The Collect in the Missal. Sarisb. 
was: Deus qui solennitate Paschali 


mundo remedia contulisti, populum 
tuum, quesumus, Domine, ccelesti dono 
prosequere, ut et perfectam libertatem 
consequi mereatur, et ad vitam pro- 
ficiat sempiternam; Per, &c.—Ibid. ] 

h [ Ibid. ] 

' (Ibid., fol. xcii.] 

ij [ Before 1662 the Collect now ap- 
pointed for the first Sunday after Easter 
was used on the Tuesday in Easter- 
week, The Collect for this day in the 
Missal. Sarisb. is: Deus qui Ecclesiam 
tuam novo semper fcetu multiplicas, 
concede famulis tuis ut sacramentum 
vivendo teneant, quod fide perceperunt; 
Per, &c.—Ibid., fol. xcii, b. ] 
_* [Ibid.] 





: 
* 
i 
[ 
& 
a 








ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 


281 


The Gospel.| Sarum habet idem Evang.' 


THE FIRST SUNDAY AFTER EASTER, 


Sarum; Dominica in Octavis Pasche*. 


The Collect. | 


Sarum habet eandem Orationem®. 


The Epistle.| In Ord. Sarum repetitur Epistola in die Pasche, 


1 Cor. v.? 


Item hee eadem Epistola cum eodem Evangelio dicuntur, 


Fer. 4. et 64. 


The Gospel.| In Ord. Sarum repetitur Evang. in die Pasche, 
_ Mar. xvi." 


THE SECOND SUNDAY AFTER EASTER. 


: The Collect.| In Ord. Sarum non habetur hee Oratio‘*, 


The Epistle. 
Epistola in Ord. Sarum’, 
The Gospel. | 


For Christ also suffered for us.| Hite inctpit 


Sarum habet idem Evangelium". 


THE THIRD SUNDAY AFTER EASTER. 


In Ord. Sarum habetur eadem Collecta*, 
~ Sarum habet eandem Epistolam’. 
_ Sarum habet idem Evangelium’. 


1 [Jbid.] 

m [Ibid., fol. xciii—xev. ] 

n | That is, this is the name of the 
Sunday. ] 

© [ Before 1662 the Collect for the 
first Sunday after Easter was the same 
as that for Easter-day; as it is in the 
Sarum Missal, fol. xevi. ] 

P [Ihid.] 

4 [On the contrary, the Epistle and 


_ Gospel which we have on this Sunday 
were to be said each day in the week 


i 
4 
% 
Li 
y 









except Wednesday and Friday, which 
_had Epistles and Gospels of their own. 
—lIbid., fol. xevii., &c. | 


~* [(Ibid., fol. xevii.] 


_. * [The Collect for the second Sunday 
after Easter in Missal, Sarisb.is; Deus, 


qui in Filii tui humilitate jacentem 
mundum erexisti, fidelibus tuis perpe- 
tuam concede Jetitiam, ut quos perpe- 
tue mortis eripuisti casibus, gaudiis 
facias sempiternis perfrui; Per eundem 
Dominum, &c.—Ibid., fol. xeviii. ] 

t [Ibid.] 

a b ibid b.] 

x (Deus, qui errantibus ut in viam 
possint redire justitiz, veritatis tue 
lumen ostendis, da cunctis qui Chris- 
tiana professione censentur, et illa re- 
spuere qui huic inimica sunt nomini, 
et ea que sunt apta sectari; Per Do- 
minum, &c.—Ibid., fol. xcix. ] 

y [Ibid., but with the first word of 
vy. 19.] 

2 [ibid.] 


SECOND 


After this day there is in the Order of Sarum a service for ———— rs taal 


every day in the week™, 


SEeconD 


SERIES. 


282 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


THE FOURTH SUNDAY AFTER EASTER. 


Sarum habet eandem Collectam*, Epistolam, et Evangelium”. 


THE FIFTH SUNDAY AFTER EASTER. 


Sarum habet eandem Coll., Epist., et Evang.° 


ASCENSION-DAY. 


Sarum habet eandem Collect., Epist., et Evang.‘ 
The Gospel. Confirming the words with miracles following. ] 
Et quibus hec non sunt satis, nihil est satis. 


SUNDAY AFTER ASCENSION-DAY. 


In Ord. Sarum non habetur hee Oratio®. 

Sarum habet eandem Epistolam‘*, 

Sarum habet idem Evangelium’. 

After this, there is in the Order of Sarum a special service 


for Whitsun-eve®. 


WHIT-SUNDAY. 


In Ord. Sarum non habetur hee Oratio. 


Commemoratione §. Spiritus’, — 


* [The Collect before 1662 began: 
Almighty God, which doest make the 
minds of all faithful men to be of 
one will, grant unto Thy people, &c. 
In the Missal. Sarisb. the words 
are: Deus qui fidelium mentes unius 
efficis voluntatis, da populis tuis id 
amare quod precipis, id desiderare 
quod promittis; ut inter mundanas 
varietates ibi nostra fixa sint corda ubi 
vera sunt gaudia; Per Dominum &c.— 
Ibid., fol. c. b.] 

» [ Ibid; ] 

© [Ibid., fol. ci. b. The Collect is: 
Deus, a qua bona cuncta procedunt, 
largire supplicibus tuis, ut cogitemus 
te inspirante que recta sunt et te gu- 
bernante eadem faciamus; Per Domi- 
num nostrum Jesum Christum; but 
the Gospel ends at v. 30, “ By this 
we believe that Thou camest forth from 
God.’’ ] 

4 [Ibid., fol. ciii. The Collect is: 
Concede, quzsumus, omnipotens Deus, 


Invenitur tamen in 


ut qui hodierna die unigenitum tuum 
redemptorem nostrum ad ccelos ascen- 
disse credimus, ipsi quoque mente in 
coelestibus habitemus; Per eundem, 
&c. 
: [The Collect for this day in 
the Missal. Sarisb. is: Omnipotens 
sempiterne Deus, fac nos tibi sem- 
per et devotam gerere voluntatem e+ 
majestati tue sincero corde servire, 
per, &c.—Ibid., fol. civ. Our Col- 
lect is from the antiphone at vespers 
on Ascension-day. O rex Gloria, 
Domine virtutum, qui triumphator 
hodie super omnes ccelos ascendisti, 
ne derelinquas nos orphanos, sed mitte 
promissum Patris in nos, Spiritum Ve- 
ritatis—Breviar. Sarisb., fol. cxi, b.] 

f [Ibid.] 

& [ Ibid. ] 

h [ Ibid., fol. civ. b.] 

i [This Collect is the Collect for 
Whit-Sunday in the Sarum Missal, 
fol, cvi., (as well as for the Missa in 





ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 


Sarum habet eandem Epistolam*. 

Sarum legit hoc Evang. in vigilia Pentecostes, usque ad, Jesus 
answered and said unto him, If a man love Me, &c.' 

In Ord. Sarum hie incipit Hvang.™ 


MONDAY IN WHITSUN-WEEK. 


Sarum non habet hane Collectam™. 
Habet Ordo Sarum eandem Epistolam°®. 
Ordo Sarum habet idem Hvangelium?. 


TUESDAY IN WHITSUN-WEEK. 


Ordo Sarum non habet hane Collectam 4. 
Sarum habet eandem Epistolam’. 
Sarum habet idem Evangelium’, 


TRINITY SUNDAY. 


Ordo Sarum habet eandem Collectam, Epistolam, et Evang.' 


Upon the Thursday after, there is in the Order of Sarum’, 


a service appointed for the Sacrament, and they called it 


Festum: Corporis Christi. 


But there is no mention of any 


transubstantiation, or circumgestation of the Sacrament, as 


now the papists use. 


The Epistle is 1 Cor. xi. [28—29.] The Gospel, John vi. 


[55—58. ] 


commemoratione Sancti Spiritus, or de 
Spiritu Sancto; ibid., Commun., fol. 
xx.) The words are: Deus, qui hodierna 
die corda fidelium Sancti Spiritus il- 
lustratione docuisti; da nobis in eodem 
Spiritu recta sapere, et de ejus semper 
consolatione gaudere; Per Dominum 
&c. in unitate ejusdem &c.] 

k [Ibid.] 

1 [Of our Gospel for Whit-Sunday 
the first portion, v. 15—23, is the 
Gospel for the Vigil of Whit-Sunday ; 
the second, v. 24—31, for Whit-Sunday. 
—Ibid., fol. evi. ] 

m [That is, at the words just cited: 
In illo tempore dixit Jesus, &c.] 

" (The Collect in Missal. Sarisb. for 
Monday in Whitsun-week is: Deus 
qui apostolis tuis sanctum dedisti Spi- 
ritum, concede plebi tue piz petitionis 
effectum, ut quibus dedisti fidem, lar- 
giaris et pacem; Per Dominum &c. in 

‘unitate ejusdem &c.—Ibid., fol. cvii. ] 





° [The Epistle for this day begins in 
the Missal. Sarisb. at v. 42.—Ibid. ] 

P [Ibid., b.] 

4 [The Collect for the Tuesday in 
Whitsun-week in Missal. Sarisb. is: 
Adsit nobis, Domine, quesumus, virtus 
Spiritus Sancti, que et corda nostra 
clementer expurget, et ab omnibus 
tueatur adversis; Per Dominum &c. in 
unitate ejusdem &c.—Ibid. ] 

® (Ibid. ] 

s { Ibid. | 

t (In Missal. Sarisb. the Collect is: 
Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, qui de- 
disti famulis tuis, in confessione vere 
fidei, eterne Trinitatis gloriam agnos- 
cere, et in potentia majestatis adorare 
Unitatem ; quesumus, ut ejusdem fidei 
firmitate ab omnibus semper muniemur 
adversis; Per Dominum nostrum. The 
Epistle ends in v. 10, (in secula secu- 
lorum, )—Ibid., fol. xcii., xciii. ] 

« (Ibid., fol. xciii. | 


283. 


Srconp— 


SERIES. 


SECOND 
SERIES. 





284 


.NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


THE FIRST SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Ord. Sarum habet eand. Collect., pistolam, et Evangelium*, 


THE SECOND SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Ordo Sarum habet eandem Collect., Hpist., et Hvang.¥ 


THE THIRD SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Ordo Sarum habet eandem Collect., Epist., et Evang.” 


THE FOURTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Ordo Sarum habet easdem Collect., Epist., item Evang.* 


THE FIFTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY, 


Sarum habet eandem Collect., Epist., et Evang.» 


THE SIXTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Collect., Epist. : et Hvang.° 


x [Ibid., fol. cxiv. The Collect is: 

Deus, in te sperantium fortitudo, adesto 
propitius invocationibus nostris; et 
quia sine te nihil potest mortalis infir- 
mitas, presta auxilium gratie tue, 
ut in exequendis mandatis tuis, et vo- 
luntate tibi et actione placeamus; Per 
Dominum. The Epistle begins at the 
words ‘ God is love,’ in v. 8. ] 
_ ¥ [Ibid., fol. exv. The Collect for 
the second Sunday after Trinity, before 
1662, was: Lord, make us to have a 
perpetual fear and love of Thy holy 
name, for Thou never failest to help 
and govern them whom Thou doest 
bring up in Thy steadfast love; Grant 
this, &c. And in the Missal. Sarisb. : 
Sancti nominis tui, Domine, timorem 
pariter et amorem fac nos habere per- 
petuum, quia nunquam tua guberna- 
tione destituis, quos in soliditate tuz 
dilectionis instituis, per Dominum, &e. 
The Epistle ends at v. 18.] 

z [Ibid., fol. exy. b., exvi. The Col- 
lect is: Deprecationem nostram, que- 
sumus Domine, benignus exaudi; et 
quibus supplicandi prestas affectum, 


tribue defensionis auxilium; Per Do- 
minum. ‘The Epistle begins at verse 6, 
not in verse 5, as ours. ] 

® [Ibid., fol. cxvi. b. The Collect is: 
Protector in te sperantium Deus, sine 
quo nihil est validum, nihil sanctum ; 
multiplica super nos misericordiam 
tuam, ut te rectore, te duce, sic trans- 
eamus per bona temporalia, ut non 
amittamus eterna; Per Dominum no- 
strum. ] 

> [Ibid., fol. exvii. The Collect is: 
Da nobis quesumus Domine, ut et 
mundi cursus pacifice nobis tuo ordine 
dirigatur, et Ecclesia tua tranquilla 
devotione letetur; Per Dominum no- 
strum. | 

¢ [Ibid., fol. exviii. The Collect is: 
Deus qui diligentibus te bona invisi- 
bilia preeparasti; infunde cordibus no- 
stris tui amoris affectum, ut te in om- 
nibus et super omnia diligentes, pro- 
missiones tuas, que omne desiderium 
superant, consequamur; Per Dominum 
nostrum. The Gospel ends at vy. 24, 
not 26, as ours does. ] 











ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 


285 


THE SEVENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Collect., Hpist., et Evang." 


THE EIGHTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Collect., Ep., et Hvang.® 


THE NINTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Collectam, Ep., et Evang.‘ 
The Epistle. We should not lust after evil things as they, &c.| 
_ Hic incipit Epist. in Ord. Sarum. 


THE TENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Collect., Epist., Hvang.® 
The Gospel. For the days will come unto thee, that thine enemies 


shall cast a bank about thee, §e.| Which days came to pass 
according to this prediction of our Saviour thirty-eight years 


after His death, in the time of Flavius Vespasian, then Roman 


emperor®., 


And these be the Historical Observations concerning the 


‘destruction of Jerusalem. 


In the 12th year of Nero (An. a Nat. Christo 67.) Florus 
was sent governor into Judea; against whom and the power 
of the Romans the Jews began to rebel the very year fol- 
lowing, as Josephus computeth the time. 

In the 13th year of Nero was the ensign of the Roman 
eagle first brought into Jerusalem, and there set up in 
the temple by Florus, which gave the first occasion to the 


Jews of rising against him. 


@ (Ibid., fol. ecxix. The Collect is: 
Deus virtutum, cujus est totum quod 
est optimum; insere pectoribus nostris 
amorem tui nominis, et preesta in nobis 
religionis augmentum; ut que sunt 
bona nutrias, ac pietatis studio que 
sunt nutrita custodias. Per. ] 

¢ {Ibid., b. The Collect is: Deus, 
eujus providentia in sui dispositione 
non fallitur ; te supplices exoramus, ut 
noxia cuncta submoveas, et omnia no- 
bis profutura concedas; Per. The Epi- 
stle ends in the middle of v. 17. ] 

f [Ibid., fol. exx. b. The Collect is: 


Largire nobis, Domine, quesumus, 
semper spiritum cogitandi que recta 
sunt, propitius, et agendi; ut qui sine 
te esse non possumus, secundum te 
vivere valeamus. Per. ] 

& [Ibid., fol. exxi. The Collect is: 
Pateant aures misericordie tue, Do- 
mine, precibus supplicantium; et ut 
petentibus desiderata concedas, fac eos 
que tibi placita sunt postulare; Per 
Dominum. ] 

h [See Joseph. Antiq. Jud., lib. xx. 
cap. 11. Op. tom. i. p, 981.] 


SECOND 
SERIES. 





SECOND 


SERIES. 


286 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


And now in the holy place was seen the abomination o 
desolation (whereof Christ foretold) ; from which time to the 
final destruction of Jerusalem, there passed only three years 
and a half, the just time that the prophet Daniel had spoken 
of for that purpose long before. ‘The Roman forces then 
brought against the Jews were under the conduct of Flavius 
Vespasian, (afterwards made emperor,) who came this year 
to Jerusalem, and besieged it in the month of May. In the 
28th chapter of Deuteronomy, Moses compared the Roman 
nation to an eagle flying and seizing upon the Jews’ country, 
as if he had therein a regard to the event of this time. 

In the meanwhile, all the Christians that were in the 
city of Jerusalem, being by divine providence timely admo- 
nished to leave it, went to the city of Pella, on the other | 
side of Jordan, and there had their safety, as Lot had in | 
Zoar, when God meant to destroy Sodom. Euseb.,' 

Two years after (Nero having slain himself) Fl. Vespasian 
was cried up and proclaimed emperor by his army, which 
then besieged Jerusalem. Whereupon he sailed away with 
all haste to Rome, and left the care of the siege behind him > 
with his son Titus, who followed him in the empire. 

The next year ensuing was the city taken, in the time of 
the Jews’ Passover feast. In August the temple was burnt, 
and in September all the city set on fire. And here was an 
end of the Jewish government, the 71st year after Christ’s 
Nativity, and 38 years after His Ascension. 

By the relation of Josephus* there perished at this be- 
sieging and taking of Jerusalem, what by famine, and what 
by the sword, no fewer than eleven hundred thousand per- 
sons. And one hundred thousand were sold besides, or 
carried away captive. 





1 [Od why GAAX Kal Tod Aaod Tis ev 
‘IepocoAvmos éxkAnolas, KaTd Twa 
xpnopmoy Tots avTdb: Soxivos 3 &roKa- 
AdWews exd00évra, mpd Tod moAcuov 
petavacriva: THs méAcws Kal Tiva 


-Tlepalas méAw oikely KkexeAevouevov 


(TléAAay abrhy dvoudfovew) év } Tay 
els Xpiorby memiotevxdtwy and Tis 
‘lepovoaAhm meT@Kicnevwy, dod wayTe- 
A@s emiAcrouwétwv Gylwy avdpay, abThy 
Te Thy “lovdalwy BactdiKkhy untpomoAw 
kal cturacay Thy “lovdaiay yiv, h ék 
cov dlkn Aoiwdy abtods dite Tocaidra 


els Te Thy Xpiordy Kal rods amoordAous 
avTon Tapnvounkdtas meTHel, TOV aoe~ 
Bav &pinv rhv yevedv rabrny exelyny && 
avOpérav a&pavifovca.—Euseb. Hist, 
Eecl., lib, iii. cap. 5. p. 93, } 

k [rév pe ody aixuardrov wdvTwr, 
baa Kad? bdrAov eAhpbyn troy médeuor, 
GpiOuds évvéa mupiddes nal éwraioxl- 
Atot ouvhxOn’ TeV S& aworAopEevwY KaTe 
mwacav Thy woALopklay pupiddes Exardv 
kal déa.—Josephus, de Bell, Jud., lib. 
vi.c. 9. § 3.] 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 


287 


Tacitus reckoneth in his history, that there were at this Ssconp 
time six hundred thousand men inclosed within the city 


walls!, 
Egypt. 


So many were there of the Jews, that came out of 


» 


THE ELEVENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Coll., Epist., et Hvang.™ 


THE TWELFTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Coll., Epist., et Evang.” 


THE THIRTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Ooll., Epist., et Evang.° 


THE FOURTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Coll., Hpist., et Evang.? 


Sarum habet eand. Ep., Coll., et Evang.’ 


1 [Multitudinem obsessorum omnis 
zetatis virile et muliebre secus, sex- 
centa millia fuisse accepimus.—Tacit. 
Histor., lib. v. cap. 13.] 

m (Ibid, fol. cxxii. The Collect for 
the eleventh Sunday after Trinity, be- 
fore the last revision, was: God which 
declarest Thy Almighty power most 
chiefly in shewing mercy and pity, 
give unto us abundantly Thy grace, 
that we running to Thy promises, may 
be made partakers of Thy heavenly 
treasure, through Jesus Christ our 
Lord. In the Missal. Sarisb.> Deus, 
qui omnipotentiam tuam _ parcendo 
maxime et miserando manifestas, mul- 
tiplica super nos gratiam tuam, ut ad 
tua promissa currentes, ccelestium bo- 
norum facias esse consortes; Per Domi- 
num, &c. The Epistle ends with our 
‘the grace bestowed upon me was not 
in vain.” ] 

= [Ibid., fol. exxii.b. The Collect 
for the twelfth Sunday after Trinity, 
before 1662, was: Almighty and ever- 
lasting God, which art always more 
ready to hear than we to pray, and art 
wont to give more than either we de- 
sire or deserve, pour down upon us the 


_ abundance of Thy mercy, forgiving us 
_ those things whereof our conscience is 


afraid, and giving us that that our 
prayer dare not presume to ask, through 


Jesus Christ our Lord. And in the 
Missal. Sarisb.: Omnipotens sempi- 
terne Deus, qui abundantia pietatis tue 
et merita supplicum excedis et vota, 
effunde super nos misericordiam tuam, 
ut dimittas que conscientia metuit, 
et adjicias quod oratio non presumit; 
Per, &c.] 

© [Ibid:, fol. exxiii. b. The words of 
the Collect for the thirteenth Sunday 
after Trinity, before 1662, were these: 
Almighty and merciful God, of whose 
only gift it cometh that Thy faithful 
people do unto Thee true and laudable 
service, Grant, we beseech Thee, that 
we may so run to Thy heavenly pro- 
mises, that we fail not finally to attain 
the same, through Jesus Christ our 
Lord. In the Salisbury Missal: Om- 
nipotens et misericors Deus, de cujus 
munere venit ut tibi a fidelibus tuis 
digne et laudabiliter serviatur, tribue 
nobis, quesumus, ut ad promissiones 
tuas sine offensione curramus, per 
Dominum, &c. ] 

P [Ibid., fol. exxiv. The Collect is: 
Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, da nobis 
fidei, spei, et charitatisaugmentum ; et 
ut mereamur adsequi quod promittis, 
fac nos amare quod precipis; Per Do- 
minum nostrum, &c.] 

4 [Ibid., fol. exxv. The Collect is: 
Custodi, Domine, quesumus, eccle- 


SERIES. 





SECOND 


_ SERIES, 


288 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


THE SIXTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 
Sarum habet eand. Coll., Ep., et Hvang.* 


THE SEVENTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Coll. , Ep., et Evang.® 


THE EIGHTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Coll., Hp., et Evang. 


THE NINETEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Collect.» 
To lay from you the old man which is cor- 


The Epistle. 


rupt, &c.| Hic incipit Epist. in Ord. Sarum*. 


That he may give to him that needeth.| 


Hic finitur’, 


Sarum habet idem Evangelium’. 


THE TWENTIETH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Coll., Ep., Evang." 


THE TWENTY-FIRST SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Coll., Ep., et Evang.” 


siam tuam propitiatione perpetua; et 
quia sine te Jabitur humana mortalitas ; 
tuis semper auxiliis et abstrahatur a 
noxiis, et ad salutaria dirigatur. Per. 
The Epistle is Galat. v. 25—vi. 10, 
and the Gospel ends at ‘all these things 
shall be added unto you.’ ] 

r (Ibid., fol. cxxvi. The Collect is: 
Ecclesiam tuam, Domine, quesumus, 
miseratio continuata mundet et mu- 
niat; et quia sine te non potest salva 
consistere, tuo semper munere guber- 
netur; Per Dominum,&c. The Gospel 
ends at “God hath visited His peo- 
ple.” ] 

* (Ibid. b, and fol. exxvii. The Col- 
lect is: Tua nos, Domine, quesumus, 
gratia semper et preveniat et sequatur; 
ac bonis operibus jugiter prestet esse 
intentos; Per Dominum. ] 

‘ [The Collect for the eighteenth 
Sunday after Trinity, before 1662, was: 
Lord, we beseech Thee, grant Thy people 
grace to avoid the infections of the 
devil, and with pure heart and mind to 
follow Thee the only God, through 
Jesus Christ our Lord. In the Missal, 


Sarisb. it was: Da, quesumus, Domine, 
populo tuo diabolica vitare contagia, et 
te solum Deum pura mente sectari; Per 
Dominum, &c.—Ibid., fol. exxviii.] 

« (The Collect for the nineteenth 
Sunday after Trinity, before 1662, ran 
thus: O God, forasmuch as without 
Thee we are not able to please Thee, 
grant that the working of Thy mercy 
may in all things direct and rule our 
hearts, through Jesus Christ our Lord. 
The words of the Missal, Sarisb. are; 
Dirigat corda nostra, quesumus, Do- 
mine, tuz miserationis operatio, quia 
tibi sine te placere non possumus; Per 
Dominum nostrum, &c.—Ibid., fol, 
CXxviii. } 

x [Ibid.] 

y (ie., from v. 23 to 28.] 

2 [ Ibid. ] 

® [Ibid. b, and fol. exxix. The Col- 
lectis: Omnipotens et misericors Deus, 
universa nobis adversantia propitiatus 
exclude; ut mente et corpore pariter 
expediti, que tua sunt liberis mentibus 
exequamur; Per Dominum.] 


b [Ibid., b. The Collect is; Largire 








ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 


289 


Sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God.| Hic finitur 


Epist. Sarum®, 


THE TWENTY-SECOND SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Collect., Ep., et Evang. partem4, 
Therefore is the kingdom of heaven likened, &c.| Hic incipit 


Evang. Sarum. 


THE TWENTY-THIRD SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Coll., Epist., et Evang.‘ 


THE TWENTY-FOURTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum habet eandem Collectam®. 
For this cause we also, &c.| Hic incipit Epist. Sarum.® 


THE TWENTY-FIFTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. 


Sarum Dominica proxima ante Adventum. 


Ibidem habetur eadem Coll., Ep., et Evang.' 


The same prophet that should come into the world. | 


Which 


last words refer to Christ’s Advent, next therefore to follow. 

If there be any more Sundays before Advent Sunday, to supply 
the same, shall be taken the service of some of those Sundays 
that are omitted between the Epiphany and Sexagesima.| In 
the Order of Sarum, if there be more Sundays after Trinity 
than twenty-five, it is appointed, that the service of the 
twenty-fourth Sunday shall be repeated over again, once, 


quesumus Domine, fidelibus tuis in- 

dulgentiam placatus et pacem; ut pa- 

riter ab omnibus mundentur offensis, et 

secura tibi mente deserviant. Per &c. } 
© { Ibid. ] 

@ [Ibid., fol. exxx. The Collect is: 
Familiam tuam, quesumus Domine, 
continua pietate custodi; ut a cunctis 
adversitatibus te protegente sit libera, 
et in bonis actibus tuo nomini sit de- 
vota. Per Dominum. The Epistle be- 
gins at “ We are confident of this very 
thing.’’} 

® [ Ibid. b.] 

f [1bid., fol. exxxi. The Collect is: 
Deus, refugium nostrum et virtus, 
adesto piis Ecclesie tue precibus, 
auctor ipse pietatis ;» et preesta, ut quod 


COSIN. 


fideliter petimus, efficaciter consequa- 
mur. Per Dominum. ] 

& (Ibid. b. The Collect is: Absol- 
ve, quesumus Domine, tuorum de- 
licta populorum ; ut a peccatorum nos- 
trorum nexibus, que pro nostra fra- 
gilitate contraximus, tua benignitate 
liberemur. Per Dominum. } 

» (Ibid. The Epistle ends one verse 
before ours. ‘The Gospel is the same, 
but ends at “was made whole from 
that hour,” v. 22. ] 

i [Ibid., fol. cxxxii. b. The Collect 
is: Excita, quzesumus Domine, tuorum 
fidelium voluntates; ut divini operis 
fructum propensius exequentes, pietatis 
tuze remedia majora percipiant. Per 
Dominum. | 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


290 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Secon twice, or thrice, as the number of those Sundays may be. 
—e. So that the twenty-fifth Sunday is always to be observed 
for the Sunday next before Advent*. 


DE APOSTOLIS. 


Quo loco quisque apostolorum docuerit, quam sua singuli 
predicatione effecerint, et quid illis acciderit, quemve vite finem 
sortiti sint, scriptores quidem ecclesiastict commemorant, sed non 
ex omni parte consentiunt, et recentiores sunt plerique, quam quod 
certo istarum rerum conscit esse potuerint. La vero que in Actis 
Apostolorum continentur, loco certissime et verissime historia 
ecclesiastice esse possunt et debent. Lt certum est apostolos 
Christi ab [erosolyma egressos predicavisse Evangelium Christi 
ubique, Domino cooperante, et sermones eorum confirmante per 
subsequentia signa. 

Ab equo itaque lectore veniam mihi dari postulo, si in re- 
citandis tis, que Scriptores Ecclesiastict annotarunt, interdum 
meum gualecunque judicium libere et candide interposuero. 


ST. ANDREW’S DAY. 


Euseb. De Andrea Apostolo. 
Hist. Ecel. 


Lie ‘Sertptores Ecclesiastict affirmant, eum in Scythia et vicinis 
Nazianz.in regionibus Evangelium docuisse. Nazianzenus scribit eum in 
Orat. ad : > , ee ; 

Arianos™, Lpiro predicasse. Dorotheus® in Synopsi dicit eum docuisse 
: gpg etiam apud Sogdianos, Sacas, in Selastopoli interiore, que 
Lite 1% [The rubric in the Missal. Sarisb. 
gives the following directions after the 
service for the twenty-fifth Sunday after 
Trinity: Cum prolixum fuerit tempus 
inter inceptionem historia, “ Deus 
omnium” et Adventum Domini, offi- 
cium “ Dicit Dominus’ per tres dies 
dominicas cantetur ut supra notatum 
est. Cum vero breve fuerit tempus, 
semper proxima dominica ante adven- 
tum quando de dominica agitur cantetur 
**Dicit Dominus” cum oratione “ Ex- 
cita, quesumus, Domine;’’ Epistola 
‘*Eece dies veniunt;’? Evangelio 
“Cum sublevasset.’”’ Si vero dominica 
non vacaverit, tunc in feriis primo loco 
per hebdomadam cantetur. Cetere 
vero dominice que remanserint in 
ferialibus diebus cantentur. That part 


1 [(’AvSpdas (etAnxev) thy SxvOiav.—— 
Euseb. Eccl. Hist., lib. iii. ¢. 1. p. 87.] 

m[... ’Avdpég mpds thy “Hmeipov.— 
S. Greg. Naz. Orat. xxxiii, adv. Arianos, 
§ 11. Op. tom. i. p. 611, A.] 

» Kamrmadoxta nev ody abt kal Tara: 
tia kad 4 TéY Bibbvwy a’r@ eAdyxavor. 
enHrbé ye why Kal thy } tev "Avepwro- 
pdywv ovéuarta’ re Sxvdav épnuta, 
Evtewds re wévtos Exdtepos, Ta Te Tpds 
Boppay kai Nétoy ab’tod KAluara’ 76 Te 
Bifayros wéSov.—Niceph. Callist. Hist, 
Eccl., lib. ii. c. 39.] 

© [’Avdpéq be, Ta wep Toy Evtewov 
kal thy Sxvdlav wacay, Budvtidy Te, 
Makedovia te, xa) ) wept “EAAdSa”*Hel~ 
pos 6 kAjpos Hv.—ld. ibid., lib, iii. ¢. 1.] 

P {Dorothei Episc. Tyri, de vita ac 
morte Prophetarum et Apostolorum 





of our rubric which says ‘‘ And if there 
be fewer, the overplus may be omitted, 
&c.’’ was added in 1662.] 


Synopsis (liber fabulosus) apud Bibl. 
Patr. Max., tom. iii. p. 426, G.] 





eS SS aes 


‘ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. | 291 


est in Aithiopia. Nicephorus ait eum per Cappadociam, Ga- 
latiam, et Bithyniam in Scytharum solitudines ad utrumque 


Pontum EHuxinum accessisse. Qua Abdias4, in vitis apostolorum 


de Andrea commemorat, caute sunt legenda: multis enim in- 
eptiis, que spiritum apostolicum non spirant, historiam suam 
prorsus suspectam reddit. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


De morte 8. Andree alii: affirmant, eum Patris, civit. Achaia, sophro- 


ab Aigea prafecto Edessenorum in crucem actum; alii” eum in 


Scythia crucifixum esse credunt. 


The Collect. 
The Collect in the Order of Sarum is for the intercession 
of Andrew, and so here omitted, this being put instead 


thereof. 


Sarum habet eandem Epistolam et idem Evang. 


ST. THOMAS’S DAY. 


Non habetur hee Collecta in Ord. Sarum. 


Sarum habe 


eandem Lpistolam et idem Evang." 


THE CONVERSION OF ST. PAUL. 
Ordo Sarum habet eand. Coll., Ep., et Evang.* 


THE PURIFICATION OF ST. MARY. 


In the Order of Sarum’ here is first appointed the bene- 
diction of wax candles, to be distributed to the people, and 


4 [Acta Apostolorum apocrypha Ab- 
diz primo, ut ferunt, Babylonie epi- 
scopo ascript. lib. iii. de Gestis beati 
Andrew Apostoli; ap. Fabric. Cod. 
Apocr. N. ‘T., tom. ii. pp. 456—515. ] 

t (The Collect for S. Andrew’s Day 
in Missal. Sarisb. was: Majestatem 
tuam Domine suppliciter exoramus ut 
sicut ecclesia tuze beatus Andreas 
apostolus extitit preedicator et rector, 
ita apud te sit pro nobis perpetuus in- 
tercessor, per Dominum, &c.— Missale 
Sarisb. (Sanctorale), fol. i. b.] 

* (Ibid. But the Epistle in Missal. 
Sarisb. began at v. 10, and ended with 
v. 18.] 

t [The Collect in Missal. Sarisb. for 
S. Thomas’s Day was: Da nobis, 
quesumus, Domine, beati Thome apo- 
stoli tui ita solennitatibus gloriari ut 
ejus semper et patrociniis sublevemur, 
et fidem congrua devotione sectemur, 
per Dominum, &c.—Ibid., fol. v.] 


" [Ibid.; but the Gospel in Missal. 
Sarisb. ends with v. 29. 

x [Ibid., fol. viii. ‘The Collect for 
the feast of the Conversion of S. Paul, 
before 1662, was: God, which hast 
taught all the world through the 
preaching of the blessed Apostle St. 
Paul, grant, we beseech Thee, that we 
which have his wonderful conversion 
in remembrance, may follow and fulfil 
Thy holy doctrine that he taught, 
through Jesus Christ our Lord. And 
in Missal. Sarisb.: Deus qui universum 
mundum beati Pauli Apostoli tui pree- 
dicatione docuisti, da nobis, quesumus, 
ut qui ejus hodie conversionem colimus, 
per ejus ad te exempla gradiamur, per 
Dominum, &c. The Gospel ends one 
verse earlier than ours, at ‘‘shall in- 
herit everlasting life.’’ ] 

y [The directions given in Missal, 
Sarisb, (ubi supra, fol. x.) are: In 
purificatione beate Marie Virginis 


u 2 


nius. 

2 Sabellic. 
Enn. 7. 
lib. iv. 


292 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 


Second set up in their houses, when they will, for the driving away 


of devils and all other mischiefs from them. 

This benediction of wax-lights is there founded upon 
Simeon’s words in St. Luke, “To be a light,” &e. 

Sarum habet eandem Collectam’. 

In the Order of Sarum, the Epistle is Mal. 11.*: Hee dictt 
Dominus, ecce Ego mitto Angelum Meum, &c. usque ad, Sicut 


anni antiqui, dicit Dominus. 


Sarum habet hoc ipsum Evang. et Canticum Simeonis in 


Sine”. 


ST. MATTHIAS’ DAY. 


In the Order of Sarum, the Collect is for the intercession 
of Matthias, and therefore here omitted and changed*. 
Sarum habet eandem Epistolam et idem Evang.* 


ANNUNCIATION OF 


THE VIRGIN MARY. 


Virgin Mary.| Jam quod diem conceptionis Christi sub 


Marie nomine plebs celebrat, 


cantata hora sexta fiat benedictio lumi- 
nis solenniter a pontifice vel a sacer- 
dote, cappa serica induto, cum ailiis 
indumentis sacerdotalibus, super supre- 
mum gradum altaris converso ad orien- 
tem, sic incipiente Dominus vobis- 
eum,” ‘Et cum spiritn tuo,” “ Ore- 
mus.” **Benedic, Domine Jesu Christe, 
hane creaturam cere supplicantibus 
‘nobis, et infunde ei per virtutem sancte 
crucis benedictionem ccelestem, ut qui 
eam ad repellendas tenebras humano 
usui tribuisti, talem signaculo sanctz 
crucis tue fortitudinem et benedictio- 
nem accipiat, ut quibuscunque locis 
accensa sive apposita fuerit discedat 
diabolus, et contremiscat et fugiat pal- 
lidus. cum omnibus ministris suis de 
habitationibus illis, nee praesumat am- 
plius inquietare servientes tibi, qui cum 
Deo Patre et Spiritu Sancto vivis et 
regnas Deus, per omnia secula secu- 
lorum. Amen.’ Again in the next 
prayer: “ Domine, sancte Pater, omni- 
potens eterne Deus, qui omnia ex nihilo 
creasti et jussu tuo per opera apium 
hune liquorem ad perfectionem cereo- 
rum venire fecisti et qui hodierna die 
petitionem justi Simeonis implesti, te 
humiliter deprecamur ut,” &c. Anda 
rubric then orders: ‘‘ Peracta candela- 


acriter in eam superstitionem 


rum benedictione accendantur candele 
et distribuantur.’’ | 

 {Ibid. The Collect is: Omnipo- 
tens sempiterne Deus, Majestatem 
tuam supplices exoramus, ut sicut 
unigenitus Filius tuus hodierna die 
cum nostre carnis substantia in tem- 
plo est presentatus, ita nos facias pu- 
rificatis tibi mentibus presentari. Per 
eundem Dominum, ] 

*® [The Service-books before 1662 
directed the Epistle for the Purification 
of the Virgin to be “the same that 
is appointed for the Sunday.” The 
Missal. Sarisb, has the Epistle which 
we now use, Mal. iii. 1, ending how- 
ever with v. 4.—Ibid., fol. xi. b.] 

> [The Gospel before 1662 was 
S. Luke ii. 22, to v. 27. In the Mis- 
sal. Sarisb. it was S. Luke ii. 22—32. 
—Ibid., fol. xii. ] 

¢ [The Collect for S. Matthias’s 
Day in Sarum Missal was; Deus, qui 
beatum Matthiam Apostolorum tuorum 
collegio sociasti, tribue, quesumus, ut 
ejus interventione tue circa nos pietatis 
semper viscera sentiamus; Per Domi- 
num nostrum Jesum Christum filium 
tuum.— Ibid., fol. xiv. b.] 

4 [Ibid.] 

















ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 


quotannis envectus sum. 
Domine in Martio appellant. 
vulgo creditur. 


293 


Galli enim sua lingua festum nostre 
Ac proinde dies ille sacer esse 
Sic tamen mihi temperavi, ut compescerem ex 


adverso, qui dies illos prorsus tollendos clamitabant. Calv., Ep. 


1288. 


In Ord. Sarum Collecta est pro intercessione V. Maria; ac 
proinde in hac nostra Liturgia non habetur*. 
_ In Ord. Sarum habetur éadem LE pistola et idem Lvang.® 


ST. MARK’S DAY. 


In Ord. Sarum hee Oratio non habetur, sed alia pro inter- 


cessione™. 


Sarum habet eand. Epistolam' et idem Evangelium, 


ST. PHILIP AND ST. JAMES’S DAY. 


In Ord. Sarum hee Oratio non habetur, sed alia de meritis'. 
Ordo Sarum habet pro Epistola 5 Sap. Stabunt justi™. 
Ordo Sarum habet idem Evang.™ 


ST. BARNABAS, APOSTLE. 


In Ord. Sarum non habetur ista Oratio, sed alia pro in- 


tercessione°. 


* [Epist. Calvini Ministro Burensi. 
Epist. et Respous., p. 63. col. 1. Op. 
ed. Amst. 1667. ] 

f [The Collect in Missal. Sarisb. for 
the Annunciation was: Deus, quide bea- 
te Marie Virginis utero Verbum tuum, 
angelo nunciaute, carnem suscipere 
voluisti, preesta supplicibus tuis, ut qui 
vere eam Dei genitricem credimus ejus 
apud te intercessionibus adjuvemur ; 
per eundem Dominum, &c.—Ibid., fol. 
xvii. Our Collect is the Post-Com- 
munio in the Sarum Office: Gratiam 
tuam,quesumus Domine, mentibus nos- 
tris infunde; ut qui angelo nuntiante 
Christi Filii tui incarnationem cogno- 
vimus, per passionem ejus et crucem 
ad resurrectionis gloriam perducamur. 
Qui tecum vivit et regnat Deus; Per 
eundem &c.—Ibid., fol. xviii. ] 

& [Ibid.] 

h [The Collect in Missal. Sarisb. for 
S. Mark’s Day was: Deus, qui beatum 
Marcum Evangelistam tuum, evan- 
gelice preedicationis gratia sublimasti, 
tribue, quesumus, ejus nos semper et 
eruditione proficere, et oratione defendi; 
Per Dominum, &c.—Ibid., fol. xix. b.] 


i (Ibid. But the Epistle in Missal. 
Sarisb. ended at v.13, ‘‘ Unto the mea- 
sure of the stature of the fulness of 
Christ,” and the Gospel ended at v.7.] 

k {The Gospel in the Sarum Office, 
being the same as ours, is the common 
gospel for the Vigil of an Apostle or 
Kivangelist’s day.—Ibid., Commune, 
fol. i. ] 

1 [The Collect for S. Philip and 
S. James’s Day in Missal. Sarisb. 
was: Deus, qui nos annua apostolorum 
tuorum Phiiippi et Jacobi solennitate 
letificas, praesta, queesumus, ut quoium 
gaudemus meritis instruamur exemplis; 
Per Dominum, &c.— Ibid., fol. xx. 
In our Service, before 1662, it was: O 
Almighty God, whom truly to know is 
everlasting life; grant us perfectly to 
know Thy Son Jesus Christ to be the 
way, the truth, and the life, as Thou 
hast taught S. Philip and other the 
apostles, through Jesus Christ our 
Lord. j 

m fIbid. Wisd. v. 1—5.] 

2 [ Ibid. ] 

° [The Collect for S. Barnabas’ 
Day in the Missal. Sarisb. was: Ec- 


SECOND 
SERIES. | 


SEconD 


SERIES. 
_———— 


~ 


294 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Ord. Sarum habet Epist. 2 ad Eph. Jam non estis?. 


Sarum habet idem Evang. 


ST. JOHN BAPTIST, 


In Ord. Sarum hae Oratio non habetur, sed alia non inepta. 
Sarum habet Epist. ex 49 Esaie, Audite insula’. 


Sarum habet idem fivang.* 


Hor Fle hath visited and redeemed His people.| Hie finitur 


Evang. in Ordine Sarum. 


ST. PETER’S DAY. 


Ord. Sarum habet, Petri et Pauli*. 
Hee oratio non habetur in Ord. Sarum*; mandatum tamen 
de pascendo greye habetur in Vigilia pro Evangelio’. 


Sarum habet eandem Epist.* 


Sarum habet idem Evangelium’ 


Evangelium in die 8. Petri. 


And I say unto thee, Thou art Peter.] In uno Petro figuratur 


unitas omnium pastorum Ecclesia. St. Aug., in Serm. de Vigil. 
Apostolorum Petri et Pauli®. “ Sunt quedam que ad Apostolum 
Petrum proprie pertinere videntur, nec tamen illustrem habent in- 
tellectum, nisi cum ad Ecclesiam referuntur, cujus ille agnoscitur 
in figura gessisse personam.”? Idem, in Psal. 108°. Loquitur 
Dominus ad Petrum, Quod tu es Petrus, &c. Super unum 
edificat Ecclesiam, et quamvis Apostolis omnibus post resur- 


clesiam tuam, quesumus, Domine, beati 
Barnabe Apostoli tui commendet oratio, 
et pro ea interventor existat quam doc- 
trina et passione illustrat; Per, &c.— 
Ibid., fol. xxv. b.] 

P (Ibid. This is the Epistle from 
the Commune unius Apostoli.—Ibid., 
Commune, fol. i. b.] 

4 [ Tbid. } 

x (The Collect for S. John the 
Baptist’s Day in Missal. Sarisb. was: 
Deus qui prasentem diem honorabilem 
nobis in beati Joannis nativitate fecisti, 
da populis tuis spiritualium gratiam 
gaudiorum, et omnium fidelium mentes 
dirige in viam salutis zterne; Per 
Dominum, &e.—Ibid., fol. xxix. b.] 

* (Ibid. Is. xlix. 1—17.] 

* {Tbid.] 

“ [That is, in the Sarum Office it is 
the festival of the two apostles, Dies 


apostolorum Petri et Pauli.—Ibid., fol. 
XXxi. | 

* [The Collect for S. Peter’s Day 
in Missal. Sarisb. was: Deus, qui ho- 
diernam diem apostolorum tuorum 
Petri et Pauli martyrio consecrasti, da 
ecclesiw tuze eorum in omnibus sequi 
preceptum per quos religionis sumpsit 
exordium; Per, &e.—Ibid., fol. xxxi.] 

Y {That is, John xxi. 15, Ibid., fol. 
xxix. b. 

7 [Ibid., fol. xxx.] 
'® (Ibid. b.] 

> [In uno Petro figurabatur unitas 
omnium pastorum, sed bonorum qui 
sciant oves Christi pascere Christo, non 
sibi.—S. Aug. Serm. 147. de Script. 
(aliter Serm. 24. de Sanct.) cap. 1. § 2. 
Op. tom. v. col. 702, D.] 

¢ (Enarr, in Psal. 108. § 1. Op. tom. 
iv. col, 1215, E.] 











ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 295 


rectionem suam parem potestatem tribuat, dicens, Ego mitio 
vos, &c. tamen ut unitatem manifestaret, unitatis ejusdem ori- 
ginem ab uno incipientem, sua authoritate disposuit.. Hoe 
utique erant ceteri apostoli, quod Petrus fuit, pari consoriio 
prediti honoris et potesiatis; sed exordium ab unitate pro- 
Jiciscitur, ut Ecclesia Christi una monstretur, &c. Caus. 24. 
guest. 1. cap. loquitur®, 

Istud etiam probatur ex verbis Christi, Ego pro te oravi, 
ut non deficiat fides tua. Quod de Ecclesia interpretatum est, 
quia fides Keclesie nunquam deficit neque errare potest. Cap. 
a recta, in Caus. cit.c Et probat Archidiaconus in cap. Ita 
Dominus, dist. 19'. Non igitur intelligi potest de fide Petri, 
qui in fide defecit, ut legitur in Matth. cap. 26. et in cap. fide 
hor. dist. 19%. Porro sicut ista verba ad Petrum directa, de 
Ecclesia intelliguntur, ita et illa, Tu es Petrus, de Ecclesia 
atidem intelligenda sunt. 

And I will give unto thee the keys, &c.] 

Si hoc tantum Petro dictum est, non hoc facit Ecclesia. 
Si ergo hoc in Ecclesia fit, Petrus quando claves accepit, 
Ecclesiam sanciam significavit. St. Aug., Tract. 50, in Joh. 
cap.12", Hoc Petrus pro omnibus tanquam personam unitatis 
accepit. Idem, Serm. x. super Joh.' Non sine causa inter 
omnes Apostolos Ecclesie Catholice personam sustinet Petrus : 
huic enim claves regni celorum date sunt; et cum ei dicitur 


omnibus dicitur, Quodcunque ligaveris, &c. amas Me? Pasce 


oves Meas, &c. Idem, de Agone Christiano, cap. 30°. Habent 


quidem hance judiciariam potestatem omnes alii apostoli, &c. . 


Petrus autem ideo specialiter accipit, ut omnes intelligant, 
quod quicunque ab unitate fidet et societate ejus se separaverit, 
nec a peccatis solvi, nec celum ingredi potest. St. Hieronymus, 


ad [Decretum, pars ii. causa 24, 
quest. i. c. 18. The passage is from 
S. Cyprian de Unitate Ecclesie, § 3. 
p. 106. ed. Fell. ] 

© [ Lbid., c. 9.]' 

f [See above, p. 230, note e. The 
editor has not had access to this work. ] 

& [This seems to be a reference to 
the same work. ] 

h [Si hoe Petro tantum dictum est, 
non facit hoc Ecclesia. Si autem et in 
Ecclesia fit, ut que in terra ligantur, 
in celo ligentur, et que solvuntur in 
terra, solvantur in ccelo: quia cum 
excommunicat Ecclesia in coeloligatur 


excommunicatus; cum _ reconciliatur 
ab Ecclesia, in ccelo solvitur reconci- 
liatas: Si hoe ergo in Ecclesia fit, 
Petrus quando claves accepit Ecclesiam 
sanctam significavit.—S. Aug. in Johan. 
cap. 12. Tract. 50. § 12. Op. tom. iii. 
p- 2. col. 633, E.] 

i [These words, ‘hoc cum omnibus 
tanquam personam gerens ipsius uni- 
tatis acceperit; ideo unus pro omnibus. 
—lId. ibid., Tract. 118. § 4. ibid., col. 
80], A. Similar pas-ages are very 
frequent in S. Augustine. | 

k (Id. de Agone Christiano, cap. 30. 
§ 32. Op. tom. vi. col. 260, C.] 


SECOND) 


SERIES. 


Seconp in Glossa super hec verba'. 
SERIES. 


296 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 


Cum Petro dixit, Tibi dabo claves, 
transivit in alios hujus potestatis jus, quodque uni commendatur 
omnibus intimatur; et Petro dixit singulariter, quia cunctis 
Ecclesia rectoribus Petri forma proponitur. Leo, Serm. ii. de 
Ascens." Ex his satis aperte claret, non esse verum, quod 
jurisdictio ecclesiastica sic in Ecclesia tanquam thesaurus 
in arca, et quod Petrus receperit claves, ut aperiret arcam 
quando ei videretur, quasi exercitium potestatis soli Petro con- 
cessum sit, sed quod potestas in habitu sit concessa Ecclesie 
universe. 

Falsa est igitur Petri de Palude de Potestate Papa, 
Quest. 8. Art. 2°. et aliorum papistarum doctrina, qui volunt 
alios apostolos non immediate a Christo, sed a Petro potesta- 
tem jurisdictionis accepisse. 


ST. JAMES, APOSTLE, 


Ista Oratio in Ord. Sarum non habetur, sed alia de presidio 


8S. Jacobi°. 


In Ord. Sar. Epist. est 2 ad Eph. Jam, &c.” 


Sarum habet istud Evang.4 


ST. BARTHOLOMEW, APOSTLE. 


In Ord. Sar. Oratio non multum differt ab hac nostra*. 


1 [These words are cited as Jerome’s 
in the Glossa Ordinaria on this pas- 
sage. ] 

m [S. Leo, Serm. iv. In anniver- 
sario die ejusdem assuniptionis, cap. 3. 
Op. tom. i. col. 18. et Serm. 1xxxiii. 
in natali S. Petri Apostoli, cap. 2. ibid. 
col. 33]. ] 

» [Octava conclusio est de potestate 
jurisdictionis, quod eam alii apostoli non 
habuerunt a Christo immediate, sed 
quamcunque habuerunt a Petro habue- 
runt.—Petrus de Palude de causa im- 
mediata ecclesiastice potestatis. Arti- 
culus secundus, conclusio octava, sign. 
b. iii. 2. Paris. 1506. ] 

° [The Collect for S. James’s Day 
in Missal. Sarisb. was: Esto, Domine, 
plebi tui sanctificator et custos, ut apo- 
stoli tui Jacobi munita presidiis, et 
conversatione tibi placeat et secura 
deserviat; Per, &c.—Missale Sarisb. 
Sanctorale, fol. xxxix. ] 

P [The Epistle referred to is E:phes. 


ii. 19—22, the Epistle for the feast of 
one apostle in the Commune unius 
Apostoli.—Miss. Sarisb. Commune, fol. 
i, b. We retain it on S. Thomas’s 
Day. | 

4 rtbid., fol. xxxix. ] 

r [The Collect for 8. Bartholomew's 
Day, before 1662, was in these words: 
Almighty and everlasting God, which 
hast given grace to Thine apostle Bar- 
tholomew truly to believe and to preach 
Thy word, grant, we beseech Thee, unto 
Thy Church, both to love that he be- 
lieved, and to preach that he hath 
taught, through Christ our Lord. 
And in the Missal. Sarisb.: Omnipo- 
tens sempiterne Deus, qui hujus diei 
venerandam sanctamque letitiam in 
beati Bartholomezi ap»stoli tui festivi- 
tate tribuisti, da Ecclesia tuw, quesu- 
mus, et amare quod credidit et predi- 
care quod docuit; Per Dominum, &c.— 
Ibid., fol. li. ] 





ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES, AND GOSPELS. 297 


Sarum habet Epist. ex 2 ad Eph. Jam non estis*. 
Sar. habet idem Evang.* 





ST. MATTHEW, APOSTLE. 


Ista Oratio non habetur in Ordine Sarum, sed alia de inter- 
cessione S. Matthew”. 

Ord. Sarum habet Epist. ex Ezekiel i. Similitudo vulius*. 

Sarum habet idem Evang.’ 


ST. MICHAEL, AND ALL ANGELS. 


Sarum habet eandem Orationem’. 
Sarum Epist. habet ex Apocal. cap. i. Significavit Deus*. 
Ista Epistola habetur in Ord. Sar. alio die qui dicitur 
S. Michaelis in Monte tumba”. 
Sarum habet idem Evangelium’. 


ST. LUKE THE EVANGELIST. 


In Ord. Sarum habetur alia Oratio pro intercessione 
B. Luce". 

Sarum habet Epist. ut in die S. Matihar®. 

Sarum habet idem Evang.* 


ST. SIMON AND JUDE, APOSTLES.” 


Sarum non habet hanc Orationem, sed aliam non ineptams, 


* [See above, p. 294, note p. ] in Monte tumba, was observed Oct. 16. 
t (Ibid., fol. li. This Gospel is from See the Miss. Sarisb. Sanctorale, fol. 
the Commune unius Apostoli, fol. ii. ] ]xiii. 


« {The Collect in the Missal. Sarisb. ¢ [ Ibid., fol. lix. b.] 
for S. Matthew's Day, was: Beati 4 {The Collect for S. Luke’s Day 
Matthzi Apostoli tui et Evangelista, in the Missal Sarisb. was: Interve- 
Domine, precibus adjuvemur, ut, quod niat pro nob’s, Domine, quzesumus, 
possibilitas nostra non obtinet, ejus sanctus Lucas Evangelista, qui crucis 
nobis intercessione donetur; Per, &e.— mortificationem jugiter in suo corpore 
Ibid., fol. lvii. b. } pro tui nominis honore portavit; !er 

x (The Epistle is that from the Dominum nostrum, &c.—Ibid., fol. 
Commune unius Evangelista, fol. iii., I xiii. b. ] 
Ezek. i. 10—14. ] € | See above, note x. ] 

Y [Ibid., fol. lvii.] f { Ibid., fol. Ixiii. b.j 

* [The Collect is: Deus, qui miro gs [The Collect for S. Simon and 
ordine Angelorum ministeriahominum- §.Jude’s Day in the Missal. Sarisb. 
que dispensas; concede propitius, ut was: Deus qui nos per beatos Apostolos 
quibus tibi ministrantibus inccelosem- tuos Simonem et Judam ad agnitio- 

_ perassistitur; ab his in terravita nostra nem tui nominis venire tribuisti, ad 


muniatur.—Ibid., fol. lix.] nobis eorum gloriam sempiternam et 
* [The Epistle is Rev. i. 1—5, part proficiendo celebrare, et celebrando 
of the first verse only being read. | proficere, per Dominum, &c,—lbid., 


> [This festival, called S. Michaelis fol. Ixv.] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


298 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Sarum habet Epist. Rom. viii. 
Deum". 
Sarum habet idem Evang.i 


Scimus quod diligentibus 


ALL SAINTS’ DAY. 


All Saints. In the Order of Sarum these saints were 
reckoned to be, the Virgin Mary, the several orders of 
angels, the patriarchs, the prophets, the apostles, evangelists, 
martyrs, confessors, monks, virgins, and all clergymen. Vide 
eund. Ord. ad hune diem*, et ad Missam de omnibus sanctis 


per totum annum. 


Ordo Sarum habet Orationem de intercessione et meritis 


omnium Sanctorum. 


Sarum habet eandem Epistolam™. 
Sarum habet idem Evangelium*. 


» Ci. e. Rom, viii. 23—39. Ibid. ] 

i (Ibid. The Gospel ended at “they 
hated Me without a cause.”’ ] 

k [See the Sequentia for this day.— 
Tbid., fol. Ixvi. b. ] 

| (The Collect for All-Saints Day 
in Missa’. Sarisb. was: Omnipotens 
sempiterne Deus, qui nos omnium Sane- 


torum merita sub una tribuisti celebri- 
tate venerari, quzesumus ut desideratain 
nobis tue propitiationis abundantiam 
multiplicatis intercessoribus largiaris; 
Per &c.—Ibid., fol. Ixvi. b.] 

m [ Ibid. ] 

n [TIbid., but the last clause is 
omitted. } 


ee ae 


~ 7 es 


Cr nee See ee Sere ee ee ee eee ee 





yee 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 299 eee 


Varie de- 
nomina- 
tiones que 
huic sacre 
actione a 
THE ORDER FOR THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE LORD'S SUPPER®. S. Scrip- 
tura, et an- 
tiquis Pa- 
° P ° . tribus at- 

Sic enim Apostolus Paulus hujus sacrament celebrationem tyivute 
appellat, 1 Cor. xi. 20, cupiaxov detrvov. Item, 1 Cor. x. 21, sunt 
tpatélav xupiacnyv. Canam Domini, et mensam Dominicam. Domini. 

. os . 2 
In Actis Apostolorum, cap. ii. 42, dictum Kowwwvia, Com- Maile, 
: ; ate i é ominica. 

muUnio, Kal KAdoLs TOU apTtov, Fractio panis. Quam loquendi* Com- 
eee . . 2 munio. 

formam veteres imitati sunt. A priore enim et magis per- 4 practic 

spicua actione totum sacramentum hanc denominationem acce- Panis. 

pit, figura nec nova, nec parum usitata. Hebreis certe fran- 

gere panem idem est quod cibum sumere: et sicut Greci ab 

altera parte (nempe potu) totum convivium ovyrroc.ov dixerunt, 

ita etiam Hebrei ab altera sed potiore parte (nempe fractione 

ac esu panis) totum denominarunt. 

Porro quoniam Servator noster, quando suprema sua cums cCipus et 
Pracenults cena hoc sacramentum instituebat, eddoyjcas Kal i eernaed 
evyaptoTicas, panem fregit poculumque distribuit, idem quoque 6 Rucha- 
nobis faciendum ostenderat; inde patres et Ecclesia deduz- "sta. 
erunt appellationem Eucharistie ; qua voce utitur etiam Syrus 
peerpree Act. i. 42. Anpeliont quogue antonomastice Nevtoup-7 Liturgia. 
ylav, cvvakw, Kat uwvotyptov, que vocabula aliis quoque rebus = a 

yste- 
sacris conveniunt. ee 

Sacramentum altaris dicitur non inepie, eo quod peragatur © gacra- 
vel administretur ad mensam, que cum altari communem habet p aia 

. . . . s 
formam, sive imaginem, etsi non eundem usum, ad quem tamen 
alludit. Altaris igitur vocabulum, idque illustriore significa- 
tione quam in V. T. ab Apostolo Paulo in N. T. Hebr. xiii. Wee xiii. 
-] 
aigue etiam a S. Johanne, Apoc. viii. e¢ ab Esaia propheta, ; ree sie 
utrisque de ecclesia Christiana loquentibus usurpatur. 3. ] 

Sacrificium vero appellarunt e veteribus plerigue, partim™ Sacrif- 
imitatione V. T. cujus vocabula et phrases Novi ritibus ac-“"™ 
commodabant ; partim quod in hoc sacramento fidelibus com- 


municantibus presens sit id, quod olim materia fuit sacrificii, 


_ sive Corpus et Sanguis Christi, que pro nobis Deo Patri in 


° [This note is derived almost en- the extracts on the Communion Service 
tirely from Calixtus’ Dissertation De generally, in this series of notes. The 
Sacrificio Christi semel in cruce oblato, references are given at the end of 
et initerabili, (Helmstadt, 1644,) as are each extract. ] 


SEcOND 


SERIES. 


12 Hostia. 
13 Victima. 
14 Tmmo- 
latio, 

15 Oblatio. 
16 Missa. 


300 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Ara Crucis obtulit; partim quod Eucharistia utpote sacra- 
mentum et actio a Christo instituta, sit Dei cultus, Ipsi gratus 
et acceptus, et propterea referatur inter sacrificia spiritualia, 
sive figurate et analogice ita dicta; qualis ministeriorum N. T. 
appellatio nec infrequens est nec ignobilis. Atque hinc reliqua 
vocabula ab antiquis sensu satis sano, a recentioribus vero 
nimis depravato, usurpato, Hostie, Victimea, Immolandi, et 
Offerendi. ‘ 

Vox Misse°® primo invenitur apud S. Ambrosium, Epist. 
xxxiil. 6.5; “ Ego” (inquit ad Marcellinam sororem) “ mansi 
in munere, Missam facere cepi; dum offero captum cognovi a 
populo castulum quendam,” &c. Invenire est apud eundem Mis- 
sarum solennia, et precationes ad Missam preparantes duas4 
(apud Ambrosium vero, sicut mox dicemus, vox Missa alia pror- 
sus res erat, quam est hodie apud Romanenses novos) e quibus, 
unam et illo dignam, et nobis necessariam, ad scribendum non 
pigebit. ‘Fac nos” (ingquit) Domine Jesu Christe, per gra- 
tiam Tuam semper illud de tanto mysterio credere et intelligere, 
sentire et firmiter retinere, dicere et cogitare, quod Tibi placet, 
et expedit anime mee. Intret Spiritus Tuus bonus in cor meum, 
qui sonet tibi sine sono, et sine strepitu verborum loquatur om- 
nem veritatem tantorum mysteriorum.” 

Misse autem vocabulum ab antiquis in Latina ecclesia, alia 
prorsus notione usurpatum est, quam que hodie apud poniificios 
obtinet. Veteres enim Latini dixerunt, Ite Missa est, (sicut 
Greci dicebant decors) id est, missio sive dimissio; quemad- 
modum remissam pro remissione tidem usurparunt. Hine 
itaque factum ut ab unico, eoque ultimo actu, totum illud sa- 
crorum actuum corpus uno nomine Missa appellabatur. Usur- 
patur Missa pro dimissione, can. 84. Concil. Carthag. 1V.", et 
can. 1. Concilit Valentinis ; in quibus mentio fit Misse cate- 




















© Si tamen perbrevis illa, que ex- 
stat Cornelii Rom. episcopi ad Lupi- 
cinum Vien. episcopum epistola ge- 
nuina est, vocabulum Misse jam tum 
medio seculo 3°, in usu fuit. “ Scias”’ 
ait, ‘quod publice neque in cryptis 
notioribus Missas agere Christianis li- 
cet.” Ob odium nempe imperatorum 
Galli et Volusiani. [ Epist. S. Cornelii 
ad Lupicinum apud Concilia, tom. i. 
col. 701, B. First printed by Baronius, 
Annal. Eccl. ad ann. 225. n. 47.] 

P [S. Ambros. Epist. xx. (edd. vet. 


xxxiii.) ad Marcellinam, § 5. Op. tom. 
ii. col. 853, B.] 

4 {These are spurious works, printed 
in the appendix to the works of S. 
Ambrose, tom. ii. col. 489, sqq. } 

‘ {Ut episcopus nullum_ prohibeat 
ingredi ecclesiam, et audire verbum 
Dei, sive gentilem, sive hereticum, 
sive Judzum, usque ad missam cate- 
chumenorum.—Cone. Carthag. LV. (ita 
dict.) can. 84. Concilia, tom. ii. col. 
1444, B.] 

* {Ut sacrosancta Evangelia ante 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 301 


chumenorum. Sicut enim duplex sacrum, catechumenorum sci- 
licet et fidelium, ad offertorium usque Missa catechumenorum 
dicebatur (quos priusquam offerretur, discedere oportuit,) ab 
offertorio et deinceps Missa fidelium. Altera autem alteri con- 
tinua erat; nisi quod dimissio illa catechumenorum et peeni- 
tentium intercederet, Isidorus Hisp. lib. Origin. vi. cap. 19': 
© Quando catechumeni foris mittuntur, clamat Levita, Si quis 
catechumenus remansit, exeat foris, et inde Missa; quia sacra- 
mento altaris interesse non possunt, qui nondum regenerati 
aut baptizati noscuntur.” Et Alcuinus, lib. de divinis Officiis® : 
* Missa nihil aliud intelligitur, quam dimissio, id est, absolutio 
(sive finis sacrorum) quum celebratis omnibus, populus per 
vocem diaconi a solenni observatione dimittitur.’? Idem tamen 
ut etiam plures alu medie infimeque etatis scriptores, aliter 
alio loco explicat, improprie quidem, licet non impie*: “ Missa 
dicitur quasi transmissa, vel transmissio, eo quod preces et cb- 
lationes fidelis populi per ministerium et orationem sacerdotis 
ad Deum transmitiuntur; sive quia nos mittat ad Deum’.” 
Talia potius ad vocabulum alludant, quam genuinum et verum 
ejus etymon explicant. Ipsum autem Misse vocabulum, sicut 
apud pontificios hodie usurpatur pro vero et proprio Christi 
sacrificio, Deo patri (toties quoties) oblato pro vivis et defunc- 
tis, nusquam apud antiquos invenitur. Atque ob hanc causam 
ab Ecclesia Anglicana, que pravam illam opinionem de Misse 
sacrificio extirpatum ivit, ipsum etiam vocabulum Misse (novo, 
non antiquo sensu) rejicitur. In prima quidem Lliturgie edi- 
tione sub Rege Edvardo VI. etiam nomen Misse* (uti vulgo 
tum dicebatur) retentum fuit; sed quum illud homines papis- 
tarum doctrina fermentati ad pravum sensum detorquebant, 
visum est episcopis, ut in secunda ejusdem Liturgie publica- 


munerum illationem vel missam cate- * [Id., ibid., p. 67. col. i. E. After 





chumenorum, in ordine lectionum, post 
apostolum legantur.—Cone. Valent. (in 
Hisp. A.D. 524.) c. i. Ibid., tom. v. 
col. 759, B, C.] 

* (S. Isidori Hispal. Etymologiarum 
(seu Originum) lib. vi. c 19. § 4 
Missa tempore sacrificii est quaudo, 
&¢.— Op. tom. iii. p. 279.] 

" [Alcuini de divinis Officiis, cap. 
De celebratione Misse et ejus signifi- 
catione, (ad fin. in verb. Ite Missa est) 
wy Hittorp. de Div. Off. p. 79. col. 
i. A. 


eo quod, the words of Alcuin are, po- 
pulus fidelis de suis meritis non pre- 
sumens, preces et oblationes quas Deo 
omnipotenti offerre desiderat, per mi- 
nisterium et orationem sacerdotis ad 
Deum transmittat. ] 

y [Id., ibid., p. 67. col. ii. A.] 

2 [The title at the beginning of the 
Communion Service in the first Book 
of Common-Prayer in the reign of Kd- 
ward VI., A.D. 1549, is, ‘‘ The Supper 
of the Lord, and the Holy Communion, 
commonly called the Mass,’’ ] 


SEcoND 
SERIES. 


Augustana 
Conf. et 
Apolog. 
cap. 3. de 
Abusibus?*. 


[1 Cor. 
xiv. ult. ] 


302 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


tione penitus omitteretur. Interim Missa vocabulum prout | 
apud veteres Latine Ecclesia patres in usu fuit, nequaquam a 
nostris Ecclesiis improbatur. ‘‘ Falso accusantur Ecclesia | 
nostre (verba sunt Confessionis Augustane sive Protestantium 
in Germania, quorum exemplar et nos etiam Angli in plerisque 
secult sumus,) quod Missam aboleant. Missa enim apud nos 
retinetur, ea scilicet que habet exemplum ex Scriptura et pa- 
tribus, et summa reverentia celebratur. Servantur et usitate 
ceremonia fere omnes,” ordo lectionum, orationum, cantionum, 
oblationis munerum, benedictionis sive consecrationis, et com- | 
munionis sive distributionis, que in ecclesia peragi solebant’.’ | 
Habetur Missale haud multum a nostra Liturgia discre- 
pans, “quod ad usum Ecclesiarum Augustane Confessionis 
Wittenberga speciosis et grandibus characteribus excusum una 
cum nolis musicis ante annos LX. edidit Matthaus Ludecus‘’, 
Ecclesia cathedralis Hamburgensis Decanus, vir juxta pius et 
erudiius ; qui suum propositum cum Hieronymiana idem fecisse — 
perhibet, antiquos legere, probare singula, retinere que bona 
sunt et a fide Ecclesia Catholice non recedere*.” Id quod nos 
etiam palam profitemur. 

Ex his “manifestum est, nes etiamsi in Missa Sacrificium 
proprie sie dictum non agnoscamus, neque Christt sacrificium 
semel in cruce peractum iterari admittamus, et quos in eam 
abusus et corruptelas temporum sequiorum iniquitas invexit re~ 
pudiemus ; minime tamen cmnium aut priscos, laudabiles, et 





Tpos oiKodomiy Kat TO evoynuov facientes Ritus, aut ipsam 


veram, germanam et Christianam Missam abolevimus*.” 


THE ORDER FOR THE ADMINISTRATION, &e. 


In Primitiva Ecclesia hic erat ritus et ordo Sacrorum in 





* {The words cited in the text are 
from the Confession of Augsburg, c. 
ili. De Missa, at the beginning, (Libri 
Syn:bolici Eccl. Lutherane, ed, Meyer, 
p- 17. Gotting. 1830.) The latter part, 
erdo lectionum, &c., is accommo- 
dated from the Apologia Confessionis, 
c. xii. De Missa, (ibid., p. 15,) giving 
the substance of what is said, and add- 
ing some words. ] 

» [See Calixtus de Sacrificio Christi 
in cruce semel oblato, et initerabili, 


§ li., lii.] 

© {The editor has not seen this work, 
but has ascertained that its title is, 
Missale, Vesperale, et Matutinale; 
h. e. Cantica, hymnos, et collectas seu 
precationes ecclesiasticas que in primis 


et secundis vesperis, itemque matutinis — 


precibus, per totius anni circulum, in 
ecclesiis et religiosis piorum congres- 
sibus cantare usitate solent. 1606. | .. 

@ [Calixtus, ibid., § iv. ] 

© {Id., ibid., § liii.] 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 303 


sacris Christianorum conventibus (ut patet ex Justino!, Ter- 
_ tulliano® et aliis) a 8. Paulo primum usitatus. 
f Primo, canebant Psalmos etiam populus. Secundo, lege- 
| bantur Prophetia, et Scriptura sacra. Tertio episcopus pre- 
dicabat. Quarto, fiebat Coena et Sacrum: quod tune fere 
tantum oblatione panis et vini, eorundem consecratione sive bene- 
dictione, communione [...] ac oratione, cut populus respondebat 
| Amen, constabat. 5%, Postquam omnes communicassent qui- 
dam Psalmos et Hymnos in laudem Dei canebant, et varis 
linguis (adflati Spiritu) prophetabant. Alii Scripturas Sa- 
cras, more Judeorum, interpretabantur ; alii audiebant, et sub- 
inde interrogabant aliquid circa id quod dicebatur ; simulque 
inclamabant, cum aliquid pii et boni pulchre dictum, Amen, 
Amen. Postremo, claudebat omnia agape sive convivium om- 
nium commune, in symbolum charitatis; post quod rursum 
succedebant hymni et orationes. A Lapide*. Possuntque hodie 
plerayue ex iis que habet Apostolus in 1 ad Corinth. satis 
commode deduci. 

Ordo! autem quo hodie hoe Sacrum in Ecclesiis nostris cele- 
bratur est hujusmodi. 

Principio jubetur, mensam sive altare mundis lintets et alro 
decenti apparatu sterni; S. Biblia, una cum libro Liturgia, 
patina, et calice super eandem mensam collocari; duos autem 
ecereos superponi; celebrantem autem solenni ecclesiastico or- 
natu, id est, superpelliceo et casula sive capa amiciri. Nempe 
peculiari isto apparatu indicium facimus non esse vulgarem, 
que instituatur, actionem, sed sacram et mysticam; atque adeo 
ut animi omnium intenti sint, et de dignitate tanti mysterii 
admoneantur.  Lecte autem monet praefatio de caremoniis hos 
ritus ad essentiam religionis non pertinere, nec necessarias esse, 
sed adiaphoros, ita ut ab ecclesia in alios mutari possint ; stante 
autem presenti publica authoritatis mandato observart debent. 

Deimde ad introitum dicitur oratio Dominica, et precatiun- 
cula pro purificatione cordis. Sequuntur decem Domini pracepta a 

_ presbytero recitata, et responsio populi singulis preceptis inserta, 


"a 


f (S. Justin. M. Apol., i. c. 65—67. 


pp. 82, 83, cited repeatedly in the first 
_ series of notes. | 


8 (Tertullian. Apol., c. 89. Op. p. 


81, and in many other places. } 


h (This passage beginning at, In 
Primitiva Ecclesia, is taken from Cor- 


nelius @ Lapide on 1 Cor. xiv. 26.— 
In omnes D. Pauli Epistolas Com- 
ment., p. 818. Paris, 1638. ] 

i (The rest of this note was written 
much later than the preceding para- 
graph. } 


SEcOND 


SERIES. 
ee 


SEcOND 
SERIEs. 


804, NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


qua Deum orent, ut eis misereatur ; suljicitur Collecta pro Rege 
qui utriusque tabule custos a Deo constitutus una cum Collecta de 
tempore aut festo. Collectam hance secundam excipit lectio Epi- 
stole et Evangelit, exinde legitur aut canitur Symbolum (seu pro- | 
Jessio Catholice fidei) quod dicitur Nicenum, seu rectius Con- | 
stantinopolitanum ; Symbolo subjungitur Homilia sive concio ad 
populum. 
Habita concione sequitur Offertorium, et a communicantibus col. 
ligitur quod Ministrorum Ecclesia et pauperum egestatem sub- 
levare queat. Quanquam solennioribus diebus apud nos (sicut et 
apud alios multis in locis Protestantes) ad ipsam aram sive sacram— 
mensam offertur quod cedat usibus ejusdem mense et presbyte- 
rorum Licclesia. Sulyicitur precatio pro Ecclesia militante, pro 
emperatoribus Christianis omnibus, pro rege nostro, pro consiliariis 
et potestatibus ei sulyjectis, pro episcopis, pastoribus et curatis 
ecclesiastics, pro consensu omnium et unitate in rebus fidei a Deo 
revelatis, pro eis qui in necessitate aliqua sint constituti, denique 
pro omnibus quibus vel nosmet ipsi, vel alii qua animam, quave 
corpus indigemus ; prorsus ad morem et mentem veterum, quibus- 
cum has ipsas preces et ritus nostros compont, preter rem haul 
Juerit. Subsequitur Exhortatio ad populum duplex ; una ut ew- 
eant foras qui non communicatum veniunt, altera ut reliqui sese 
digne praparent. Postea sequitur generalis omnium sed solennis 
peccatorum Confessio, quam excipit generalis itidem Absolutio ab 
episcopo vel presbytero pronunciata una cum selectis e 8. Scrip- 
tura sententiis, que Dei misericordiam penitentibus promittunt. 
Lis ita peractis symbola panis et vini ante celebrantem collocan- 
tur, qui ad populum sese convertens legit antiquissimam admo- 
nitionem sive prafationem de cordibus sursum habendis, et gratiis 
Deo agendis. Sequuntur autem speciales nonnulle prafationes 
jucta diversitatem festorum, quibus solennes Deo gratia aguntur pro 
beneficiis, wsdem diebus memoratis, que hymno tpicayiv clau- 
duntur. Subjungitur oratio humititatis et devotionis plena; de- 
inde surgens celebrans per preces et recitationem verborum Domini 
quibus Sacram suam Canam instituerit, panem et vinum coram 
posita reverenter in Sacramentum consecrat ; et postquam seipsum 
ulraque specie communicaverit, easdem toti populo in genua humi- 
liter inclinato distribuit. Finita distributione dicitur ab omni- 
bus Precatio Dominica. Quam excipit oratio Oblationis, in qua 
commemoratur mors Christi et offertur Deo sacrificium laudis pro 


| 
: 
| 
| 
{ 


Deo, &c. 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 805 


‘redemptione humani generis per passionem ejusdem Servatoris nos- 
tri in eternum benedicti in cruce olim facta. 


Subsequitur gra- 
tiarum actio, et Hymnus Angelicus, qui dicitur Gloria in Excelsis 
Postremo solenni benedictione totus communicantium 


catus dimittitur. Atque hine erat, quod ab hac ultima actione 


tota premissorum sacrorum celebratio Missa veteribus dicebatur, 
_quibus alia ejusdem vocabuli ratio, que hodie a nuperis Romano— 


Catholieis in usu est, penitus ignota fut. 

Ordo autem quem hic recitavimus fere idem est cum Coloniensi, 
gui ab ejusdem loci Archiepiscopo Hermanno, postquam Bucerum 
consuluisset, constitutus est, circa annum Domint MDXXXVI. 


Iltius enim exemplar et Protestantes in Germania, et Reformatores 


nostri in Anglia potissimum sequuti sunt. 

Vide Reformationem Coloniensem' ob quam idem Archiepiscopus 
Hermannus a non-reformatis pontificus exauctoratus est. 

The Table at the Communion-time having a fair white linen cloth 
upon it.| Vide que annotavimus ad rubric. ante initium Precum 
Matutinarum*; for here is to be inserted and repeated the 
order there appointed, as well concerning the ornaments of 
the church, as of the priest or bishop, and other ministers 
that celebrate the Holy Communion, viz. “The minister, at 
the time of the Communion, shall use such ornaments in 
the church as were in use, by authority of parliament, in the 
second year (not the fifth year, when most of those orna- 
ments were taken away,) of the reign of K. Edw. VI.” And 
then by the same authority this order was in use, and there- 
fore (by the authority of parliament, in the Act of Unifor- 
mity, made 1 Eliz., and set at the beginning of the Liturgy, 
§ penult.) is still required to be continued in the Church of 
England, viz. “The priest who shall (at the time of the Com- 


munion) execute the holy ministry, shall put upon him a | 


vesture appointed for that ministration, that is to say, a white 
alb plain, with a vestment or cope; and all other priests and 


'_' [The title of this work is, Nostra 
-Hermanni ex gratia Dei archiepiscopus 


Coloniensis, &c. simplex et pia deli- 


beratio, qua ratione Christiana et in 
verbo Dei fundata reformatio doctrine, 
administrationis divinorum Sacramen- 
torum, &c. apud eos qui nostre pasto- 
‘Tali cure commendati sunt, tantisper 
Anstituenda sit, donec Dominus dede- 
rit constitui meliorem, vel per liberam 
COSIN. 


et Christianam synodum, sive gene- 
ralem sive nationalem, vel per ordines 
imperii nationis Germanic in sacro~ 
sancto Spiritu congregatos. The edi- 
tion the editor has seen is Bonne, A.D. 
1645. The service for the Holy Com- 
munion is at fol. Ixxxix., sqq. } : 

k [See above, pp. 227, sqq. and the 
notes there. | 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


806 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Bow deacons, who shall help him in that ministration, shall have 
ae. upon them likewise the vestments appointed for their minis- 


try, that is to say, albs with tunicles; but a bishop shall have 
upon him, besides his rochet, a surplice or alb, and a cope or 


vestment, and also his pastoral staff in his hand, or else borne | 


or holden by his chaplain; and the preachers shall wear 
their hoods belonging to their several degrees taken in either 
of the universities of this realm.” Upon the table also, be- 
sides the linen cloth and other needful furniture, were to be 
placed two lights, &c. See the notes before the Morning 
Prayer. Nempe peculiart isto apparatu et antiqua et nostra 
Lcclesia indicium facere voluit, non esse rem vulgarem, aut com- 
munem que instituatur actionem ; sed solennem, sacrum et mysti- 
cum ; atque adeo ut animi omnium eo magis intents essent, &c., de 
tante rei dignitatem admonerentur}, 

And therefore when all this order, with some other rites 
appointed in our Liturgy, were represented by the Scots (John 
Knox and his company being*then at Frankfort, where the 

‘English Church used them,) to Mr. John Calvin at Geneva, 
he might have spared his hard and supercilious censure that 
he gave of them, when he said™, Legi Auglicanam Inturgiam, 
sicut vos eam descripsistis (which most likely it is they did the 
worst way they could) 2m gua vidi quasdam ineptias, tolerabiles 





tamen, ce. Epist. Francofurtensibus inscripta. Sed negari non 
potest, Calvinum (utut alias laude sua dignum) fuisse veterum 


Ecclesia rituum nimis rigidum censorem™. Yet he saith of them 


in another of his books, as he saith here of ours, that they — 
may be tolerated as long as they be not used to maintain © 


any false doctrine, from which he acquitteth both the fathers 


Calv. Inst. and us. Eyguidem (ait) cum pium et orthodorum de toto mysterio | 


lib. iv. Cap. ° ® ° . . . . . 
18. n.20, sive Sacramento sensum retinuwisse eos videam, ullius impretatis 


damnare eos non sustineo. Excusari tamen non posse arbitror, 
quin aliquid in actionis modo peccaverint. Imitati enim sunt po- 
tius Judaicum sacrificand: morem, quam aut ordinaverat Christus, 


aut Evangelii ratio ferebat. Which he intends of the words — 


used in the ancient Church, priest, offering, and sacri- 


fice, together with the ornaments or vestments that the 


1 [Calixtus, ubi supra, § Ivii.] ® [Calvinus rigidus veterum censor, — 
™ [Calvin’s words are: ‘In Anglica are the words of Calixtus, ibid. § exxiii., 
Liturgia sicut’ &c.—Calvinus Anglis who also cites the passage that follows — 


Francofurd., Epistole &c., col. i. p.98.] from the Institutes, ] 








ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 307 


‘bishops and priests used, as here in our Church they are 


appointed to do. For he was jealous lest they might prove 
an occasion of introducing worse matters, as indeed among 
the new Roman Catholics they have done many, not only 
false doctrines, but superstitious and vain ceremonies, where 
they make account (if not theoretically, yet practically) that 
most of their religion doth consist. A fault that he need not 


have laid upon our Church, which had taken special order 
against such abuses of her better intentions, as he might 


have seen in the preface Of Ceremonies, why some were 
abolished, and some retained among us. But I doubt the 
Scots sent him not that preface to read, and described all 
our rites to him after the most odious and ridiculous manner 
that they could imagine, for so have many of their disciples 
done ever since. Indeed, if we had founded ourselves upon 
the ridiculous Rationale of Durandus, or put any religion in 
them, (more than the obeying of a lawful command given for 
better order and decency in the Church was religion,) he 
might have had the more reason to find fault with us; but 
herein he was mistaken, and in our affairs was not sufficiently 
informed, otherwise he would have kept his ineptie (tolera- 
biles tamen) to himself. Interim equidem papiste® quidquid est 
in hodierna tpsorum missa vasculorum, vestimentorum, actuum, 
motuum, nictuum, ad significanda vite et mortis Christi mysteria, 
partim putide, et histrionice, partim superstitiose retulerunt. Ista 
autem apud sequioris avi scriptores nonnullos utramque faciunt 


— paginam, Durandum presertim Rationalis auctorem, Videatur 








apud eum specimen, lib. iv. cap. 6? et cap. 104, de Lgne et 
Thuribulo. Si tanta harum rerum mysteria, qualia ille desombit, 
et somniat, quanta aliarum que apud illos sunt in usu, existi- 
mabimus ? ad que forte sine nausea loquenda valido opus fuerit 
stomacho. 

The priest standing at the north: side of the Table.| Cuando 
stamus ad orationem. B. Cypr. de Orat. Dominica*. Stantes ora- 
mus, quod est signum resurrectionis, (tempore Paschali,) unde etiam 
omnibus diebus Dominicis ad altare id observatur. 8. Aug., Epist. 


° [This passage is from Calixtus, 4 [Most of the chapter is cited by 
ibid. § cxxiii., cxxiv., who gives also  Calixtus. ] 


the words of Durandus. } * (S.Cypr. de Orat. Dominic. Op. 
P [The passage referred toisn. 5. of Tract., p. 152.) 
this chapter. } 


x2 


SECOND 


. SERIES. 


SECOND 


‘SERIEs. 


_Phariseus stans orat ; 


808 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


119s, et Tertull., de Orat., c. 14t. Si ad aram Dei steteris; 
atque ejus ret testimoniis vetera abundant monumenta.  Stantes 
orabant Judai (Matth. vi. 5.) nisi luctus tempore, tune enim ora- 
bant proni, aut in genibus. Vide infra notas ad hane rubricam 
uberiores. 

At the north side.| Antiquitus vero ad medium Diwini altaris 
adstitit. Dionys., Eccl. Hier., cap. 3". 

S. Matth. vi. 5. Stantes orabant Judai, nisi luctus tempore... 
vid. Dan. ix. 20. Christiani in Quadragesima, quod tempus peni- 
tentia dicatum orabant in genibus; diebus Dominicis et in Pen- 


tecoste, id est totis Li. diebus post Pascha, non nisi stantes ; ut 


docet Tertullianus de Corona Mit.* et canon ultimus Synodi magne 
Nicaensis ; et qui penitentiam agebant delictorum intra presti- 
tutum tempus erant tnonintovtes, postea ovvertartes’,  Statio 
‘gitur apud veteres non quamvis sed receptissimum orandi modum 
significat. Ita Marci xi. 25, Quando statis orantes ; Lue. xviii. 


Jjubetur consurgere, et Gen. xvili. 22, ubi in Hebrao est, Abraham 
stabat coram Deo, Chaldaus vertit, orabat. Neque aljter verbum 


stands usurpatur, Jerem. xv. 1, et xvii. 19, et Jod. xxx. 20. 


Atque ita vocem stationis usurpant tum Judai, tum Christian ve- 
teres ; interdum et cvvexdoyikGs pro piorum conventu. Grot.* 
Of the Table.] Que erat veterum consuetudo, ut omnia que 
ad celebrationem cene Dominice pertinebant ad aram dicerentur. 
In hac autem celebratione inter Ecclesias Protestantium in Ger- 
mania et nostras in Anglia nullum fere est discrimen, nisi quod ab 
antistite sive sacrorum ministro apud nos ad sacram mensam preces 
-dicuntur, apud illos e suggestu recitantur. Qua in re cum antiquis 
non conveniunt. : 

_ The priest.| This term or title of priest is here used 
‘throughout this whole Communion-service, unless it be in 


* [S. Aug. Ep. 55. ad Januarium 


costen usque gaudemus.—Tertullian. 





et apud Nehem. ix. 5, populus ad preces’ 


(aliter Ep. 119) cap. 15. § 28. Op. 
tom. ii. col. 139, E.] 

* [Tertullian.‘de Oratione, cap. 14. 
Op. p. 136, A.] 


" [Kal viapevcoy Tas xeipas Hart Tob 


lepdpxou kal t&v iepéwv, 6 mey lepdpxns: 


év wéow Tod Ovo.acTnplov Kabliorarat.— 
S. Dionys, Areop. de Eccles. Hier- 
archia, cap. 3. Op. p. 188, A. } 

* [Die Dominico jejunium nefas du- 
cimus, vel de geniculis adorare. Eadem 
immunitate a die Pasche in ree 


de Corona, cap. 3. Op. p. 102, A.]} 

Y [éreidh tivés eiow ev TH KuplaKh 
yovu Kdlvortes, Kal év Tats THs mevTN- 
Kooris huépas, bwtp Tod mdvTa év mdon 
mapouria purdrredba, erta@ras eoke 7 
ayia ovvddy ras edxas Grodiddva EG 
©cg.—Cone. Nicen. (A.D. 825.) can. 


xx. Concilia, tom. ii. col. 41.] 


2 [Grotius, Comment. in Matth. cap. 
vi. v. 5. apud Criticos Sacros, tom. vii. 
col. 266. } 


Se a a ee 





ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION, 309 


such parts of it which may be read upon Sundays and holy- 
days when there is no Communion, for then may another 


minister perform the office; but the sacrament of the Eucha-_ 


-rist is reserved for the priest, no other minister of an inferior 
order having any commission or power given him to meddle 
either in consecrating the elements or absolving the penitents 
that come to receive them. 

Otherwhiles the Church of England calleth those that are 
presbyters by the name of priests, and those that are deacons 
by the name of Levites; nor can there be any just exception 
against these appellations, which are given them only by 

analogy and allusion to the priests and Levites of the Old 
Testament. And there is a clear place of Scripture for it, 
“Isa. Ixvi. 20, Adducent ex omnibus gentibus munus Domino, &c. 
Atque etiam ex iis adsumam in sacerdotes et in Levitas, ait Domi- 
nus, the prophet speaking there of the religious service that 
was to be done under the New Testament. So doth the 
apostle accommodate the name of circumcision to the sacra- 
ment of Baptism, Col. ii. 11, and the name of the passover or 
sacrifice to the Eucharist; (‘Christ our passover is offered 
for us, let us therefore keep our feast ;” that is, our Eucha- 
rist). And the name of altar to the table of the Lord, 
Heb. xiii., “ We have an altar.” And the name of oblations 
and sacrifices to the giving of alms, Ibid., Quales Levite, tales 
sacerdotes, quale altare, talia sacrificia, omnia scilieet ad allu- 
sionem, gue bonum neminem queat offendere. C.* 
_ Our Father.| Est de Collectis Orationibus Constitutio Concili 
Carthag. 3. cap. 23°. Ut... cum altari adsistitur semper ad 
Patrem dirigatur oratio: fuit hoc exemplo Christi, qui discipulos 
docens orare, exordium precationis ad Patrem direxit. 

Amen.| Collectam excipiebat populus solenni acclamatione vocis 
Amen. Uli observa Amen quandoque esse particulam affirmantis, 
quandoque vero concedentis aut optantis. Affirmantis est, quando 
orationi premittitur, unde iliud Christo frequens, Amen dico vobis ; 
est autem concedentis aut optantis ubi postponitur. Concedentis 
est, Deuteron. xxviit., ubi ad benedictiones legis servata, et male- 
dictiones violate, populus quasi illas acceptans, acclamat Amen. 
Ontantis est in precibus; unde et ypsam Orationem Domimicam 


 ® [Calixtus, ibid., § xiv.] can. 23. Concilia, tom. ii. col. 1403, 
b [Cone. Carthag. III. (A.D. 397.) A.) 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


310 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Christus voluit hae voce terminari: et Ecclesia eum secuta passim | 


suas preces ad hunc modum obsignat, quasi diceret, vere fiat quod 
petimus. 


The Collect. 

Almighty God, unto whom, §c.) In Ord. Sarum hee Oratio 
habetur, et secunda est in Ordinario Misse*. 

Then shall the Priest rehearse. . . the Ten Commandments. | 
Lego apud B. Cyprianum, Ep. 334, consuevisse lectorem super 
tribunal EHeclesia sive pulpitum collocari, ut plebi universe con- 
spicuus legat Precepta et Evangelium Domini. An id vero de 
Praceptis Decalogi intelligendum sit, nondum mihi constat. 

The Collect for the day. | 

Cottecta. Sic dicta, quod in unum vota populi colligeret, vel 


| 
} 





| 





| 
| 
| 


\ 


——E 


quod fieret populo jam in unum collecto. Supra in Tit. Collect. et 


Epist.® 


The Priest standing up*.| Vide que supra adnotavimus, ante 


Orat. Dom.§ 

Let us pray.| Sacerdos indicit Orationem. Eo respexit B. 
Augustinus Epistolad ad Vitalem™, ubi meminit sacerdotis ad 
altare populum exhortantis orare. Apud Gracos in Inturgia 
Jacobi et alibi indictionem hance facet diaconus. 
illud in sacris Gentilium, HOC AGE. 


The Priest shali read the Epistle.) Post hae commentaria 
apostolorum et scripta prophetarum leguntur. Just. Mart. Ter- 


tullianus vocat hec, fomenta fidei, ab interlectione Scripturarum. 
Supra in Tit. Collect. et Epist.' 


Frat et simile ea 


© [Missale Sarisb., fol. cxli. This 
Collect is said in the preparation for 
celebrating immediately after Veni 
Creator. It is the first and only Collect 
in that place. It is also the Collect in 
the Missa ad invocandam gratiam Spi- 
ritus Sancti, Ibid. Commune, fol. xxx. ] 

¢ [Hune... quid aliud quam super 
pulpitum, id est, super tribunal eccle- 
siz oportebat imponi, ut loci altioris 
celsitate subnixus, et plebi universe pro 
honoris sui claritate conspicuus, legat 
precepta et Evangelium Domini.— 
S. Cypr. ad Ep. 39, clerum et plebem. 
(ed. Pam. 34.) Op. Epist. p. 77. The 
passage of Cyprian is cited by Calixtus, 
ibid., lxi.} 

© [Calixtus, ubi supra, § lviii., quoting 


Alcuin. de Div. Off. See above, p. 247, 
note d. } 

f [ The rubric before 1662 was: Then 
shall follow the Collect of the day, 
with one of these two Collects following 
for the king, the priest standing up, 
and saying, &c. } 

8 [See above, on the priest standing 
on the north side of the Table, pp. 307, 
308.] 

b {Numquid ubi audieris sacerdotem 
Dei ad ejus altare populum hortantem 
ad Deum orandum.—S, Aug. Ep. 217, 
ad Vitalem, (aliter Ep. 107.) cap. 7. 
§ 26. Op. tom. ii. col. 808, A.] 

i [See this passage above, p. 257, 
and notes e, f.} 





ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION, 811 


And the Epistle ended, he shall say the Gospel.) 

Veteribus enim Epistole aut lectioni prophetica succedebat im- 
mediate Evangelium, saltem in Ecclesia Latina, prout a patribus 
decretum est in Concilio Toletano 4°. can. 11*. Alius Grecorum 
mos, qui ex antiqua consuetudine versus aliquot aut hymnos Epi- 
stole et Evangelio intermiscuerunt Liturg. 8. Chrys Quem ritum 
postea etiam recepit Ecclesia Latina ; idque (ut verisimile est) ex 
hac ratione, ne in ecclesiis majoribus (ubi multi erant clerics cele- 
brantes) chorus vacaret eo tempore, quo diaconus aut presbyter 
gradus ambonis Evangelium lecturus ascendit. Inde quoque factum 
ut versus isti Gradualia dicerentur. Consueverunt enim veteres in 
ecclesiis loca editiora habere, e quibus non tantum Evangelium, sed 
et alia lectiones legerentur. S.Cypr., Ep. 383™. Hue adducantur 


que annotata et posita sunt inter Epistolam et Evang. 1 Dominic. 
in Adventus”. . 


[oN THE NICENE CREED. | 


Ab Evangelio transitur ad Symbolum, idque congruentissime, 
cum juxta apostolum fides ex auditu sit°. 


De Symbolo. 

Ut iliud in sacris recitetur Graecis ante Latinos usitatum ; et 
apud Latinos primum Hispanis. Ita enim decreverunt patres, 
Cone. Tolet. 8°. c. 2%, Pro reverentia sanctissime fidei, et propter 
corroborandas hominum invalidas mentes, Sc., consultu prissimt et 
gloriosissimi Reccardi Regis Domini nostri constituit sancta syno- 
dus, ut per omnes Leclesias Hispanie et Galliciea secundum for- 
mam Orientalium LEcclesiarum Concilit Constantinopolitani, hoc 
est, centum quinquaginta episcoporum, Symbolum Fidei recitetur : 
et priusguam Dominica dicatur oratio, voce clara a populo decan- 
tetur, quo et fides vera manifestum testimonium habeat, et ad 
Christi Corpus et Sanguinem praelibandum pectora populorum fide 
purificata accedant. 

Symbolum vero Nicenum publice occentu sacerdotum in sacris 

k [See above, p. 91, note o. ] " [See above, pp. 249, 250.] 

1 [kal tod amrootdAov TAnpwhévros ° [Landtmeter, de Vetere clerico, 
exwvei 6 fepeds: ciphyn co. 4 Budicovos monacho, clerico-monacho libb. tres, 
copia, Kal 6 xopds Td GAANAOvVia, YarA- lib. ii. c. 81. p. 207. Antwerp. 1635. ] 


pos T@ Aavid.—Lit. S. Chrys. ap. Goar. Pp (Thus far is from Landtmeter, 
Rit. Grec., p. 68, L. and note 95.] ibid. ]’ 


_™ [See above, p. 310, note d.] 4 [See above, p. 92, note r.] 


SEconD” 


SERIES. 
Bis. ernie 


SECOND 


SERIES. 





312° NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. ° 


solennibus recitatum fuisse, tradit Theodorus lector in Collec- 
taneis'. Timotheus (inquit) qui erat Constantinopolitanus Epi- 
scopus, ab amicis rogatus Symbolum Fidei 318 patrum per sin- 
gulas synaxes dici curavit, ad reprehensionem Macedonii. Cum 
autem semel tantum in anno in Parasceue, scil. Dominice pas- 
sionis tempore, quo episcopus catechizabat, recitatum esset, &c. 
Radulphus Tungrensis de Can. Observ. propos. ult.§ et Pla- 
tina in vitis Pontificum' authores sunt, a Marco episcopo Ro- 
mano (circa An. Dom. 340.) Symbolum diebus solennibus jussum 
statim post Evangelium, a clero et populo alia voce decantari. 
I believe in, &c.| Hic nota quod aliud est credere Deum, et 
aliud credere Deo, et aliud credere in Deum. Nam credere 
Deum, est tantum credere Deum esse, credere Deo, est credere 
verbum Ejus ; sed credere in Deum est credendo amare Deum, 
et credendo in Eum ire, ac membris Ejus incorporart. Primum 
et secundum bonorum et malorum est, sed tertium est bonorum 





tantum. 


De hoc solent pont versus : 


**Crede Deo, credasque Deum; plus crede valere 
Quod.credas in Eum, quam vel Ei, vel Eum.”’—Linw.® 


One God. | 


Hec dictio unum non habetur in Symbolo Apostolorum, sed 
recte additur, non tantum contra errorem gentilium qui posu- 
erunt plures Deos, sed etiam contra calumniam hereticorum, 
gui Catholicos non unius, sed trium Deorum cultores appella- 


bant. 


r [Tiudbcos 7) Tév Tpiaxociwy Séra 
nal dxTm® twarépwy tis mlatrews cbuBo- 
Aov, Kad? éxdotny cbvativ AéyerOu Ta- 
peokevacer, emt SiaBorT d70ev Makedo- 
vlov, &s avTod ph dexouevou 7) otuBo- 
Aor, Gag Tov Tous Acyouerns mpdrepov 
év TH ayia TaparKevi Tov Oelov maOous, 
TPE Kap@e tov ywouevwy brd Tod ém- 
oxdrovkatnxnoewy.— Excerptaex Hist. 
Eccl. Theodori Lectoris, lib. ii. § 32. 
ap. Hist. Eccl. Scriptt., tom. iii. p. 
578. ] 
~ ®*{Symbolum Nicenun, id est, Credo 
in unum Deum, Sanctus Marcus natione 
Romanus, successor Silvestri, qui cce- 
pit anno Domini 339 vel 340, statuit, 


ut post Evangelium in ecclesia alta- 


Voce dicatur.— Radulphus decani Tun~ 
grensis de canonum observantia liber, 
Prop. 23. ap. Hittorp. de Div. Off, p. 
669, D, EY) 


Unitatem vero facit consubstantialitas. Linw.* 


t [Voluit preterea diebus solennibus 
statim post Evangelium Symbolum a 
clero et populo magna voce decantari ; 
et eo modo quo fuerat in Niceno Con- 
cilio declaratum.— Platina de vitis Pon- 
tificum, Marcus I. (Pont. 35.) But Leo 
III., A.D. 809, says to the envoy of 
Charlemagne and the council of Aix- 
la-Chapelle of the Creed, “in nostra 
saneta Ecclesia non cantatur.’”’ See 
Bingham’s Antiquities, book x. 4,17, 
and xv. 3, 28.] 

« [The whole of this note (and those 
that follow) is extracted from Lynd- 
wood, Provinciale Anglicanum, lib. i. 
tit. 1, de summa Trinitate et fide Ca- 
tholica, p. 2. not. q, ad verb. credo in 
unum Deum, with slight alterations. } 

x [Ibid., p. 3, note a, in verb, anum. 
The first and last clauses only are 
in Lyndwood’s words. } 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 313 


Maker of heaven and earth.| 
_. Juxta illud Gen. i. In principio creavit Deus ceelum et ter- 
‘ram. Hic nota quod circa mundi creationem quatuor erant 
errores. 1. Quidam enim dicebant mundum fuisse ab eterno. 
2. Alii dicebant mundum habuisse materiale principium, et non 
esse factum ex nihilo. 3. Alii dicebant Deum superiores crea- 
turas per Se produxisse, sed inferiores per ministerium angelo- 
rum. 4, Alit ponebant duo principia, sicut Manichei, unum, 
summum bonum ; et aliud, summum malum ; dicentes incorrup- 
tibilia esse a bono principio, sed corruptibilia a malo principio. 


predicta authoritate. Primum cum dicit, In principio, 2™. cum 





dicit, creavit, 38". cum dicit, Deus, 4™. cum dicit, celum et ter- 
ram. Linw. 

Ali things visible and invisible.| Hoc dicitur ad tollendum 
errorem sive heresin Manicheorum predictam, qui dicebant, 
invisibiles et spirituales creaturas creatas a principio bono, 
visibiles autem et corporales a principio malo, de quibus habe- 
tur mentio. C. de Heres. 1. Manicheor. 24. q. 3. § quidam 
x. Manichei*. Quibus concordat dictum S. Pauli Act. xvi. ubi 


ait, Qui fecit mundum et omnia que in eo sunt, &c. et ad Heb. 


xi. Fide credimus aptata esse secula verbo Dei, ut ex invisi- 
bilibus invisibilia fierent. Linw.* 

Jesus.| Grace est cwtip. Qua voce tantum ait significari 
Cicero, ut id Latino uno verbo exprimi non possit. Vere 
tamen doctissimus Hug. Gr.>; Non videbatur deesse vor Latina 

ejusdem originis atque efficacie, sed antiquior et in sacris 
magis quam in usu populari recepta, Sospitatoris. 

_ Only-begotien.| Et dicitur unigenitus, quia in unitate per- 
sone a Deo Patre est genitus. Linw.° 

Light of light.| Quomodo aliqualiter patet in igne, qui de 
se gignit splendorem ; et si ignis ab eterno fuisset, splendor ab 
ipso genitus fuisset ab eterno, ut dicit S. Aug. vi. de Trin.4 


Hos errores omnes excludit Symbolum Ecclesia, et Moyses in 


y [Ibid., p. 5. note a, in verb. cceli 
et terre. | 


2 | Decretum, pars ii. caus. 24. quest. 


_ 8. c. 39. ap. Corpus Jur. Carn., tom. i.] 


@ { Linw., ibid., note b, in verb. om- 


nis visibilis et invisibilis creatura. ] 


> [Grotius, Comment.in S Matth. i. 


21. v. Jesum. ap. Crit. Sacr., tom. vii. 
col. 45. 


PT pry 
Sty Sl ng 


¢ [Linw., ibid., note i, in verb. uni- 
genitum. ] 

d {Id. ibid. S. Augustine’s words 
are: Nam ipse Arius dixisse fertur, si 
filius est, natus est; si natus est, erat 
tempus quando non erat filius: non in- 
telligas etiam natum esse Deo sempi- 
ternum esse, ut sit cozternum Patri 
Filius, sicut splendor qui gignitur ab 


SECOND. 
SERIES. 





314 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


SECOND 


Incarnate.| Per veram carnis assumptionem. Prov. Ang. 
SERIES. 


de S. Trin.° Contra Manicheos, qui dixerunt Christum non ve- 
ram carnem accepisse, sed fantasticam. Sed hic possit queri, 
quare opus assumptionis nostre nature nominatur incarnatio, 
et non animatio, cum tamen a digniori res consueverunt nomi- 
nari? Dic quod propter multas rationes. Primo, ut expres- | 
sior esset nominatio. Secundo, ut profundior explicetur dig- 
natio miserantis. Tertio, quia magis est nobis nota pars carnis. 
Quarto, ut major humiliatio exprimatur, quia caro magis distat 
a Deo quam anima. Quinto, quia caro est a parente propa- 
gata, anima vero a Deo infusa. Linw., ibid., in Glossat. 

By the Holy Ghost.| Id est Spiritus Sancti cooperationes. 

Of the Virgin Mary.| Et hoe dicit ut tollat errorem Carpo- 
cratianorum de quo habes 24. q.3.c. quidam x. Carpocratiani®, 
qui dixerunt Christum esse conceptum et progenitum de utroque 
parente', Atque etiam ut verificaretur prophetia Esaia vii. 
Lece virgo concipiet, &c.* 

Virgin.| Supple semper, non solum ante partum, sed in par- 
tu, et post partum. Ex quo tollitur error Helvidii, qui dixit 
Mariam Virginem concepisse et peperisse alios postmodum 








filios ex Joseph.' 
Crucified. | 


Scil. secundum humanitatem, que erat passi- 


bilis, non tamen secundum Deitatem, que erat impassibilis™, 
Who proceedeth.| Supple eternaliter. Linw.” 
And the Son.] Additamentum illud ex scriptis Leonis 
Pape I., Epist. xciii. c. 1°. (qui ‘de ulroque processit’ inquit) 
desumptum, primi Symbolo inseruerunt episcopi Tarracone 


congregati, temporibus ejusdem Leonis. 


igne atque diffunditur, coevus est illi, 
et esset cozternus si esset ignis eter- 
nus.—S. Aug. de Trinit., lib. vi. cap. 1. 
§ 1. Op. tom. viii. col. 843, C.] 

¢ (Prov. Angl., lib. i. tit. 1. from the 
text of Abp. Peccham’s Constitutio de 
Summa Trinitate, of which the words 
are: “incarnatio seu vera carnis as- 
sumptio.”’ ] 

f [Linw. note on the above; ibid. 
p: 6. not. q, ad verb, vera carnis. ] 

& [Id. ibid., p. 6. note i, ad verb. per 
Spiritum Sanctum. ] 

h [Decretum, pars ii. caus. 24, quest. 
iii. c. 39, apud Corpus Jur. Can., 
tom. i. ] 

i [{Linw., ibid., p. 6. note h, ad verb. 
ex sola. | , 


Ac ut ita in Ecclesia 


k [Id. ibid., note o, ad verb. ex 
virgine. } 

1 [Id. ibid., p. 6. note p, ad verb. 
incorrupta. | 

m (Id. ibid., lib. i. tit. 1. de Summa 
Trinitate et Fide Catholica, p. 6, noter, 
ad verb. vera Christi passio. | 

" (Id. ibid., p, 4. note d, ad verb. 
procedentem. | 

° [Speaking of the opinions of the 
Sabelliaus, Leo says: Tanquam idem 
Deus nunc Pater, nunc Filius, nunc 
Spiritus Sanctus nominetur: nee alius 
sit qui genuit, alius qui genitus est, 
alius qui de utroque procedit.—S. Leo 
I., Epist. xv. (ol. xciii.) ad Turribium, 
e. 1, Op. tom. i, col, 697.] 





ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 315° 


Consultus Leo Papa Tertius prohibuit hoc additamentum, non ———~ 
quia aliud sentiret, sed ob reverentiam antiquitatis, et ne licen- 

tia tribueretur, Conciliis Gicumenicis aliquid addendi. Ex qua 

eadem antiquitatis reverentia idem Symbolum duobus scutis sive 

tabellis argenteis, sine dicto additamento Grace et Latine cu- 

ravit inscribi. Postea vero vitandi schismatis gratia inter- 

seri permissum est. Incertum tamen quando id factum ; quam- 

vis Graci tribuant Christophoro. Landm.1, Lege Baronium, 

A°. 809° et 8885. 

Concilium Constantinopolitanum 1™.* Symbolo addidit illa Ex Patre, 

verba, “ex Patre procedit.” Sed non ait ex “solo Patre.” pega 
Illa enim particula “solo” adjectio est nuperrima novorum quo+ 
rundam Grecerum, non est autem proprium concilit verbum, 
Cur vero concilium non adjecerit “ex Filio,”’ sed satis esse 
censuerit dicere, “ Qui ex Patre procedit,” ratio est; quia eo 
tempore dubium non erat, an Spiritus Sanctus ex Filio proce- 
deret ; idem enim heretici Macedoniani, contra quos concilium 
erat congregatum concedebant (ut constat ex S. Basilio, lib. 1." 
in Eunomium) sed dubium erat de Patre a quo alienum omnino 
Sp. S. tanguam “ solius Filit creaturam” tidem heretici esse 
dicebant. Concilium igitur ut aptum morbo remedium adhi- 
beret, id posuit in Symbolo quod erat necesse. 

Who spake by the prophets.| Nam 2 8. Pet.1. dicitur, Spi- 
ritu Sancto inspirante locuti sunt Dei homines. Quod facit 
contra errorem Cataphrygiorum, de quibus 24. gq. 8. c. quidam 
§ Cataphrygit’. Hi dixerunt prophetas quasi arreptitios fu- 
isse, et quod non prophetizarunt per Sp. Sanctum, et quod Sp. 
Sanctus non descendit ad perfectionem super apostolos. Linw.* 


P [Ratio que habita est de Symbolo 
fidei in secretario Sancti Petri apostoli 
inter dominum Leonem, &c... et mis- 
sos domini Caroli imperatoris.——Concil. 
Aquigranense, (A.D. 809.) Concilia, 
tom. ix. col, 278, sqq.] 

4 [Landtmeter de clerico &c., ubi 
supra, p. 311, note o. ] 

* (Baronii, Annales Ecclesiastici, 
A.D. 809, n. 66—81, on the discussion 
between the envoys of Charlemagne 
and Leo ITT. ] 

§ (Id. ibid., A.D, 883, n. 5—40, on 
the controversy with Photius about the 
introduction of the clause, and the con- 
firmation of it by the Roman Church, 


(n. 86, 37, on its alleged introduction 
by Pope Christophorus). } 

t [7d éx rod Tarpds éxmopevduevor. 
—Symbolum, Cone. Constant. I.(A.D. 
881.) Concilia, tom. ii. col. 1131.] 

" [rod mev Gyevvhrou Toy vidy evpl- 
ckwy moinua, Tov Sé€ poroyevovs Tov 
TlapakAnrév’ Kan THs TOU movoryevois 
bwepoxis tiv THs évepyetas Siapopay 
miotovmevos.—S. Basil. adv. Eunom., 
lib. ii. § 32, Op. tom, i. p. 269, A, 
They are the words of Eunomius. ] 

Vv { Decretum, pars ii. caus, 24. quest, 
3. c. 38.] 

x [ Prov. Angl., lib. i. tit. 1. note e. 
ad verb. sanctificatio Ecclesie. ] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


316. NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Passim dicitur Deus id dixisse quod dixerunt propheta, pri-. 


mum, quia ipsam verborum sententiam Deus menti illorum in- 
seruit ; deinde quia et verba ita est moderatus, ne a sententia 
aberrarent. Verba autem ipsa a Deo illis dictata fuisse, sicut 
interdum evenisse non est negandum, ita non videtur perpetuum. 
Aitque hinc factum est, ut pro temporum ac loquentium varie- 
tate, etiam sermo prophetarum aliquando differret. Grot.¥ 
One Catholic Church.| Dicitur in symbolo unam esse Ca- 


tholicam Ecclesiam contra Donatistas, qui posuerunt Ecclesiam | 


et gratiam Christi solum in Africa remansisse; quia totus 
alius mundus communicabat Ceciliano Carthaginis episcopo, 
quem ipst damnaverant, et in hoc negabant Ecclesia unitatem. 
Linw.? 


CONCIO SIVE HOMILIA AD POPULUM. 


After the Creed shall follow the Sermon or Homily.] Quam 
necessarium Scripturas populo legere et exponere, tam quoqgue 
est antiquum. Justin. Mart., Apol. 2°, “ Solis qui dicitur die, 
omnium gui vel in oppidis vel rure degunt, conventus fit, et 
commentaria apostolorum vel scripta prophetarum, quoad 
tempus fert, leguntur. Deinde lectore quiescente, preses 
(sive episcopus sive presbyter) sermonem habet, quo popu- 
lum instruit, et ad imitationem*tam pulchrarum rerum co- 
hortatur>,” 

Conciones quas hodie dicimus, Graci oputidias vocant ; 
Tractatus appellabant Latini veteres, quibus tractare est 
populum docere. Hine Vine. Lirin. cap. 40°, Doctores trac- 
tatores nunc appellantur, &c. et Vict. Vit. lib. i.4, Persecut. 
Vandal. de S. Augustino ; 233 libros confecerat, exceptis in- 
numerabilibus epistolis, et tractalibus popularibus, quas Greci 





y [Grotius, Comment. in Matt., cap. 
i, v. 22. apud Criticos Sacros., tom. vii. 
col. 50. J 

* [Lyndwood, ubi supra, a f_w lines 
before the last extract. | 

* [kal tH Tod HAlov Aeyouevn hucpa 
mavTov Kata modes 2) &ypous wevdyTwy 
érl ro avtd cuvéArevois yiverar’ Kal Ta 
&rouvnuovévpata Teav aroordéAwy 7) TH 
ovyypdupata tay mpopyntav avaryryyé- 
oKeTor péxpis eyxwpet. eita Tavoa- 
Bévov Tov dvaryiyveokorvtos, 6 mpoeoTas 
51a Adyou thy vovbeclay kal mpdKAnow 


THS TOV KadaY TobTwY MihoEwSs ToLEt- 
Tat.—S. Justin. Mart. Apol. 1. (al. 
Apol. 2.) § 67. Op. p. 83, D.] 

[This passage is an extract from 
Calixtus, ubi supra, § 1xi.] 

© [Vincentii Lirinensis Commonito- 
rium, c. 28. (p. 862.) ap. Gallandi Bibl. 
patrum, tom. x. p. 114, E.] 

@ [Victor Vitensis de Persecutione 
Africana, lib. i. p. 5. ed. Chifflet, Di- 
vione, 1664, (The quotation is a- 
bridged.) ] 


4 





ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 317 


outrias vocant.  Certe Augustini in Joh. Sermones etiam 


_ hodie Tractatus inscribuntur ; uti quoque Gaudentii Brixiensis. 


gui supersunt. Ambrosius Epist. 33°, Post Lectiones atque 
Tractatum dimitiuntur Catechumeni, &c.* 

Ad Lectionem autem sive Psalmorum sive Prophetarum, 
sive Epistola, sive Evangelii paulo ante auditam, Sermonem 
‘suum aut Tractatum referre, eique exponende operam dare 
consueverunt veteres qui tractabant et solennibus festis, ut 
_Pascha, Pentecostes, &c. Diebus etiam jejuniorum, ut Qua- 
dragesime, Quatuor Temporum, et Vigiliarum, Lectio et 
Sermones tempori reique presenti semper congruebant ; etsi 
alias integri quidem Scripture libri pertractabantur. Id ip- 
sum videre est ex proemio S. Augustini in Epist. S. Joh. 
quod est hujusmodi; “ Meminit sanctitas vestra Evangelium 
secundum Johannem ex ordine Lectionum nos solere tractare. 
Sed quia nunc interposita solennitas sanctorum dierum, quibus 
certas ex Evangelio Lectiones oportet in Ecclesia recitari, que 
ita sunt annua, ut alie esse non possint, ordo ille quem susce- 
peramus, necessitate paulatim remissus est, non omissus®. 

(Vide etiam Optatum de Donatistis lib. iv.1 Lectiones (inquit) 
Dominicas incipitis, et Tractatus vestros ad nostram inju- 
riam explicatis, profertis Evangelium, et facitis absenti fratri 
convicium. Atque utinam hodie nusquam gentium, qui cum 
Donatistis ea in re puria faciant, inveniantur*.) 

De pravo more acclamantis et plaudentis populi, quando 
aliquid admodum concinne dixisset concionator et feliciter 
expedivisset, vide S. Mug. de Doct. Chr., lib. iv. cap. 10! and 
24™, Hieronym. Ep. ii. ad Nepotium™ et Chrysostom. Homil. 
2. de Lazaro’. Tacete (inquit) auditores, &c.P 


e (S. Ambros. Ep. 20. ad Marcelli- 


nam, (ed. vet. 33.) § 4. Op. tom. ii. 


col. 853, B.] 

f [From Calixtus, as above, § Ixiv. ] 

& [S. Aug. Prologus Tract. in Epist. 
Johann. Op. tom. iii. p. 2. col. 825, 826. ] 

h [From Calixtus, as above, § Ixviii. 
with adaptations at the beginning. } 

i [S. Optatus, de Schism. Donat. 
lib. v. cap. 5. Op. p. 72. ] 

* [Calixtus, ibid., § lxvi. This para- 


_ graph is added in the margin of the 


original. ] 

- 1} (Solet autem motu suo significare 
utrum intellexerit cognoscendi avida 
multitudo.—S. Aug. de Doct. Christ., 


lib. iv. § 25. cap. 10. Op. tom, iii. p. 1, 
col. 74, A.] 

m [Denique cum apud Cesaream 
Mauritanie populo dissuaderem pug- 
nam civilem, ... egi quidem granditer, 
quantum valui, ut tam crudele atque 
inveteratum malum de co.dibus et 
moribus eorum avellerem, pelleremque 
dicendo: non tamen egisse aliquid me 
putavi, cum eos audirem acclamantes, 
sed cum flentes viderem. Acclama- 
tionibus quippe se doceri et delectari, 
flecti autem lacrymis indicabant.— 
Ibid., § 55. cap. 24. Op. tom. iii. p. 1, 
col, 87, E.} 

2 (S, Hieronymus, Ep. lii. (ol. ii.) 


SECOND 
SERIES. 





SECOND 


SERIES. 


318 _ NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


DE CONCIONIBUS SEU HOMILIIS AD POPULUM. 


Auspiciis Caroli Magni Homilie Patrum, quibus lectiones 
Dominice et Festive exponerentur, delecte sunt. 


Sigebertus ad annum 8074, “ Carolus Imperator (ait) per 
manum Pauli Warnefridi Diaconi sui decerpens optima queque 
de scriptis catholicorum patrum, lectiones unicuique festivitati 
convenientes per circulum anni in Ecclesia legendas compilari 
fecit.” De his ipsis, aut certe talibus Concilium Turonense 3™ 
ejusdem Caroli Magni jussu celebratum, cap. 17°, “ Visum est 
unanimitati nostra, ut quilibet episcopus habeat homilias con- 
tinuatas necessarias admonitiones, quibus subjecti erudiantur. 
Et ut easdem homilias quisque aperte transferre studeat in 
rusticam Romanam linguam, (id est Gallicam;) aut Theotiscam, 
(id est Germanicam ;) quo facilius possint cuncti intelligere 
gue dicuntur. Ita consultum fuit duobus precipuis sub im- 
perio Caroli populis. Quam vero operam Sigebertus aliique ve- 
tustiores Paulo Diacono tribuunt, eam in Alcuinum nostratem 
confert Sextus Senensis, Bibl. sue, lib. 4°. Collegit (inquit) 
et in ordinem redegit jussu Caroli Magni prestantissimarum 
ecclesia doctorum homilias in evangelia, que per anni ambitum 
in templis leguntur. Addit omnes numero esse ccix., sed ubi 
opus illud latet, incertum est. 


THE OFFERTORY, 


De Offertorio. | 

Huc usque se extendebat Missa Catechumenorum apud 
antiquos. Post hec extra delubrum catechumeni fiunt, et 
hi quoque qui in penitentia sunt. Manent autem intus soli 


ad Nepotianum, § 8. Docente te in 
Ecclesie non clamor populi, sed ge- 
mitus suscitetur,...in qua mihi omni 
populo acclamante, &c.—Op. tom. i. 
col. 261, 262. ] 

° [ovyare tadTa axovovTes; moAAHY 
buay exw xdpw Tis ovyjs Tabrns mar- 
Aov, 2} Tav Kpdtwr. of wey yap Kpdrot 
kal of €rawot Aaumpdrepoy eue wo.odow, 
H aryh 5t abrn owppoverrépous iuas ép- 
yaferat.—S. Chrysost., Hom. 2. in La- 


zarum, Op. tom. i. p. 730, A.] 
P [ Calixtus, ibid., § lxv.] 


4 [Sigeberti Gemblacensis Chronica, — 


A.D, 807. p. 98. ap. Mirzi Chronica, 
Antw. 1608. ] 
® (Cone. Turonense III, (A.D. 813.) 
ean. 17. Concilia, tom, ix. col. 351.] 
* [Sixtus Senensis, 
Sancta, lib. iv. art. Albinus, p. 191. 
ed. Paris, 1610.] 


Bibliotheca — 





_ 





een 





ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 319 


qui divina spectare merentur, atque percipere. Dionys., Eccl. 
Hierarch. c. 3*. et Conc. Laodicenum, can. 19°. 

Oblationes ergo catechumenorum aut peenitentium aut eo- 
rum qui sese manifestis criminibus obstrinxissent, vetus eccle- 
sia minime recipiebat*, 

Symbolum enim erat perfecte Communionis una cum ceteris 
fidelibus offerre, et alios de aliorum oblationibus particulam in 
Eucharistia accipere. Idem.’ 

Et prior quidem Liturgia pars, (que in Latinis Ecclesiis 
quondam Missa Catechumenorum, quia ea finita dimittebantur, 
appellata fuit,) communis erat institutionis, id est, omnibus 
tam catechumenis quam poenitentibus, et infidelibus ipsis, atque 
impiis hominibus, non minus quam regeneratis, fidelibus et piis 
libere permittebatur ; Posterior vero pars, que cum Offertorio 
incipit, et deinceps sequitur usque ad ultimam Dimissionem, 
Missa Fidelium vocabatur, et erat proprie institutionis ad_eos 
tantum et non alios pertinens*. Vide que de hac re infra 
annotavimus ad ult. benedictionem et dimissionem communi- 
cantium*. 

And this latter part was reckoned by the ancient Fathers 
of the Church, as it is still by us, to be the more noble, holy, 
and sacred solemnity of the two. For in the former part 
hitherto, there was only an exercise of the common ministry 
of Christ’s Gospel, whereby all men, whosoever they were, 
had their instruction, and were exhorted to make profession 
of God’s true religion, and for that purpose were admitted 
to all the former parts of the Liturgy or Service of the 
Church. But when it came once to the latter part, wherein 
the Holy Communion was to be administered, that was 
reserved only for such as were already duly brought up in 
piety, and prepared for the reception thereof, according to 
the rules and institution of Christ Himself at His last 
Supper, which the Church was most careful and curious 


to observe. 


t [See note b, on next page. ] 

u [wept rod Sety idia mp@roy weTa Tas 
buiArlas tev emiokdrwy, Kal Thy KaTy- 
Xoumévev edxhy emirercioGat Kal pera 
Td eeAOeiv Tos KaTnXounévous, TaY ev 
petavola Thy edxhv yiveoOa.—Concil. 
Laodicen., (A.D. cir. 364.) can. 19, 
Concilia, tom. i. col, 1500, C.] 


In a king’s court, all manner of persons are 


x [Partly taken from Calixtus, ubi 
supra, § xxiv. } 

y ({Id., ibid. | 

7 [From Calixtus, ibid., § xc. The 
passages which follow are in great mea- 
sure translated from the same. ] 

* [See the notes at the end of the 
Communion Service. ] 


SECOND 


SERIEs. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


320 _ NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 


nourished according to their degree and condition, even 
those have some entertainment that are but newly entered 
into his family, not yet fit for any great or serious employ- 
ment; many disorderly persons, and those that are held in 
prison or captivity for their misdoings; all these have some 
provision or other made for them at his expense: but into 
his private lodgings, into his bedchamber, or to his own 
table, none are admitted, but such as tried and approved 
persons, both for their fidelity, and for their abilities, which 
renders them more acceptable to him, and more fit to do 
him service. And after the like manner it is in the Church, 
where to the common doctrine and instructions of the word 
of God, which is the nourishment of the souls of men, and 
without which no spiritual life can either be begun or con- 
tinued in them, all men are admitted, be they catechumens 
or penitents, or excommunicate persons, or such as be vicious 
and irregular in their course of life. But to Christ’s own 
table, into His inner chamber, none are suffered to come, 
but those that are regenerate, and live a godly life according 
to His own ordinances. For He accounteth all others as 
not yet fitted to serve Him in so near a capacity, or to par- 
take of His greatest favours. By this similitude may we the 
better understand, what the difference is between the first 
and second part of this ecclesiastical Liturgy. 

Missis catechumenis ministrorum alii quidem pro clausis 
templi foribus adstant, alii proprii aliquid muneris agunt ; 
deinde facta per populum oblatione, qui ipsius ordinis pre- 
ciput ministri sunt, una cum sacerdotibus, sanctum panem, et 
benedictionis calicem sacro sanctis altaribus imponunt. Dionys. 
ibid.> Ubi per precipuos ordinis ministros diaconos intelligit. 
Horum enim est, materiam sancte celebrationis in altari dis- 
ponere. Erant autem hec panis et vini elementa ea que potis- 
simum offerebantur. 
aliquid offerendum, quod aut sacrificio, aut ejus ministris 


guoquomodo serviret, ut de aliquibus referant auctores, ne eis — 





et 


Usque adeo vero exisiimarunt fideles — 


> [kal werd rabras, tw ylyvovra Tis 
iepas wepiox7s of katnxovmevot Kal mpds 
avrots of évepyovuevol, Kal of év pera- 
vola bvres, mévovat 5 of THs THY Oelwy 
érovlas kal Kowwvias aw. tady deEl- 
Ttoupyav 5&, of pev éoraor mapa Tas 
Tov iepod mbAas ovyKekAciopevas, of 5e 


HAAS TL TY Tis oiKelas Td=ews evEpyon- — 
Of 5) Tis Aerroupyinijs Siakocun- 
cews Exxpitot, obv Tots fepedow emt Trou — 


ow. 


Oclou Ovoiacrnplov mporibeact Toy iepdy 
&prov, kal Td Tis evAoylas moThptov.— 


S. Dionys. Areop. de Eccles. Hierarchia, y 


cap. 3, Op. tom. i. p. 187, D.] 





eS ee 
ne ee a 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 321 


 deesset quod offerrens, ad fontem properasse, inde aquam sal- Srconp 
tem delaturos, notavit ex Alcuino® et Amalario® Onuphrius. es 

Populus vero fidelis offerebant panem et vinum; aquam (ut ait 
- Amalarius® de suo tempore) offerebant cantores, aut alii eorum 
~ nomine. 

Erat autem! veteri Ecclesie in more positum ut in sacris 
—conventibus a fideli populo offerrentur panis et vinum, que non 
modo cederent pauperibus, sed etiam Ecclesia ministris in sub- 
- sidium et alimoniam, postquam tantum quantum administrande 
_ Eucharistia sufficiebat, de eisdem sumptum fuisset. Which 

order and custom of the ancient Church is acknowledged 
and approved by H. Bullinger®, one of the reformers in 
‘Switzerland, lib. iti. de Orig. Error. cap. 4". Receptissimum 
fuit in Ecclesiis vetustis cibum et potum offerre in cetu sacro 
ad usum ministrorum et pauperum; ex quibus deligebantur 
etiam panis et vinum, que in Cena Domini proponebantur. 
Unde Sacramentum Eucharistia vocabatur oblatio et sacri- 
ficium, &c. Which is the reason that the sentences appointed 
here to be read for the Offertory, refer some to the poor, and 
‘some to the ministers of the Church, that wait upon the 
altar. And this is also the reason, that in the fifth rule 
following the Collects after the Offertory, it is appointed, “If 
~ any of the bread and wine remain, the curate shall take it home 
to his own house.” Hine B.Cyprianus' lib. de Opere et Elee- 
~mosyna, opulentam matronam increpans, “ Locuples, inquit, et 
dives es, et Dominicum celebrare te credis, ... qua in Domi- 
nicum sine sacrificio venis, que partem de sacrificio, quod 
pauper obtulit sumis?” Sane sacrorum participes que ad 
sacra peragenda requiruntur offerre sive conferre decet. Ci 
Et sanctior cultus, cujus obeundi ergo conferri sensibilia 
munera possint, alius nullus est, Irenai antiquissimi itidem 
_ scriptoris hac sunt verba, lib. iv. cap. 32. “ Offerre igitur 
| oportet Deo primitias ejus creature, quam Dominus docuit 


¢ [Alcuin says: Cantores,...que- Off, p. 163, D.] 


' runt aquam ad fontem, et servant eam f [ Calixtus, ibid., § xvii. ] 
coopertam, usque ad tempus sacrificii, & (This passage was added in the 
et siceam mundam offerunt.—Alcuinus margin: and seems to be Cosin’s own. ] 

_de Div. Off. c. quid significent vesti- h [{Bullingerus, de origine erroris 

menta. Apud Hittorp. de Div. Off. libri duo, lib. ii. cap. 4 fol. 106, b. 

_p. 67, B.]) Tiguri, 1568. ] 

| 4 [See the next note. ] 1 (S. Cypr. de Operibus et Eleemo- 


. * [Amalarius Fortunatus, de Eccl. synis, Op. Tract. p. 203. ] 
Off, lib. iii. c. 19. apud Hittorp. de Div. J [Calixtus, ibid., § xviii.] 


COSIN, Y 





f 


322 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Seconn Offerri in Ecclesia; sicut et Moyses ait, Non apparebis vacuus 


SERIES. 





ante conspectum Domini Dei tuik. Non quasi indigentem, 
sed ut ipsi nec infructuosi nec ingrati simus'.” 

Diu duravit in Ecclesia hic ipse offerendi mos, quem Matis- 
conensis Synodus 2* seculo v1. ad finem jam vergente confirma- 
tum wit, can.4™,. “ Decernimus, ut omnibus Dominicis diebus 
altaris oblatio ab omnibus viris et mulieribus offeratur, tam 
panis quam vini, ut cum Abel vel ceteris juste offerentibus con- 
sortes sint.”? De eadem oblatione seculo nono Amalarius Fortu- 
natus qui suos de Officio Eccl. libros Ludovico Pio inscripsit, 
lib. 11." Omnis populus intrans Ececlesiam debet sacrificium 
(panem et vinum) Deo offerre. Only in places where they had 
quire-men, that sung.during the time of the Offertory, it was 
appointed that one should offer for them all. They in the 
Church of Rome have at this day no such common Offertory 
as of old they had; but now they leave it off, and teach the 
people to think upon no other offering but their offering up 
of Christ in the Sacrifice of the Mass. 


Superest tamen in Gallia® (haud, quod sciam, alibi) hujus 


antiqui Offertorit aliquod vestigium, ubi in Missis, guas vocant 


Parochiales, grandis panis, quem ex ordine per vicos patres- 


familias parochiani suppeditant, cum pompa offerunt. 


(First sentence of the Offertory.) And glorify your Father 
which is in heaven.] Justin. Mart. Apolog.? “In omnibus 


vero oblationibus benedicimus et laudamus Creatorem omnium 
per Filium Ejus Jesum Christum et per Sp. Sanct.” 
Who goeth a warfare &c.| Pro clera, 


Let us do good unto all men, especially.)  Beneficium 
maxime necessarium est sublevare egentes ; ab isto igitur bene- 
ficio quod non tam homini prestatur quam humanitati, nemi-— 


nem vult apostolus excludi. 


Quod haud dubie ex equi bonique 


regula intelligendum est, quatenus et nostre facultates ferunt 


k [Igitur Ecclesiz oblatio, quam Do- 
minus docuit offerri in Ecclesia, purum 
sacrificium reputatum est apud Deum. 
... Offerre igitur oportet Deo primitias 
ejus creature sicut et Moyses ait, &c. 
——S. Irenzus cont. Heres., lib. iv. cap. 
18. § 1. Op. p. 250. 1.] 

1 [Sed et suis discipulis dans con- 
silium, primitias Deo offerri ex suis 
creaturis, non quasi indigenti, sed ut ipsi 
nec infructuosi nec ingrati sint, eum 
qui ex creatura panis est, accepit et 


gratias egit—-Idem, ibid., cap. 17, § 5. 
Op. p. 249. 2.] 
m (Conc. Matisconense II, (A.D. — 
585.) can. 4. Concilia, tom. vi. col. 674.] _ 
n [See above, p. 321, note e. | 
° [Calixtus, ibid., § xxvii.] 
P [éml maior 5 ofs mpoopepducda, 
evAoyoomer Thy moinThy Tay wdvTwy did 
Tov viod av’Tod "Incod Xpiorod, Kal Sid 
mvetuaros Tod Gylov.—Justin M. Apol. 
i. c. 67. Op. p. 83, ¢.] ; 





4 








ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 323 


Quod si omnibus sublevandis Szconn 
ERIES. 


Gal. v. 10. 


et ipsorum necessitas postulat. 
‘pares non simus, equum est eos preferri quos pietatis professio 
nobis conjungit. Grotius’. > 

Let every man do as he is disposed &c.| Just. Martyr 

_ (ex quo veteris in his oblationibus ecclesie praxis et mos claret) 
| Apol. 2". “Quibus copia est, et gui volunt, pro arbitrio quisque 
suo, quod visum est, contribuunt ; et quod colligitur apud pre- 
positum deponitur. Ipse vero modo opitulatur pupillis et 
viduis, et propter morbum aliamve causam egenis, &c. Item 
Tertullian. Apolog., c. 398. “ Modicam unusquisque stipem 
menstrua die, vel cum velit, et si modo possit apponit; nam 
nemo compellitur, sed sponte confert. Hwe quasi deposita 
pietatis sunt ; nam inde non epulis, nec potaculis, nec ingratis 
voracinis dispensatur, sed egenis alendis humandisque et pueris 
ac puellis re ac parentibus destitutis, itemque domesticis seni- 
bus, item naufragis, et si qui in metallis, et si qui in insulis, 
vel in custodiis, duntaxat ex causa Dei secte, alumni confes- 
_ sionis sue fiunt. 7 

Whoso hath this world’s good, &c.| Pro pauperibus. 

The churchwardens, &c.| Munus economorum et assistentium 
in Ecclesia Anglicana jampridem observatum ; Quibus incumbit 
curare, 1°. Ne quid detrimenti capiat templi fabrica. 2°. Ut 
cum consilio rectoris pecunie collecte et in cistam reposite 
rite distribuantur pauperibus. 3°. Ne quis rei sacre interstre- 
pat. 4°. Ne quis excommunicatus cetui se ingerat. 5°. Inor- 
dinate viventes admonere. Et 6°. Si perseverent, eorum nomina 
ad episcopos deferre. 

flit autem vel a rectore nominantur, vel ab ipso et paro- 
chianis quotannis eliguntur. 

And upon the Offering-days appointed.| It was one of the The four 
instructions set forth by the authority of King Henry VIII. Sfering- 

in the convocation of his clergy, anno 1536, to be generally pore of the 


urch of 


observed in the Church of Englandt; “That the feasts of England. 


4 [The editor has not found this 
passage of Grotius. ] 
* [oi edropotvres St Kal BovaAduevor, 
kara mpoalpesw Exacros thy éavrod, d 
 BobrAcra Sidwor, nad 7d ovArEydpevov 
Tapa Te wpoeoT ri amworiGera, kad ards 
_ €mixoupel 6ppavots re Kal xhpais, Kal Tots 
bia vécov % 8? BAAnv aitlay Acvromé- 
vos, kal Tois év Seapots obo, Kal Tots 


Pee ee ed 


mapemidhuots ovo E€vois, Kal ATWA@S THE 
trois év xpela otor Kndeuwv yiyverat.— 
S. Justin. Mart. Apol. 1. (al. Apol. 2.) 
§ 67. Op. p. 83, E. 24, A.] 

s (Tertullian. Apolog., cap. 39. Op, 
p. 31, B.] 

* [A copy of the Act made for the 
abrogation of certain holidays, &c. 15386. 
Wilkins’ Concilia, tom. iii, p, 824. ] 


¥2 


324 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


pecan ‘the Nativity of our Lord, of Easter Day, of the Nativity of 
——— St.John Baptist, and of St. Michael the archangel, shall be 
accounted accepted, and taken for the four general Offering- 
days.” Which order is in some places among us still ob- 
served. And the king or queen in their chapel-royal (or 
wherever they be at church on those days) never omit it, 
-but arise from their seat, and go in solemn manner to pre- 
sent their offering upon their knees at God’s altar. And 
then is read by the priest or bishop attending, this sentence 
here prescribed, 1 Cor. ix., ‘They which minister about holy 
things live of the sacrifice, and they which wait on the altar, 
are partakers with the altar. Even so hath God also or- 
dained, that they who preach the Gospel, should live of the 
Gospel.” 


Let us pray for the whole state.| Audis sacerdotem Det 
ad altare exhortantem populum Dei, orare pro omnibus, S. Aug. 
Lp. 107%. 

Militant here on earth.| Sic dicta ad differentiam Ecclesie 
triumphantis in ceelo, de quibus plenius videre poteris in c. fun- 
damenta super v. militantis Eccl. per Cardin. de Ele, lib. vi.* 

By Thy holy apostle hast taught us to make prayers.| 
1 Tim. 1. 1, dejoers, mpocevyas, &e. guas pro omnibus homi- 
nibus, pro regibus, et quibusvis in eminentia constitutis fiert 
jubet apostolus, de precibus in celebratione Eucharistie recitart 
solitis. exponit Augustinus, Ep. 59%. Eligo (inquit) in his 
verbis hoc intelligere, quod omnis vel pene omnis frequentat 
Ecclesia, ut Precationes accipiamus dictas, quas facimus in— 
celebratione Sacramenti, antequam illud quod est in Domini 
mensa incipiat benedict ; Aerie cum benedicitur et sancti- 
Jicatur, &. 

Agimus vero gratias » non ob propria tantum, verum etiam 
0b aliena bona. Ita enim et invidiam poterimus extinguere, 
et adstringere charitatem, eamque facere magis sinceram ; neque 
enim jam illis poteris invadere, pro quibus et pro quorum bonis 
gratias Deo agis. JIdcirco etiam sacerdos pro universo orbe 





* [See above, p. 310, note h.] barella the editor has not found. ] 

* [Lyndwood, Prov. Angl., lib. tit. y (S. Aug. Ep, 149. ad Paulinum. 
1.c. 1. p. 5. note p. ad verb. Ecclesia. (aliter Ep. 59.) cap. 2. § 16. Op. 
The reference to Cardinal Franc. Za- tom. ii. col. 509, C.] ; 





: 
t 

























in Matt.* 


‘licet, postulemus. C.? 


quiete, “pro mora finis,” 


&c. 


| mus autem omnes. 


mysterium idem sunt. 
quod videtur. 


\ wer. j 4 


talia te oportet preparare. 


. [edxapiorapey dé we) bmep TOV 
| oixelwy pdvwv, GAAG Kal imtp Tav GA- 
\ Aorpiov ayabar, otTw yap Kab Thy Bac- 
| Kaviay d&vedety Suvnoducba, rath THY dyd- 
nv emioplyEat Kal yunoiwrépay mojo. 
| ovde yap Suvhon Backivat Aourdy éxel- 
| vows imép av evxapioreds To Seomdry’ 
| bd 5) Kal 6 i lepeds bmep THs oloumevns, 
| brép ray por epwy, bnép TOV VOY, dmrép 
| Tay yevundev roy TOV Eumpooder, bmp 
Tay werd, Tara, eropevor eis Tas, edxa- 
| Ptoreiv xedever, THs Ovolas mpoKesmevys 
| ékelvns.—S. Chrysost. in Matt. cap. viii. 
| Hom. 25. (al. 26.) Op. tom. vii. p. 311, 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 


The holy Sacrament—the holy mystery.| 
Sacramentum tamen proprie dicitur illud 
Mysterium vero quod per id significatur. 

To a most godly and heavenly feast.| S. Aug. Tract. 84. in 
| 8. Joh! Hoc est quod legitur in Proverbus Solomonis cap. xxiii. 
Si sederis cenare ad mensam potentis, considerans intel- 
| lige que apponuntur tibi, et sic mitte manum tuam, sciens quia 
Qua autem mensa est potentis, nist 


All Christian kings, princes, and governors, and especially 
&c.] Bonum factum, ut benignam eis protectionem, et cuncta, 
sine quibus vitam tranquillam, piam et honestam, degere non 


De tisdem precibus Tertullianus, Latinorum Patrum anti- 
_quissimus, Apologet. cap. 39”, Oramus etiam pro imperatoribus, 
pro ministris eorum et potestatibus, pro statu seculi, pro rerum 
Et libro ad Scap.°, Itaque et 
Sacrificamus pro salute imperatoris, sed Deo nostro et ipsius, 
sed quomodo Deus precepit, pura prece. 
verba Cyrilli Hierosolymitant Catech. Mystag. 54, Odsecra- 
‘mus Deum pro communi Ecclesiarum pace, pro tranquillitate 
mundi, pro regibus, pro militibus, pro soctis, pro egrotis et 
afflictis, et in summa pro his omnibus, qui egent auzilio. Lge- 


Atque hue spectant 


[THE SECOND EXHORTATION®. | 


Sacramentum et 


A.] 

@ (Calixtus, ibid., § xxxi.] 

> (Tertullian. Apolog., cap. 39. Op. 
p. 31, A.] 

. (Id. ad Scapulam, cap. 1. p. 69, C.] 

“1%, Se Na Hieros. Catechis. 23. 
Mystagog. 5. Op. pp. 327, D. 328, A. 
cited above, p. 243, note h.] 

° [The second exhortation of the 
books, before 1662 is embodied in our 
first exhortation. ] 

f [S. Aug. In Johann., cap. 16. 


Tract. 84. Op. tom. 3. p. 2. col. 709, A. 


This is not an exact citation. ] 


325° 


terrarum pro absentus, atque presentibus, pro his qui ante nos Sxconp 
fuerunt et pro his qui postea futuri sunt, sacrificio Christi 
\proposito Deo nos gratias jubet offerre. Chrysost. Hom. 26. 


SERIES. 


326 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Seconp unde sumuntur Corpus et Sangus Ejus, qua animam suam posuit 


/ERIES. 


pro nobis? Ht quid est ad eam sedere, nisi humiliter accedere ? 
Et quid est considerare, et intelligere que apponuntur tibi, nist 


digne tantam gratiam cogitare? Et quid est sie mittere manum, 


ut scias quia talia te oportet preparare, nisi quia pro nobis Chris- 
tus passus est, relinquens nobis exemplum (1 Pet. 11. 21) ita ut nos 
sequamur vestigia Ejus? Hoe est talia preparare. 

Then let him come to me—and open his grief.| Hoe autem et 
eos qui Johannem adibant, (Mat. iii. 6.) fecisse credibile est, tum 


ut precibus ipsius apud Deum juvarentur (Jac. v. 16.) tum ut in- 


struerentur consilio ad speciales circumstantias accommodato (Lue. 
lil. 12, 14.) . . . Quod autem disputant viri eruditi, an legibus 
Levit. v. 5, et Num. v. 1, exigatur tantum confessio apud Deum, 
et eum cujus interest, an vero etiam apud sacerdotem, ea de re 
probabilis maxime videtur eorum sententia qui existimant etiam 
apud sacerdotem factam aliquam particularem culpa confessionem, 


in vis que cognita capitis penam non adferebant, in ceteris suffe-_ 


cisse generalem. Grotius®. Overallus”. 


Cur penitentiari sacerdotes introducti sunt in Ecclesiam post 
errorem Novatianorum, licet aliunde assumere, sed quemadmodum — 


eos aboleri, atque item postea restitui placuit, hoc vero institutt 
nostri erit. 
Arcadio', 


delicti, gejunio et orationt vacare, propterea frequentius im 


Leclesia moraretur, adeoque im ea certe pernoctaret, a diacono 


stuprata est. Quod scelus penitentiario revelavit. Poniten- 
tiarius item, cui ex vetert canone taciturnitas commendabatur, 


prodidit commissum. Itaque re in contumeliam versa, et in oppro-— 
brium ecclesiastice discipline, Nectarius Constantinopolitanus — 
episcopus, nedum diacono ut scortatori, penitentiario ut impru=— 
denti dignitatem ademit, (que pena Synodo Anglicano 1604, 


Sub imperatoribus Valentiniano, Theodosio, et 
Constantinopoli mulier fuit, et ea quidem nobilis, © 
que cum a penitentiario jussa, in remissionem agnitt confessique 







Tenent — 





y 
, 
; 
7 





5 





& [Grotius, Comment. in Matt. cap. 
iii. v. 6. apud Criticos Sacros, tom. vii. 
col. 103. ] 

h [It does not appear why the name 
of Bp. Overall is added here. His views 
were well known to Cosin, who had 
been his chaplain. See reference to his 
teaching and practice in the former 
series of notes, pp. 114, 127, 155. 

In a letter to Grotius dated Sept. 25, 
1617, Overall, speaking of the views of 








the English Divines, says: 
presbyteros Ecclesize veram habere po-— 
testatem, etsi ministerialem, solvendi 
et remittendi peccata, (clave non er=— 
rante,) non tantum declarandi soluta 
aut retenta esse; ut et veteres ex Ma= 
jore parte judicarunt.—Prestantium et 
eruditorum virorum Epistole.. Ep. 
eexcii. p. 486. ed. Amst. 1684. ] ! 
* [See Socrates, Hist. Eccl., lib. ve 
ce. 19. p. 286.] a 


k 


PT 
% 
. 





ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 827 


Canone 113*, renovata et aucta est,) verum etiam ex Eudaemonis 
presbytert sententia, ut libera esset im posterum ecclesia ab omni 
maledicentia et probrosa suspicione penitentiarium munus omnino 


_ abrogavit: maluitque ut pro fiducia et conscientia sua unusquisque 


ad communionem sacrorum mysteriorum accederet, quam ut denuo 
in religione tale probrum, seu verum, seu fictum, ponitentiario- 
rum sacerdotum, et tacite hujus professions occasione nasceretur. 
Quod exemplum ali omnes episcopi eo tempore secuti sunt, et 


hodie sequitur Ecclesia Anglicana, que necessitatem confessionis 


private (preterquam im moribundis) sustulit, confessionem libe- 
ram non sustulit. Ita sepe accidit, ut que bene constituta, atque 
introducta sunt, quasi ise leges et non homines deliquissent, 
severius mdignatione facti, aboleantur, quam pene exigantur ab 
ais qui adversus eas leges deliquerunt, ut Regiam potestatem, De- 
cemviratum, dictaturam, tribunatum Romani, eorum potius odio 
qui hos magistratus tenuissent, abrogarunt ; quam quod in his po- 
testatibus aliquid vitit detrimentive esset. Quapropter et ex con- 
trario abusu easdem leges postea iterum refigi, aut eosdem magis- 
tratus restitur, mirum videri non debet, quia in omnibus sola salus 
popult queritur. LItaque et penitentiari ipsi postea sunt resti- 
tuti, sed nulla conscientia necessitate ante Innocentic Tertir 
decretum, quod Anglos non ligat. Ad ceteros quod attinet, ipsr 
viderint. Merito vero in Inquisitione Hispanica tmprobatur, 
quod confitentibus subornantur, qui occulti excipiunt quid scisci- 
tetur penitentiarius, quid respondeat reus. Itaque laudatur -a 
Plutarcho Lacedemonius ille, qui religione wmitiaturus, Deo no- 
luit confiteri quod gravius unquam deliquisset, nisi prius semoto 
sacerdote. Id quod Ecclesia nostra Anglicane jure objict aut ea- 
probrart non possit. 

Non habetur pro confesso, qui apud eum confessus est, quem lex 


vetat enuntiare, quod dictum sit. 
c. 161, 


k [If any man confess his secret and 
hidden sins to the minister, for the un- 
burdening of his conscience, and to re- 


_ ceive spiritual consolation and ease of 








mind from him, we do not any wise 
bind the said minister by this our con- 


stitution, but do straitly charge and 


admonish him that he do not at any 


_ time reveal and make known to any 


person whatsoever any crime or offence 


so committed to his trust and secrecy, 


Es 
F 
‘a 


(except they be such crimes as by the 


rod. de Hyiscopali Audientia, 


laws of this realm his own life may be 


_ called in question for concealing the 


same,) under pain of irregularity.— 
Canon 110, Canons and Constitutions 
Ecclesiastical, A.D. 1604. ] 

1 [ Arodii Rerum ab omni antiquitate 
judicatarum Pandectz, lib.i. tit. 5. c. 16. 
p: 34. This is the title of the chapter, 
out of which the whole note on the 
Penitentiary priests is taken, except 
the additions respecting the English 
Church. | 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES, 


328, NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


And be in perfect charity with all men.) Where Christian 
men are chiefly to be understood, as being all the sons of one 
Father, God our Almighty Creator; and for all whom Christ 
our blessed Saviour suffered death upon the cross, that all 
men (for aught that He intended to the contrary) might 
come to repentance, and be saved by it. 

Draw near, and take this holy Sacrament.| Which seems 
to be an inviting of the people that are to communicate, to 
come into the quire, where the communion-table is placed ; 
(in the place where the altar stood, or within the chancel, 


Injunct. of Queen Eliz., An®°. 1559™) or if otherwhiles, for. 


more convenience, it be brought down at this time, and set 
in the body of the church, the people are hereby ordered to 
go out of their pews or common seats, and to approach towards 
it, for the celebrating of the Sacrament. But the custom of 
calling up the communicants into the quire or chancel of the 
church, though it be no new thing, (having been formerly 
used, as it is also at this day among the Roman and un- 
reformed Catholics, and among both the Protestants in Ger- 
many (Minitis post concionem precibus, qui communicaturr sunt, 
in chorum progrediantur, et in genua procumbant. Agenda Julia 
sive Brunsvicensis®) and other the reformed Catholics else- 
where abroad ;) yet anciently it was not so: for of old time, 
none of the lay-people were permitted to come up, or tarry 
longer in the quire than whilst they presented their oblations 
to the priest there at the altar; and the offertory being 
ended, they were to return into the body of the church, and 
there to receive the blessed Sacrament, which the priest and 
deacon brought down unto them, Concil. Bracarense, A°. 563°. 
Intra sanctuarium altaris ingredi ad communicandum non liceat 
laicis viris aut mulieribus, nisi tantum clericis, sicut et antiquis 


canonibus statutum est. Toletan. Concil. IV. post initium sec. 


vil. can. 17”. Sacerdos et Levita ante altare communicent, in 
choro clerus, extra chorum populus. 
Imo imperator ipse Theodosius ab Ambrosio Episcopo (quamvis 


™ [See Injunctions given by the _ lixtus, ibid., § Ixxx.] 
Queen’s majesty, A.D. 1559, § For ° (Cone. Bracarense IT. (A.D. 563.) 
Tables in the Church. Wilkins’ Con- om 18. Concilia, tom. vi. col. 521.] 
cilia, tom. iv. p. 188. ] P [Cone. Tolet. IV. (A.D. 683.) can. 
» (These words, which are in the 18. Ibid., col. 1457. ] 
margin of the original, are out of Ca- 





: 





ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 


a 


F. 


in hac re paulo morosioré quam oportuit) prohibitus est in choro 
H post offertorium manere. Lgredere igitur (ait) et cum laicis con- 
‘siste; nam interiora o Rew, solis sacerdotibus sunt pervia. Theo- 
| doret. Hist., lib. v. ec. 174%. 

| . Populo tamen ut ta d6pa offerrent, intrare licuit; egressis 
| autem, et suo loco consistentibus diacont deimde ta Spa quando 
erant consecrata attulerunt*. Et multo tempore hie mos in eccle- 
sia duramt. Vide que annotata sunt supra, ad rubr. de Cancellis 
ante initium Matutinarum Precum’. 

Meekly kneeling upon your knees.| Ubi excluserimus a sacer- 
dotalibus ambitibus eos qui non possunt participes esse altaris, 
alia facienda est Hotes et omnes simul in terram jacemus. 

S. Chrys. Hom. 18. in 2 Ep. ad Corinth.* 

Then shall this general confession be made.| Hujus mstitutr 
auctorem faciunt quidam Damasum papam, quidam Pontianum ; 
Pol. Verg. Quamvis verius utroque antiquior sit ; nec aliud lh 
| fecerint quam quod decretis suis ritum tllum confirmaverint. 


Landm* 


















After which the priest shall proceed, saying, Inft up &c.] 

Succedit Prafatio, cujus usum etiam antiquissimum testantur 
_veteres Liturgia, et primorum seculorum patres, Cyprianus, Chry- 
—sostomus, Aug. de Bon. Persev., cap. 13%. Ham adhiberi ut pre- 
_paretur mens sanctioribus istius celebrationis actionibus, monet 
B. Cyprianus ; Ideo (inquit) sacerdos ante orationem (h.e. cano- 
nem sive orationem benedictionis) prafatione premissa parat fra- 
trum mentes dicendo, “ Sursum corda:’ ut dum respondet plebs, 
“HHabemus ad Dominum,” admoneatur aliud se nihil quam Dominum 
cogitare debere. B. Cypr.de Orat. Dom.* Patet hinc etiam atate 





4 [rd &ydov, & Bactred, udvois early 
fepetor Bara, Trois 5& BAAows Gracw 
&bura re nal apavora® Ei Tolvwy, kar 
Tois &Adots Kowwavet Tis ordorews, é aAvup - 
yls yap Bactréas, obx iepéas moret.— 
Theodoret. Hist. Eccl., lib. v. c. 18. p. 
218. This passage in ‘parentheses i is a 
"marginal addition in Cosin. } 

__* (Calixtus, ibid., § lxiii., from whom 
_. previous part of the note is derived, 
-§ Ixii. 

___* [See above, p. 228. This is a mar- 
| ginal note in the original. ] 

&: t fardAw emevdav elptwuev TOY lepav 
 mepBddww Tovs ov Suvapévous THs iepas 
| «peTarxelv rpamréfns, Erépay Set yeverbat 
EY 










edxhv, kal mdvres duolws én’ eddpors 
keiueOa.—S. Chrysost. in 2 Ep. ad Co- 
rinth. cap. viii, Hom. 18. § 2. Op. tom. 
x. p. 368, C.] 

« [Polydori Vergilii de Rerum In- 
ventoribus libb. viii.; lib. v. cap. 11. 
p- 442. ed. Argent. 1613. ] 

x [ Landtmeter, de vetere clerico, &c., 
lib. ii. c. 81. p. 208. ed. Antw. 1635. ] 

y [S. Aug. de Dono Perseverantiz 
(aliter de Bono Persev.) cap. 13. § 33. 
Op. tom. 10. col. 839, B. The words 
are cited a little below, as are also 
ae of S. Chrysostom. ] 

z (S. Cypr. de Orat. Dominica, Op. 
Tract. p. 152.] 


329 - 


SECOND. 
SERIES. 





Prefatio ; 
Sursum 
corda, 


SEcoND 


SERIES. 


’ et erubescis? Nempe illa ipsa hora mendax inveniris ? 


830 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


B. Cypriani de nomine notam fuisse quam hodie dicimus prafa- 
tionem, ac itidem ea verba “ Sursum corda.”’ Resp. “ Habemus ad 
Dominumn.” 

Lift up your hearts. Answ. We lift them up &e."| Prafa- 
tiones iste antiquissime sunt, et in Ecclesia Dei universa a pri- 
mis usque seculis usitate. S. Aug. de Vera Relig., cap. 3°. Quo- 
tidie per universum orbem humanum genus una pene voce respondet 
sursum se corda habere ad Dominum. 8. Chrysost. Homit. de 
Eucharist. in Enceniis®. Nonnulli (inguit) sub horam terribilis 
mystica mense, im vaniloquentiea conventiculis occupati sunt. Quid 
JSacis, O homo? Nonne promisisti sacerdoti, qui dixit, Sursum 
mentem et corda, et dixistt, Habemus ad Dominum. Non vereris 
Quod 
igitur, si unquam alias, omnium maxime in sanctissimi hujus 
sacraments celebratione animus a terra terrenisque curis et cogi- 
tationibus avellendus, sursumque sit tollendus, hine dvapopav vo- 
carunt Graci. Anast. Sinaita Orat. de 8. Synaxi. State cum 
timore tremenda illa elevationis hora, év th boBepa Spa tis 
dvadopas. Quo enim affectu, et quo animo quisque illo tempore 
adsistit, sic et ad Dominum sursum fertur. ’Avapopa yap héyerat 
ud TO Tpos Oedv avapépecOa.  Llevatio enim dicitur quia ad 
Deum sursum fertur. 

Let us give thanks &c. Ans. It is meet and right &e.] 
S. Aug. de Bon. Persever. cap. 18°. Quod in Sacramentis fide- 
lium dicitur ut sursum corda habeamus ad Dominum, munus est 
Domini; de quo munere ipsit Domino Deo nostro gratias agere a 
sacerdote post hane vocem, quibus hoc dicitur, admonentur ; et 
dignum et justum esse respondent. 8S. Chrys. Hom. 18. in 
posterior. ad Corinth. In horrendissimis mysteriis ea que ad 


* {The note which follows, and part 


Spa rhs avapopas ofa yap Siabéoen Kal 
of the preceding one, are from Calixtus, 


olm Aoyiou@ Twapicrara ExacTos buav 





ubi supr., § Ixxx., 1xxxi. ] 

@ [S. Aug. de Vera Relig. cap. iii. 
§ 5. Op. tom. i. col. 750, C.] 

b [radra mpds rods &mroAyutavouevous 
tev Oclwy ouvdtewr elpetot, kal mpds 
Tovs év TH THs PoBEpas Kal mvoTiKijs 
tparéens Spa eis cuvruxtas kat waraio- 
Aoylas arxoAouméevous. tl motets, dv- 
Opwre; odx twécxov TE iepel eirovTi, 
tvw oxGuev Hudy toy vodv Kal Tas Kap- 
dias, kal efras, Zxouev mpds Toy Kupior. 
—S. Chrysost. De Peenitentia, &c., 
Hom. ix. Op. tom, ii. p. 549, C.] 

© [orhnere peta pdBov ev TH poBeps 


kar’ éxelyvnvy thy Spay, oftws nab mpo- 
avapéperar TE Seowdryn. avaddpa yap 


A€yerar Sid TH Tpds Ody dvahéperOar. — 


—S. Anastas. Sinait. de S. Synaxi 
apud Canisium, Lect. Antiq. tom. i. 
p- 470. ] 

4 [S. Aug. de Dono Perseverantiz 
(aliter de Bono Perrev.) cap, 13. § 83. 
Op. tom. x. col. 839, B.] 


© [éw avrav rdAw tay opuwdserrd- — 
twv pvotnploy éredxerar 6 fepeds TH 


Aag@’ erevyerat 5 6 Aads TE iepe?... TH 
THs evxapiotias méAw Kowd. ovde yap 


éxeivos evxaptore? udvos, GAAG Kal 6 








ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 331 


_ gratiarum actionem pertinent sacerdoti et populo communia sunt 
omnia, neque enim ille solus gratias agit, sed etiam omnis po- 


pulus. 


DE PREFATIONIBUS. 


Inter prefationes ille vetustissime sunt, quas S. Ambrosius 
composuit singulis diebus et officits proprias, et quarum plures 
cum libro Sacramentorum S. Gregorit primi edidit Pameliust. 
Novem prolixiores quarum hodie usus est in Ecclesia Romana 
a pluribus tribuuntur Gelasio; et in illius Actis habetur®, Hic 
Jecit Prefationes Sacramentorum. 


DE PREFATIONIBUS PROPRIIS®. 


Ipse Dominus noster priusquam panem frangeret et distribueret, 
gratias egit. Idem sibi faciendum putavit Ecclesia. Quia vero 
Dominus nullam certam formulam prescripsit, sed rei temporique 
congrua usus fuit ; ideo etiam Ecclesia, uti res et tempora exigere 
videbantur, sic quoque in precibus concipiendis, et agendis gra- 
tus formulas attemperavit. Deo (S. Aug. de Civ. D. lib. x. 
cap. 4') dona Ejus in nobis, nosque ipsos vovemus, et reddimus ; 
et beneficiorum Ejus solemnitatibus festis, et diebus statutis dica- 
mus sacramusque memoriam. Ita ad hune modum juxta diver- 





sitatem festorum pro diversis beneficiis, quorum videlicet iis diebus . 


(ut Nativit. Domini, Pasch. Ascens. et Pentecostes) memoria reco- 
litur, ut gratia Deo agerentur formule diverse confecte sunt. 


After which Prefaces shall follow.| Prafationem concludit 
Hymnus Trisagius, Triumphalis, Cherubicus (ita enim veteribus 
vocatur) in omnibus antiquis Liturgiis. 

Therefore with angels &c., saying, Holy, holy, §c.] Pra- 
Jfationes propria, sive formule iste, quibus gratia Deo agebantur, 
hymno tpicayip semper clauduntur. Quod ipsum quia edya- 


Aads &ras.—S. Chrysost. in 2 Ep. ad 
Corinth. cap. viii. Hom. 18. § 2, Op. 
tom. x. p. 868, C, D.] 

f (See Liturgica Latinorum, Jacobi 
Pamelii, tom. ii. p.550. ed. Colon. Ag. 
1571. Prefationes antique per anni 


_¢circulum. Quarum plereque D, Gre- 
_ gorii ztate vetustiores sunt, immo 
mea quidem sententia, Gelasiane et 


erie 


_ Ambrosiane complures. | 


& [Vita Gelasii Papz ex libro Pon- 
tificali, apud Concilia, tom. v. col. 281, 
E. The words are, Fecit etiam et sacra- 
mentorum przefationes et orationes cau- 
to sermone. | 

h (The note that follows is from 
Calixtus, ibid., § 1xxxii. ] 

i{S. Aug. de Civitate Dei, lib. x. 
cap. 3. (ed. vet. cap. 4.) Op. tom. vii, 
col. 240, e.] 


SECOND 


SeRIES. 


SEconD 


SERIES. 


332° NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


ptotiay complectitur, et prastat, quod ante distributionem et 


sumptionem Dominus ipse prestitit, ideo bai ai biti minime 
voluit Ecclesia. C.* 


Then the priest standing up, shall say the Prayer of Con- 
secration. 
The Priest.| Nam per alium quam sacerdotem rite ordina- 


tum non potest hoc Sacramentum confici. Lindw. in Gloss. v.. 


Solis celebrantibus, de sum. Trin. c. Altiss.} | 
Standing up.| Which is a posture of reverence, and here 


ordered for the priest to use, that he may with the more_ 


readiness perform his office in consecrating the elements. 


THE PRAYER OF CONSECRATION, 


Constat ex commemoratione unici Sacrificit per Christum se- 
mel in cruce oblati, historia et institutione Sacramenti, una cum 
oratione ut simul cum benedicto pane et vino de Corpore et San- 
guine Christi communicemus. 

Dicit Gregorius Magnus (lib. vii. Ep. 63™.) morem aposto- 
lorum fuisse, ut ad ipsam solummodo orationem Dominicam, 
oblationis hostiam consecrarent. Quod, si testi sex seculis 
re gesta inferiort fides habenda sit, aut de sola formula pre- 


candi (seclusis gratias agendi et commemorandi formulis) aut. 


alio aliquo modo intelligendum est. Justinus sane etati apo- 


stolice proximus ait, (Apolog. 2",) presidem celebrantem pre-. 


catum esse quantum totis viribus suis potuit, et gratias egisse. 
Magis itaque probo verba Walafr. Strabonis in hunc modum 
loquentis (De Rebus Eccl., cap. 22°.) ‘ Quod nune agitur 
multiplict orationum, lectionum, cantilenarum, et consecra- 
tionum officio, totum hoc apostoli, et post ipsos proximi, ut 
creditur, orationibus, et commemoratione Passionis Dominica, 
sicut ipse precepit, agebant simpliciter ... et relatio majorum 
est, ita primis temporibus missas fieri solitas, sicut modo in 


k [From Calixtus, ibid.] is from Calixtus, § 1xxxiii.] 
' [Lyndwood, Prov. Angl., lib. i. " [kal 6 mpoeoras edxas Suolws Kar 
tit. 1. c. 2. p. 9. note k.] edxapiotias bon Sbvaums ab’tg dvawéeu- 


m (S. Greg. M. Epist., lib. ix. Ind. met.—S. Just. Mart. Apol. 1. (al. Apol. 
.Epist. xii, Op. tom. ii. col. 940, D. 2.) § 67. Op. p. 83, D.] 
Mos Apostolorum fuit, &e. The word ° {Walafridus Strabo de rebus Ec- 
Dominicam is supplied from the pre- _ clesiasticis, c. 22, at the beginning: ap. 
vious clause. The whole of this note. Hittorp., de Div. Off, p. 345, E.]} 




















ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 333 


Parasceue Pasche (quo die apud Romanos misse non aguntur) 
communicationem facere solemus, id est, premissa oratione 
Dominica, et sicut ipse Dominus noster precepit, commemo- 
ratione Passionis Ejus adhibita, eos corpori Dominico commu- 
nicasse et sanguini, quos ratio permitiebat.” Ad commemo- 
rationem illam facit ipsa institute Dominice cene historia, 
una cum mandato Ejus, (ut quod Iile fecit, idem et nos faciamus, 
et perpetuam illius mortisque sue memoriam conservemus) a 
nobis hic recitari solita. 

By His one oblation-of-Himself.| “For this He did once, 
when He offered up Himself,” &c. Heb. vii. 27; x. 12. 
Qui una pro peccatis oblata victima, in perpetuum sedet ad 
dextram Dei. And therefore Christ can be no more offered, 
as the doctors and priests of the Roman party fancy Him to 
be, and vainly think that every time they say mass, they offer 
up and sacrifice Christ anew, as properly and truly as He 
offered up Himself in His sacrifice upon the cross. And this 
is one of the points of doctrine, and the chief one whereof 
the popish mass consisteth, abrogated, and reformed here 
by the Church of England, according to the express word 
of God. 

Of Himself.| Oblatus enim est quia voluit. Et Ipse tra- 
didit animam suam in mortem, Isa. liti. 12. Ego (inquit) pono 

-animam meam a meipso et nemo tollit eam a me, Joh. x. 18; 
Eph. v. 2. 

A full, perfect, and sufficient sacrifice.| Quod proprie con- 
ceptum semper supponit mortem et occisionem Christi. Sunt 
enim hec duo de intrinseca ratione sacrificit ad cultum Dei et 
remissionem peccatorum impetrandam oblati?. So that with- 

out shedding of His blood, and killing Him over again, no 
proper sacrifice can be made of Him; which yet in their 
masses the Roman priests pretend every day to do. 

A full, perfect.| Hujus enim sacrificii fructus est perpetuus, 
quia hoc unicum semel oblatum sacrificium Deus Pater semper 
intuetur, et Filius ad dextram Patris considens intuendum sem- 
per exhibet et offert, atque ita Patrem ut propitius nobis esge 

velit, permovet. Hoc est quod dicit apostolus, Heb. ix. 12, 
Ingressus est in coelum, ut compareat apud faciem Dei pro 
nobis 4, : 

P [Calixtus, ibid., xcii. sqq. ] 4 (Id. ibid., § ix.] 


SEcOND 


SERIES.. 


334 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Barone And sufficient.| Epistola igitur ad Hebr. a sacrificio Christi 
—-—"" tterationem, utpote imperfectionis argumentum, plane removet. 
Et cum sciamus Christum suscitatum a mortuis non amplius 

mori, Rom. vi. 9, hine abunde constat, sacrificium Ejus repeti 

non posse, atque adeo non posse dari in Ecclesia sacrificium, 

quod cum sacrificio in cruce oblato specie idem sit, vel tale 
essentialiter quale illud fuit, vel de quo et sacrificio crucis uni- 

voce sacrificium predicetur®. | 

And satisfaction for the sins of the whole world.| Quia 
pretii est immensi et infiniti*, Which is the doctrine of the 
Church of England, founded upon the words of the apostle, 
1 John 11. 2, “ And He is the propitiation for our sins, and 
not for ours only, but for the sins of the whole world.” 

A perpetual memory.| Optima enim beneficiorum custos est 
ipsa memoria beneficiorum, et perpetua gratiarum actio, que est 
Eucharistia. 8. Chrys. Hom. xxvi. in 8. Matt.* 

Proprium est huie celebrationi™, quod im ea memoratur mors 
Domini, non per mera verba, ut im aliis precibus, sed etiam per 
symbola et signa sacra, sive sacramenta, que S. Augustino sunt — 
guedam quasi verba visibilia. Lib. xix. cont. Faust., cap. 16%, — 
Nam dum frangitur hostia, dum Sanguis de calice in ora fidelium 
Junditur, quid aliud quam Domin et Corporis in cruce immolatio, 
Ljusque Sanguis de latere effusio designatur’. 

Est quidem memoratio’, est precatio citra et eatra sanctissimum 
hoc sacramentum. Quia autem in eo exhibetur Corpus Christi 
in mortem traditum, et preterea symbolicis sive sacramentalibus 
actionibus traditio Corporis et effusio Sanguimis figurantur ; ideo 


~~ 


® (Calixtus, ibid. § x.] 

§ [Id., ibid., § ix.] 

* [pudakh yap evepyeotas aplorn 7 
Tis evepyectas uvhun kai Sinvenns ebxya- 
ptoria. 5:& 8) tovTo Kal Ta ppiKddy 
pvoThpia, Kal woAARs yeuorvTa owrnplas* 
Ta Kad éxdorny xéyw obvakw’ ebxapioc- 
tla kaAetrat.——S.Chrysost.in Matt. viii. 
Hom. 25. (al. 26.) § 3. Op. tom. vii. 
p. 310, D.]} 

« [This paragraph is from Calixtus, 
ibid., § xciv., substituting huic cele- 
brationi, for missz fidelium. ] 

= (Quid enim sunt aliud queque cor- 
poralia sacramenta, nisi quedam quasi 
verba visibilia sacrosancta quidem ve- 
runtamen mutabilia et temporalia.... 
Hee omnia fiunt et transeunt: virtus 


tamen que per ista operatur, jugiter 
manet, et donum spiritale, quod per 
ista insinuatur, eternum est.—S, Aug. 
cont. Faustum, lib, xxxix. cap. 16. Op, 
tom. viii. col. 321, E.] : 

¥ [These words, Nam dum &c. are 
cited by Lanfranc, Gratian, and others, 
as from the Sentences out of Augustine, 
by Prosper. They do not occur there, and 
seem to be Lanfranc’s. The reference 
to Aug. cont. Faust. alone is put in the 
margin of Calixtus, § xciv., but in § i. 
the latter part, beginning at Nam dum, 
is given as above from the Sentences 
by Prosper. | 

* [This passage is from Calixtus, 
ibid., §§ xcix., c., ci., cili.] 











ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 335 


_veteres memorationem huie sacramento peculiarem, Sacrificium 
_memorativum, precationem autem Oblationem appellare ament: 
_utroque illo vocabulo non proprie sed improprie et late sive meta- 
phorice accepto. Notus est locus Augustini in Epist. ad Bonifac.* 
Die Dominico dicimus, hodie Dominus resurreait, cum ex quo re- 
surrexit tot anni transiverunt ; nempe dicitur ulo die fiert propter 
sacramenti celebrationem quod non illo die, sed yam olim factum 
est. Nonne semel immolatus est Christus in seipso ? et tamen in 
Sacramento non solum per omnes Pasche solennitates, sed omnt 
die populis immolatur. Sicut enim Christus eo die resurrexisse 
dicitur, quo resurrectionis Ejus memoria celebratur: ita in Sacra- 
mento Eucharistia immolari dicitur quia in eo immolationis Hus 
memoria peragitur. Insignis etiam est Fulgentit locus, de Pid. 
ad Petr”, cap. 19. Firmissime tene Christum se pro nobis obtu- 
lisse sacrificium et hostiam Deo, Se. cui... sacrificium panis et 
vini in file et charitate sancta Heclesia Catholica per universum 
orbem terre offerre non cessat. LHuseb. Demonstr. Evang. lib. 1.° 
sub finem, Ejus sacrificit memoriam nobis tradidit, ut vice sacri- 
ficti (dvtt Ovelas) semper offeramus. Item4, Hujus sacrifici 
memoriam in mensa per symbola celebrandam accepimus. 

It pleased the synod at Trent® (not long after this Liturgy 
of ours was published) to lay their curse (their “ anathema’’) 
upon all them that held the celebration of this sacrament to 
be a nude commemoration only of Christ’s sacrifice upon the 
cross; or that said it was not a true propitiatory sacrifice, 
but a sacrifice only of praise and thanksgiving, or that taught 
any more, that this sacrifice profited none but those that 
communicated of it, and was not truly offered up for the 
sins, pains, and satisfactions of the living and the dead, 


* [Hodie nempe ipso die Dominico Venet. 1742.] 





tS 
& 
‘thes 
i 
& 
& 
z 


dicimus, Hodie Dominus resurrexit; 
cum ex quo resurrexit tot anni trans- 
ierint. Cur nemo tam ineptus est, ut 
nos ista loquentes arguat esse mentitos, 
nisi quia istos dies secundum illorum, 
quibus hee gesta sunt, similitudinem 


| MNuncupamus, ut dicatur ipse dies qui 
| non est ipse, sed revolutione temporis 
| similis ejus, et dicatur illo die fieri prop- 


_ ter Sacramenti celebrationem, &c,— 
S. Aug. ep. 98. ad Bonifacium, § 9. 
BOP. tom. ii. col. 267, D, E.] 

> [Fulgentius, Lib, de Hid. ad Pe- 
trum, cap. 19. § 60. Op. p. 237. ed. 





© (uvhuny nal iyiv mapadovs, ayrh 
Oucias TE Oeg Sinven@s wpocHéeperv.— 
Euseb. Pamph. Demonst. Evangel., lib. 
i. cap. 10. p. 38, E.] 

q D Abrou dqTa Tov Ovuaros Thy uvh- 
Env er) rpaméfns exteAciv 51a cupBdarwr, 
TOU TE THMATOS aVTOD, Kal TOD cwTnplov 
aluaros Kata Oecuovs THS Kouwhs Sia- 
Ohxns tmapeAnpdres. — Id., ibid., p. 

Ap 

¢ [This paragraph, to Sess. xxii., cor- 
responds to Calixtus, § cxxv., but is 
Cosin’s own. 


SECOND 


SERIEs. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


336 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Sess. 22°. For thus they declared themselves in ambiguous 
words, which as they may have a right and true sense put 
upon them, so are they capable of a wrong, and a false, if 
they intended them (as they did) against us: for we do not 
hold this celebration® to be so naked a commemoration of 
Christ’s Body given to death, and of His Blood there shed 
for us, but that the same Body and Blood is present there in 
this commemoration (made by the sacrament of bread and 
wine,) to all that faithfully receive it: nor do we say, it is 
so nude a sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving, but that by our 


“prayers also added, we offer and present the death of Christ 


to God, that for His death’s sake we may find mercy, in 
which respect we deny [not®] this commemorative sacrifice 


participating of which sacrifice exhibited to us, we say is 
profitable only to them that receive it, and participate of it; 
but the prayers that we add thereunto, in presenting the 


‘death and merits of our Saviour to God, is not only bene- 


ficial to them that are present, but to them that are absent 
also, to the dead and living both, to all true members of the 
Catholic Church of Christ. But a true, real, proper, and 
propitiatory sacrificing of Christ, toties quoties as this Sacra- 
ment is celebrated, which is the popish doctrine, and which 
cannot be done without killing of Christ so often again, we 
hold not; believing it to be a false and blasphemous doc- 
trine; founding ourselves upon the apostle’s doctrine, that 
Christ was sacrificed but once, and that He dieth no more. 


‘to be propitiatory. The receiving of which Sacrament, or 


That we receiving these Thy creatures of bread and wine, S¢., 


may be made partakers of His blessed Body and Blood.| 1. That 
together with the hallowed elements of bread and wine, we 
may receive the Body and Blood of Christ, which are truly 
exhibited in this Sacrament, the one as well as the other. 


f (The words of the canon are; Si 
quis dixerit, Missz Sacrificium tantum 
esse laudis et gratiarum actionem, aut 
nudam commemorationem sacrificii in 
cruce peracti, non autem propitiato- 
rium, vel soli prodesse sumenti; neque 
pro vivis et defunctis, pro peccatis, 
penis, satisfactionibus et aliis necessi- 
tatibus offerri debere anathema sit.— 


‘Cone. Trident. Sess. xxii. De Sacri- 


ficio Missee, Canon. III. Concilia, 


tom. xx. col. 131, D.] 


& [ What follows to ‘ Catholic Church 
of Christ’ is chiefly from Calixtus, § 
exxvi., and §§ xlvi., Ixxiii., sqq., and 
xevi., there referred to. ] 

h (This word is not in the original, 
but it was printed so by Nichols, and 
is obviously required by the context, 
as it is by Calixtus’ words, “ harum, 
inquam, precum intuitu dici possit in 
Missa propitiatorium esse sacrificium.”’ 
§ cxxvi. See the first series of notes 
on this subject, p. 106, note f, &c. ] 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. Bers" 2 


OR SEP TRS 


Who in the same night that He was betrayed, §c.] Eo quod Sxcoxd 

‘novissimum esset tum Pascha, tum epulum, quod ad modum hac. SES 
_tenus usitatum cum suis in terra celebraret, quoque adimpleret 

typum veteris Pasche, et mstitueret novum Corporis et Sanguinis 

sur pro fidelium salute Sacramentum ; quod quoniam mortis Ejus 

| futurum erat pynpdovvev, non conveniebat institui, nisi suprema 

Cena, (quando jam Ipse mortem erat subiturus,) eaque Paschali, 

ut figure syccedenel res, et typo veritas. 


Who in the same night that He was betrayed, §c.| Hujus 
Pasche historiam accurate describunt omnes evangeliste. Post 
igitur paratum hoc Pasche, et a Servatore cum discipulis come- 
_stum, eadem nocte capitur, et postero die cruci affigitur. 
De hac nocte in qua Pascha comedit, et Sacramentum suum in- Christus et 
stituit, magna oritur questio. Nullum enim dubium est, quin cum 142i non 


eadem 
Christus Pascha comederet, vulgo a Judais comestum non Juerit ; ee pas- 


a cele- 
nam in die festo tam solenni nunquam tis licuisset, neque ipsi un- Shane 
quam in animum indusxissent, hominem capere, accusare et supplicio 

aficere. Quod si eadem vespera cum Christo celebrassent Pascha, 
_ fuisset sequens dies primus Azymorum inter dies festos totius anni 
facile princeps. Judai autem non introierunt in pretorium (eo 
die quo Christus crucifixus est) ne polluerentur, sed ut ederent 
Pascha, Joh. xviii. 28, nondum igitur comederant ; at Christus 
_comederat ; ergo non eodem die aut eadem nocte Christus et Judai 
comederunt. 
 Queritur igitur an Christus legem violaverit, et alio quam fas 
esset die Pascha celebraverit ? Quod sane non videtur verosimile ; 
quia hoc a Judais inter alia crimina Ei oljectum non fuit. Et 
guomodo in Servatorem cadat, ut legem violaret, qui venerat in 
mundum non ut legem solveret, sed ut adimpleret? Et quomodo 
_permiserit aliquis Judaorum ut in domo sua nocte non legitima 
_ Pascha Judeorum celebraretur? Non hie recensende sunt varie 
“de hac re variorum interpretum opiniones, quarum alia non magni, 
alia nullius sunt momenti. Paulus Burgensis Hebraicarum anti- 
Q -quitatum peritissimus, sententiam primus ante annos ducentos pro- 
e erosutt, quam hodie doctissimi quique amplectuntur. Aiunt itaque, 
mc quando accideret, ut festus aliquis dies et usitatum Sabbatum 
- ese mutuo exciperent, ita ut necesse esset duos continuos dies Sestos 
_agere, tum moris fuisse, ut fieret. translatio Seriarum et conjun= 


- gerentur duo festi dies in unum. Non enim facimus Yager ent 
-COSIN. Z 








SEcOoND 


SERIES, 


338 ' NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Rabbini) duo Sabbata continua propter olera et propter mortuos. 
Nempe diebus festis neque licitum erat sepelire mortuos, aut cibum 


coquere. Cum vero in calidioribus illis regionibus, vere pra-— 
sertim et autumno mortuorum cadavera integrum biduum ser- 


vari non poterant, neque cibi in plures dies parari ex oleribus, 
hine ut huic incommodo moderentur, translationem dierum ex- 
cogitarunt, et in morem apud Judaos introduxerunt, non quidem 
convenienter legi divine, sed notum est truditiones seniorum 
apud illos seculis sequioribus admodum invaluisse, et vim legis 
obtinuisse. Non autem satis compertum est, quando hac trans- 
latio feriarum ceperit institui. Sunt qui referunt ad tempus 
captivitatis Babylonice. Hinc igitur questio expeditur. Cum 
instaret Passio Domini, ita ferebat ratio mensis, ut magnum et 
Sestum diem azymorum mox exciperet Sabbatum usitatum, at- 
que adeo duo continua Sabbata celebranda essent. Judai igitur 
more jam pridem recepto translationem fecerunt, et festum cum 
Sabbato conjungunt ; unde S. Joh. cap. xx. 31, Erat ille dies 
magnus dies Sabbati, nempe qui proxime sequebatur diem cru- 
cifixionis Domini, quia in eam rejectus erat primus dies azy- 
morum. Sc rvator autem contra divine legis fuit observantis- 
semus, neque constitutionem aut traditionem Judaicam ei pre- 
latam voluit. Ipse enim eo nomine sepe Judaos reprehenderat, 
ut Marci vii. Inde Lucas signanter cap. xxii. 7. ait: Venit dies 
Azymorum quo oporte,at Pascha nactari. Judei quidem postri- 
die mactabant ; non igitur eo die quo oportebat. Johannes igitur 
signanter dicit (cap. xix. v. ult.) Erat Parasceue Judeorum, 
ut a Parasceue legitima eam distingueret. Lx his intelligi 
potest Christum nec tzmpus celebrandi Pascha anticipasse, ut 
Greci opinati sunt, atque inde argumentum sumpserunt non in 


azyma sed in fermentato Eucharistiam a Dec institutam et 
celebratam, atque a nobis etiam ita celebrandam esse; que 
opinio cum aliis nonnullis ecclesiam Grecam cum Latina ir- 
reconciliabili schismate commisit; nec Juc@os distulisse; sed 


Christum secundum legem, Judeos secundum traditionem ma- 
jorum suorum Pascha celebrasse. Non igitur paterfamilias 
muratus est factum Christi, et ut co anno ex decreto synedrii aliter 
Jieret ; neque sacerdotes qui Christum accusabant, ausi fuerint 
criminis loco id ei objicere, cum scirent ex lege Christum ae: 
suum cum discipulis edisse. C.' 


' [The editor has not found from what work this and the following — 
are made. ] 


i 


= 


4 





ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 339 bia) 


| Took bread, and when He had given thanks, (or, as we use to Seconp 
say, when He had said grace), and blessed it, He brake it, &c.] ss aca 
Opera pretium est ut perpendamus hic, qui fuerint sacri convivii pe- 

culiares ritus apud Judaos inde a primo eorum in Palestina ingres- 

sum, ut probabile est, observati, sine quibus coguitis historia evange- 

lica, seu institutio hujus Sacramenti accurate intelligi non potest. 

Cum festum Pasche aderat, unusquisque paterfamilias agnos a Ritus 
nona hora usque ad undecimam, hoc est, inter duas vesperas, secun- oe 
dum legem Mosis, cedebat: singuli agni a singulis sodalitiis, ee 

qua Josephus Belli Jud. lib. vii. c. 174, appellat pparpias, seu minice. 
contubernia, manducabant, et he pparpiac non pauciorum erant 
quam decem virorum ; aliquando etiam vicini convenerunt. Ante 
occubitum pedes lavabant. Quia enim in lectis discumbebant, 
propterea depositis soleis pedes lavare oportebat, ne pulverosis pe- 
dibus strata inquinarent. Atque hunc morem observavit Christus. 
Joh. xiii. Luc. vii. 44. Discumbentes vescebantur agno illo so- 
lido, cum panibus azymis. Hae cena peracta consurgentes altera 
pedum lotione sese ad secundas mensas comparabant, ad quas pro 
... - inferebantur im paropside acetarium ex intybis et lac- 
tucis agrestibus, quarum amaritudinem embammate quodam tempe- 
rabant. Ista colligi possunt e rituali Pasche quod citat Scaliger 
lib. vi. de emend. Temp. Secunda mense hi erat ritus; Pater- 
familias integrum panem azymum in manus sumens, et in duas 
partes dividens sic uni benedicebat, Benedictus es Domine Deus 
noster in esu panis azymi; alterum autem partem sub mappa re- 
conditam ad finem convivit servabat: quo peracto idem ille 
paterfamilias totam illam alteram depromens in tot frusta frac- 
tam, quot erant in mensa convive, primus ipse sumebat, reliqui 
vero frusta sigillatim et ordine discumbentibus cateris porrigebat 
cum his verbis, Iste est panis arumna quam comederunt majores 
nostri in terra Algypti ; quisquis esurit, accedat et paschalizet. 
_ Primam benedictionem dans Servator noster non mutavit, neque 
ratio erat cur mutaret. Eam itaque prolatam innuunt evangelista 
eum dicunt, accepisse panem et benedixisse. Instituturus autem 
_ Corporis sui Sacramentum posteriora verba non retinuit, sed pro iis 


4 
cd 





3 [of 88 évordons éoprijs, doxa xa-  0poltov.—Joseph. Bell. Jud., lib. vi. 
Activa, eal hv Ovovor pev ard évvarns cap. 9. § 3. Op. tom. ii. p. 399.] 

i Gpas wexpe erdexdrns, bowep 5€ pparpla [ There is a word here which is now 
rep) éxaorny ylyverat Ovolay, obk Aac- illegible; in Nichols, the words were 
gov avipay déxa, udvoy yap ovn eeort translated, “ instead of delicate meats.” | 
 -Salvvobat, wordrol 5& Kal aby elkoow - 


i Z2 


Barone dixit, Accipite, edite, hoe est Corpus Meum. 
SERIES, 


340 


_ NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Deinde idem pater- 
Jamilias poculum accipiebat, hac benedictione usus, Benedictus es — 
Domine, qui fructum vitis creasti, et degustatum proximo tradebat, 
et secundo donec per totum contubernium circumferretur. Idem 
Jecit Salvator, sed pro ratione institutt Sui, adjecit ; Hic est San-— 
guis Meus, &c. His omnibus absolutis Psalmus cxi. cum aliquot 
sequentibus cantatur, quem solennem hymnum, hodie Judai mag- 
num Halleluia vocant. Ita etiam Salvator et discipuli ; Et cum 
cecinissent hymnum, abierunt im montem Olivarum. .. . Domino 
nostro in Cena sua suprema ... . intelliguntur'. C. 

Took bread. . . took the cup.| At these words the priest was 
appointed, by the first liturgy set forth in the second year of 
king Edw. VI., to take the bread and cup into his hands™ 
(which is still observed among us); but he was not appointed 
to make any elevation of them, as the new Roman Catholics 
do at their mass; where the priest saying Hoc est Corpus 
Meum, suddenly lifts up the wafer over his head, and after- 
wards the chalice, that the people may all fall down upon 
their knees, and worship them ; which rite neither we, nor any 
of the reformed or Protestant Churches observe, but (in re- 
gard of the peril of idolatry) have wholly omitted". Besides, 
it is but a novelty as the Roman priests now use it, for in 
the ancient fathers we do not read of any such custom; and 
when afterwards this rite of elevation came into the Church, 
it was not a lifting up of the bread and wine (as soon as they 
were sacramentally hallowed) over the priest’s head; nor 
-were the people then appointed to fall down and adore them, 
as the very Body and Blood of Christ held up between the 
priest’s fingers, and set down again upon the table, which is 
more than any priest of them all can do: but this only was 
the order or custom of the Church ; after the elements were 
consecrated, the priest and the deacon together held them in 
their hands, and shewed them to the people, whom at the 
same time they admonished and invited to approach, and 


1 [There are several words illegible 
here: in Nichols the passage is trans- 
lated; “Now by what has been said, 
‘those things which were done by our 
Saviour in His last Supper, may better 
be understood.’’] 

m [“ Here the priest must take the 
‘bread into his hands.” ‘Here the 


lxxxy. 


priest shall take the cup into his hands.” — 
Rubric in the margin of the prayer of — 
consecration, Book of Common Prayer, — 
1549. These were omitted in the second - 
book, and not restored till 1662. } 

" [See Calixtus, ubi supra, §§ lxxxiv., 
The whole of the latter part 
of this note is taken from him. } 


ge 


ON TUE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 341 


communicate thereof, saying to them, wpocéAGere®. Sancta Seconn 
sanctis, siquis dignus sit, accedat et participet®. (In the order Sess 
of Sarum, heretofore used in the Church of England, the 
priest is appointed only to elevate the consecrated elements, 
usque ad frontem, ut a populo videri possint, no mention of the 
people’s adoring is at that time made.) And other elevation 
and ostension than this they had none. Nicol. Cabasil. in 
Exposit. Liturgia, cap. 36°. Sacerdos vivifico pane accepto et 
ostenso, ei qui digne ipsius participes futuri sunt, vocat, Sancta (in- 
quit) sanctis, propemodum dicens, Ecce panis vite quem videtis 
(quod de ipso Corpore Christi natural dici non potest) accurrite 
ergo, siguis est sanctus ; and cap. 39%, Ostensis sanctis, vocat illos. 
qui participare voluerint. Which order and custom in effect , 
is by us still observed. Probably this manner of elevating 
and shewing the consecrated elements to the people, was at 
first introduced to signify and excite the elevation of their 
minds, as at the Swrswm Corda we call upon the people to lift 
up their hearts, and their answer is, “ We lift them up unto 
the Lord.” Which the Greek Church called avagopa, (Ana- 
stasius, Serm. de Synaxi*,) that is, the elevation. Afterwards, 

in the Latin Church, they would have it to signify the ele- 
vation of Christ upon the cross. Rabanus Maurus, lib. i. de 
Inst. Cleric." Elevatio sacerdotis et diaconi Corporis et Sanguinis 
Christi (in sacramento) elevationem Ejus ad crucem insinuat, pro 
totius mundi salute. Et Ivo Carnot., ep. 233*. Cum Panis et 
Caliv adhibito diacono, elevatur, exaltatio Corporis Christi in 





| _ cup respectively. 








© [avotyouor Thy Cipay Tod aylov Bh- 
patos. Kal 6 itKovos mpooxuvhoas &wak 
AapBaver Td Eyiov woThpioy peta evAa- 
Belas, wal etpxerar eis thy Ovdpay, Kal 
¢ “a ae / > 
tbwav 7d Ey.ov worhpiov Seixvucw adTd 


TS raG, A€ywr" Meta PdBov @eod rah 
_alotews mpooérdete.—S, Chrys. 
_ ap. Goar, Rit. Greecorum, p. 84. ] 


Lit., 


- P {The words which follow in paren- 


theses are in the original a marginal 
| note on the words ‘This only was the 
| order,’ &c. } 


4 [Post hee verba inclinet se sacer- 
dos ad hostiam, et postea elevet eam 


_ supra frontem: ut possit a populo vi- 


deri: et reverenter illam reponat.... 


Hic elevet calicem usque ad pectus 


vel ultra caput, &c.—Rubrics after the 


_ words of consecration of the bread and 
Missale Sarisb. Ro-» 


thomag. 1506, and Paris, 1556. ] 


t [roy Swomotov uprov Auer, teal ava, 


detfas, TOUS agious avTov HETEXOVTAS, 
els Thy Merovoiav KaAel. TH Kya, pret, 
Tois wytows. dvov ov Aéyor" idod 6 rijs 
Swjs upros bv bpare. obKoby Spduere 
peTadnyoueror, GAN’ ob waves, GAN’ ef 
tis &ytos.—Nicolai Cabasile Liturgiez 
Expositio, c. 39. ap. Bibl. Patr. Auct., 
tom. ii. p. 247, A, B. Paris. 1624. ] 

® [deltas Ta Gyia, Kael TovSs meTa- 
oxetv BovAouévovs.—Id, ibid., c. 39. 
p. 250, B.] 
_t [See above, p. 330, note c. ] 


« [Rabanus Maurus de Institutione — 


Clericorum, lib. i. Append. de Missa, 
Op. tom. vi. p. 14, C.] 

x {Ivo Carnotensis, Epist. 231. Op.. 
pars alt. p. 98. Paris. 1647. J 


SECOND’ 


SERIES. 


342 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


eruce commemoratur. In all which, there is not a word 
tending to the people’s adoration of that bread, and that 
cup, this being a late device of the new Roman Catholics, 
after they had brought in their novelty of transubstan- 
tiation. 

When He had given thanks.| Nobis’ hoe ipso exemplum pra- 
bens, imo injungens per verba sequentia (Hoc facite) ut nos idem 
agamus. Evxapiotnoas autem hic est ebrdoynoas, Benedicens fre- 
git panem, Se. formulam quidem non prestitit certam, sed Ipse eam 
que temport et rebus presentibus congrueret, adhibuit. Ecclesia 
vero permrsit, ut verbis uteretur quibus tante ret dignitatem, bene- 
Jiciorumque magnitudinem, et devotionem populi, quam commodis- 
sime fiert poterat, exprimeret. Atque hine diversarum gentium et 
Keclesiarum ahe atque alia liturgiarum formula, quas cum alibi, 
tum sexto BB. PP. tomo Paris*. Gr. edit. videre est. 

He brake it.| Ad hee verba dividitur panis. Que divisio 
Eucharistie Latinis et Gracis communis fuit ; cum hoe tamen dis- 
crimine, quod Latini divisionem facerent fractione, Greci sectione. 
Firat enim Grecis in hune usum lanceola, ac preter sectionem in 
modum crucis, adhibebant puuctionem in latere deatro. Cabasil. 
Liturg., cap. 8°. 

Likewise after supper, &c.|. Cum queritur quare Sanguis di- 
visim a Corpore consecratur, dic, quod ratio potest sumi ex usu ad 
quem sacramentum ordimatum est; quia manducatio ex cibo et 
potu consistit. Alia ratio potest sumi ex eo quod per Sacramen- 
tum representatur ; quia in Passione Sanguis Christi a Corpore 
divisus fuit. Linw. in gloss. simul. De Sum. Trin, c. Altiss.” 

Voluit Dominus Corpus et Sanguinem suum eo modo sumi, quin 
panem quoque et vinum, cum quibus exhibentur, eo modo tractari, 
gui ad passionem animis fidelium imprimendam esset idoneus. 
Nempe voluit Sanguinem seorsim, et tanquam a Corpore separatum 
accipi, et voluit benedictum panem, qui Kowwwvia est Corporis, 
Jrangi, et vinum calici infusum effundi, ut ita et passio et mors, ac 
Corporis cruciatus et Sanguinis effusio representarentur, et non 


y [This note is from Calixtus, ubi ® [werd 5¢ rodTo, Kal ds ém) ra Sekid 
supra, § xxix. } bépn Kevrel Toy Uprov, Thy mAnYhv Tis 
2 [That is in the sixth volume of mAcupais éxelvns dinyotmevos, TH Tod 
the Bibliotheca Patrum de la Bigne, &ptov tAnyii.—Nicolaus Cabasilas, ubi 
Paris. ed. 2. 1589; but for the Greek,  supr. c. 8. p. 209, E.] 
see the Auctarium, 1624, tom. ii., where {[Lyndwood, Prov. Angl., lib. i. 
the Greek liturgies are printed. ] tit. i. ec. 2. p. 8, note 1.) 


oe RR al 
ma 








ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 343 


; . . 
_ efjicaciter ingenerentur®. 


Do this in remembrance of Me... Drink this in remembrance of 
Me.| That is, of Christ put to death and sacrificed for us 


_ upon the cross, which is the sacrifice that He truly and per- 


fectly once made, and whereof we only make a commemo- 
ration, or a representation, ¢ofies quoties, as often as we cele- 


_brate this His sacrament, and observe the precept which He 


gave us about it. 
Quantum igitur abest*, ut fractio panis, aut effusio vini, aut 


_ ipsa etiam mystica sumptio Corporis et Sanguinis Domini, sit verus 


eruciatus, aut vera mors Domini, et separatio anime a Corpore 


Dominico, tantum abest quoque ut Sacrificium Eucharistia sit veri,. 


proprit, et stricti nominis sacrificium, et non potius istud ab illo, 
ut imago a prototypo, non nisi extrinsece denominetur. Contra 
solo vero sacrificio pro nobis Christi Sanguis effusus est, ut recte 
ait Aug., Lib. contra Adv. Leg. et Proph., cap. 18°. Hujus 
autem sacrificit Caro et Sanguis (ut idem Aug., lib. xx. contra 
Faust., cap. 224.) ante adventum Christi per victimas similitudi- 
num promittebatur,... im passione Christi per ipsam veritatem 
reddebatur, post adventum Christi per sacramentum memoria cele- 
bratur ; et cap. 188. Unde jam Christiani peracti ejusdem sacri- 
ficit memoriam celebrant sacrosancta oblatione, precibus. videlicet 
(et representatione) fierr solita, et participatione Corporis: et San- 
guinis Christi, sine qua nunquam eo tempore Eucharistia celebra- 
batur. Et Lib. Quast. 83. Quest. 62%. Holocausti sur ima- 
ginem ad memoriam passionis Sue in Ecclesia celebrandam. dedit. 
Nempe ut in Sententiis per Prosperum‘ collectis etiam citant Lan- 
JSrancus*, Algerus’ et Gratianus™: Dum frangitur hostia, dum 


© [Calixtus, ibid., § iii.] Append., p. 163; but these words do 


_ 4 [This note is from Calixtus, ibid., 
é 


-] 

¢ (S. Aug. Cont. Adver. Legis et 
Proph., lib. i, ¢ap. 18. § 87. Op. tom. 
Viii. col. 568, B.] 

f [Idem, Cont. Faustum, Jib. xx. 


_ cap. 21. Ibid., col. 348, C, D.] 


& (Idem, ibid.; cap. xviii. col. 345, 


F.] 
h (Idem. Lib. de Quest., 83. Quest. 


61. § 2. Op. tom. vi. col. 35, E.] 


i [The work referred to is Prosperi 


_ Aquitani, Sententiz ex Augustino de- 
_ libatee; see Prosperi Op. p. 543. ed. 
_ Paris. 1711; and S. Aug. Op. tom. x. 


not occur there. } 

k [Lanfraneus, Liber de Corpore et 
Sanguine Domini, cap. xiii. Op. p. 240, 
C. ed. Paris. 1648. The words appear 
to be Lanfrane’s own. They are not 
given by him as a citation. ] 

1 [Algerus, de Sacramento Corporis 
et Sanguinis Domini, lib. i. c. 19. ap. 
Bibl. Patr. Max., tom. xxi. p. 271, col.i. 
B. Here we find the words, Augustin, 
in libro sententiarum Prosperi, in the 
text before this citation ; hence they are 
so given in Gratian’s Decretum, &c.]} 

m [Decretum, pars iii, De Consecr, 
dist. 2. ¢. 37.] 


modo mentt, sed ipsis quogue oculis per hujusmodi signa et actiones Secon 
SERIES, 





SECOND 


SERIES 


344 -NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Singuis de calice in ora fidelium funditur, quid aliud quam Domi- 
nici Corporis in cruce immolati, ejusque Sanguinis de latere effusio 
designatur? Sequitur apud Algerum™, Ergo etiam ipse Corpus 
Suum fregit, et tradidit, ut signaretur, quod sponte sua in passione 
id faceret pro nobis ; quod etiam in altari vice sua imitantur sacer- 
dotes, ut idem representent. lib. i. cap. 19. Hine S..Aug. ad 
Bonif., ep. 23°. Nonne semel Christus immolatus est in semetipso, 
el tamen in sacramento omni die immolatur. Nec mentitur qui sie 
dicit, si enim Sacranenta quandam similitudinem earum rerum 
guarum sunt Sacramenta, non haberent, omnino Sacramenta non 
essent. 

Hoe facite in commemorationem Mei?.| Qua verba explicans 
S. Paul. 1 Cor. xi. 26. Quotiescungue (inquit) panem hune ede- 
ritis et poculum hoc biberitis, mortem Domini annunciatis usque 
guo venerit. Nempe ipsa mors Domini verum est wlud sacri- 
jicium in cruce semel oblatum: in Eucharistia est ejusdem mor- 
tis atque adeo sacrificii memoratio. Recte igitur appellatur Eucha- 
vistia a nobis oblata, sacrificium eucharisticum, et mortis Christa 
memorativum, sive sacrificit Dominici representativum. C. 


[Rubric after the Prayer of Consecration. \ 


And after, (deliver it) to the perple'.| Chrys. Hom. 18. in 
poster. ad Corinth*. docet, uti preces, ita quoque sumptionem myste- 
riorum populo cum sacerdote communes esse (coutra solitarias papis- 
tarum missas, ubi sacerdos tantum mysteria sumit) Est (inquit) ubi 
nihil differt sacerdos a subdito populo, ut quando fruendum est tre- 
mendis mysteriis ; similiter enim omnes, ut illa percipremus, digni 
habemur. Non sicut in veteri lege, partem quidem comedebat sa- 





» { Algerus, ubi supra. ] 

° [S. Ang. Epist. 98. (ol. 23.) ad 
Bonifacium, § 9. Op. tom. ii. col. 267, E. 
S. Augustine’s words are: Et tamen in 
Sacramento non solum per omnes Pas- 
che solemnitates sed omni die populis 
immolatur, nec utique mentitur qui in- 
terrogatus eum responderit immolari, 
&c.} 

» [This note is from Calixtus, ibid., 
but with considerable additions and mo- 
difications by Cosin. Calixtus’ words, 
after the quotation from S. Paul, are: 
Nempe mors Domini verum est sacri- 
ficium. In Eucharistia est memoratio 
mortis, atque adeo sacrificii Domini. 
Nihil igitur obstat quin Eucharistia ha- 


beatur et appelletur sacrificium memo- 
rativum. Memoratur autem et suo quo- 
dam modo representatur mors Domini, 
&c. | 

4 [From Calixtus, ibid., § xxxiv.} 

* (Zor, 5¢ Brov ovde SiéorynKev 6 
iepeds Tov apxouévou' oiov Stay &woAad- 
ew dén Tay ppiKTa@v wvoTnpiwv. duolws 
yap mwdvres GkiovpeOa THY ai’Tay, od 
Kaddmep em) Tis madaas, TA wey 6 iepeds 
hodie Ta Bt 6 Gpxduevos’ Kal duis odK 
hv TG AaG petéxev dy petetxer 6 iepeds. 
GAN’ od vv" GAAA Tacw ev cGua mpd- 
Keita, Kat mothpiov év.—S. Chrysost. 
in 2 Ep. ad Corinth. cap. viii. § 2.. 
Hom. 18. Op. tom. x. p. 368, B.] 





Ree a ets He yee 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 345 


cerdos, partem autem populus, et non licebat populum participem Sxconp 
esse eorum, quorum particeps erat sacerdos. Nune autem non — 
sic: sed omnibus unum corpus proponitur, et poculum unum. 

Kneeling.| Porriguntur iis’, qui sese ut digne acciperent, 
prepararunt, tum benedictus Panis, tum. benedictus Caliz, 
juxta Christi institutionem et mandatum. Ipsi autem interea 
dum accipiunt in genua procumbentes Christum Dominum, qua 
presens eis digne edentibus et bibentibus adest, suumque Corpus 

_manducandum, et Sanguinem bibendum exhibet, venerantur et 
adorant; non quidem elementa in Sacramentum sanctificata, 
que adoranda non sunt, sed ipsum Dominum et Deum nost rum 
Jesum Christum. 

True it is, that the Body and Blood of Christ are sacra- ° 
mentally and really (not feignedly) present, when the blessed 
Bread and Wine are taken by the faithful communicants ;_ 

b aust as true is it also, that they are not present, but only 
when the hallowed elements are so taken, as in another 
work (the History of the Papal Transubstantiationt) I have 
more at large declared.\ Therefore whosoever so receiveth -~ 
them, at that time when he receiveth them, rightly doth 
he adore and reverence his Saviour there together with 
the sacramental Bread and Cup, exhibiting His own Body 
and Blood unto them. (Yet because that Body and Blood — 
is neither sensibly present((nor otherwise at all present 
but only to them that are duly prepared to receive them, 
and in the very act of receiving them and the consecrated 
elements together, to which they are sacramentally in that 
act united)\the adoration is then and there given to Christ ~ 
Himself, neither is nor ought to be directed to any ex- 
ternal sensible object, such as are the blessed elements. 
But our kneeling, and the outward gesture of humility and 
reverence in our bodies, is ordained only to testify and ex- 
press the inward reverence and devotion of our souls towards 
our blessed Saviour, who vouchsafed to sacrifice Himself for 
us upon the Cross, and now presenteth Himself to be united 


® {This Latin note is from Calixtus, indicates the date of this note. See the 
ibid., § Ixxxv.] preface to volume iv. Cosin had first 
t {Historia papalis Transubstantia- written ‘‘quitantum sumentibus adest, 
tionis &c., cap. iv. § 5. Cosin’s Works, et vera fide non destitutis;” this he 
vol. iv. p. 49. That work was written altered into ‘‘quum communicantibus 
in 1656, not printed till 1675. This tantum adsit.” See the treatise itself. }. 


SECOND 


_ SeRies. 


346 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


sacramentally to us, that we may enjoy all the benefits of 
His mystical Passion, and be nourished with the spiritual 
food of His blessed Body and Blood unto life eternal. 

Take, and eat this in remembrance that Christ died for thee, 
and feed on Him in thy heart by faith.| Servator enim ipse 
in sui memoriam sive commemorationem se Sacramenium hoc 
instituisse pronunciarat. Hoc facite (inqguit) in Met comme- 
morationem. Que verba interpretans S. Paulus 1 Cor. xi. 26. 
Quotiescunque (ait) panem hunc ederitis, &c. mortem Domini 
annunciabitis. Hine colligere est, in confirmationem fidei, per 
quam in Christo vivimus institutam esse; fieri enim non potest 
guin fides crebrat seria mortis Domini, qua ipsa nititur, com- 
memoratione, nutriatur, augescat, et roboretur. Imprimis vero 
quod talis hic Ejus mortis fiat commemoratio, in qua presens 
Jjideli cuivis sit ipsum tllud corpus, quod pro nobis in mortem 
traditum est, ipseque tlle sanguis, gui pro nobis in ara crucis 
effusus est. Quinimo non tantum presentia sunt et illud et 
alle, sed nobiscum indistanter, intime, atque certissime esu 
potuque conjunguntur. Est enim sancta cena actio a Christo 
instituta, in qua quando benedictus panis accipitur et come- 
ditur, simul accipitur et comeditur a fidelibus verum Corpus 
Christi et similiter de vino benedicto, et Sanguine Christi di- 
cendum est, ut commemoratione mortis Ejus, promissio testa- 
mentaria, et fides eam amplexa, confirmetur et obsignetur. C. 

And the Minister that delivereth the Cup.| Qui debet esse 
ex auro vel argento. De Consecr. Dist. 1. Ht Calix*. Non 
autem de ligno nec de vitro, nec de cupro, nec de aurichalcho. 
De Cons. Dist.1. Vasa*. Sed nunquid sufficit Calix stanneus ? 
Dic secundum canones quod sic saltem propter paupertatem, 
sicut legitur in eadem Dist. c. Hi Calivx’. De hoc tamen repe- 
ritur constitutio Richardi, interdicens ut episcopus benedicat 
stanneum Calicem. Prov. Angl. de celebr. Miss. c. Precipimus*. 
Sed iliam intellige, secundum illum Canonem, Caliz, viz. nisi 


_ * [Decret., pars iii. dist. i. c. 45. ap. 
Corp. Jur. Can. tom. i. Ut calix Do- 
mini cum patena, si non ex auro, om- 
nino ex argento fiat; et infra; si quis 


x [Ibid., c. 44.] 

y [Ubi supra, note u. } 

* [Precipimus, ne consecretur Eu- 
charistia nisi in calice de auro vel ar- 





tamen tam pauper est, saltem vel stan- 
neum calicem habeat. De ere aut 
aurichaleo non fiat calix.. ..Nullus 
autem in ligneo aut vitreo calice pre- 
sumat missam cantare. ] 


gento; et ne stanneum calicem epi- 
scopus amodo benedicat, interdicimus. 
—Prov. Angl., lib. iii. tit. 23. ¢. 6. a 
constitution of Richard, abp. of Cant., 
A.D. 1171—1184.] 


347 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 


propter paupertatem. Linw. in Gloss. y. in Calice; de Sum. 
Trin. c. altiss.* 


Then shall the Priest say the Lord’s Prayer, &c.| Ad 
solam Orationem Dominicam Apostolos consecrasse plures an- 
notarunt. Post canonem institutum, quidam Orationem Do- 
minicam omiserunt, guod redarguit S. Gregorius, lib. vii. Ep. 
63°, indignum ratus, ut precem, quam scholasticus composu- 
erat, super oblationem diceremus, et ipsam traditionem, quam 
Redemptor noster composuit, super EKjus Corpus et Sanguinem 
non diceremus; presertim cum (ut ait 8S. Hieronymus, 1. 111. 
contr. Pelag.°) ideo illam Christus docuerit, ut ea in sancta 
celebratione quotidie uteremur. 

Quam totam Sacramenti celebrationem, fere omnis Ecclesia 
Dominica oratione concludit, et gratiarum actione. S. Aug. 
Epist. 594, 

Grecis oratio Dominica ab omni populo, Latinis a solo 
sacerdote dicitur. S. Greg.® 


O Lord and Heavenly Father, &c.| The Prayer of Oblation, 


Edward VI. was appointed to be said before the distribution 
of the Sacrament. And it would not have been amiss if 
that order had continued so still. | 
This our sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving.| That is, 
this sacrifice of our Eucharist‘. In which regard, as in divers 
other besides, the Eucharist may by allusion, analogy, and 
extrinsecal denomination, be fitly called a sacrifice, and the 
Lord’s table an altar; the one relating to the other; though 
neither of them can be strictly and properly so termed. It is 


which by the first ordering of this Book in the time of King 





o. 





@ (Prov. Angl., lib. i. tit. 1. ¢. 2. 


_ p. 9. not. ¢.] 


b | See above, p. 114, notes. S. Gre- 


_ gory continues, Et valde mihi incon- 
_ veniens visum est ut precem quam 


scholasticus composuerat, super obla- 
tionem diceretur &c.—Epist. lib. ix, 
Ind. ii, Ep. 12. Op. tom. ii. col. 940, 
D.) 

© [See above, p. 114, note c. ] 

4.' Sed eligo in his verbis hoc intel- 
ligere,.... ut precationes accipiamus 


_ dictas, quas facimus in celebratione 
_ Sacramentorum, antequam illud quod 
_ est in Domini mensa incipiat benedici: 
_ orationes cum benedicitur et sanctifica- 


tur, et ad distribuendum comminuitur, 
quam totam petitionem fere omnis Ec- 
clesia Dominica oratione concludit.... 
Quibus peractis et participate tanto 
Sacramento, gratiarum actio cuncta 
concludit.—S. Aug. Epist. 149. ad 
Paullinum, (aliter Ep. 59.) cap. 2. § 16, 
Op. tom. ii. col. 509, C, F.]- 


€ {Sed et Dominica oratio apud 
pud. 


Grecos ab omni populo dicitur, apud 
nos vero a solo sacerdote.—S. Greg. 
M. ubi supr. col. 941, A. next after the 
words cited in note b. ] 

f [This note is derived from Calix- 
tus, ibid., § xi, xiii, xv. ] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


¢ 
i 


348 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


secon the custom of Scripture to describe the service of God under 

———— the New Testament, be it either internal or external, by the 
terms that otherwise most properly belonged to the Old, as 
immolation, offering, sacrifice, and altar. So the evangelical 
prophet, Esay, foretelling the glory and amplitude of the 
Christian Church, speaketh of God’s altar that shall be 
there, upon which an acceptable offering shall be made, ch. 
ii. 4, &c. And the apostle, Rom. xv. 16: “I labour in the 
Gospel, that the oblation of the Gentiles may be accepted, 
being sanctified by the Holy Ghost.” And Phil. ii. 17: 
“The service and sacrifice of your faith.” And Heb. xi. 10: 
“We have an altar whereof they (the Jews) are not worthy 
to eat.””, And indeed, the Sacrament of the Eucharist carries 

the name of a sacrifice, and the table whereon it is cele- 
brated an altar of oblation, in a far higher sense than any 
of their former services did, which were but the types and 
figures of those services that are performed in recognition 
and memory of Christ’s own sacrifice, once offered upon the 
altar of His Cross. The prophecy of Malachy, concerning 
the Church under the New Testament (“ My name is great 
among the Gentiles, and they shall offer,” or sacrifice, ‘‘ unto 
Me a pure oblation,” Mal. i. 10,) applied by the doctors of the 
Roman Church to their proper sacrifice (as they call it) of 
the mass, is interpreted and applied by the ancient fathers 
sometimes in general to all the acts of our Christian religion, | 
and sometimes in particular to the Eucharist; that is, the 
act of our praise and thanksgiving for the sacrifice of Christ 
once made for us upon the Cross, (as here we use in the 
Church of England.) §$. Hieronymus in hune locum’; Ut 
sciant carnalibus victimis spirituales successuras; et thu- 
miama; hoc est sanctorum preces Domino offerendas. Ter- 
tullianus, ii. contra Marcion. cap. 22". In omni loco sacri- 
jficitum Mihi offertur, glorie scilicet relatio, et benedictio, et 
laus, et hymni. Rursus iv. contr. eund. c. 1'. Sacrificium 
mundum, scilicet simplex oratio de conscientia pura. St adv, 
Judeos, cap. 5*. De spiriiualibus sacrificiis addit, dicens, et 
in omni loco sacrificia munda offerentur nomini Meo. 


& [S. Hieron. Comment. in Malachi, i [Idem, ibid., lib. iv. cap. 1. p. 414, 
cap: i. 11. Op. tom. vi. col. 952, A.] . 6 
[ Tertullian, adv. Marcionem, lib. k (Idem, adv. Judzos, cap. 5. p. 188, . 

iii. cap. 22. Op. p. 410, D.] a . ree 


Fipimettins s 


Se es 








ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 349 


(Quale vetus Ecclesia sacrificium, (et non aliud) agnovit. 
Euseb. lib. i.! de Dem. Evang. sub finem™. Sacrificamus 


itague Deo summo sacrificium laudis-: sacrificamus divinam, 


venerabilem, et decoram victimam; sacrificamus novo modo 
mundam hostiam. At sacrificium Deo spiritus contritus est. 
Jamque adolemus propheticum illum: suffitum, in omni loco 
offerentes Ki odoratum fructum ; precibus videlicet Eum com- 
pellantes: Igitur et sacrificamus et adolemus ; alias quidem 
memoriam magni illius sacrificti, secundum mysteria, que Ipse 
tradidit, celebrantes, et gratias pro salute nostra per pios 
hymnos et preces Deo agentes ; alias nosmetipsos totos Ei con- 
secrantes, pontificique Verbo Ejus, corpore atgue animo dedi- 
catis. S.Chrys., Hom. 17. in Ep. ad Hebr." Quid ergo nos? 
Nonne per singulos dies offerimus? Offerimus quidem, sed ad 
recordationem mortis, &c. Theodoret, in cap. 8. Ep. ad Hebr.° 
St Ille obtulit sacrificium, fecitque ut alia sacrificia non essent 
necessaria, quare N. 71’. sacerdotes mysticam liturgiam sive 
sacrificium offerunt? Sed clarum est tis, qui sunt in rebus 
divinis eruditi, non aliud sacrificium offerre, sed unius illius et 


salutaris memoriam peragere. 


Dominus.) 


Foc enim nobis precepit ipse 


The Church of England therefore herein followeth the holy 


Scripture and the ancient fathers?. 
et preces piorum 8S. Scriptura vocat sacrificia. 
Sacrifica, vel immeola Deo laudem. 
Heb. xiii. 15. Per Christum 


vitulos labiorum nostrorum. 


1 [The Latin of this note seems de- 
rived from Calixtus, ubi supra, §§ ciii., 
civ., cv. It is in the original a mar- 
ginal addition. The rest should be read 
continuously. | . 

™ [Ovouev b97a Tovyapovy TH emt mdv- 
tay 0e@ Ovatav aivécews* Ovouev Td ev- 
Ocov, kat ceurdy, Kal fepomperés Odua. 
Ovouev Katves KaTa Thy Kawvhv Siabhknv 
Thy kabapay Ovaiav. volta yap TH OG 
mvevua ouvteTpiumcvoy elpnrat. kal 52 
kal Ouuiduevy Td mpodyntixdy Ovulaua 
2+. TOTE pey THY pYhUNY TOD meydAou 
Oduatos, KaT& Ta mpds ad’Tod mapado- 
Oévta pvorhpia emitedodytes, Kal Thy 
intp owrnplas hua edxapiotiay BV ev- 
oeBov tuvwy Te Kal evyav TG Oe@ Tpo- 


_okoulfovres, ToTe SE THaSs adTods JAW, 


Kafiepovrtes avT@, Kal T@ ye “Apxie- 
pe aiton Adyy, a’r@ odmati Kab 
Wuxi avanelwevor.— Euseb. Pamph. 


Gratiarum enim actiones 
Psal. J. 14. 
Hos. xiv. 8. Reddemus 


Demonst. Evangel. lib. i. 
p. 40, A, B.j 

n [rl odv jucts; Kad Exdorny hucpav 
ov Tporpépomev; Tpordéepomey mev, GAN’ 
dvduvnow morduuevot Tod Oavdrov avtod. 
—S. Chrys. in Heb., cap. 10. Hom. 17. 
§ 3. Op. tom. xii. p. 168, D.] 

° [et rolvuy 6 KaT& Tagéiy MeAxioedinxc 
dpxiepevs Thy Ovclay mporhveyKe, Kab 
Buoias érdpas dvevdects naderthkaper, Th 
Sjwore THs Kaw7S Siabheys of iepets Thy 
puoTikhy Acrtoupylay emiteAodaWw; GAA 
SjAov Tots Ta Octa wemadevuevots, @s ovK 
&AAnv rive Ovoiay mpoopéepouev, GAAATIS 
fas exeivns kal owrnplov thy uvhunv 
€miTeAovmev’ TovTO yap Huiy avTds 6 
deondrns mpocératev.—'l heodoret. Com- 
ment. in Ep. ad Hebr. viii. 4. Op. tom. 
iii. p. 431, B.] 

P (What follows is from Calixtus, 
ibid. § xxviii., xxix. ] 


cap. 10. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


“SECOND 


SERIES, 


350 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 

assidue offeramus sacrificium laudis, i. e. fructum labiorum 
confitentium nomini. Hjus Apoc. v. 8. Suffitus sunt preces 
sanctorum. Item, viii. 8. Dati sunt angelo suffitus mulii, 
ut offerret cum precibus sanctorum omnium super altare au- 
reum, quod est ante thronum. Ps. cxl. 2. Dirigatur oratio 
mea sicut incensum, &c. Hine de Ecclesia Christiana loquitur 
S. Greg. Nyssenus, Libro de vita Mosis, év tavtn tH oKnv7 
(inquit) Ovcia ths aivécews, &¢.1 In hoc tabernaculo et laudis 
victima, et suffitus precum offerri semper conspicitur. Kt 
S. Aug. lib. i. contra Adv. Leg. et Proph., cap.18". Quod est 
sucratius laudis sacrificium, quam in actione gratiarum. Quod 
tamen fideles in Ecclesia sacrificio faciunt ? 

That by the merits and death of, &c.| Insigne admodum 
Sacrificit genus’. Nam Deum Patrem per Christum, Christi 
mortem et meritum obtestari et precari, nihil est aliud quam 
Deo Patri Christum, Christique mortem et meritum offerre. 
In celebratione igitur Sacramenti Eucharistie Deo Pairi 
Filius suus, Filiique mors, que verissimum est sacrificium 
(a nobis representatur, et per eandem representationem sive 
commemorationem, et obtestationem) offertur, et quidem, ut 
ex tis que infra dicentur constat, pro vivis et pro defunctis, 
(id est, pro universa Ecclesia.) Sicut enim Christus ipse quando 
in celis comparet in conspectu Dei pro nobis (Heb. ix. 24; 
Rom. vill. 34) semetipsum suamque mortem Deo sistit et 
offert, ita etiam in terris Ecclesia, que corpus Kjus est, quando 
per Ipsum et mortem Ejus Deum deprecatur ibidem Ipsum, Kjus- 
gue mortem, atgue adeo sacrificium in cruce peractam repre- 
sentat, et Deo offert. Nemo autem adeo cecutit aut lippit, ut 
non videat inter ‘ offerri’ proprium, quod per mortem in cruce 
semel peractum fuit, et inter ‘ offerri’ improprium, quod nunc 
fiat in celis, per illam quam diximus comparationem, sive in 
terris per preces, et representationem aut obtestationem et 
commemorationem peragitur, meram (vocis) homonymiam (in 
re vero magnam differentiam) intercedere. 





4 [év ratty TH oxnvh Kal Ovola rhs 
aivécews Kat Ovulapa THs mpooevx7s ev 
T@ OpOp@ Kal TH Ecwéepa evepyouuern bid 
mayvtTos Kabopara.—S. Greg. Nyssen. 
de vita Mosis. Op. tom. i. p. 226, D.] 

* [Quod est sacratius laudis sa- 
crificlum quam in actione gratiarum. 
Et unde majores agende sunt Deo 


-_—< 


gratia, quam pro ipsius gratia per 
Jesum Christum Dominum nostrum, 
quod totum fideles in Ecclesiz sacri- 
ficio sciant.—S. Aug. cont. Adver. Leg. 
et Proph., lib, i. cap, 18. § 37. Op. tom. 
viii. col. 568, E. ] 

* [This note is from Calixtus, ibid. 
§ xlvi.; the words in parentheses are 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 351 


Si attendat quist formalem sacrificit rationem in hoc posi- 
tam, ut res animata, que Deo offeratur, destruatur, non est 
_proprie sed improprie tantum et per extrinsecam denomina- 
_tionem dictum sacrificium. Apparet ergo quomodo dict possit 
_ sacrificium, quomodo non possit. Quod observandum est. 

Si enim" sacrificium proprie et formaliter accipimus, sive 
pro actione sacrificandi (ut hodie sumitur a sacrificis Roma- 
_nensibus) tum sane etiamsi victima per commemorationem et 
: representationem sit eadem numero cum illa que oblata est in 
_cruce, actio tamen ipsa sive oblatio qua nunc a nobis fit in 
_ Ecclesia, cum oblatione et immolatione que in cruce peracta 
| fuit, nec specie, nec genere convenit. Neque enim datur forma 
vel ratio oblationis que de ista, et de illa univoce predicari 
_possit.... Nempe in cruce facta est oblatio per veram rei vive 
_destructionem et mortem, absque qua sacrificium proprie dic- 
tum nullum esse potest ; in Eucharistia vero nostra fit oblatio 
per preces, consecrationem et representationem, que proprie 
: sacrificium non est. Nihil autem obstat, quin Eucharistia 
habeatur et appelletur sacrificium proprit sacrificit et mortis 
Christi memorativum. Quod et Ipse nos docuit Dominus 
guando dixit, Hoc facite in Mei commemorationem. C. 

That we and all Thy whole Church may obtain remission of 
our sins, and all other benefits of His Passion.| Where by ‘all 
the whole Church,’ is to be understood, as well those that have 
been heretofore, and those that shall be hereafter, as those 
that are now the present members of it. (And hereupon my 
Lord of Winchester, Bp. Andrewes*, grounded his answer to 
Cardinal Perron, when he said, ‘‘We have and offer this 
sacrifice both for the living and the dead, as well for them 
| that are absent, as those that be present ;” or words to this 
_ purpose, for I have not the book now by me.) And by ‘all 
other benefits of His Passion,’ is intended no less the victory 
that we shall all have over death and sin at the last day, that 
is, the resurrection of our bodies from the grave, and the 


re 9 eee iy 





OPEL LIT 








' added by Cosin, who has also altered 
Missa into celebratione Sacramenti. ] 


‘ (This paragraph is from Calixtus, 


ibid. § xcii. ] 


u [The rest of this note is from 


| Calixtus, ibid. § xlix. 1.} 


* {The words in parentheses are a 


marginal addition. See Bp. Andrewes’ 
Answer to Cardinal Perron, Minor Eng- 
lish Works, p. 20. His words are; 
‘The Sacrifice of Christ’s death. is 
available for present, absent, living, 
dead, (yea, for them that are yet un- 
born).” 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SEconD 


SERIES. 


352 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


public acquittal which will then be given us from all our sins, 
(when Christ shall pronounce His final sentence, and say, 
“Come ye blessed,” &c.) than the remission of sins past to 
be now given us. So that the virtue of this sacrifice (which 
is here in this prayer of oblation commemorated and repre- 
sented) doth not only extend itself to the living, and those — 
that are present, but likewise to them that are absent, and 
them that be already departed, or shall in time to come live 
and die in the faith of Christ. Qua re observata’ locutiones 
nonnulle veterum de sacrificio et oblatione Ecclesia pro vivis 
et mortuis, que alioquin difficiles forte primo iniuitu apparere 
possint, facile explicantur.. Nihil enim minus cogitabant ili, 
quam opus operatum Misse Pontificie, et sacrificium proprie 
dictum, quod se hodie offerre (toties quoties) sacerdotes Romani 
non Reformati, contendunt et gloriantur, sed frustra. Nos 
autem cum antiquis patribus dicimus, et docemus, in sacra- 
mento Cene Dominice nihil aliud veteribus fuisse oblationem 
pro vivis et mortuis, quam pro tis per Christum, Christique 
Passionem et mortem a sacerdote sive presbytero ad sacram 
mensam consistente Deum orare. A traditione igitur anti- 
quitatis, et. consuetudine universalis Ecclesie in hac re nos 
non recedimus. C. 

And here we offer and present unto Thee, O Lord, ourselves. | 
Ut fiat quod jubet apostolus, Rom. xii. 1; Sistite corpora 
vestra hostiam vivam, sanctam, placentem Deo. (Vide Notata 
in Epist. 1. Dominic. post Epiphan. ad lit.*) Qua de re pro- 
nunciat S. Augustinus de Civ. Dei, cap. 6*; Quod etiam 
Sacramento altaris fidelibus noto frequentat Ecclesia, ubi ki 
(Christo) demonstratur, quod in ea oblatione quam offert, ipsa 
offeratur. Et cap. 19>; Sacrificantes non alteri, quam illi 
visibile sacrificium, cujus in cordibus nostris invisibile sacri- 
ficium, nos ipsi esse debemus. Ht cap. 20°; Christus est 
sacerdos, Ipse offerens, et Ipse oblatio. Cujus rei Sacramenium 
quotidianum esse voluit Ecclesie sacrificium, que cum Ipsius 
capitis corpus sit, seipsam per Ipsum discit offerre. 


y [This is from Calixtus, ibid. > {Idem, ibid., cap. 19. col. 255, D. 


§ Ixxii.] The words of S. Augustine are; Ita 
% [See above, p. 255. These words _ sacrificantes non alteri visibile sacrifi- 
are added in the margin. ] cium offerendum esse noverimus quam 


a (S. Aug. de Civitate Dei, lib. x. illi, cujus &c. ] 
cap. 6, Op. tom, vii. col. 243, F.] © [Idem., ibid., cap. 20. col. 256, B.] 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 353 


Agamus ergo Ei qui crucifixus est pro nobis juges gratias, et 
id non modo verbis nostris, verum etiam operibus ipsis pre-. 
cipue impleamus. Propterea et tremenda et salutaria illa 
mysteria, que in omni Ecclesie cetu celebrantur, Eucha- 
ristia sive gratiarum actio nuncupatur. S.Chrys., Hom, 26, 
an S. Mat.° 
In the time of Ivo, bishop of Chartres, there was no other 
interpretation made of the Roman Canon (as they called it) 
in the Mass or Liturgy of the Latin Church, than what we 
‘make here, and practise in ours. 
Adscribam! que huc faciunt illius verba, e Tract. de conve- 
_nientia veteris et novi sacrificii®. ‘“ Unde et memores, Domine, 
nos Tui servi Passionis Tui Filii, Resurrectionis et Ascensionis, 
offerimus majestati Tue, id est oblatam commemoramus, per 
hec dona Tua visibilia, hostiam puram, id est sine fermento 
malitie, sanctam, id est Tibi consecratam, immaculatam, id est 
_talem qualem significabant animalia, que immolanda sine ma- 
cula querebantur. Et hanc veri sacrificii commemorationem 
_postulat sacerdos ita Deo Patri fore acceptam, sicut accepta 
| fuerunt munera Abel, Abrahe et Melchisedec.” 
_ And herein, in a spiritual sense, though not in regard of 
public offices in the Church, we are all priests, the whole 
assembly of the people, as well as the chief minister himself. 
1 Pet. ii. 9, ‘Ye are a royal priesthood;” Rev. i. 6, “and 
hath made us priests unto God.’ Hx Chrysostomo etiam 
hac de re nonnulla audire opere erit pretium. Homil. 18. in 
“poster. ad Corinth.» docet uti sumptionem mysteriorum, ita 
 quoque preces et gratiarum actiones populo cum sacerdote 
communes esse. List (inquit) ubi nihil differt sacerdos a sub- 
dito, ut quando fruendum est tremendis mysteriis ; similiter 
enim omnes &c. ut supra ad lit.i, . . Quin et in precibus 


STEER RTH re * 









© [da 8% Todo Kal 7a ppinddn pv- 
= “OTH pics kal TOAAAs yéwovT a owrnplas® 
te Kal? Exdorny Aéyw TEAOUMEVG, TbVA- 
gw" ebxapioria Kadctrar.—S. Chrysost. 
in Matt. viii. Hom. 25. (al. 26.) § 3. 
: Op. tom. vii. p. 310, D.] 

_. * [This paragraph, except the open- 
_ ing words, is from Calixtus, ibid., § eviii. 
It was added in the margin. ] 

& (Ivo Carnotensis, Serm. v. De 
_ convenientia veteris et novi Sacri- 
x ficii, Op. pars ii, p. 281, ed. Par. 
1647.) 

_ # [S.Chrysost. in Ep. ad Corinth., 
COSIN, 










cap. 8. Hom. 18. § 2. Op. tom. x. 
p. 368, C. See the words quoted above, 
p. 344. This paragraph is from Ca- 
lixtus, ibid., § xxxiv. ] 

i [This refers to p. 344, where the 
words were cited; the annotations in 
the MS. are distinguished, by letters, 
one of which is indicated here; the 
passage continues thus in the Greek: 
kal év rais evxais 5¢ mwoAd roy Aady 
Tor mis by TWvELTpEpovTa, kal ‘yap 
trip Tay évepyounéerwr, bmp TOY év 
peravola, Kowal Kad mape. Tov lepéws Kar 
map avtav ylvoyvta ai edxal Kal mév- 


Aa 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


354 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Seconn videat quis populum multum simul offerre. Communes enim 
SERIES: yreces a sacerdote, et ab illis fiunt; et omnes unam dicunt 
orationem, orationem misericordia plenam. 

Sed quamvis* omnes qui presentes sunt, eo modo offerant, 
quo et precantur, viri et foemine, et universus fidelis populus ; 
nihilominus precipua et pecultart peacam ratione videri pote- 
rat offerre nomine omnium 6 ars, qui sacre mense ad~ 
staret, et verbis preiret’. 

To offer unto Thee any sacrifice.| Hujus sacramenti cele- | 
brationem ob varias rationes sacrificium appellari posse, et ab- 
antiqua Ecclesia appellatam esse agnoscimus ; negamus tamen, 
aliyuam ex omnibus esse, propter quam verum et proprie dic- 
tum sacrificium censeri possit aut debeat. Verum autem sacri- 
ficium quando dicimus, formalem sacrificii rationem attendi- 
mus, non finalem. Nempe finis est cultum et obsequium Deo 
prestare, sive agere quod Deus approbet, et gratum habeat. 
Hujusmodi enim opus quodcunque fuerit ab Augustino verum 
sacrificium appellatur. Ita, X. de C. D. cap.v.™ misericordiam 
verum sacrificium et Deo gratum cum apostolo vocat, et cap. vi." 
Omne opus quod agitur ut sancta societate inhereamus Deo, 
verum sacrificium est. 

Ita veteribus® et nobis nunc celebratio hujus saeramenti 
sacrificium appellatur, imo ea, que modo exposita est, ratione 
verum sacrificium. (1°) Quod sit ritus sensibilis supplens locum 
sensibilium V. T. sacrificiorum. (2°) Quod quando celebratur, 
offerrt soleant que cedant in usum peragendi sacri, vel certe 
ministrorum Ecclesie et pauperum, qualia ipsius scripture 
phrasi victime Deo grate appellantur. (3°) Quod itidem 
Deo agantur gratie et fundantur preces, sacrificiorum titulo in 
Scriptura insignite. (4°) Quod per has ipsas preces offeratur 
Patri per commemorationem et representationem suus Filius 
Ejusque passio, mors et meritum.... (5°) Quod sit hac fine 
factum, ut sancta societate inhereamus Deo, quemadmodum 
locutum esse diximus S. Augustinum. 


paulum ante commemoravi, Talibus— 
enim sacrificiis placetur Deo.—S. Aug. — 


Tes play Aéyouaty edyhy, edxhy Thy édgov 
yéuovoay. —Idem, ibid. ] 





k (This paragraph is from Calixtus, 
ibid., § Ixxiii.] 
! (‘The passage which follows is from 
Calixtus, ibid., § xci. ] 
m [Porro autem misericordia verum 
sacrificium est; unde dictum est quod 


de Civitate Dei, lib, x. cap. 5. Op. tom. — 
vii. col. 242, E.] | 
" [Idem, ibid., cap. 6. col. 242, F.}. 
° [This passage is from Calixtus, 
ibid., § xciii. ] 


a ee) ee a 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 355 


Or this, We most heartily thank Thee.| 8. Aug., Ep. 59. 
Q.5”. Quibus peractis, et participato tanto Sacramento, Gra- 
tiarum Actio cuncta concludit, quam (1 Tim. ii. 1) verbis 
suis ulttimam commendavit apostolus. 


Then shall be said or sung, Glory be to God on high.| In 
ritibus celebrandi Paschatis, atque in institutione et cele- 
bratione Cene Domini, hune morem observatum innuunt Evan- 
geliste, cum dicunt, Et cum cecinissent hymnum, abierunt in 
Montem Olivarum. Absoluto esu. Paschatis, in more erat 
apud Judeos cantare Ps. cxi. et sequentes aliquot, quem solen- 
nem hymnum hodie Magnum Halleluja vocant. Hos Servator, 
nos Eum imitati sumus. . 

In ordinario Sarum iste hymnus dicitur ad initium Misse.. 

Jesus Christ.| Hic additur*, Spiritus alme, orphanorum 
Paraclete. 

- Son of the Father.| Hic additur, primogenite Marie V. 
Matris. 

Receive our prayer.| Hic additur, ad Marie gloriam. 

Art holy.| Hic additur, Mariam sanctificans. 

Art the Lord.| Hic, Mariam gubernans. 

Thou only, O Christ.| | Hic, Mariam coronans. 


Then the priest, or bishop, if he be present, shall let them 
depart with this blessing.| Episcopus benedicit, non bene- 
dicitur, &c. presbyter benedicit, non benedicitur. Diaconus 
non benedicit ; non dat benedictionem, sed accipit, &c. Author 
Const. Apostol., lib. viii. c. 348, qui sive Clemens P. I. fuit, 
sive quis alius, ipsis fuit apostolis coevus. 

Shall let them depart with this blessing. | Pérattat com- 
munione et gratiarum actione, subjungitur solennis benedictio, 
| per quam qui communicarunt, dimissi sunt. Veteres in Latina 


Pp [S. Aug., Ep. 149. ad Paulinum, 
| (aliter 59, Cosin’s MS. has 5 only,) 
| ap. 2. § 16. Op. tom. ii. col. 509, F. j 
| 4 [Missale Sarisb., fol. cxlii.] 

_ * [ The additions here noted are found 
| in the Sarum Missal in rubric, and 
| @ppear to be intended to be read on 
festivals and services of the Virgin. -] 

i; _ § [ériokoros edrovyet ovK eddovyetrat’ 
++. TpeaBurepos evrAoyel ov evAO'EITAL, 


% seo 


Se 


ae 





evroylas Séxerat mapa émioKdrov Kal 
oupnmper But épov" didkovos ovK eboyet: 
od Bidwow evaAoylav’ AapBdaver 5& mapa 
émisxémov Kat mpeoButépov.-—Apostol. 
Constit., lib. viii. cap. 28. apud Concilia, 
tom. i. col, 494, B.] 

t [ What follows is from Calixtus, 
ibid., §§ Ixxxvi., Ixxxvii., with slight 
alterations. ) 


Aa2 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 
SERIES. 


356 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 


Ecclesia dixerunt post datam benedictionem, Ite missa est, sive 
Dimissa est populi congregatio. Greci autem dixerunt, "Ade- 
ous, que itidem est Missio, sive Dimissio. Atque hinc factum, 
ut ab hoc unico eoque ultimo actu totum illud Liturgie corpus 
sive universum complexum sacrorum actuum in hac solenni 
Sacramenti celebratione in Ecclesia peragi solitarum uno 
nomine Missam appellarunt. Cujus misse verum etymon nos 
in hac dimissione populi etiamnum in Ecclesiis nostris retine- 
mus; prisce scilicet et genuine misse, in qua non solum hymni 
canantur, precationes fiant, scripture legantur, et explicentur, 
panis vinumgque benedicantur et consecrentur, sed etiam ad 
manducandum et bibendum omnibus presentibus distribuantur. 
Talem enim missam sive Sacramenti sui celebrationem Domi- 
nus instituit, et usque ad suum reditum frequentari precepit, 
non qualem hodie usurpant novi Romano-Catholici, in quo ple- 
rumgque nemo nisi sacerdos communicat ; populo autem semper 
calix benedictionis substrahitur ; adeoque omnibus aliis sacers 
dotibus, qui presentes sunt et non celebrant sacrum. C. 


Collects, &c. Assist us mercifully.| Ista Oratio habetur 
in Ord. Sarum ad Missam pro iter agentibus”. 

And if any of the bread and wine remain, &c.| Which is 
to be understood of that bread and wine, that the church- 
wardens provided, and carried into the vestry, not of that 
which the priest consecrated for the Sacrament ; for of this, 
if he be careful, as he ought to be, to consecrate no more 
than will suffice to be distributed unto the communicants, 
none will remain. 

(Yet if for lack of care* they consecrate more than they dis-_ 
tribute, why may not the curates have it to their own use, 
as well as be given to children, (Concil. Matisc. c. 2¥.) or be 
burnt in the fire (Isych. in Levitic.”) for though the bread and 
wine remain, yet the consecration, the Sacrament of the 


* 
" [This is the Collect in the Offi- protegantur auxilio: per, &c.] | 
cium Peregrinorum, Miss. Sarisb. Com- x [This part of the note was written. 
mune, fol. xlvi., and the Missa pro after the former, and because that oc- 
iter agentibus, ibid., fol. xlvii., but the cupied the page, this is carried down 
words are; Adesto ‘Domine supplica- the margin; it appears to be a sort of. 
tionibus nostris, et viam famulorum quere or dmopla in the way of dist 
tuorum N, et N. in salutis tue pro- cussion. ] 
speritate dispone: ut inter omnes vie Y [See above, p. 132, note s.] 
et vite hujus varietates tuo semper * [See ibid., note q-] 










ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 357 


|| Body and Blood of Christ, do not remain longer than the Srconp 
holy action itself remains for which the bread and wine ut 
were hallowed; and which being ended, return to their 
‘former use again ?) 

’ The curate shall have it to his own use.| It was the ancient 
‘manner of the Church, to offer a good quantity of bread and 

‘wine (every one of the people some) for the use as well of 

the minister and priest, as for the poor, and the preparation 

of the Sacrament. 

And note, that every parishioner shall communicate at the 
least three times a year, of which Easter to be one. 

_ Every parishioner.| Hoc est, tam masculi quam famine 
post adultam etatem. Linw. in gloss. y. Paschal, de Sum. 
Trin. c. Altiss.* 

At the least.| Qui ob devotionem alio. tempore commu- 

nicare volunt, talibus non debet denegari Sacramentum, (dum 
| tamen sint dispositi ad illud sumendum) etiamsi ad furcas vel 
patibulum quis duceretur, 26. q. 6. Siquis 13. q. 2. q. Situm. 
Linw. ubi supra’. 
_. Three times in the year.| Scilicet Paschal tempore, in 
Pentecoste, et Natali Domini. De Consecr. Dist. 2. Seculares. 
Puto tamen neminem arctari per hance rubricam, nisi ad tem- 
pus Paschale, modo duabus aliis vicibus infra annum com- 
“municet®. 

It was one of K. Canutus’s laws, made here in England 
‘in a Convention at Oxford, “That every Christian should 
thrice in the year receive the blessed Sacrament of the 
‘Lord’s Supper.” Baker, 214. 


* [Paschali tempore: quo tam mas- de clericis secularibus satis posset con- 
_culi &c. tenentur Eucharistie Sacra- cedi...mnam quoad laicos puto eos 
mentum recipere nisi ad tempus de non arctari nisi semel in anno, viz. in 
consilio sui sacerdotis duxerint absti- Paschali tempore. | 
nendum. —Lyndwood, Prov. Angl. a [Baker’s Chronicle, p. 16, which 
~ Gloss. in lib. i. tit. i. c. 2. p. 8, not. q.] says that these regulations were made 

> ({Ibid., not. h. ad verb. alio, re- ina Convention at Oxford. The Canon 
ferring to the Decret. pars ii. caus. 26. referred to seems to be this: Let every 
+ quest. 6. c. 6; and caus. 13. quest. 2. Christian act for his own benefit, and 
we c. 30. } have an earnest concern for his Chris- 
_ © [Ibid. This is the former part of  tianity, and prepare himself to go to 
_. the gloss quoted in the last note; itis housel three times a year at least.— 

on the words, Paschalis tempore vel King Cnute’s Laws Ecclesiastical (at 
Rpalio: alio; sc. &c....Domininam et Winchester) sub ann, 1017. can. 19. 
his festis seeculares tenentur commu-. Johnson’s Canons, vol. i. p. 509, Anglo- 
_nicare, alias inter Catholicos non habe- Cath. ed.; the same rule is given in 
buntur, de conse. di. 2. c. seculares the Canons of Eanham, circ. 1009. 
(Decret. pars iii. dist. 2. c.19,) quod can. 20. ibid. p. 487.] 











SECOND 


SERIFS. 


358 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Of which Easter to be one.| Acerbissime mortis, quam pro 
nobis auctor vite sustinuit, nunquam non meminisse oportet. Hoe 
tamen anni tempus peculiariter memoriam tanti mysterii sibi vin- 
dicat, quod et ab omni antiquitate, ipsaque adeo infantia Ecclesia 
est observatum, et ratio ipsa ac natura rei postulat, ut quo tempore 
opus redemptionis nostra peractum fuit, eodem in ejus considera- 


tionem non minus sedulis quam piis cogitationibus incumbamus, C&- 


ON THE OFFICE OF HOLY BAPTISM. 


Except he be regenerate, and born anew of water, and of the 
Holy Ghost.| Hoc est, nisi baptizetur. 

That they may be baptized with water.| Ceremonia hac (etiam 
tempore Johannis Baptiste) neque nova plane fuit, et vocations 
gentium pralusit. Tradunt enim Hebrai inquilinos, qui nollent 
jus ciwitatis Judaica adipisci, non necesse habuisse circumeidi, sed 
ablutos duntaxat fuisse, ut hoe modo ab idolorum cultu recedere se 
ostenderent. Atque ita narrant multa hominum millia Davidis et 
Solomonis temporibus abluta. Sed et nunc qui ad Judaismum 
veniunt, ab sis baptizantur. Sunt et qui scribunt temporibus 
Messia tantam fore turbam conversorum, ut per lavacrum non per 
circumcisionem sint admittendi. Cum vero peregrini abluti et non 
circumcist solos legibus tenerentur, quas Deus toti hominum generi 
dederat, intellectu facile est, ablutionem hance fuisse imter vetera 
instituta, orta, ut arbitror, post magnum diluvium in memoriam 
purgati mundi. Grot.' 

By the baptism of Thy well-beloved Son Jesus Christ.| Cum 


Christus perfectissima innocentiea exemplar fuerit, ne in Ipso 


quidem inanis erat ceremonia que innocentia propositum obsig- 


nabat. Neque efficacius ostendi potuit quantus honos institutis a 
Deo ritibus deberetur, quam si Christus Ipse usum eorum nobis ea- 
emplo suo commendaret. Praterea Ipse per hance ceremoniam, que 
nos populo Dei inserit, eidem populo velut concorporatus est, cer-— 


tosque suo exemplo fecit omnes, qui, ut oportet, baptizantur, aperte 
ipsis regia celestis, consequendi Spiritus, et yuris filiorum Dei, 
Grot.® 


® [This is from Calixtus, ubi supra, ‘ [Grotius, Comment. in Matt. cap. 


§ 1. Itis at the opening of the disser- iii. ver. 6. Apud Criticos Sacros, tom, — 


tation, and refers to the season of vii. col. 102.] 


Lent, at which time this treatise, or 8 [Id., ibid., in cap. iii, v. 15. col. — 


‘Exercitatio Academica’ was sent out.] 105, 106. 


d 

: 
a 
: 


q 
$ 


‘e 








ON THE OFFICE OF HOLY BAPTISM. 


The mystical washing away of sin.) Ut sic discerneretur hae 
sacra ablutio a lustrationibus prophanarum gentium, et lotionsbus 


Judaorum. 


Josephus*, ut Johannis Baptiste ablutionem a gentium ablu-— 


tionibus discerneret, que aqua marina, aut etiam vivo flumine 
culpas suas elui, animosque purgari delictorum conscientia existi- 
mabant, de quibus poeta, 


O nimium faciles, qui tristia crimina cedis 
Tolli fluminea posse putatis aqua}. 


[. . .] ait, illo authore mentibus primum juste vite proposito pur- 
gatis, usurpatam deinde aquam que corpora ablueret, Grot.3 

Shall dip it im the water.... It shall suffice to pour water 
upon it.|  Mersatione enim, non perfusione, agit solitum hune 
ritum baptismt per apostolos, implicat et vocis proprietas, et loca 
ad eum ritum delecta, Joh. ii. 23, Acts vill. 38, e¢ allusiones 
multe in eorum scriptis, que ad aspersionem referri non possunt, 
Rom. vi. 3, 4; Col. ii. 12. Sertus,aliquanto imvaluisse videtur 
mos perfundendi sive aspergendi, in eorum gratiam, qui in gravi 
morbo cubantes nomen dare Christo expetebant, quos cateri KAwt- 
Kovs vocabant. Grot.* 

In the water.| Dixit Johannes Baptista Christum baptiza- 
turum Spiritu Sancto et igne, Matt. in. 11. Quod autem ithe 
dicitur Spiritum et ignem, in Marco i. 8, Joh. i. 33, dicitur sim- 
pliciter baptizare Spiritu ; ut appareat illud igne adjectum é&nyn- 
TIKOS, nimirum quia ut aerts ita ignis subtilissima atque effica- 
cissima natura vim illam divinam quam in se credentibus Christus 
erat collaturus tb opodpov tis xapitos, ut hic loguitur Chryso- 
stomus', optime exprimit, unde et lingua ignite super apostolos 
misse. Grot.™ 

Rubric on the sign of the Cross.| Quod autem Aithiopes juxta 
baptismum ustionem quoque usurpant, factum arbitror more veterum 
Christianorum, qui traditis a Christo ceremoniis signa addebant, 
que verba Scripture eandem rem aliter atque aliter adumbrantia 


359 





h Lobrw yap kal thy Bdwriow amro- 
Sexrhy abtg paveicOa, wy emi TivwY 


; Gpuaprddiov Taparhoe. Xpwmeveny, BAN 


€p ayvelg ToD cdhpuaros, Gre 5) Kal Tis 


 Wxijs ducacocdvn mpockkekabapyevns.— 
_ Josephus, Antiq. Jud., 


lib. xviii. ¢. v. 
- § 2. p. 883.) 

i | Ovid. Fast. ii. 45.] 

i [Grotius, ubi supr. in v. 6. col. 


102. ] 
k (Id., ibid., col. 108. ] 

1 [aAAG Bawrloes bas ev mvedmare 
ayly, Kal tH éwetnyhoe tov mupds, 
mdAw Td opodpdy, Kal a&Kadexroy THs 
xdpitos évdecxvvmevos.—S. Chrys. in S. 
Matt. Hom. xi, § 4 Op. tom. vii. 
p- 154, C.] 

m { Grotius, ubi supra. ]: 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 
SERIES. 


360 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


simul in memoriam revocarent: talis fuit lactis et mellis pragus- 
tatio, signatio crucis, signa ab antiquis addita demonum adjuratio, 


salis admotio, unctio, aliaque hujusmodi: morem autem hunc urendi ° 


vetustissimum esse, neque proprium gentis Aithiopice, docet nos 
Heracleon citatus.a Clem. Alexandrino in Libro de Prophetia®. An 
Seleuciant et Hermiani®, quos igne baptizasse legimus, hune mo- 
rem observarint incertum habeo, ut et de Valentino, de quo Ter- 
tullianus ;— 
Bis docuit tingi, traducto corpore flamma? : 

At horum mos, ut videtur, librarits audacioribus causam dedit de- 
lendi hane voculam ‘igne in Mattheo quod in quibusdam codicibus 
videre est. Id.4 | 

A Christian man.| Hae dictio non solum masculum, sed etiam 

_ Seminam comprehendit. Lninw. de sum. Trin. e Ignor. x. Ne 
guis'. Nam et femine scure tenentur articulos fider, &c. sicut et 
masculi. Lbid.* 

Ratio quare a Christo dicimur Christiani, et non a Jesu Jesuani, 
hac est, quia rem significatam hoe nomine, Christi scilicet unc- 
tionem, Christus nobis communicavit ; nam, ut ait apostolus, omnes 
nos de plenitudine Hjus accepimus, et unctio Hjus docet nos de om- 
nibus. Sed rem significatam hoc nomine Jesu, Jesus nobis non 
communicavit: interpretatur enim Salvator, cujus effectus, vide- 
licet salvare, Ipsi solu convenit, et non alu. Ad hoc facit de Cons. 
Dist. 4. Nemo, et c. Aliud, cum similibus. 
Jesu Christi c. Hujus*. 


ON THE CATECHISM. 


_ Rehearse the articles of thy belief.| Articulus est idem quod 
membrum, sic dictum ab artu, id est, membro. Linw.* 


Linw. de Consuet. x. 


" [&vo1 dt, Ss pnow ‘HpakrAéwy, muph 
Ta Ta Tov chpayiLouevwy KaTeonun- 
vato.— Clemens. Alex. Prophetarum 
Ecloge, cap. 25. Op. tom. ii. p. 995.] 

© | See above, p. 137, and notes. ] 

P [Incerti auctcris adversus Mar- 
cionem libri quinque (Tertulliano ol. 
ascript.) lib. i. Op. Tertull., p. 631. ] 

4 [Grotius, ubi supra. | 

* [Prov. AngL, lib. i. tit. 1. ¢. 1. 
p- l. note b. on the words ne quis of 
Peccham’s constitution: Ne quis per 
ignorantiam se excuset, quin sciat arti- 
culos fidei, &c.] 

* (Ibid. ] 

‘ [Proy. Angl., lib. i. tit. 2, «. 3. 


p. 19, note d. The concluding words 
in the original are, ‘* ipsi soli convenit, 
‘Ipse enim’ ut dicitur in Evangelio, 
salvum faciet populum suum,” &c. “ ac 
si diceret, ipse solus et non alius. Ad 
hoe facit,’’ &c. And in other points 
the passage is not quoted with verbal 
accuracy. The canons referred to are 
Decret. pars iii. dist. iv. c.41. Nemo 
tollit peecata, nisi solus Christus, &c. ; 
and ec. 39. ‘* Per hance enim potestatem 
(baptizandi) quam Christus solus sibi 
tenuit et in neminem ministrorum 
transfudit.’"—Apud Corp. Jur. Can., 
tom. i. ] 

« [Lyndwood, Provinciale Anglica- 


ae 





pie a, See ee 








ON THE CATECHISM. 361 


- He descended into hell.|  Scilicet in anima, quiescente corpore 
in sepulchro. Nam post mortem Christi anima separata est a 
corpore ; sed divinitas indivisibilis utrique, scilicet carni et anime, 
mansit unita*. ? 

* The holy Catholic Church.| Id est, fidelium multitudo fide et 
charitate unita. 14 9. 1. loquimury. 

The Communion of Saints.| Multa sunt in quibus sancti (h. e. 
fideles) inter se communicant, non tamen cum infidelibus ; quia 
inter fideles et infideles magna debet esse discretio, 3. q.4. alent”. 
Non enim communicant infideles cum fidelibus im accusatione et 
testificatione, 2. q.7, Pagani*. Item in matrimonii confaderatione, 
28. g. 1, Jam nunc”. Item in ciborum perceptione, 28. q. 1, 
Nullus*. Item in mutua cohabitatione, 28. q. 1. Judai4, et ¢. 
Sape*®. Item in jejuniorum observatione, de Cons., dist. 3, Jeju- 
nium?, Item in tempore prescriptionis, 16. g. 3, Porro’. In 
talibus vero fideles inter se communicant, qui etiam in bonis spiri- 
tualibus bene communicant ad invicem, quamdiu sub Christo cum 
aliis unum corpus fuerint. Nam latronibus, Sc. nisi ad eorum 
emendationem Ecclesia non communicat, 14. g. ult. c. penult.® 
Item nec seipsos interficientibus, 23.9.5. Placuit', et c. Ex parte, 
Extra de sepult.i Item nec quibuscunque peccatoribus sine peni~ 
tentia decedentibus, 13. g.11, non astimemus*. Item nec post more. 
tem de haresi damnatis, 24. gq. 2, Sane’. 
exercentibus, Extra de torn. c. felicis™. 
24.9. 1. ce. Que dignior®. 


Item nec torneamenta 
Item nec cum hereticis, 
Item nec excommunicatis, 11. q. 2, 


num; gloss. in lib. i. tit. i. c. 1. note g. 
ad verb. articulos, pp. 1, 2. Itis to be 
observed, that this is only one of seve- 
ral explanations given by Lyndwood. } 

x (Id., ibid., p.7, note q, ad verb. in 
anima. | 

y [Id., ibid., p. 5, note 9, ad verb. 
Ecclesia Christiana, “‘ Que aliter ap- 
pellata Catholica, et dicitur fidelium 
multitudo fide et caritate unita, 14. 
dist. legimus circa medium 14. q. 1. 
loquimur.” In the Margarita Decreti 
we have the words cited by Lyndwood, 
and as it would seem the original of 
the reference, which is wrongly given 
in our printed copy; Ecclesia. Quod 
Ecclesia Catholica dicitur fidelium mul- 
titudo fide et charitate unita 93 d. legi- 
mus circa med. 1. q. 1. multz, in fi. 
24. q. 1. loquitur; but the words them- 
selves do not occur in any of these 


places.] — 

 { Decret. pars ii. caus. 3. quest. 4. 
ce 1. 
@ (Ibid., caus. 2. quest. 4. c. 25.] 

» [Ibid., caus. 28, quest. 1. c. 8. ] 

© [Ibid., c. 13.] 

d [Ibid., c. 10. ] 

e [Ibid., c. 12.] 

f [ Ibid., pars iii. dist. 4. c. 14.] 

s [Ibid., pars ii. caus. 16. quest. 3. 
c. 14. 

> ‘ia, caus. 14, quest. 5. ¢. 3.] 

i [Ibid., caus. 23. quest. 5. c. 12.] 

i [Decretal., lib. iii. tit. 28. de Se- 
pulturis, c. 11. ex parte. ] 

k [Decret., pars ii. caus. 13. quest, 
11. c. 19.] 

1 [Ibid., caus. 24. quest. 2. c. 6. ] 

m { Decretal., lib. v. tit. 13. ¢. 1.] 

" [Decret., pars li, caus. 24. quest, 
1. c. 26.) 


SECOND 
SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


362 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Omnes®, et ce. Quicunque”?, nisi in casibus permissis a jure, 11. 
>] 3 : >] 


gq. 3, ¢. Quoniam multos". 


Linw.* 


In it thou shalt do no manner of work.| Necessitas sane et 
salus populi universa potest exceptionem admittere. Itaque et 
Josua, cum civitatem Hiericho debellaret ; et Maccabai cum alto- 


phylos expugnarent, Sabbatum non observarunt. 


Tertullianus®. 


Sed in privato negotio, quid impellit a pracepto deflectere? Qui 
igitur in Sabbato ligna collegerat, adductus e castris lapidibus 


obruebatur. 


Postquam vero Christianismus invaluit, hae obser- 
vatio in diem Dominicam translata est; sed non tanta. 


Nam 


Laodicenum concilium' cessationem et otium istud quodammodo 
spontaneum efficit. Ht Conc. Aurelianense tertium™ nimiam im 


hae re superstitionem, Judaicam appellat. 


Quod postremo pena 


aliqua imposita est eu qui a negotiatione et opere non abstineret, 
factum est constitutione Guntramni regis, et Matisconensis synodi 
decreto*. Nam antea, lex Constantini M. quam Eusebius’ et Sozo- 


{Ibid., caus. 11. quest. 1. c. 32.] 
[Ibid., c. 37.] 
[Ibid., c. 103.] 

® (Prov. Angl., lib. i. tit. 1. ¢. 1. p. 
note f, ad verb. quibus communicat. 
Cosin bas however altered the expres- 
sions occasionally. ] 


es a 6 


‘ [ Tertullian, Adv. Judzos, cap. iv. 


Op. p. 187, B.] 

t [ér) ob def Xpictiavods iovdatfeyv, 
Kal év 7T@ oaBBarw oxodAdtew, GAAG 
epydfecOar abrovs ev TH adTh juépa’ 
Thy 5& Kupiakhy mpotim@rvtas, elye 5v- 
vawTo, oxoAdlev ws Xpioriavol.— 
Conc. Laod. (A.D. 364?) can. xxix. 
Conc. tom. i. col. 1536, C.] 

« [Quia persuasum est populis die 
dominico agi cum caballis, aut bubus, 
et vehiculis itinera non debere, neque 
ullam rem ad victum preparare, vel ad 
nitorem domus vel hominis pertinen- 
tem ullatenus exercere, (quz res ad 
Judaicam magis quam ad Christianam 
observantiam *pertinere probatur) id 
statuimus, ut die dominico, quod ante 
fieri licuit, liceat. De opere tamen 
rurali, id est arato, vel vinea, vel sec- 
tione, messione, excussione, exarto, vel 
sepe, censuimus abstinendum, quo faci- 
lius ad ecclesiam convenientes orationis 
gratie vacent, &c.—Cone. Aurelia- 
nense III. (A.D. 538.) can. xxviii. 
Ibid., tom. v. col. 1281, B.] 

* (Vidimus populum Christianum 
temerario more diem dominicam con- 
temptui tradere, et sicut in privatis 
diebus operibus continuis indulgere. ... 


Custodite diem dominicam, que nos 
denuo peperit, et a peccatis omnibus 
liberavit. Nullus vestrum litium fo- 
mitibus vacet: nullus causarum ac- 
tiones exerceat : nemo sibi talem neces- 
sitatem exhibeat que jugum cervicibus 
juvencorum imponere cogat. Estote 
omnes in hymnis et laudibus Dei 
animo corporeque intenti. Si quis ves- 
trum proximam habet ecclesiam, pro- 
peret ad eandem, et ibi dominico die 
semetipsum precibus lacrymisque affi- 
ciat,&e. (The whole canon is import- 
ant.) Conc. Matisconense II. (A.D. 
585). Guntramni regis jussu celebra- 
tum. Can. i.—lIbid., tom. vi. col. 673. 

Hujus decreti ac definitionis generalis 
vigore decernimus, ut in omnibus die- 
bus dominicis, in quibus sancte resur- 
rectionis mysterium veneramur, vel in 
quibuscunque reliquis solennitatibus, 
quando ex more ad veneranda tem- 
plorum oracula universe plebis con- 
junctio devotionis congregatur studio, 
preter victum quem preparari con- 
venit, ab omni corporali opere suspen- 
dantur, nec ulla causarum precipue 
jurgia moveantur.—Preceptio glorio- 
sissimi regis Guntramni (A.D. 585) ad 
episcopos et judices regni sui (whom 
he enjoins to punish those who trans- 
gress this rule.)—Ibid., col. 684, 685.] 

Y [kal jucpay 8 ebxay HyeioOa Ka- 
TAAANAOY, Thy Kupiav GAnOas Kal mpd- 
Thy bvTwS, KUpiaKhy Te Kal TwThp.oy, 
diervmov, K.7.A. 51d Tots bd Thy ‘Pw- 
Malwy apxhy modArtevouevois Gract, 


ON THE CATECHISM. 363 


menus* ita adeo laudant, etiamnum legitur, qua culture agrorum 
permittebatur inservire. Certe humana opera, non divina prohi- 
bentur, ait in Marcionem Septimius ille*. trod.” | 

Thou art not able to do these things of thyself, Sc. without His 
special grace.| Lt hoc dicitur propter errorem Pelagianorum, qui 
dixerunt liberum arbitrium anteponendum esse gratia divine, et 
quod sufficeret homo de se ad implendum jussa divina. Contra 
quos optime facit quod legitur, de Consecr. Dist, 8. c. ult.° 


SECOND 
SERIES. 


—————— 


DE NUMERO SACRAMENTORUM. 


Two only as generally necessary to salvation.| Quanquam 
enim interdum nomen hoe sacramenti latins, ut solet ab antiquis, 
et nostris etiam scriptoribus reformatis adhibetur ; quando tamen 
apposite et proprie loquuntur, non nisi duo, que Christus institutt, 
Baptismum et Cenam Domini, in sacramentis nostris numerant, 
Tuth. de Capt. Babyl.* “ Proprie” (inquit) “ ea visum est vocare 
sacramenta, que annexis signis promissa sunt; catera quia signis 
alligata non sunt, nuda promissa sunt. Quo fit, ut si rigide loqua 
velimus, tantum duo sunt in Ecclesia Dei sacramenta, Bapt. et 
Panis, cum in his solis et institutum divinitus signum, et promis- 
sionem remissions peccatorum habeamus.” 

Cum vero nomen sacramenti varie sumatur, multisque rebus 
accommodetur, mirum non est, Lutherum, aliosque viros prestan- 
tissimos de nomine minus sollicitos fuisse. Atque hine est, quod 
Lutherus duobus hisce sacramentis Peenitentiam aliquando addi- 








TXOAHY Byew Tals erwvbmots TOD CwTI- 
pos nucpas évovbérer’ duolws Se Kad 
Tas [mpd] rod caBBdrov Timay, K.7.A.— 
Euseb. de vita Constant., lib. iv. c. 18, 
p- 635. Kal tots kat’ vos 8 &pxovow, 
duolws Thy Kupiakhy nuepay vouos épotra 
yepalpew.—Id., ibid., c. 23. p. 638. See 
also Euseb. Oratio de laudibus Con- 
stantini, ibid., p. 739, 740. ] 

2 Na dé Kuplakhy Kadoupevny Hué- 
pav, hv “EBpaio: mpaérny ris EBdouddos 
évoudfovowv, “EAAnves 5& HAlw dvaTi- 
Géact, Kal Thy mpd THs EBdduns, evomobE- 
Tnoe Sikacryplwy Ka) Tay GAAwY Tpary- 
pdtv cxoAhv wyew mavras, Kal ev 
evxais Kal Artais Td Oelov Oepameverv.— 
Sozomen., Hist. Eccl., lib. i. c. 8. 
p- 20. ] 

* [Nam cum de die Sabbati dicit, 


Omne opus tuum non facies in ea, di- 
cendo Tuum de humano opere definiit, 
quod quisque ex artificio vel negotio 
suo exequitur, non de divino. Opus 
autem salutis et incolumitatis non est’ 
hominis, sed Dei proprium.—Tert. adv. 
Marcion., lib. iv. c. 12. Op. p. 424, A, 
B.] 
> [ZErodius, rerum ab omni anti- 
quitate judicatarum. Pandectze, lib. i, 
c. 22. p. 26.] 

¢ [Linw. ubi supr. not. e, ad verb. 
Sanctificatio Ecclesiz, quoting the De- 
cretum, pars iii. dist. 3. c. 31.] 

4 [Lutherus, Captivitas Babylonica, 
ad finem. Op. tom. ii. fol. 88. Wite- 
berg. 1562, in which however the last 
word is videamus, not habeamus. } 


SEcoND 


SERIES, 


364 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


dit®; Calvinus loco Penitentie@ in colloquio Ratisbonensi, anno 
1541', Septem esse sacramenta non illibenter agnoverunt. 

“ Commentum vero pontificium,” quod nec plura, nec pauciora 
sunt sacramenta quam septem, proprie sic dicta; (idque de fide 
Catholica tenendum esse,) certe veteri Ecclesia ignotum atque in- 
auditum fuit. St enim olim in Ecclesia receptum fuisset, id ah- 
quis patrum scriptis suis prodidisset ; at nullus omnino est ex tam 
multis qui hune sacramentorum septenarium numerum confirmavit. 

Nec vero ante Hugonem de S. Victoret, et Petrum Lombardum* 
hac de septenario numero sacramentorum opinio percrebuit ; cum 
Lombardus ipse, qui patrum testimonia diligenter collegit, hic om- 


nino nulla recitet. 


Concilium vero nullum extat antiquius Florentino’, (A°. 1439,) 


in quo hic septenarius numerus approbatur et sancitur. 


Atque 


hac sunt illa preclara antiquitatis monumenta, quibus ipsa causa 
contra Ecclesiam nostram a pontificiis defenditur. 

Verum evinci potest clarissimis patrum  testimoniis veterem 
Christi Eeclesiam non nisi duobus esse usam notis et perpetuis 


sacramentis. 


Clem. Romanus (Recogn., lib. i.®) non nisi duo sacramenta nu- 


merat. 


Justinus in Apol. ii.! duo tantum commemorat. 


Tertul- 


lianus in libro contr. Marcionem™, et de Corona militis, non nisi 
>] 3 


© [The passage last cited continues: 
Nam peenitentiz sacramentum, quod 
ego his duobus accensui, signo visibili 
et divinitus instituto caret, et aliud non 
esse dixi quam viam ac reditum ad 
baptismum. Ibid. At the opening of 
the treatise he had said: Principio ne- 
ganda mihi sunt septem sacramenta, 
et tantum tria pro tempore ponenda. 
Baptismus, Peenitentia, Panis .. quan- 
quam si usu scripture loqui velim, 
non nisi unum sacramentum habeam, 
et tria signa sacramentalia.—Ibid., fol. 
63, b.] 

f [ This the editor has not found. ] 

& [Septem sunt principalia sacra- 
menta, que in Ecclesia ministrantur: 
quorum quinque generalia sunt, quia 
ab eis neuter sexus, nulla etas, con- 
ditio nulla excluditur, videlicet bap- 
tismus, confirmatio, eucharistia, poe- 
nitentia, unctio infirmorum. Duo par- 
ticularia sunt, eo quod non tribuantur 
omnibus, sed quibusdam hominibus, 
ordines scilicet et conjugii.— Hugo 
de S. Victore, de Sacramentis, lib. i. 
c. 12, Op. tom. iii. p. 256; et ap. Hit- 


torp. de Div. Off, p. 734.] 

h [Jam ad sacramenta nove legis 
accedamus; quz sunt, baptismus, con- 
firmatio, panis benedictionis, id est 
eucharistia, poenitentia, unctio ex- 
trema, ordo, conjugium.— P. Lom- 
bardi Sententiarum liber; lib. iv. Dist. 
ii. § 1.] 

i [Nove legis septem sunt sacra- 
menta, &c.—Decretum Eugenii P. 1V. 
Cone. Florent. (A.D. 1439) § Quinto. 
ap. Concilia, tom. xviii. col. 546, D.] 

k [Aliter enim “nullo modo eos os- 
tendi posse salvari, nisi per Sancti Spi- 
ritu gratiam, trine invocationis dilui 
Baptismate properarent, et Eucharis- 
tiam Christi Domini sumerent.—Re- 
cognit., lib. i. cap. 63. opus spurium 
inter Op. S. Clement. Roman. apud 
Patr. Apost., tom, i. p. 502. col. 2.) 

1 [See S. Justin. Apol. 1. (al. Apol. 
2.) § 61 et § 66. Op. pp. 79, 83.] 

m [The passages which appear to be 
referred to are Tertullian de Corona 
Militis, c. 3, (Op. p. 103,) where Bap- 
tism and the Eucharist are mentioned, 
and Adv. Mare. iv. 34. (p. 450,) 


ON THE CATECHISM. 365 
duo agnoscit. B. Cyprianus® ait, “ Tune demum plane sanctificari, 
et esse filii Dei possunt, si utroque sacramento nascantur.’ Cy- 
villus Hieros.° in Catechism. suis de duobus tantum sacramentis 
scribit. S. Ambrosius? lLibrum ex instituto de sacramentis Eccle- 
siasticis conscripsit, in quo duo solummodo sacramenta tractat. 
S. Augustinus de Symb. ad Catech.4 ait, “hac sunt Ecclesia ge- 
mina sacramenta.”  Dionys. Areop.® non penitentiam, non matri- 
montium, pro sacramentis agnoscit, et unctionem, non infirmorum, 
sed mortuorum celebrat. WS. Greg. Magnus*® non nisi tria sacra- 
menta statuit. Bapt. Chrisma, Corpus et Sanguinem Domini. 
Chrisma autem ad baptismum pertinebat. Rabanus Maurus* toti- 
dem ponit. Paschasius" ingenue scribit, “ Sunt sacramenta Christe 
in Ecclesia Catholica, Baptismus, Corpus quoque Domini et San- 
guis.’ Denique Bessarion Cardinalis (de Sacr. Huchar.*) non est 
veritus confitert, “ Hac duo sola sacramenta in evangelus mani~ 








Seste tradita legr.” 


where he says, Ad sacramentum Bap- 
tismatis et Eucharistiz admittens. It 
ought to be observed that Tertullian 
uses the term sacramentum in a wide 
sense, and that he frequently mentions 
other of the sacred rites ‘‘ commonly 
called sacraments.” ] 

n (S. Cypr., Ep. 72, ad Stephanum. 
Op. Epist., p. 196. But by ‘utroque 
sacramento,’ Baptism and Confirmation 
are meant. | 

° [S. Cyrilli Hieros. Catecheses. Of 
Baptism passim; of Baptism, Con- 
firmation, and the Eucharist, Catech. 
xviii. § 33. p. 301, A. mas éxabapio- 
Onre Tav Guapriay bnd Tov Kuplov, TE 
AouTpg Tod datos ev phuati...kal Srws 
hn oppayis tuiv €560n ex Tis Kowwvias 
Tov aylov mvedpatos, Kal mepl tTav év 
Ovataornply Tis Kavjs SiabAKnS mvoTN- 
ptwy: of the holy Eucharist throughout 
the Catecheses Mystagogicz. | 

P [S. Ambrosii de Sacramentis libri 
sex: Op. tom. ii, col. 349, sqq. Con- 
firmation seems to be spoken of as a 
part of baptism. ] 

4 [Percussum est enim ejus latus, ut 
evangelium loquitur, et statim manavit 
sanguis et aqua, que sunt Ecclesiz 
gemina sacramenta. Aqua in qué est 
sponsa purificata: sanguis ex quo in- 
venitur dotata.—S. Aug. Serm. 2. de 
Symbolo ad Catechum., cap. 6. § 15. 
Op. tom. vi. col. 562, E. The Bene- 
dictine editor considers this passage 
spurious. | 

* [S. Dionys. Areop. de Ecclesiast. 


Hierarch. Op. tom. i. c. ii. on Baptism ; 
c. iii. on the Holy Communion; ec. iv. 
p. 215, on Anointing generally ; c. v. vi. 
on Ordination; c. vii. on the Offices 
for the Dead, in which occurs: déo7a- 
capevev 5 maytwv, emixyeer TE KEKOL- 
pnuevp To dcuov 6 tepdpxns. p. 265, 
C.} 


’ [Sacramenta sunt Baptismus,Chris- 
ma, Corpus Christi. These words are 
in a passage cited as S. Gregory’s by 
Lombard, Liber Sententiarum, lib. iv. 
Dist. 18. § 1, and in the Decretum of 
Gratian, lib. ii. caus. i. quest. 1, but 
they do not occur in his works, and do 
not appear to be his. (See Bellarmine 
de Sacramentis in genere, lib. ii. c. 27. 
Op. tom. iii. p. 98.) They are in 
S. Isidore, Etymol., lib. vi. c, 19. § 39. 
Op. tom. iii. p. 285.] 

t [Sunt autem Sacramenta, Bap- 
tismus, et Chrisma, Corpus et Sanguis. 
—Rabanus Maurus de Institutione 
Clericorum, lib. i. c. 24. Op. tom. vi. 
p. 8, E.] 

« [Sunt autem sacramenta Christiin 
Ecclesia, Baptismus et Chrisma, Cor- 
pus quoque Domini et Sanguis.—Pas- 
chasius Radbertus de Corpore et San- 
guine Domini liber. c. 3. Op. col. 1561, 
C. Paris. 1618. ] 

x [Si igitur hoc duo sola sacramenta 
in evangeliis manifeste tradita legimus, 
&c.—Bessarionis Cardinalis de Sacra- 
mento Eucharistie. ap. Bibl. Patr, 
Max., tom, xxvi. p. 794, H.] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 
| 


SEcoND 


SERIES. 
-_- 


366 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


His testimoniis duo sacramenta comprobantur, septem vero 
nullis nisi recentissimis plane nituntur. Sed quid humana testi- 
monia perquirimus, cum divina sint manifesta? Nam S. Paulus 
diserte docet, Israelitas re habuisse eadem sacramenta que nobis 
Christus tradidit, 1 Cor. x. 1, nulla autem nominat nisi baptis- 
mum et escam spiritualem. Atque ex Christi latere omnia N. T. 
sacramenta fluxerunt, quemadmodum 8S, Aug.’ multis in locis 
eonfirmat. Ieliqua autem quinque nulla ratione poterant ex 
Christi latere deduci. 

Generally necessary.| Sacramenta enim proprie sic dicta 
pertinent ad omnes Christianos, quia sunt sigilla nova foderis, 
quod non cum certo quodam hominum genere, sed cum universis 
Christianis sancitum est. 

Only necessary.| Contra Jude@os et alios qui diwerunt gra- 
tiam Christi non sufficere ad salutem, nisi quis circumcisionem et 


alia legis mandata observet?. 


To salvation.| Salus fidelium conservatur per Ecclesi@ sa- 
cramenta in quibus virtus passionis Christi operatur®. 

This word Sacrament.| Proprie scilicet et stricte sumptum, 
non communi quodam, et lato sensu usurpatum. 

{Sacraments? are those which are signs and tokens of some 
general promised grace, which always really descendeth from 


God unto the soul that duly receiveth them. 


y [De latere in cruce pendentis lan- 
cea percusse profluxerunt Icclesiz 
sacramenta.—S. Aug. in Johann. Tract. 
xv. § 8. Op. tom. iii. p. 2. col. 409, F. 
Quando de latere Christi sacramenta 
Kcclesiz profluxerunt? Cum dormiret 
in cruce.—Id., Enarr.in Isal. xl. § 10. 
Op. tom. iv. col. 351, G. Sed quare 
voluit dormienti facere? Quia dor- 
mienti Christo in cruce factus est con- 
jux de latere. Percussum est enim 
latus pendentis de lancea, et proflux- 
erunt Ecclesiz sacramenta.— Idem, 
Enarr. in Psal. lvi. § 11. Op. tom. iv. 
col. 535, F. Quando dormivit in cruce, 
dignum gestabat, immo implebat quod 
significatum est in Adam: quia cum 
dormiret Adam, costa illi ‘detracta est 
et Eva facta est: sic et Domino cum 
dormiret in cruce, latus ejus lancea per- 
cussum est et sacramenta profiuxerunt, 
unde facta est Ecclesia.—Idem, Enarr,. 
in Psal. exxvi. § 7. Op. tom. iv. col. 
1432, C. Si ergo Adam forma futuri; 
quomodo de latere doimientis Eva facta 


Other signi- 


est, sic ex latere Domini dormientis, id 
est in passione morientis, et in cruce 
percusso de lancea, manaverunt sacra- 
menta guibus formaretur Ecclesia.— 
Idem, Enarr. in Psal. cxxxvi. Op. tom. 
iv. col. 1534, F. Quod latus lancea 
percussum in terra sanguinem et aquam 
manavit; proculdubio sacramenta sunt 
quibus formatur Ecclesia.—Idem,Serm. 
ecxix. de Temp. Op. tom. v. col. 962, D. 
Et quod ostium in latere accepit (arca) 
profecto illud est vulnus, quando latus 
crucifixi lancea perforatum est: hac 
quippe ad illum venientes ingrediun- 
tur; quia inde sacramenta manarunt, 
quibus credentes initiantur.—S. Aug. 
De Civitate Dei, lib. xv. cap. 26. § 1. 
col. 410, E.] 

2 [Lyndwood, Prov. Angl., lib. i. tit. 
i. c. i, p. 5. not. ce, ad verb. Sanctificatio 
Ecclesiz. } 

* (Id., ibid., not. m, ad verb. Non est 


salus. } 


> [This passage belongs to the first 
series of notes. ] 


567 


ON THE SOLEMNIZATION OF HOLY MATRIMONY. 


ficant ceremonies are only as sacraments, yet no sacraments. Srconp 
Hooker, Kccl. Pol., lib. iv. sect. 1°.] Bedell 

An outward and visible sign of, &c.| Primum enim constat 
in omni sacramento necessariam esse quandam externam, aspec- 
tabilem, corpoream materiam, quemadmodum in Baptismo et 
S. Coena perspicimus. Ita ait 8, Aug. Tract. 80. in 8. Johan.", 
Accedat verbum ad elementum, et fit sacramentum. Quare in 
omni sacramento requiritur elementum. 

Ordained by Christ Himself.| Que enim propria sunt Ec- 
clesie sacramenta, ea non nisi ab ipso Christo instituta esse, apud 
omnes in confesso est. 

As a means whereby, &c.|  Quia virtute divina sanctificant 
et gratiam conferunt. 

Which are verily and indeed taken, §c.| Vere quidem ac 
realiter a fidelibus, sed in sacramento, et modo nostris mentibus 
ampervio. 

The strengthening and refreshing of our souls, &c.] By 
nourishing our faith and assurance that our sins are remitted ; 
by giving us increase of grace to lead a godly life, and by 
confirming our hope that we shall hereafter come to life 
eternal; which are all the true food of our souls, and with- 
out which they are dead, having no true spiritual life in 
them at all. C.¢ 


[ON THE SOLEMNIZATION OF HOLY MATRIMONY. | 


DE SPONSALIBUS', 


Ordo Sarum. In certis anni temporibus prohibetur solennitas 
matrimonit, non tamen. consensus; tamen si solennitas adhibe- 
atur, non retractetur matrimonium. 

A solemnizatione abstinendum est, a 1*. Dominica Adventus 
usgue ad &™ diem post Epiphaniam, inclusive ; a Dominica Sep- 


tuages. usque ad 8™ diem post Pascha inclusive, id est, usque in 





€ [ Hooker, Laws of Eeclesiastical 
Polity, Book iv. chap. i. § 4. 

4 [S. Aug. in Johann. cap. xv. Tract. 
80. § 3. Op. tom. iii. p. 2. col. 703, C.] 

© {It would seem from this letter 
that this note, and possibly those pre- 
ceding on the number of the sacra- 
ments, are derived from some treatise 


of Calixtus, which the editor has not 
met with.] 

f [The following passages are ex~ 
tracts from the Rubries in the Ordo 
ad faciendum sponsalia, in the Sarum 
Missal, Commune, fol. xl., the words 
being sometimes slightly altered, or the 
substance only given. ] 


SECOND 


SERIFS. 


368 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


crastinum, et vocatur ille dies Dominica in Albis ; item a die lune 
in 2 feria in Rogationibus usque in crastinum Trinitatis. 

Non videtur usitatum fuisse, ut a sponsalium die sponsa in 
sponsi domum transiret ; quanquam Chrysostomus® td affirmat, 
forte quia Antiochia sua atate id fiert videbat ; cum Judai dis- 
sentiant, credibilius est liberi juris id fuisse pro utriusque com- 
modo. Nam fiebecca deducta est ad Isaacum ante nuptiarum 
solennia, quia Isaaco incommodum erat in Mesopotamiam pro- 
Jficisci ; contra, Sampsonis sponsa mansit in domo paterna. Lt 
id fuisse usitatius satis colligitur ex loco Deut. xx. 6, quod et 
Romanis moribus proditum est a Modestino, eam que desponsata 
est ante contractas nuptias domicilium non mutare. Ceterum 
tllud constat, sponsas intactas fuisse, donec convocato ceetu matri- 
monium solenni prece initiaretur. Quod non tam lege precep- 
tum, quam ab antiquissimis, ut arbitror, patribus traditum, Judet 
ut olim, ita nune quoque observant; a quibus ad Christianos id 
institutum honestatis plenissimum manavit. Grot.» 

Mos erat Judais non minus quam Romanis, ut nec con- 
traherentur nec dirimerentur sponsalia, nisi adhibitis testibus. 
Idem. 

First the banns must be asked, &c.] 

Sarum*, Non fidabit sacerdos virum et mulierem, nec con- 
sentiet in fidatione ante tertium edictum bannorum ; et banna de- 
bent interrogari per tres dies solennes et disjunctas, ita ut inter 
unumquemque diem cadat ad minus unus dies ferialis. 

The persons to be married shall come into the body of the 
church. 

Sarum‘, Ante ostium Ecclesia, sive in facie Ecclesia, coram 
Deo, sacerdote et populo. 

Vir autem stet a dextra mulieris, mulier autem a sinistris viri. 
Causa est quia formata fuit ex costa sinistri lateris Ade. Tune 
sacerdos publicabit banna. 


To join together this man and this woman.] Sarum™. (Hic 


8 [os yap rots maAaots ds TX TOAAG k [Missale Sarisb., ibid , fol. xl. b.] 
év oixia Tas meuynorevmévas exe, Sov 1 [Ibid.] 


ye kal viv TodTo yiwduevoy tdor Tis &v.— m [The exhortation of which the be- 
S. Chrys. Hom. iv. in 8. Matt. (i. 18.) ginning was in the last note, continues, 
§ 2. Op. tom. vii. p. 49, C.] ad conjungendum duo corpora: scilicet 


» [Grotius, Comment. in S. Matt., hujus viri et hujus mulieris; then come 
cap. i. v. 18. ap. Crit. Saer., tom. vii. the words in the text, those in paren- 
col. 43. ] theses being the rubric.—Ibid. ] 

* [Id., ibid., in vy. 19. col. 44.) 





ON THE SOLEMNIZATION OF HOLY MATRIMONY. 3869 
respiciat sacerdos personas suas ;} ut a modo duo corpora, una 
caro, et due anime sint in fide et in lege Dei unite, ad pro- 
merendum simul vitam eternam ; Et quécquid ante. hec es 
. . . nec amplius dicitur in exhortatione”. 


In the sight of God°.| Adduntur in Ord. Sarum hee Seba, 


- “et angelis Ejus et omnibus sanctis.” 


Secondly, it was obtained for a remedy against sin, &c.] 

Essem inter Judeos uxores aut non ducebant, aut si duzxis- 
sent, post impregnationem cum illis non amplius concumbe- 
bant ; perinde quasi matrimonii unicus esset usus, procreatio 
sobolis ; et non etiam vitatio fornicationis, 1 Cor. vii., Joseph. 
Antig., lib. 18. c. 22. 

Therefore if any man can shew any just cause. } 

Sarum. Deinde fiat admonitio ad populum in lingua ma- 
terna, ad hunc modum: Admoneo vos omnes per Patrem et 
Filium, et Spiritum Sanctum, ut si quis ex vobis est, qui sciat 
aliquid, quare istt adolescentes legitime contrahere non pos- 
sunt, modo confiteatur. 

If any man do allege or declare any impediment. | 

Sarum*.  Siquis vero impedimentum aliquod’ proponere 
voluerit, et ad hoc probandum cautionem prestiterit; diffe- 
rentur sponsalia, donec rei veritas cognoscatur. 

If no impediment be alleged.}| Sit vero nullum impedi- 
mentum proponere voluerint, interroget sacerdos dotem mu- 
lieris*. 

Then shall the srdte say unto the man, N., Wilt thou have 
this woman, &c.| Post hee dicet sacerdos ad virum cunctis 
audientibus, in lingua materna. N. Visne, &c.* 

Iitera N. vulgo ponitur loco nominis propri; ejusmodi 
autem figura cepit non multo ante annum post Christum natum 
millesimum. Nam in antiquioribus codicibus MSS. pro hae 
litera N. ponitur hec nota Ill. cum transversa linea ; ut videre 


“a [That is, the exhortation ends here, 


 tiq. Jud., lib. xviii, cap. 1. 








and the rest is an admonition to those 
who know any impediment, to state it, 
as below, see note q. ] 

® [Ecce convenimus hic fratres coram 
Deo et angelis Ejus et omnibus sanctis, 
in facie Ecclesie ; ad conjungendum, 
&c.— Missale Sarisb. ubi sup. | 

P [otre yameras clodyovr au, obre 
SotAwy emirndedovor Krhow, Td Bey eis 


—bbuclay pépew bwetdngédtes, 70 5¢ ord- 


ews evdi5ovat moinow.—Josephus, An- 
§ 5. (alit. 
COSIN, 


_cap. 2.) Op. tom. i. p. 871.] 


¢ [This is a continuation of the ad- 
moenition cited above, beginning with the 
words: Et quiequid antehac fuerint.— 
Missale Sarisb. ubi supr. ] 

* [Ibid., between the last-cited pas- 
sage and this there is a rule for enjoin- 
ing the parties to confess, if they know 
any impediment, as in our service. } 

* [Ibid., a continuation of the last- 
cited passage. ] 

* (Ibid. ] 


Bb 


‘SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


370 


NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


est in antiquissimis libris sacramentorum MSS., et in quibus- 


dam aliis modo excusis. 


from evil, &c.] 


Menard." 
And lead us not into temptation. 


Answ. But deliver us 


Vide que annotata sunt ad hanc respons. in ordine Com- 


minationis*. 


THE ORDER FOR THE VISITATION OF THE SICK. 


And lead us not into temptation. Answ. But deliver 


us, §¢.| 


Vide que annotata sunt in hanc respons. in .ord. Commi- 


nationis’. 


THE COMMUNION OF THE SICK (OR THOSE THAT ARE READY 
TO DIE). 


Synodus Nicena prima, Can. 13% vocat hance Corporis 
et Sanguinis Christi sacramentalem communionem, To TedeEv- 
talov Kal avayKxaioratov éddd.or, i. [e.] ultimum et necessarium 
Viaticum, quo scilicet instructi Christiani obirent. 

Ignatius in Epist. ad Ephes. ita loquitur, &va dptov KX@vtes, 
& éott ddppwaxov aOavacias, avtidotos Tod jut) atroOaveiv, 
arr Shy ev Oc@ Sia *Incod Xpictod Kabaptypiov arcki- 


KaKkov*, 


Et Dionysius, cui Areopagite nomen tribuitur, hanc com- 
munionem vocat, TeXeTHV TEXETOV, id est, precipuam omnium, 
et ultimam rerum perfectionem, eo loguendi more quo sanctum 


sanctorum dicimus?, 


The Collect.| In ord. Sarum similis oratio habetur ad 
missam pro infirmo morti proximo®. 


« [S. Gregorii Liber Sacramentorum 
cum notis Hug. Menardi, p.383, Paris. 
1642. ] 

x [The last petition of the Lord’s 
Prayer was thus said as a response, 
according to the Latin practice, till 
1662. See the notes on the Commina- 
tion Service, p.384.] - 

¥ [See the notes on the Commination 
Service, ibid, ] 

* [wepl 5¢ trav ekodevdytwy 6 madaids 
kal kavovikds véuos pudaxOhoerar Kat 


viv’ bore iris ekodevar, Tov TeAevralov. 


Kal dvaykaidratov épodiov uh a&moore- 
petra, x.7.A.—Cone. Nic. (A.D. 325,) 


can. xiii. Cone. tom. ii. col. 40, A.] 

a (S.Ignatius Epist. ad Ephes. in- 
terp. cap. 20. apud Patres Apoét. 
tom. ii. pars 1. p. 54. The words in 
the text are from the interpolated 
epistle. Those of the genuine epistle 
are, “Eva &prov kAGrtes, bs éort pdppa- 
kov GOavaclas, avridoros Tod wh aro- 
Oaveiy GAAX Cv ev *Inood Xpior@ 5rd 
mavrés.—See Patres Apost., tom, ii. 
pars 1. p. 16.] 

>’ [S. Dionys. Areopag. de Eccles. — 
Hierarchia, cap. 3. init. Op. tom. i. 
p. 186, B.] 


¢ [Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, 


Ecclesiasticam non admittuntur. 


ON THE OFFICE FOR THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD. 371 


. THE ORDER FOR THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD. 


Judeis non licebat die festo mortuos sepelire, quia apud eos 
contactus mortui cadaveris pollutio erat. 
qui proinde quovis die, etiam die Dominico et precipuis festis 
sepulture Christianorum operam damus. C. 

The dead.| JIntellige eos qui de jure a sepultura solenni, 
aut in loco sacro non arceantur ; pagani enim, et nondum bap- 
tizati, ili etiam qui violentam sibi mortem quoquomodo intu- 
lerunt, aut in excommunicatione mortui sunt, ad sepulturam 
Nam has supplicationes sus- 
cepit Ecclesia (ut ex 8. Aug. retulit Conc. Cabilon. 2. cap. 39%.) 
pro spiritibus in Christiana et Catholica societate defunctis. Et 
Conc. Braccar.1. cap.17°. Placuit, ut catechumenis sine bap- 
tismo defunctis, neque oblationis commemoratio, neque psallendi 
impendatur officium, nam et hoc per ignorantiam usurpatum est. 

Hue pertinet' Canon 2. Concilii Vasensis®. Horum qui in 
bone vite cursu decedunt oblationem recipiendam, (vide notas 
in ult. Collectam hujus officiit) et eorum funera, ac deinceps 
memoriam Ecclesiastico affectu prosequendam statuimus. At 


guicunque propria voluntate se in aquam jactaverit, aut collo” 


ligato se suspenderit, aut de arbore precipitaverit, aut ferro 
percusserit, aut qualibet occasione voluntaria se morti tra- 
diderit, istorum oblata non recipiantur, ut decernit Auti- 


Apud nos non item, 





conservator animarum, qui quos diligis 
corripis, et quos recipis, pie ad emenda- 
tionem coerces; te invocamus, Domine, 
ut medelam tuam conferre digneris, et 
ut anima famuli tui in hora exitus 
illius de corpore, absque peccati ma- 
cula per manus sarnctorum angelorum 
tuorum tibi representari mereatur: per 
Dominum nostrum &c. Oratio, in missa 
pro infirmo proximo morti.—Missale 
Sarisb. Commune, fol. xxxvii. } 

@ [Dicente beato Augustino: non 
sunt pretermittende supplicationes 
pro spiritu mortuorum, quas faciendas 
pro omnibus in Christiana et Catholica 
societate defunctis, etiam tacitis nomi- 
nibus eorum, sub generali commemo- 
ratione suscepit ecelesia.—Concil. Ca- 
bilonens. II. (A.D. 813.) can. xxxix. 
Concilia, tom. ix. col. 368, B. The 
passage of S. Augustine is from his 
tract de cura pro mortuis gerenda, cap. 
iv. § 6. Op. tom. vi. col. 519, E, F.] 

© (Concil. Bracarens. II. (or I. ae- 
cording to others) (A.D. 563.) can. 17. 


ap. Concilia, tom. vi. col. 522, B, C. 
The exact words are ‘sine baptismi re- 
demptione,’ and after defunetis, ‘simili 
modo,’ referring to canon 16, which for- 
bids the commemoration of the oblation, 
or the attendance with Psalms at the 
burial of those who ‘have laid violent 
hands on themselves or been put to 
death for their crimes.—Ibid. ] 

f ( This paragraph is added in a much 
later hand; it is from Calixtus, ubi 
supra, § xxv., xxvi., except the last 
sentence, De his enim, &c. | 

& [The words of the canon are; 
Pro his qui pcenitentia accepta, in 
bone vite cursu satisfactoria compune- 
tione viventes, sine communione in- 
opinato nonnunquam transitu, in agris 
aut itineribus preveniuntur, oblationem 
recipiendam, et eorum funera, ac dein- 
ceps memoriam ecclesiastico affectu 
prosequendam. — Cone. Vasense II. 
(A.D. 442.) can. 2. Concilia, tom. iv. 
col. 717, A.] 


Bb2 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES, 


372 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. » 


siodorensis Synodus, can. 17%. Nempe mos erat in veteri 
Ecclesia, ut defunctorum vel parentes, vel liberi, vel cognatt, 
vel denique amici, oblationes illorum nomine offerrent in argu- 


_ mentum et testimonium, quod illi Ecclesiastice communionis 


participes decessissent. De his enim oblationibus sumebat et 
participabat populus fidelis, atque etiam pauperes et Ecclesie 
ministri, in alimoniam et subsidium partem habuerunt. 

- Cuthred, the 13th king of the West Saxons, was. the first 
here in England who permitted the bodies of the dead to 
be buried within the walls of their cities, which before were 
used to be buried in the fields. Bak., Hist., p. 3°. 


In sure and certain hope of resurrection, &c.| Et hoc con- 
jfirmatur in resurrectione Christi, qui veraciter surrexit, et, 
dicit apostolus ad Phil. 2. conformabit corpus humilitatis 
nostre configuratum corpori claritatis sue. 

I heard a voice from heaven, &c.| Laudamus Deum, et gra- 
tias agimus pro is qui in Christo obdormierunt, eo quod egre- 
gium certamen certaverint, et fidem servaverint, et oratur 
postea, ut Deus beatam illis resurrectionem indulgeat. 


Lead us not into temptation. Answ. But deliver us.| Vide 
gue annotata sunt ad hanc resp. in ord. Comminationis, 


Depart hence in the Lord, et infr. And all others departed. | 
"ArorvecOat Hellenistis dicuntur pit cum moriuntur, ut Tobie 
iii.6. Ita LXX. Num. xx. in fine, 671i aerxvOn’ Aapdr, et Gen. 
xx. 2. Abraham ait, ’Eyo arorvopat arexvos, ubi Targum, 
abeo ex hoc mundo, quomodo et Festus aiti, Romanis antiquis 
mortem dictam abitionem. Est autem in hoc loquendi pene’ 
manifesta professio sperate vite alterius, 

Beseeching Thee, that it may please Thee shortly to ac- 
complish the number of Thine elect.) Here is a prayer, and 
a prayer for the elect, that is, for all them who live and 
die in the true faith and religion of Christ. We pray that 
God of His goodness would accomplish this number, for 


» [Concilium Autisiodorense, (A.D. i [Baker’s Chronicle, p. 6.] 
578.) can. 17. ibid. tom. vi. col. 644, C. i [S. Pomp. Festus de verborum 
The words of the canon begin ‘At qui- _ significatione, lib. i, ad verb, Abitio- 
cunque,’ the last words are ‘oblatio non nem. | 
recipiatur.’ | 





ON THE OFFICE FOR THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD. 373 


SECOND 


those who are elect and dead cannot be made perfect, nor 
; SERIES.. 


obtain all the gracious promises of God made unto them, 
without us that be alive, and elected to the same inheritance 
with them; (Heb. xi. w/t.) This prayer, therefore, relateth 

to them that are dead in the faith of Christ, as well as to 
ourselves that make profession of it here in this life. 

And to hasten Thy kingdom.} Wherein we join our 
prayers with the souls that St. John saw under the altar Rev. vi. 
in*his vision, saying, “‘ How long, O Lord, holy and true, adit 
dost Thou not judge,” &c., and to whom it [was] said, that 
they should rest yet awhile, until their fellow-servants also 
should be perfected with them. And this was the reason, 
that in the ancient Church, prayers relating to the dead saints 
were made, pro mora finis, pro requie et tranquillitate ant- Tertull., 
marum eorum qui placide in Christo obdormierunt ; fondly none 
apne by the new Roman Catholics to the fatohing out of oes in 
men’s souls from their feigned pains of purgatory ; whereof nel 
the ancient fathers never said a word. 

That we with this our brother, &c.™] A special prayer for 
the person departed, as well as for ourselves that remain 
behind, referring to a joyful resurrection, and to a perfect 
consummation of body and soul together in God’s eternal 
kingdom of glory; which being yet [to] come, we may 
lawfully pray for it, as we are likewise taught and com- 
manded to do (no less for the kingdom of glory;,than for the 
kingdom of grace,) in the Lord’s prayer, advemat regnum Mais vi. 
Tuum. And this manner of prayer for the dead the Pro- *° 
testant and Reformed Churches have always used and main- 
tained, even in Scotland itself, when they put a dead body there ‘ 
into the grave (of any one whom they believe to have been a 
faithful professor of the Gospel) though they say nothing 

else, yet this they say, God send it, or we wish it, a happy 


k (Oramus etiam.... pro mora lum consortium mortuorum, vera regio 





finis.—Tertullian. Apolog. cap. 39. Op. 
p.31, A.] 

A [Dilexi, et ideo prosequor eum 
usque ad -regionem vivorum, nee dese- 
ram, donec ‘fletu et precibus inducam 
virum, quo sua merita vocant, in mon- 
tem Domini sanctum: ubi perennis 
vita, ubi corruptela nulla, nulla con- 
tagio, nullus gemitus, nullus dolor, nul- 


viventium, ubi mortale hoc induat im- 
mortalitatem, et corruptibile hoe in- 
duat incorruptionem.—S.Ambros.Orat. 
de obit. Theodos., § 387. Op. tom. ii. 
col. 1208, A.] 

ms (The words of the prayer adie 
1662 were ‘* that we with this our 
brother and all other et 2 in the 
true faith,” &c] 


SECOND 
SERIES. 


purgatory and pain, is a very vain collection. 


374 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


resurrection. //is concordant" quotidiana etiam nostrorum 
et bonorum omunium vota; quibus optamus, id est, Deum pre-— 
camur, ut animabus fidelium defunctorum propitius esse velit, 
et in paradisum nunc pridem receptas quiete et gaudio mactare 
deinceps concedat. Neque est quod dicant nonnulli, hoc tantum 
eos optare, non autem rogare aut orare Deum ut tribuat. Voces 
enim ipse aliud sonant, et cum ista, nisi divina benignitate 
(uti hic in Officio Mortuorum loquimur) obtingere non possunt, 
guid aliud est optare a Deo ista concedi, quam Deum rogare 
ut largiatur? Absurdum enim fuerit optare a Deo aliquid 
donari, guod Deum ut donet rogare nolis. 

Sed audiamus? virum egregium, et inter Protestantes e primis 
Reformatoribus unum, Urbanum Regium, in libello de Formulis 
caute loquendi, edito anno superioris seculi 44”. ‘ Korum certe 
gui in fide Christi obdormierunt, memoria semper in Ecclesia 
religiose celebrata fuit, Quare vir Dei, Doctor Martinus 
Lutherus, in eternum observandus preceptor noster, non putat 
a Christiana pietate alienum esse, si pro nostris defunctis semel 
atque iterum ex libera devotione oraverimus. Caritas enim 
Christiana mire efficax virtus est, nec se continet, guin et pro 
vivis et pro defunctis sit solicita ; ita ut et commembra nostra 
ex hoc seculo emigrantia pia prece commendet Christo Domino 
et Deo nostro in eternum benedicto. Et hec erat olim, et est 
nune in Ecclesia Catholica memoria defunctorum, que evidens 
testimonium est caritatis et fidei de gloriosa carnis resurrec- 
tione; et quum sit fructus fidet que per caritatem operatur, 
nemo eam rejiciet, nisi sint Epicurei et Sadducei.” Subjungit 
veterum patrum dicta et exempla, e quibus antea aligua reci- 
tavimus. 

But from hence‘ (be Seey either wishes or prayers which 


the Church maketh for: them that are departed out of this 


life in the faith of Christ) to imagine and conclude, as the 
riew Roman Catholics do, that therefore their souls are in 
For even in 


de precipuis Christiane doctrine locis; 
eap. De Sanctorum cultu. Op. Latine 


" [This is from Calixtus, ubi supr. 
§ Ixxy. 





° (This is from Calixtus, at the be- 
ginning of § Ixxv., just before the last 
citation. The concluding sentence~is 
modified by Cosin.] 

P [Urbanus Regius; Formule que- 
dam cau‘e et citra scandalum loquendi 


edita. pars i. fol. Ixxv. b. Noriberg. 1562. 
The tract is there said to be published 
in 1535.) 

4 [This is derived from Calixtus, 
ibid. § Ixxvi.] 








ON THE OFFICE FOR THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD. 375 


the Roman Canon" itself they pray, Ut omnibus in Christo 
mortuis et quiescentibus locum refrigerii lucis et pacis Deus 
imdulgeat. Can it be said, that those souls which are at rest 
in Christ are also tormented in the pains of purgatory? In 
all other Liturgies, Greek and Latin, simpliciter oratur pro 
mortuis, ut quiescant in sinu Abrahe, ut corpora eorum resur- 
gant ad consummationem beatitudinis, but of bringing them 
out of purgatory, or relieving them in their pains there, they 
say nothing at all, for they knew of no such matter, neither 
did the Church of old teach the people to believe it. 

Although therefore it cannot be exactly and distinctly 
declared, what benefit the dead receive by these prayers 
which the living make for them; yet if there be nothing 
else, there is this at least in it, that hereby is declared the 
communion and conjunction which we have still one with 
another, as members of the same body whereof Christ is the 
head. 

May have our perfect consummation and bliss, &c.*| Hodie 


quidem Pontificii, ut beatarum animarum invocationem stabi- | 


liant, ipsas jam tum perfecta, et quanta obtingere unquam 
debeant beatitudine frui, et clare Deum, et in Deo omnia, 
atque adeo desideria mentis et preces hominum superstitum 
videre asserunt. Inanis tamen est conatus, nam beati angelt 
in celis semper vident faciem Patris qui in celis est, Matt. 
xiv. 10, non tamen in Deo vident omnia; de die enim illa et 
hora, que huic mundo suprema erit, nemo scit, ne angeli qui- 
dem celorum, Matt. xxiv. 836; Mark xi. 82. (Ht Deus qui 
est unicus scrutator cordium, solus cognoscit cogitationes homi- 
num.) Non igitur quicunque Deum videt, in Deo videt omnia. 
Sed etiam ipsa hypothesis laborat, et cum S. Scriptura non 
congruit. (Nam posita et concessa hic clara Dei visione, quam 
sanctis tribuunt, nondum tamen dict potest sanctos summa et 
consummata beatitudine frui.) In apocalypsi animabus mar- 
tyrum sub altari quiescentibus date sunt stole albe, (hoc 
_ est, gloria et felicitas in paradiso celesti,) attamen dictum est 
eis ut requiescerent adhuc paululum, usque quo compleantur 
etiam conservi et fratres eorum, (in hac vita terrena superstites) 

r [Canon Missz ap. Missale Roma- which are here put in parentheses, and 
num. | altered a few connecting words, and in 


* [This note is from Calixtus, ubi the last paragraph only gave in brief 
supr. § lxxvii. Cosin added passages the substance of what Calixtus wrote. ] 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


376 | NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Seconv Apoc. vi. 10, 11; et prisci V. T. fideles, non obtinuerunt pro- 


SERIES. 





missum, quod Deus de nobis melius quiddam providerat, ne 
absque nobis consummarentur, Heb. xi. 39. Si enim maxima 
e¢ potissima retributio, et ipsa summa et consummata beatitudo 
(cujus hic mentionem facimus) in clara Dei visione et fruitione 
posita gam ante obtigit ; quorsum tanto apparatu Dominus 
noster ad judicium veniet? Num saltem ut appendiculam 
tantum pridem accepte beatitudinis in corpus mortuum con- 
ferat, (et resuscitet illud e sepulchro ut anime conjungatur, ita 
ut nihil aliud faciendum restaret ?) Verum enimvero futurum 
est preterea, ut Filius hominis veniat in gloria Patris sui cum 
angelis suis; et tunc reddet unicuique secundum ipsius facta, 
Matt. xvi. 27. Ecce, ait, venio cito, et merces Mea Mecum 
est, ut reddam unicuique, prout opus ipsius erit, Apoc. xxil. 
12. (OQmne opus Deus adducet in judicium,) Eccl, xii. 18. 
Et omnes sistemur ad tribunal Christi, et unusquisque nostrum 
de seipso rationem reddet Deo, Rom. xiv. 10, 12. Imo quod- 
cunque verbum otiosum loquuti fuerint homines, de eo reddituri 
sunt rationem in die judicit, Matt. xii. 36. Que omnia claris- 
sime ostendunt, examen fore instituendum, in die illo magno 
de universis hominum factis tam bonis quam malis. Ideo 
Sructus hujus deprecationis quam pro mortuis in Christo faci- 
mus, prorsus nullus esse non potest ; facit enim ad perfectiorem 
eorum consummationem in eterna beatitudine, quando erunt 
absque metu omni ulterioris alicujus examinis, et tam in cor- 
pore quam ir anima consummabuntur. 

Interim certum est* justorum animas esse in manu Dei, et 
non tangi a tormentis, Sap. ii. 1, et requiescere a laboribus 
suis, Apoc. xiv. 13, esse in sinu Abrahe, Luke xvi. 22, et 
in paradiso, Luke xxill. 43. Translato autem verbo omnis 
etiam spiritualis quasi regio, ubi anime bene est, merito para- 
disus dict potest, et sinus Abrahe, (qui pater omnium creden- 
tium appellatur, Rom. iv. 11,) ubi jam post hujus vite dolores 
nulla futura. sit tentatio. Adeo ut anime fidelium post disces- 
sum e corpore in tuto sint, et quiete potiuntur ; imo blande 
foventur, et exhilarantur, jamscmnien pueruli solent in 
gremio suorum parentum. 

Albeit therefore®, as we may from hence most certainly 


® [Calixtus, ibid., § ]xxviii.] Calixtus, ibid., being the continuation 
' * |'This paragraph is translated from of § Ixxviii.] 


ON THE OFFICE FOR THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD. 3877 


}are departed from their bodies, be “in joy and felicity” (as we 
acknowledge in the first part of this prayer) yet because 
they are not in such a degree of.that joy and felicity, as that 


therefore in the latter part here of this our prayer, we be- 
seech God to give them a “full and perfect consummation of 
bliss, both in body and soul, in His eternal kingdom of glory,” 
which is yet to come. And whatsoever the effect and fruit 
of this prayer will be, though it be uncertain, yet hereby we 
‘shew that charity which we owe to all those that are fellow- 
servants with us to Christ; and in this regard our prayer 
cannot be condemned; being neither impious nor unfit for 
them that profess Christian religion. For in like manner, 
if I should make a prayer to God for my father or mother, 
for my brother or sister, for my son or daughter, or any 
other friend of mine who were travelling in a journey, be- 
seeching Him that He would prosper them in their way, 
and keep them from all danger and sickness, till they should 
safely and happily arrive at their journey’s end, and the place 
where they desire to be; although at the same time when 
I pray thus for them, peradventure they be arrived at that 
place already (which I knew not) with all safety, and met 
with no dangers or diseases by the way, whereby all my 
prayer is prevented, yet the solicitude, and charity in the 
‘meanwhile, that I had for them, cannot be justly or charita- 
bly reprehended by any others. Vide que annotata sunt in. 
Litania, ad verba “ et in die Judicii*.” 

That we, with this our brother, and all others*, be] Ubi 
non solum pro vivis (nobis) oratur, sed etiam pro defunctis, qui 
ut Christiani, et ecclesiastice communionis participes diem 
suum obierunt. Hoc enim pacto nostram quoque erga defunctos 


et antigua Ecclesia facere solebat. ‘ Neque enim piorum 
anime mortuorum (ut loguitur magnus et sanctus doctor 





que etiam nunc est Regnum Christi.” Ht Lib. de Cura pro 


_t (See above, pp. 241—243.] x [S.Aug. de Civitate Dei, lib. xx. 


« {The passage which follows is from cap. 9. § 2, Op. tom. vii. col. 586, F.] 


 Calixtus, ibid, § xxxvi. and xxxix. ] 


affirm and conclude, that the souls of the faithful, after they. 


they can have or receive no more than they have already, 


caritaiem, et cum illis conjunctionem declaratum imus. Quod 


Augustinus, lib. xx. de C.D. cap. 9*,) separantur ab Ecclesia, 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


878 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


mortuzs, cap. 1¥. ‘ Non parva est (inquit) Universe Ecclesiae, 


que in hac consuetudine claret, authoritas, ubi in precibus 


sacerdotis, que Domino Deo funduntur, locum suum habet 
etiam commendatio mortuorum.”’ “Item, cap. 4”. . Non sunt 
pretermittende supplicationes pro spiritibus mortuorum, quas 
faciendas pro omnibus in Christiana et Catholica societate 
defunctis, etiam tacitis nominibus quorumcunque, sub generali 
commemoratione suscepit Ecclesia.” 

Consummation.] Id est finem et cessationem temporis gra- 
tie, cujus tempus stat quamdiu manet Ecclesia militans in 
hoc seculo*. 

Both in body and soul.| Sciendum est quod resurrectio 
generalis non erit tantum in corpore, sed etiam in anima. 
Nam sicut homo meruit vel demeruit in corpore et anima si- 
mul, sic punitur vel premiatur simul in utroque?. 


THE COLLECT. 


Collecta olim dicta ad missam pro defunctis ; gue tamen 


missa apud antiquos non erat in usu. Adfertur a Cochleo pro 
hujusmodi missis S. Dionys. Eccl. Hier., cap. 7°, quibus (in- 
quit) liceret penitentibus et energumenis adsistere, quod in 
aliis non licebat. Sed Dionysius loco per Cochleum adlegato, 
non loqguitur de missis, sed de nudis precibus, quales sunt iste 
quas Ecclesia Anglicana retinuit. Deceptus est Cochleus per 
Dionysii interpretem, qui Grecam vocem evynv vertit ‘mis- 
sam, et imperitiam suam aut (quod pejus est) imposturam 
prodidit. | 

O merciful God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. | 


¥ [S. Aug., Lib. de cura gerenda pro 
mortuis, cap. 1. § 3. Op. tom. vi. col. 
516, D.] 

% (Id. ibid., cap. 4. § 6. col. 519, 


functis ; 
laicos suos, &c. 
guandam differentiam, que observatur 


E 


circa alias missas: 


; [Lyndwood, Prov. Angl., lib. i. 
tit. 1. c. 1. p. 5, not. o. in verb. con- 
summatio. | 

> (Id. ibid., note q, ad verb. gloriam 
zeternam. } 

¢ [The passage of Cochleus alluded 
to is in his tract called Philippica sep- 
tima adversus seditiosos et famosos li- 
bellos Philippi Melancthonis, cap. xiv. 
de Missis pro animabus defunctorum; 
at. objicit nobis Philippus ‘ Dionysium 
nihil prorsus de missa loqui pro de- 


his sacris interesse poenitentes 
energumenos, quod in aliis missis non 
permittitur.—Ad cale. Cochlei Hist, 


De Ecclesiastica Hierarchia, cap. vii. 
Contemplatio, § 3: oxdme: 58, Sri viv ob 


wiou Kata Td oivnbes ai KaBaipduevar 


Tdgers Gmorvovra, udvor dt tev tepav 
€xBdddrovrat xépwv of Karnxovmevoi— 


S. Dion. Areop., Op. tom. i. p. 266, B.] 


sed fallit per hoe indoctos — 
...» Affert tamen hic — 


circa missam pro defunctis aliter quam _ 
nempe permittit — 
et ~ 
Hussitarum, p.585, prope Mogunt. 1549, 
The passage of Dionysius referred to is _ 







tee 





ON THE OFFICE FOR THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD. 379 


There was, in the first ordering of this book set forth in the 
| second year of King Edward the Sixth, a celebration of the 
| Communion appointed at the burial of some persons®; and this 
was the collect then used ; the Epistle, 1 Thess. iv., “I would 
not, brethren, that ye should be ignorant concerning them 
which are fallen asleep,” &c. unto, “ Wherefore comfort 
yourselves with these words ;’”’ the Gospel, John vi., ‘‘ Jesus 
said to His disciples and the Jews, All that My Father hath 
given Me,” &c. unto, “And I will raise him up at the last 
day.” | 

At this Communion (which was kept to shew that the 
deceased party died in the common faith and communion of 
all true Christians) there were oblations made in solemn 
manner either by the parents, or the children, or the kindred 
and friends of such as so died. And at solemn funerals of 
royal, noble, and other great persons, attended by the heralds, 
we have that custom still; where, if those heralds stand in 
the church to receive the offerings, they usurp the priest’s 
office. ; 

In the ancient Church the Communion was at this time 
celebrated for the same purpose, to declare by it, that the 
dead person departed out of this life in the public faith and 
unity of the Catholic Church of Christ: from whence we 
learn what the reason was, that Monica, the mother of 
St. Augustine, so much desired to be remembered at the 
altar after her death®; which was not (as the fond and igno- 
rant sort of people among the new Roman Catholics imagine) 
to fetch her soul so much the sooner out of purgatory (for 


the papal purgatory fire was not then kindled, nor known;) 


but partly to testify her faithful departure in the religion and 
communion of all other good Christians, and partly to have 
praise and thanksgivings rendered to Almighty God for her 
happy departure out of this world to a better, and partly 
also, that by the prayers of the Church made at the celebra- 
tion of the holy Eucharist, and by virtue of Christ’s death 
and sacrifice therein commemorated, she might obtain a 
joyful resurrection of her body out of the grave, and have 


4 [See above, p. 170, note o.] altare memineritis mei ubi ubi fueritis, 
* [Ponite, inquit, hoc corpus ubicun-. —S. Aug. Conf., lib. ix. cap. 11. § 27. 
| que, nihil vos ejus cura conturbet; Op. tom. i. col. 167, C.] 
_ tantum illud vos rogo, ut ad Domini 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIEs. 


380 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


her perfect consummation of glory both in body and soul, in 
God’s everlasting kingdom. 

And in testimony that the Church acknowledged all per- 
sons thus dying in the common and true faith of Christ to 
be of their communion, the oblations which their parents 
or friends presented in their names were received by the 
priests at the altar, whereas it had not been lawful to receive 
them, if those persons had not died in that communion and 
unity with the Catholic Church of God, or were persons 
broken off, or excommunicated from the body of it. 

Of those oblations we read in St. Augustine’s book called 
his Enchiridion ad Laurentium, cap.110!': “ Cum sacrificia 
(inquit) sive altaris, sive quarumcunque eleemosynarum pro 
baptizatis defunctis omnibus offeruntur, pro valde bonis gra- 
tiarum actiones sunt, pro non valde malis propitiationes sunt,” - 
(nempe ut resurgant, et misericorditer cum tis fiat in die judicii, 
quemadmodum in Eccl. Angl. Litania preces facimus, Libera 
nos Domine in die judicti,) “pro valde malis, si nullo sint ad- 
jumento mortuorum, qualescunque tamen sunt vivorum conso-— 
lationes.’ Repetit ista Liber Quest. ad Dulcitium, Q. 28. 
Item Inb. de Cura pro mortuis, cap. 4". “ Quibus ad ista 
desunt parentes, aut filii, aut cognati vel amici, abuna eis 
exhibentur pia matre communi Ecclesia.’ Addit tamen cap. 
ult. ‘ Non existimemus ad mortuos pro quibus curam geri- 
mus hec beneficia pervenire, nisi quod pro eis sive altaris, 
sive orationum, sive eleemosynarum § sacrificiis [solenniter | 
supplicamus ; quamvis non pro quibus fiunt omnibus pro- 
sint, sed tis tantum quibus dum vivunt comparatur ut pro- 
sint. Sed quia non discernimus qui sint, oportet ea pro 
regeneratis omnibus facere, ut nullus eorum pretermittatur, ad 
-quos hec beneficia possint et debent pervenire. Melius enim 
supererunt ista eis, quibus nec obsunt, nec prosunt, quam eis 
deerunt quibus prosunt.” 





£ [S. Ang. Enchiridion, cap. 110. § 29. 
Op. tom. vi. col. 238, C. Augustine’s 
words are “ Etiamsi nulla sint adju- 
menta.’’—See Calixtus, ibid., § xxvi.] 

& [Ita fit ut neque inaniter Ecclesia, 
vel suorum cura pro defunctis, quod 
potuerit religionis impendat, et tameu 
ferat ‘unusquisque secundum ea que 
gessit per corpus, sive bouum, sive 
malum, reddente Domino unicuique 
secundum opera ejus. Ut enim hoc 


quod impenditur, possit ei prodesse 
post corpus in ea vita est adquisitum 
quam gessit in corpore.—S. Aug. Lib. 
de octo Dulcitii quest. Quest. 2. § 3. 
Op. tom. vi. col. 129, F, G.] 

h [S. Aug. Lib. De Cura gerenda 
pro mortuis, cap. 4. § 6. Op. tom. vi. 
col. 519, F.) 

i [Id. ibid., cap. 18. § 22. col. 
530, D. See Calixtus, ibid. § xxxvi. 
XXXvii. | . 


ON THE OFFICE FOR THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD. 


Receptus itaque fuit mos celebrande*, quando corpora fune- 
rarentur, Eucharistie; cujus qui exequiis intererant, par- 


|ticipes facti, et hec erat celebratio Sacramenti in sepultura 
Augustinus de funere matris sue Monice, Lib. 


mortuorum. 
Confess. 1X. cap.12'. “ Hece corpus elatum est, imus et redi- 
mus sine lachrymis; nam neque in iis precibus, quas tibi, 
O Deus, fudimus, cum offerretur pro ea sacrificium pretit 
nostri, jam juxta sepulchrum posito cadavere priusquam de- 
| poneretur, sicut illic fieri solet, nec in iis precibus ego flevi, sed 
toto die graviter in occulto mestus eram.”’ Et de morte et de 
Suneratione ipsius Augustini Possidius in ejus vita™ ; “ Nobis 
}astantibus obdormivit in pace cum patribus suis, enutritus in 
bona senectute; et nobis coram positis, pro ejus commendanda 
corporis depositione sacrificium (Eucharistie) Deo oblatum 
est et sepultus est.”  Conjungebantur itaque antiquitus sacri- 
ficia, sive gratiarum actiones, oblationes, et orationes in de- 
_functorum sepulturis. 


Missas (quas vocant) pro defunctis inde extrahendis detorta 
sunt, et que libere erant observationis in necessariam. con- 
verse fuere, ideo ab Ecclesiis omnibus Reformatis, adeoque 
ipsa nostra Anglicana post quartum annum Regis Edw. VI. 
_celebratio Eucharistie in funeratione mortuorum omissa est, 
retentis interim gratiarum actionibus pro felici eorum ex hoc 
mundo discessu, orationibus pro beata eorum resurrectione, et 
—alicubi etiam oblationibus, quarum pauperes et ministri sacro- 
rum alerentur. 

Talia quidem™ improbavit et damnavit Aérius, dicens, orare, 
vel offerre pro mortuis (verba sunt Augustini Lib. de Heret. cap. 
53°.) non oportere, et propterea, cum etiam insuper Arianus 
esset, inter hereticos et turbatores Ecclesia relatus est. Plura 
de eo apud Epiphanium Her. 75”. Sed nos (ut protestatur 


38] » 


Sed quia hec postea, excogitato purgatorii commento, ad— 


k [What follows is from Calixtus, 
ibid. § xxxviii. with verbal alterations, 
down to sepulturis. ] 





1 (S. Aug. Conf., lib. ix. cap. 12. 
§ 32. Op. tom. i. col. 168, F.] 
m [Possidius in Vita S. August., cap. 
81. Op. S. Aug. tom. x. in Append. 
col. 280, A.) 
- ” [The rest of this note is from Ca- 
Hixtus, ibid. § xxxix.] 
_ ° [Aériani ab Aério quodam sunt, 
: qui cum esset presbyter, doluisse fertur 


Fi ae heen 
’ 


quod episcopus non potuit ordinarii et 
in Arianorum heresim lapsus, propria 


quoque dogmata addidisse nonnulla,- 


dicens offerre pro dormientibus non o- 
portere.—S. Aug. Lib. de Heres. cap. 
53. Op. tom, viii. col. 18, E. Ed. Ben. 
‘*See MSS. At editi ‘ dicens, orare vel 
offerre pro mortuis oblationem non 
oportere.’” Annot. Bened. ] 

P [eira peréreita, Tit TH Ady@ meTa 
Odvarov dvoudtere, pyar (’A€pios), dvd- 
Mata TeOvewrwrv; etxeTat yap, pyar, 


SECOND 
SERIES. 


SECOND 
SERIES. 


Pulpitum 
sive am- 
bon. 


882 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Apologia Augustane Confessionis, Art. 39. de abusibus) ora- 
tiones pro mortuis non prohibemus, nec... nos Aério patroci- 
namur. 
mentum defunctis hujusmodi preces conferant, difficile sii ex- 
plicatu, ad contestandam tamen fidem, spemque Resurrectionis, 
Christiani semper eas usurparunt. “Et quid utilius (ait Epi- 
phanius contra Aérium disserens*) quid opportunius, quam 
superstites credere, quod vivunt defuncti, cat év avuTrapéia ovK 
elaiv, et non destituuntur existentia, sed sunt, et vivunt apud 


Dominum?... Et pro justis memoriam facimus, et pro peccato- | 


ribus, &c.” Nempe pro omnibus per Christum gratias agimus 


de felict eorum excessu, et precamur pro beata eorum resur- | 


rectione ; atque hoc ipso omnibus non nisi per Eum salutem 
obtingere profitemur. C. 

Who also taught us by His holy apostle St. Paul.| Ad 
1 Thess. iv. 13. ‘ Nolumus vos ignorare de dormientibus, ut non 
contristemini sicut ceteri qui spem non habent.”’ Potest namque 
hic queri, Ad quid nobis utilis est fides sive spes resurrectionis ? 
Et dic, quod ad quatuor. Primo, ad tollendas tristitias quas 
ex mortuis concipimus, juxta illud apostoli; et pro hoc vide 13 
q. 2%. [c.] Quam preposterum, et c. Qui divina. Secundo, quia 
solicitos nos reddit ad bene operandum propter desiderium 
premu. Tertio, quia retrahat nos a malo ob timorem pene. 
Quarto, aufert timorem mortis, in quantum speramus aliam 
vitam post mortem. Linw.* 


ON THE COMMINATION SERVICE. 


The Priest shall go into the pulpit.| Consuevisse veteres in 


Ecclestis loca editiora habere, e quibus non tantum evan- 
gelium sed et alie lectiones legerentur, significant ea que 
de Celerino et Aurelio lectoribus scripsit B. Cyprianus, 





Quanguam in hac re quem fructum, et quod emolu- | 


a 








6 Sav } oikovomiay érolynae, Tl wpeAnOh- 
oetat 6 reOveds.—S. Epiphan. adv. 
Heres., lib. iii. tom, i. Her. 75. cap. 3. 
Op. p. 907, A.] 

4 [ Apologia AugustaneConfessionis; 
xii. de Missa; ap. Libros Symbolicos Ec- 
clesie Lutherane. ed. Meyer, p. 165. ] 

* [ri by etn todbrou Kaipidrepoy, Kat 
Oavpacirepoy morevew wey Tos Ta- 
povras Sti of &meAOdvTes SGor kal & 
avurraptia obk eialv, GAA cial, Kat Cor 


mapa Te Seomdry.... kal yap Sicalwy 


mo.ovpedat Thy uvhunyv Kai drep auapTw- 
A@v.—S. Epiphan. adv. Heres., lib. iii. 
tom. i. Her. 75. cap. 7. Op. p. 911, A, 
B.] 

§ [Decretum, parsii. caus. 13. quest. 
2. c. 25 and 28. ap. Corp. Jur. Can., 
tom. i. | 

* [Lyndwood, Prov. Angl., lib. i. 


tit. 1. c. 1. p. 6. gloss. in verb. eterna — 


damnatio. } 


ON THE COMMINATION SERVICE. 383 


Ep. 33%. ubi inter cetera eleganter opponit pulpitum ca- 
taste; et Aurelium in hac conspicuum fuisse Gentilium mul- 
titudini, in illo a fratribus conspectum. rat autem catasta 
locus editior, in quo servi venalitit exponebantur, aut pegma 
‘in quo supplicium pendebat reus. Quo sensu dixit Cyprianus 
Aurelium lectorem fuisse Gentilibus in eo loco conspicuum, 
sicut in pulpito ecclesie conspectum fratribus. Erant enim 
Celerinus et Aurelius confessores. 

Pulpitum ab eodem B. Cypriano (loco citato)’ etiam tribunal 
ecclesie dicitur. Hunc (inquit de Celerino loquens) testi- 
monio et miraculo Dei illustrem, quid aliud quam super pul- 
pitum, id est super tribunal ecclesia, oportebat imponi, ut 
loci altioris celsitate subnixus, et plebi universe pro honoris 
sui claritate, conspicuus, legat precepta et Evangelium Do- 
mint. . 

Greci pulpitum Ambonem vocant; nam ab avaBaivo, 
ascendo, fit au8dév. Quod itidem to Biya vocant, quia emi- 
net. Quibus tamen 76 Bhya aliquando totum locum, in quo 
sacra erat mensa et sacrorum ministri una cum suo episcopo 
constitebant, aut considebant, significat. C.¥ 

This pulpit was wont of old time to be so placed and 
joined to the front of the chancel, (next to the body of the 
church,) that the priest might ascend up into it from his 
own stall below, where he read the morning and evening 
service. It is now got into the middle of the church, and 
in some places the priest that is to preach or do any other 
office in it, hath much ado to get thither through the crowd 
of the people. And the reformers of our Church in England 
were not the first that placed it there; for their unreformed 
predecessors had carried it thither before them, as in most 
places abroad the new Roman Catholics do now. Which 
| notwithstanding is otherwise than we find in the use and 
custom of the ancient Church. Jn margine enim cancellorum* 
(that is, of the chancels) locus editior aduBov seu pulpitum 
appellabatur, e quo ministri seu lectores sacras Scripturas 
populo perlegebant, episcopi seu tractatores (id est, conciona- 
tures) exponebant. 

. [S. Cypr. Ep. 39. ad Celerum et  § Ixi.] 

Plebem. (Ed. Pam. 34.) Op. Epist. w (This last paragraph is from Ca- 


p. 77. | lixtus, ibid. ] 
Y (Id. ibid., cited by Calixtus, ibid., * [ Calixtus, ibid. § xiii. ] 





SEconpD 


SERIES, 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


* 


384. | NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


That ye should answer to every sentence, Amen.| Uli 
observa hance vocem esse particulam tantum affirmantis aut) 
concedentis, non optantis ut in conclusione precum. Supra 
de Collectis’. 


Then shall all kneel upon their knees.| Veteres Christiani 
in Quadragesima, et omni tempore peenitentie dicato, orabant 
in genibus. Et qui penitentiam agebant delictorum, intra pre- 
stituta tempora, erant itrorimtovtes, postea cuvertOTes. 

Miss. Sar. in Capite Jejuni*. Deinde prosternant se clerict 
in choro, et dicant septem Psalmos penitentiales (quorum iste 
unus est, qui hic sequitur)... et hec omnia sine nota dicuntur. 
tam a sacerdote quam a choro, 


Lord have mercy upon us, &c.| All this, to the end of 
the first collect following, is appointed in the Order of Sarum, 
upon the first day of Lent”. 


Lead us not into temptation. Answ. But deliver us, &c.} 
It is appointed in many places of this book before, as here 
it is, that the choir and the people shall subjoin and say this 
last petition of the Lord’s Prayer themselves as they were 
anciently used to do in the Latin Church. And the reason 
thereof is given by Hugo de S. Victore, (de Offic. Eccl. lib. ii. | 
cap. 39°.) Hoc septimum chorus succinit ; in quo se orasse 
cum sacerdote ostendit. Ad hoc enim fuerat invitatus, cum 
sacerdos ante Orationem Dominicam diceret, Oremus. 





Let us pray.| Sarum*. Et omnes orationes dicuntur cum 
Oremus, nisi prima tantum, que dicitur cum Dominus vo- 
biscum. 

O Lord, we beseech Thee, &c.| Hee oratio habetur in. 
Ordin. Sarum, ad Missam pro Pecca toribus. 





Y [See above, p. 309. ] de Officiis Eccl., lib. ii. c. 39. Op. tom. 
* (Feria iv. in capite Jejunii, post iii. et ap. Hittorp. de Div. Off. p. he : 
sextam inprimis fiat sermo ad popu- col. 1, D.] 
lum si placuerit, deinde Poenitentiale.— a [ Missale Sarisb., fol. xxx. b. ] 
Missale Sarisb., fol. xxviii. b. ] ® [The collect in the Missa pro pec- 
a [Et hec ... choro—lIbid., fol. catoribus begins in the same words ag 


xxx. This rubric comes at the Pa- that in the service used on Ash-Wed- 
ternoster, which, with the antiphone, nesday, from which it is translated: 
Remember not Lord, and, Lord have but the latter part is “ut pariter no- 
mercy upon us, follows the Penitential bis indulgentiam tribuas benignus et 
Psalms. | pacem. Per Dominum.”’—Ibid. —_ 
b (Ibid.] mune, fol. xxxi. b.] 
¢ [Hugo de S. Victore, Erud, Theol. 








| 


ON THE COMMINATION SERVICE. oe 


O most mighty God.| This collect is made of six collects 
that here follow in the Order of Sarum‘. 

Then shall the people say this that followeth after the minister, 
Turn thou, §c.] Instead of this prayer they were wont to 
‘absolve the people (as appeareth by the Order of Sarum) 
after this manner’, Vertat se sacerdos ad populum, et extendens 
manum dicat super eos sine nota, sed m audientia, hoe modo: 
Absolvimus vos vice B. Petri apostolorum principis, cui collata 
est a Domino potestas ligandi atque solvendi, et quantum ad vos 
|pertinet accusatio, et ad nos remissio, sit vobis omnipotens Deus 
wita et salus, et omnium peccatorum vestrorum pius indultor | gc. | 
Qur vivit et regnat cum Deo Patre, &c. 

Deinde surgant omnes a prostratione, osculantes terram, vel 
formulas. 

Postea benedicantur et distribuantur cineres super capita cleri- 
corum et laicorum, a dignioribus personis, dicendo : 

Memento homo quod cinis es, et im cinerem reverteris, In 
nomine Patris, et Filia et Spiritus S, Amen. 


ON THE PSALTER. 


Ps. ev. 27. Land of Ham.| Hoc est, in Agypto. Mizraim 
enim Chami filius colonias in Afgyptum duxit circa annum mundi 
1816. Que inde Mizraim et terram Chami nomen adepta est. 


ON THE SERVICE FOR THE ORDERING OF DEACONS. 


The Preface. And none shall be admitted a deacon.| Aitas 


ordinandorum*, Juvenes prefectos esse ecclesia, rara sunt ex- 
empla. Nazianz. Orat. 39. i 


€ (Six collects, some parts of which i (S. Gregory is speaking against 
are embodied in this collect.—Miss. young persons being teachers. He 
_ Sarisb. ubi sup., xxx. b.] says: elta 6 Aamhad évravda, kal 6 Seiva, 
& [Miss. Sarisb., ibid. ] kal 6 deiva, véot xpiral, Kal Ta mapa- 
b [This is from AZrodius, Rerum ab delypara em) yAdoons.. . &AA’ od vduos 
omni antiquitate judicatarum Pan- éxxdAnolas, 7d omdviov etrep unde wla 
decte, lib. i. tit. 4. De Pontificibus, yedrdev Zap wore?, x.7.A.—S.Greg. Naz. 
auguribus, episcopis et clericis, et pri- Orat. xxxix. § 14. Op. tom. i. p. 686, 
vilegiis eorum, cap. 1. p. 39.] E. 687, A.]} 
COSIN. 3 ce 





SECOND 


SERIES. 


SEconpD 


SERIES. 
te 


386 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


ZETAS ORDINANDORUM. 


And none shali be admitted a deacon, unless he be xxi. years of 
age at the least. A priest shall be full xxiii. years old; and a 
bishop xxx.| Omnino hee tam accurata descriptio tempus legi- 
timum respicit. Lex que extat Numer. iii. 3 et 47, addita his- 
toria 1, Paralip. xxiii. 2, diserte docet Levitas justam functionem 
demum aggressos, cum essent Tricenarui, quanquam ut alia lex 
docet, Num. vill. 24, anno xxv°. exacto jaciebant ministerta sur 
rudimenta. Ad hoc exemplum voluit Deus et Baptistam et w- 
sum Christum, anno demum xxx°. peracto, exordirt functionem ip- 
sis mandatam. Ad exemplum vero legis Hebree et ipsius Domini 
Justinianus imperator constituit eum qui eligeretur episcopus ex- 
cedere debere xxx." etatis annum, Novell. cxxxvii.* At olim ne 
presbyter quidem ante eam atatem legebatur ut videre est Synodi 
Neocesariensis canone xi. 

Sunday or holy-day.| By the Order of Sarum, the bishop 
gave orders upon the Saturday in Ember Week. See the 
order of the mass there in Sabb. 4° Temp. Quadragesimee™. 


ON THE SERVICE FOR THE ORDERING OF PRIESTS. 


Epist. 1 Tim. ii. | 

Sober, discreet.| Temperantia enim, modestia, et prudens pra- 
meditatio in omni re et loco exigitur a sacerdote. 

No fighter.| Adeo jubetur sacerdoti a cade et vulnere absti- 
nere, ut etiam si imprudens occiderit, tamen prohibeatur ad altare 
ministrare. Sed si jure occiderit, an quod juste et legitime fac- 


tum est, cuiquam nocere possit? Nam est apud Zonaram®, sub 


Constantino, filio Leonis, Themalium extitisse, qui cum sacra solen~ 


k [In this constitution it was ordered 
that an oath should be taken, of which 
part was, kal imtp Td TpiaxooTby eros 
elva: rovrous émeActavro.—Authentice, 
seu novelle Constitutiones Justiniani 
Imp. Collat. ix. tit. 20. Novell. 137. c. 
2. ap. Corp. Jur. Civ. ] 

1 [mpeoBirepos mpd rev TpidKovTa 
erav uh xeporoveicbw, ed kal wavy H 6 
&vOpwros &ivos, GAAG darornpeladw. 6 yap 
Kipios "Inoods Xpiorbs ev TG TpiaxooT@ 
tres epwricOn, Kat Hptaro diddoKew.— 


Cone. Neoc. (A.D. 314.) can. xi. Con- 
cilia, tom. i. col. 1513, A.] 

m [There is a collect at the end of 
the service on the Saturday in the 
Lent Ember-week, which is said if the 
bishop is not present. The rubric after 
it is ‘‘Si episcopus presens fuerit et 
ordines fecerit, non dicetur.”’—Missale 
Sarisb., fol. x1.]} 

n (This reference has not been 
found. | 





ON THE ORDINATION SERVICES. 387 


nia perageret, repente, cognito adventu Saracenorum, intermisso SECOND 
{ sacro, fustem, uti erat amictus, ab ostiario sumpsit, atque alios vul- SERS: 
_ nerando, alios occidendo, ita strenue se gessit, ut omnes im fugam 
_ versos prohibuerit ecclesia. An dum impedivit, ne sacra ab hosti- 
bus et hareticis polluerentur, polluit ipse sese, et ecclestam pro- 
 fanavit? an_dum injuriam repulit, injuriam commisit? verum 
tamen hac de causa abdicatus est sacerdotio ; neque ut restituere- 
tur, potwit unquam ab episcopo impetrare. Cur tam severe? Quia 
licet hostis jure interficitur, irreligiose tamen interficitur a sacer- 
dote. Non enim potest militare hominibus, qui militat Deo. Quin- 
imo nec medendi causa hance chirurgie partem, que urendo, se- 
candove curationem adhibet, exercere permittitur, quomodo igitur 
occidere, cui nec sanare fas est? Qui judicus publicis, pemisque 
exigendis prohibetur et praesse, et interesse, cruore contaminabit 
ipse sese. Lanista erit, non sacerdos.- Quomodo placeat Deo 
sanguinolentus, qui nec Sibi voluit sacrificart im altari cus la- 
pides ferrum attigisset? qui nec templum edificari a Davide, 
quod vir bellator esset, et sanguinem fudisset? Sic respondet 
Hildebertus® epist. 63. de Sacerdote qui casu latronem ocei- 
derat¥. 

(Ibid) a good report.| Quia propter nos conscientia nostra 
_ sufficit nobis; propter alios fama nostra non pollui, sed pollere 
| debet. Duae-res sunt, fama et conscientia. Conscientia tibi: 
_ fama est proximo tuo necessaria. 8. Aug. in Serm. de vita et 
_ moribus clericorum’, 

Persons meet for the same.| &i quidem hoc infame est, et (ut 
ait Greg. Naz.") religioni nostra hoc nascitur opprobrium: quod 
_ sacerdotia nec dignitate, nec meritis nec natalibus deferuntur. 
Cujus rei vitium, vel labem si prohibere super nos est, et certe 


erubescere et aversari, pars aliqua pietatis est. bar yee 






R 
3 
7 
& 
_ . ® [Consideranti ergo mihi, quanta 4 [S. Aug., Serm. 355. De vita et 
in sacerdote postuletur innocentia, et moribus clericorum suorum, cap. 1. § 1. 
_.maxime quam immunis debet esse a (the words being slightly altered,) Op. 
Sanguine, non videtursacerdotem reum tom. v. col. 1380, B. ] 
sanguine oportere deinceps ministrare, * (viv 5 nivduveter, 7d mdvTwv Gryid- 
quamvis tuende salutis necessitate ho- tatoy rdyua, Tay wap’ jiv mdyrov elvar 
_ micidium incurrerit.—S. Hildeberti, karayeAaorératov. b yap e& dperijs 
|  Epist. lib. ii, Epist. 43. (al. 60.) Op. paadov, H kaxoupylas, i mpoedpla’ oddk 
_ ol, 149. ed. Paris. 1708.] Tov dkiwTépwr, GAG TaY SvVAaTHTEpwr, 
P [The whole of this passage is from of @pdvo1.—S. Greg. Naz., Orat, xliii. 


/Erodius, ubi supra, cap. 21. pp.63,64, § 26. Op. tom. i. p. 791, D.] 
- omitting portions, } 


cc2 








388 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


SEconpD 1 : : 
P vinhcat Eieroboame domum propterea eversam esse scriptum est 4 Reg. 
——— xvu., quod de novissimis populi fecisset sacerdotes. Contra vero 


apud Hthnicos in Egypto, in Grecia placuit omnino imperium 
cum religione copulart. SAtgyptit reges pontifices erant. In 
Grecia regibus, et post eos summis magistratibus sacerdotum 
officia mandabantur ; ut est apud Platonem in dialogo de Regno’, 
et apud Demosthenem in Neream*. Rome in collegia ista co- 
optabant duntaxat, qui vel im summo magistratu essent, vel antea 
JSuissent, hoc est amplissimos, ornatissimos, praclarissimos quos- 
libet. Atrod.” 

(Address of bishop); After due examination.| Nemo enim 
sine examine ordinandus. Cone. Nic. can. 9*, Quam sancte enim 
Celestinus’ ille, Sacerdotium eo facilius tribui, quo difficilius 
ampletur ? In ewamine versari, cujus sit atatis qui est ordi- 
nandus. Quinta envm synodo Constantinop.” prohiberi, presby- 
terum esse ante 30. an. (hic 25) utewngque is dignissimus sit. 
Versari, cujus eruditionis ; ignorantiam enim matrem esse om- 
nium errorum, ut est in Conc. Tolet. 4°. Nec refert, innocens 
sit, necne, quia, ut Hieronymus ait ad Oceanum”, quantum exemplo 
prodest, tantum silentio nocet. In hac re nihil preclarius, uti- 
liusque, quam (ut Nazianz.° ait,) servare nauticum ac militarem 


® [wep wey Alyurrov ovd Z€eor: Ba- 
o1éa xwpls leparicys tpxew... er) de 
kal rev ‘EAAhvwy wodAaxov Tais ueryt- 
oTas apxais TA weyioTa Tov Tepl Ta 
To.adTa Oiuara epor Tis dv mpootatTs- 
eva Overv.—Platonis Politicus, § 30. 
Op. tom. ii. p. 290. 

t [7d dpxatov... ras Ovotas amdoas 
6 Bacired’s ve. — Pseudo-Demosth. 
1} Nealpas. Demosth. Op. p. 1370, 
11, 

« [rodius ubi supr., cap. 1. p. 39. 
The second paragraph comes before the 
first in AXrodius. ] 

= [ef ries dveterdorws mpohxOnoav 
mpeoBvrepot, } avaxpiwduevor @mordyn- 
Cav TH NuapTnuéva avrots, Kal duodo- 
ynodvrwv abtéy, mapa Kavdva Kwovme- 
vot &vOpwrot Tots To.obros xeipa émiTeE- 
Oeixace robrous 6 Kkavdv ov mpoolerat. 
To yap dverliAnwrov éxdicel h KaboAtKh 
éxxAhova.—Conce. Nic. (A.D. 325.) can. 
xi. Concilia, tom. ii. col. 37, B.] 

y [Solum sacerdotium inter ista, 
rogo, vilius est, quod facilius tribuitur, 
cum difficilius impleatur ?—Czelestini 
Pape I. (A.D. 427.) Epist. ii. (ad 
Episc. Prov. Vienn. et Narbon.) § 3. 
Ibid., tom. iii. col. 479, D.] 


[6 trav aylwv Ocoddpwy marépwy 
Nay kparelrw kavov Kal év robte, bore 
mpegBuTepoy wpb Tay TpidKovTa éTrav 
LH xepotovelcOw, K.7.A., repeating the 
canon of Neocesarea, cited above, p. 
886, note 1. Canones Trullani sive Qui- 
nisexti synodi (A.D. 692.) can. xiv. 
Ibid., tom. vii. col. 1353, C.J 

* [Ignorantia, mater. cunctorum er- 
rorum, maxime in sacerdotibus Dei 
vitanda est, qui docendi officium in 
populis susceperunt.—Conce. Tolet. IV. 
(A.D. 633) can. xxv. Ibid., tom, vi. 
col, 1459, C.] 

> [Innocens et absque sermone con- 
versatio, quantum exemplo prodest, 
tantum silentio nocet.—S. Hieronym., 
Epist. 69. ad Oceanum, § 8. Op. tom. 
i. col. 421, B.] 

© [érawd rov vylrny véuov, ds Thy 
Kdmnv mpdrepov eyxeiploas TE viv Kv- 
Bepvirn, kaxetdev er) Thy mpapay aya- 
yov, kal morevous Ta EuTpoobev, otrws 
ém Trav oldkwy Kablfer, wera THY MOAAHY 
Tupbcioay OdrAacoay, kal Thy Tay avéuwv 
Sidoneyiv. @s B& Kav rois mwoAeusmots 
exes’ orparitys, Ttatlapxos, otparn- 
yds. ... Kal larpds pey oddels, od5e Sw- 
ypagos, bs Tis od pices appwornudtwy 








e 


+ et Pe ay? OP 


ON THE ORDINATION SERVICES. 


389 


_legem. ‘Illa, futuro gubernatori primum remos tradit, deinde ad 
| proram collocat, tandem post longam remigationem et observationem 
| ventorum, eum ad gubernacula constituit. 
| Jacit, postea centurionem. Nullum nee medici nec pictoris appel- 
| lationem obtinere, nisi prius consideraverit naturas morborum, 
 miscuerit colores, infinitasque formas penicillo expresserit. At 
sacerdotes inveniri non elaboratos, sed simul satos ac editos, ut 
-gigantes fingunt poeta, uno die fingi sacrosanctos, eosque saprentes 
ac eruditos juberi esse, qui nihil didicerunt, neque ad sacerdotium 
quicquam prius contulerunt, preter suum velle? Herr catechu- 


Hae militem primo 


menum*, hodie presbyterum, heri in amphitheatro, hodve in ecclesia 


... mirum est si unguam bonos se sacerdotes prastent®. 


nian. Novell. 1235. 


Justi- 


Any impediment or notable crime, &c.| 8. Augustinus, Tract. 
41. in 8, Johannem®, apertissime definit, Homicidium, adulte- 
_ rium, furtum, sacrilegium, et alia hujusmodi, non solum peccatis 
 annumerari, sed criminibus que et ordinationem impediunt, et si 


imtervenerit, revocant. 
anum', 


2. Sponte mutilus, inhabilis est sacerdotii. Interest reipub. ne 2. 
Bonis enim moribus non impotentia delinquendi, 
Atrod.*® Kasectus in canones incidit, 


_ castratus sit. 
| probri suspicio vitanda est. 


Quod et dist. 81" continetur apud Grati- 


per quos non excusantur, nisi qui ita nati, aut casu, aut vi, aut 


Qui ut lbidinem evitent, hi con- 


_ cilio Arelatensi 2}, ne fiant sacerdotes, nominatim continentur. 


; 

b cr ; 

F: morbo a medicis exsecti sunt. 
4 

: 


 éoxebato mpdétepov, 7) TOAAG xXpepuara. 
_ ouverépacer, } eudppwoev’ 6 5& mpdedpos 
_ ebpickerat padiws, uh movndels, kad mpdc- 
gatos thy atiav, duod te omapels Kad 
 Gvadobels, ds 6 ud00s more? Tovs ~yityay- 
_ «Tas, TAaTTOMEV avOnuepdy Tos Gyious, 
_ kal copods civa: KeAcdouer, Tors obdiy 
 gopicbevras, ovd5t Tov Babuod mpoeioer- 
 eykévrds ti, TAHY Tod BovAecOat.—S. 
_ Greg. Naz., Orat. 43. § 26. Op. tom. i. 
_ pp. 791, C—792, A.] 

4 [Heri catechumenus, hodie pon- 
_ tifex: heri in amphitheatro, hodie in 
_ Ecclesia.—S. Hieron. Epist. 69. ad 
_ Oceanum, § 9. Op. tom. i. col. 422, C.] 
_ © [The whole of this passage, down 
_ to“ Ecclesia’..” is from Airodius,ibid., 
_ cap. 20. pp. 62, 63, omitting some 
words. “ Mirum,’ &c. seems to be 
_ Cosin’s addition. ] 

___ f [The provisions de ordinatione Epi- 
_ scopi. Authentice Collat. ix. tit. 6. 
_ Novell. 123. § 1, seems to be referred to. } 







& [(Apostolus) non ait, si quis sine 
peccato est,... sed ait, si quis sine 
crimine est, sicuti est homicidium, adul- 
terium, aliqua immunditia fornicationis, 
furtum, fraus, sacrilegium, et cetera 
hujusmodi.—S. Aug.,inS. Joan. Evang. 
(cap. viii.) Tract. xli, § 10. Op. tom. 
iii. col. 575, A. ] 

h [Gratiani Decretum, pars i. dist. 
81. c. 1. ap. Corp. Jur. Can, tom. i. 
The words, et si intervenerit, revocant, 
are grounded on what follows from 
Gratian. | 

i [ Erodius, ibid., cap. 9. p. 52. ] 

k [ Hrodius, ibid., lib. i.de Episcopis 
et Clericis, c. 14. p, 56. This is the 
heading of the chapter. } 

1 [Hos qui se carnali vitio repug- 
nare nescientes abscidunt, ad clerum 
pervenire non posse.—Conce. Arelat. IT. 
(A.D. 452.) can. 7. Concilia, tom. v. 
col. 3, D.] f 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


— 


390 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Primus enim canon Niceni Cone. 1™. Eunuchos seu sponte ab- 
scissos a sacerdotio repellit. Vide Justellum™ in notis ad eundem 
can. et Atrodium de reb. judicat. 1. i. c. 14, de episcopis et 
clericis®. 

Prohibetur Deo offerri, qui habuerit maculam. Quid dicemus ? 
Ecclesia que dissentit a Judaismo, abdicat non corpore, sed animo 
pollutum, modo non impediantur munia ecclesiastica, ut in surdo, 
et caco. Alu sacerdotes esse possunt, claudus, luscus, eunuchus ; 
alioqui non minus hic de ecclesia ridicule quert posset, quam, quod 
apud Lucianum, de philosophia inter Bagoam et Dioclem. Atrod.” 

Si non sit diaconus. Nemo enim furto aut per saltum ordi- 
nandus est presbyter. Id.4 | 

Sed quid si in heresim post ordinationem incidat? Quid si 
Dic quod clerico nulla pena capitalis 


SECOND 
SERIES. 


3. 


De abdi- 


catione oa ; 
clerici he-/“", aut homicida sit? 


pe a impont possit, quamdiu manet im clericatu. Ideo per episcopum, 
omicl 2, e . . . . 
&e. post causam cognitam, et latam sententiam, a sacris ordinibus 


abdicandus est. De heresi vero episcopus cognoscit, et judicat ; 
de vi, de latrocinio non cognoscit. Ht sicut laicum de heresi 


damnatum, ab ecclesia condemnant laici judices, et sententiam. 


mortis ferunt, absque ulla alia cause cognitione aut tractatu 
precedente, quam qui est habitus ab episcopis; ita clericum 
judicatum a magistratu, cum crimen est ciwile, episcopus or- 
dine et officio dimovere tenetur ; neque necesse est, ut causam 
simul cognoscat, sed sequi debet auctoritatem et prajudicium 
magistratus*. 

And for this self-same cause ye ought to forsake, §c.| Inde 
quesitum est, an liceat clerico versart in republica? sane Chris- 
tian sacerdotes qui officiis muneribusque civilibus impliciti sunt, 
haud recte facient officium suum sed (hoc in more cujusque civi- 
tatis, et Regni est, non in perpetuo jure. Sane*) qui de aliis 
sententiam ferunt. Si animadvertendum est, subducunt sese ; sup- 
plies enim neque imponendis, neque exigendis possunt interesse. 


m [el dé Tis Syialvwv éavrdy ekérepe, 
TovTov Kal év To KAhpw eberaCduevov 
wemavoba mpoonke’ Kal ex Tov Sevpo 
pndéva Tav ToLovTwy Xpivat mpodyerOat. 
—Cone. Nic. (A.D. 325.) can. 1. ibid., 
tom, ii. col. 33, B. 

n (Christ. Justelli ad cod. can. eccl. 
univ. note; Bibliotheca Juris canonici 
veteris, tom. i. p. 69. Paris. 1641.. The 
words just before are those of Jus- 


tellus. ] 
° [Airodius, ibid., from whom the 
words down to continentur are extracted. ] 
P (Id., ibid., p. 57.] 


a[Id., ibid, c. 20. p. 62. The 


words “ Neminem,”’ &c. are part of the — 


heading of the chapter. } 

* (See Airodius, ibid., cap. 9.] 

s [The words in} parentheses are 
added by Cosin in the margin.]. - 





ON THE ORDINATION SERVICES. 391 


mamas 
~S AES 


Apud varias SECOND 


Vetat synodus Matiscon. 2‘ ; vetat Autissiodor.% 
SERIES, 


gentes tidem reges et pontifices extitere*. Sed Christiana lege - 
ab initio major observatio fuit. Adeo nempe civilibus negotiis, 
muneribus, et honoribus clerico, imo cuique Christiano interdice- 
batur, ut ne ingressus quidem in curia quoquomodo permitteretur, 
et tantum abfuit, ut ei in magistratu esse liceret, ne de capite aut 
pudore judicaret (inquit Tertull. lib. de Idololatria’), ut quamdiu 
quis magistratum obtineret, ab ecclesia et communione prohiberetur. 
Id enim expressum est Conc. Eliberit.* et Arelat. 1.* sub Con- 
stantino magno. Nihil aiebant Deo et imperatori, nihil templo 
palatioque commune esse; qui utrumque ambirent, ambidextros 
appellabant. Non id superstitiose, sed quo magis persuaderent 
Ethnicis, se nihil medétari contra rempublicam, et ut ab adoratione 
simulachrorum Christianos eo tanto absterrerent, idcirco hec tam 
severe decernebant ; ut odit quoque imgenerandi causa, curiam ip- 
sam a cruore et sanguine dici et derivari predicabant. Sed post- 
quam reges et imperatores in Christum consensere, pedetentim ab 
ea observatione recessum est. Itaque et aula et senatus ise, ut 
aliis, ita et ecclesiasticis componuntur ; legationes obeunt ; senatur 
ingrediuntur ; nonnulli quoque sententiam dicunt. Denique pla- 
cuit tandem veteres illos canones rejici ad monachos et eremitas. 


2 Bee 








Una prescriptio est, ne se sevis immisceant. 


Itaque et apud Ni- 


cetam” sub Alexio Angelo, ridiculus fuit Mesopotamitanus, qui 


t [Cognovimus etiam quosdam cle- 
ricorum infrunitos ad forales eorum 
sententias frequenter accedere; prop- 
terea prohibitionis eorum accessus hune 
canonem protulimus, definientes ut ad 
locum exaiminationis reorum nullus 
clericorum accedat; neque intersit atrio 
sauciolo, ubi pro reatus sui qualitate 
quispiam interficiendus est.— Conc. 
Matiscon. II. (A.D. 585.) can. 19. 
Concilia, tom. vi. col. 679, D.] 

« (Non licet presbytero, nec diacono, 
ad trepalium, ubi rei torquentur stare. 
—Cone. Autisiodorense, (A.D. 578,) 
can. 33, ibid., col. 645, D. 

Non licet presbytero in judicio illo 
stare, unde homo ad mortem tradatur. 
—Id., can. 34, ibid., E.] 

x [Mrodius, ibid., lib. 1. tit. iv. de 
Episcopis et Clericis, c. 2. p. 40.] 


-¥ [Jam vero que sunt potestatis, | 


neque judicet de capite alicujus vel 
pudore; feras enim de pecunia; neque 
damnet, neque predamnet, neminem 
vinciat, neminem recludat, aut tor- 


queat; si hee credibile est fieri posse. 
—Tertullian. de Idololatria, c. 17. Op. 
p- 96, B.} 

2 [Magistratum vero uno anno, quo 
agit duumviratum, prohibendum pla- 
cuit, ut se ab ecclesia cohibeat.—Conc. 
Elib. (A.D. 305?) can. 56. Concilia, 
tom. i. col. 998, E.] 

* [ De presidibus, qui fideles ad pre- 
sidatum prosiliunt, placuit ut cum pro- 
moti fuerint, literas accipiant eccle- 
siasticas communicatorias; ita tamen 
ut in. quibuscunque locis gesserint, ab 
episcopo ejusdem loci cura de illis 
agatur, et cum cceperint contra disci- 


-plinam agere, tum demum a commu- 


nione, excludantur. Similiter et de 
his qui rempublicam agere volunt.— 
Cone, Arelat. (A.D. 314,) can.7. Ibid, 
col. 1451, D. See note, ibid., col, 
1459, C.] 

> [The name of the person was Con- 
stantine. —Nicetze Choniate Annales, 
Alexius Comnenus, lib. ii. § 4. p. 316, 
C. ed. Paris. 1647.] 


392 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Seconn factus diaconus, simulabat se imperatori in palatio non posse in- 
SERIES. servire, nisi a Xiphilino patriarcha canonibus solveretur. rod. 
Will you be diligent in prayer, and in reading of, &c. Laying 
aside the study of the world, §c.] De prasentia et assidwitate 
sacerdotum. A sacris, quam a statione militari, discedere, relic- 
tio, proditioque major est. Atrod.4 
Quesitum est un liceret hominibus sacris libris ethnicorum uti, 
rebusque et orationibus, sive scenis paganicis interesse ? Laodicea, 
cum Epiphanius sophista carmen recitaturus esset 1m honorem 
Bacchi, pro more declamantium prefatus est, procul, o procul este 
profani. Toto hoc absistite luco. Ex Christianis tamen qui ade- 
rant, plerique, fama ethnici rhetoris atque eruditione perciti, non 
abierunt ; iter eos duo Apollinares, pater et filius, clerici. Itaque 
laudes auscultarunt Det alieni, et etiam gentilium deorum spur- 
cissumi atque temulentissimi. Hac re animadversa, a Theodoro, 
episcopo Laodicensi, aliis e populo (quos laicos appellamus) me- 
diocriter objurgatis, certe veniam dedit, Apollinaribus post longam 
et publicam increpationem interdixit Ecclesia, cetu et communione 
Christianorum. Nam presentia et auribus consensum idololatria 
accommodasse, et pro eo munere quod in ecclesia possiderent, nocu- 
asse exemplo wdiotis. Ideoque si ludi et certamina (que Tertullia- 
nus nulli permittit Christiano®) taberne, et vilia officia prohibentur 
im his personis ; quanto magis ne intersint paganice scene, atque 
declamationt? Quam pulchre Theophilus ad Autolycum, lib. 3°. 
Nec catera spectacula spectare audemus, ne oculi nostri inqui- 
nentur et aures nostri hauriant profana carmina, que illic decan- 
tantur, nempe dum Thyestis tragica facinora commemorat, et Teret 
liberos devoratos recitant. An nobis fas est audire adulteria deo- 
rum, mquit Cypr. ep. 1038. Ht, si etiam tandem licet, non sine 
dubitatione receptum est, ut Christiani libris Ethnicorum uteren- 
tur (nam Cone. Carthag. 4", hoc prohibebatur, et Gregorio Naz., 
et Hreronymo oljiciebant, quod scriptis ecclesiasticis literas gen- 
tilinm admiscerent) licebit publice recitantibus sua Bacchanalia, 





© [Erodius, ubi supr., cap. 3. pp. 

41, 42.] 

a bree ibid., cap. 7. p. 46.] 

¢ [ Tertullian, de Spectaculis, passim. 
Op. pp. 72, sqq.] 

f [GAN odd Tas AoTas Oewplas dpav 
XPH, Iva wh pordvwrrat huayv of bb0adr- 
pol, kal Ta Ora, ywdueva cuuuétoxa 
TaY ékel hwvav adouevwrv. €i yap clr 
Tis wepl dvOpwmroBoplas, éxet TA OvesTov 


kat Tnpéws Téxva éoOidueva.—T heophi- 
lus ad Autolycum, lib. iii. § 14. ad cale. 
Op. S. Just. M., p. 889, C. ] 

"8 [This reference has not been 
found. } 

h [Utepiscopus gentilium libros non 
legat, hzreticorum autem pro neces- 
sitate et tempore.—Conc. Carth. dict. 
IV. (A.D. 898?) can. 16. Concilia, 
tom. ii. col. 1438, E.] 






ON THE ORDINATION SERVICES. ~ 895 


gratulando et applaudendo, studium et operam collocare? verbo 
destruere idololatriam, quam facto struas? Quid refert, Deos 
nationum dicendo deos, an audiendo confirmes? Ita enim Tertul- 
Tianus ille lib. de Tdololatria’, Ergo Apollinares tllos eo tanto 
deliquisse. “ Discit facere qui consuescit videre*.” rod." 

The bishop with the priests present.| In Ecclesia vero Romana, 
electio et ordinatio presbyterorum relicta est tandem soli episcopi ; 
“quanquam olim esset in potestate reliquorum omniwm sacerdotum ; 
quorum testimomo si indignum episcopus ordinasset, nihil ei noce- 
bat, mgquit Theophilus Alexandrinus. Hrod.™ 








ON THE SERVICE FOR THE CONSECRATION OF BISHOPS. 


_ First, the elected bishop shall be presented.| De electione et 
cooptatione sacerdotum et episcoporum, vie est quod definiri possit, 
_praterquam in omni Republ. id tandem perpetuo obtinuisse, ut 
_quibus reliqua omnia sunt in potestate, hi et jus illud assumerent 
8thi". 

The king’s mandate.| Salomon destituit Abiatharum, et Sado- 
cum imstituit. Numa pontifices et augures creavit ; vestales, hoc 
amplius, ea lege, (Halicarnasseus ingquit) ut earum electio ad 
“reges pertineret. Quando summa potestas populr furt, ejectis re- 
| gibus, pontifices maximi, maximi curiones a populo cepere creari. 
: Quare etiam post Remp. imperatores statim, sine controversia, 
| idem juris sibi arrogarunt. Imo vero Augusto concessum est, victo 
Antonio, ut sacerdotes quos et quot vellet, crearet, faceret. Sane 
qui cwiltores humanioresve aut esse aut videri voluerunt (ut sub 
tmitio imperii Tiberius) tres sibi nominari patiebantur, ex quibus 
unum cooptabant, [qualiter de Flamine Diah, &c.| Tacitus, hid. 
4°, Neque aliter inter Christianos factum est ab initio. Nam 
quamdiu Roma fuit subdita umperatoribus, regibus, aut exarchis, 
ipst summi pontifices confirmatione imperatorum utebantur, ut ex 
libro pontificals vulgare est. Imo ab imperatoribus constituebantur, 





i (Tertullian. de Idololatria, cap. 21. 
Op. p. 98, B.] 

k [This sentence is from the treatise 
de Spectaculis; incerti auctoris, ap. 
S. Cypriani Opera, p. 341, ed. Ben. 
See the notes there, p. 604. ] 

1 (#Erodius, ubi supr., lib. i. tit. 5. 
cap. 15. p. 72.] 

m [{ Hrodius, ubi supr., tit. 4. cap. 4. 
p- 43. The words of /EZrodius are: 





‘¢ Et hee quidem de electione episcopi. 
Presbyterorum, relicta est tandem soli 
Episcopo,” &c. ] 

. [ Hrodius, ubi supr. cap. 4. p. 42. ] 

° [The statement, ‘‘ut earum elec- 
tio,’ &c. refers only to the Vestals, 
Dionys. Halicarn. Antiquit. Rom., lib. 
ii. cap. 67. tom. i. p. 378, ed. Reiske. } 

P [C. Tacitus, Annales, lib. iv. c. 16. ] 


“ 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SEcoND 


ERIES. 


394 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


atque senatui commendabantur, ut apparet ex Cassiodoro, lib. 
vil.* var[iarum.| Henr. II. destituit Greg. VI. dixitque Pontificem 
Clem. II. ut est apud Sigonium, lib. viii. de Regno Ital. In aliis 
episcopis, guanquam hac lex vetus erat, (nam est Bonifacii III”) 
et mos ille jam ante Cyprianum observabatur in ecclesia (inquit 
alle Epist. 35*,) ut a vicinis episcopis, et clero, et a populo elige- 
rentur, princeps approbaret ; quod et a Carolo Magno et Rege 
Indovico’ constitutum est: postea propter contentiones vitandas 
gue im electionrbus oriebantur, et ut episcopatus quidem non con- 
JSerrent, sed agerent sane uti legitime conferrentur, postremo non 
titulo collationis, sed praesentationis et nominationis reges et impe- 
ratores hoc jus totum suum fecere. Certe enim multum ad Remp. 
pertinet, qui religiont praest, et qui cum populo, et ad populum 
agit, an et cum summo magistratu bene aut male conveniat ; pareat 
principt, an vel legem dicat, vel solutus sit legibus. Id ipsum 
Antistites animadverterunt im Cone. Aureliensi quod sub Clodoveo 
Rege et Justino Imperatore certum est*, ubt udem decrevere, ne ulli 
secularium liceret ad clericatum promoveri, nist aut jussu principis, 
aut causa apud judicem approbata. Periculosum est enim eo pro- 
vehi subditum, unde subducat sese non solum a muneribus publicrs, 
verum etiam ab omni jurisdictione et imperio.  Itaque Concilio 
Aurelianensi 5°. sub Childeberto, nominatim adjectum est*, ut elec- 


s [M. A. Cassiodori Variarum, lib. 
viii. epist. 15. Senatui urbis Rome 
Athalaricus Rex. Scribit sibi gratissi- 
mum fuisse, quod pontificem elegerint 
eum, quem Theodoricus designaverat. 
Op. p. 131. Rotomag. 1679. ] 

t [Caroli Sigonii de Regno Italie, 
lib. viii. sub. ann. 1046, 1047. Op. tom. 
ii. col. 513, 514. ed. Mediolani. 1732. ] 

" (Hic fecit constitutum .. . ut nul- 
lus pontifice vivente, aut episcopo civi- 
tatis suze, presumat loqui de succes- 
sore, aut partes sibi facere, nisi tertio 
die depositionis ejus, adunato clero, et 
filiis ecclesiz: tunc electio fiat, et quem 
quisque voluerit habebit licentiam eli- 
gendi sibi sacerdotem.—Bonifacii IIT. 
vita, apud Concilia, tom. vi. p. 1351, 
D 


x [See S. Cyprian, epist. 68. p. 119. 
and epist. 52. p.68. The words “‘ prin- 
ceps approbaret’’ are A®rodius’ addi- 
tion. } 

y [ The words of the capitularies are : 
*‘Sacrorum canonum non ignari, ut 
in Dei nomine sancta Ecclesia suo libe- 
rius potiretur honore, adsensum ordini 
ecclesiastico praebuimus, ut scilicet 


Episcopi per electionem eleri et populi 





secundum statuta canonum de propria 


diocesi, remota personarum et munerum 
acceptione, ob vite meritum et sapi- 
entiz donum eligantur, ut exemplo et 
verbo sibi subjectis usquequaque pro~ 
desse valeant.—A constitution made 
by Charlemagne, A.D. 803, and re- 
peated by Ludovicus Pius, A.D. 816, 
embodied in the capitulary, lib. i. § 78. 
—Capitularia Regum Francorum, col. 
879, 564, 718. ed, Baluz. Paris. 1677.] 

2 [De ordinationibus clericorum id 
observandum esse decrevimus, ut nul- 
lus secularium ad clericatus officium 
presumatur, nisi aut cum regis jus- 
sione, aut cum judicis voluntate.—Conc. 


Aurelianense I. (A.D. 511,) can. 4 — 


Concilia, tom. v. col. 544, D, E.] 


* (Ut nullus episcopatum premiis 


aut comparatione liceat adipisci: sed 
cum voluntate regis, juxta electionem 
cleri et plebis, sicut in antiquis cano- 


tano, vel quem in vice sua preemiserit, — 


xf 
? 


nibus tenetur scriptum, a metropoli- 
f 


cum comprovincialibus pontifex conse- — 
cratur.—Conc. Aurelianense V. (A.D. — 


549,) can. 10. ibid., col. 1379, E.] 


ty ee 





ON THE ORDINATION SERVICES. 


tiont regis arbitrium accederet; et Toletano 12°, diserte, electio 
regis est, approbatio metropolitan. Afrod.© 

Unto the archbishop.| Nam utcunque electio, creatio, aut in- 
stitutio ad alios gure vel consuetudine pertinere possit ; consecratio 
et ordinatio certe episcoporum est. Idem.* 

[ Oath. | 

Ali due reverence and obedience, §c.| Nota quod ... obe- 
dientia, que debetur homini ab homine, est debita minoris ad ma- 
jorem reverentia ; unde si mandatur id quod justum est, obediendum 
est ; si uyustum, nequaquam ; si dubium, tunc illud propter bonum 
obedientia est explendum, 33. q.1.¢. quod culpa.—Linw. de Const. 
c. quia incont. x. obedientia®. 

To the archbishop.| Cateri namque episcopi dicuntur suffra- 
ganei, eo quod “ archiepiscopo suffragari et assistere tenentur, (quia) 
vocati sunt in partem sollicitudinis archiepiscopi, non in pleni- 


395- 


tudinem potestatis. 9. g. 8. c. 1 e¢ 2.” 


Linw. ibid. x. suffr£ 


In ws que ad religionem pertinent, minores episcopi necesse 


habent parere major. Airod.® 
Prayer after the Intanie. 


Ministry of a bishop ... in this 


office.| Pontifex, sive episcopus in honore, in officio, in procu- 
ratione est ; in magistratu, im potestate, in tmperio esse non dici- 


tur. Atrod.® 


(Will you) ... to poor and needy people.| Gloria episcopi est 
pauperum opibus providere ; ignominia omnium sacerdotum est, 


propris studere divitius. 


Atrod. 


The archbishops and bishops present, Sc. shall lay their hands, 


&e.] Consecratio enim et ordinatio episcoporum est. 
vero ordinatio est, qu fit a tribus episcopis. 


b [Placuit, ut licitum maneat de- 
inceps Toletano pontifici, quoscunque 
regalis potestas elegerit, et jam dicti 
Toletani episcopi judicio dignos esse 
probaverit, in quibuslibet provinciis, in 
precedentium sedibus preficere pre- 
sules, et decedentibus episcopis eligere 
_ successores.—Conce. Tolet. XII. (A.D. 
_ 681,) can. 6. (The canon professes 
_ only to be providing for a special diffi- 
culty, but the earlier part of it speaks 
of the free election of the bishop be- 
longing to the prince.) Ibid., tom. vii. 
col. 1439, B.] 

© [#rodius, ubi supr. cap. 4. pp. 
42, 43. ] 


4 [Id., ibid. These words follow 


Legitima 
Itaque concilio 


those last cited. ] 

€ [Provinciale Anglicanum, lib. i. 
tit. 2. de constitutionibus, c. 1. in verb. 
obedientiz, p. 11. not. h. referring to 
the Decretum, pars ii. caus. 23. quest. 
1. c. 4. quid culpatur. The error of 
33, and quod for quid, are copied as 
printed in the Provinciale. } 

f (Prov. Angl., ibid., not. g. ad verb. 
suffraganei, referring to the Decretum, 
pars ii, caus. 9. quest. 3. cap. 1 and 2. 
The quotation is slightly altered in 
form. | . 

& [rodius, ubi supr. cap. 7, part of 
the heading of the chapter. | 

bh [Id., ibid., cap, 1.] 

i [Id., ibid., tit. iii. c. 13. p. 36.) 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


SECOND 


SERIES. 


396 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Rheginensi* sub Valentiniano et Theodosio, destitutus est episcopus 
Ebredunensis, quod a duobus episcopis solummodo ordinatus erat. 
Urbanus II. movit episcopum Mediolanensem, quod unus eum 
solummodo consecrasset. Platina’. 


De Pracedentia et Privilegiis Episcoporum Anglia, anno Do- 
mint 1075, tempore Gulielmi Regis Primi, in Synodo episcopo- 
rum infra Ecclesiam 8. Pauli London habita™, renovata sunt non~ 
nulla, que antiquis etiam canonibus noscuntur definita. Ex con-- 
cilio igitur Toletano 4°", Milevitano®, atque Braccarensi? sta- 
tutum est, ut singuli episcopt secundum ordinations sua tempora 
sedeant, preter eos qui ex antigua consuetudine, sive suarum eccle- 
siarum privilegiis, digniores sedes habeant. De qua re wterrogati 
sunt senes et atate provecti, quid vel ipsi vidissent, vel a majoribus 
atque antiquioribus veraciter ac probabiliter accepissent. Super 
quo responso petite sunt inducia, ac concesse usque in crastinum. 
Crastina autem die concorditer perhibuere, quod Hboracensis archi- 
episcopus ad dextram Doroberniensis sedere debeat, Londinensis 
episcopus ad sinistram: Wintoniensis juxta Eboracensem ; si vero 
Hboraceusis desit, Londinensis ad dextram, Wintonus ad sinis- 
tram. Apud Binium, in tom. vii. Concil.9 

Episcopus Sarum in collegio episcoporum est pracentor ; et tem- 
poribus quibus archiepiscopus Cantuariensis solenniter celebrat 
divina, presente collegio episcoporum, chorum in Divinis Offciis 





regere debet de observantia et consuetudine antigua. 


k [Concilium Regense, seu Reiense 
(A.D. 439) can. 1—3, ap. Concilia, 
tom. iv. col. 533, 4. ] 

' [#rodius, ubi supr. cap. 4. p. 43. 
The statement in Platina is very dif- 
ferent: Urbanus ... archiepiscopum 
Mediolanensem jam antea magistratu 
pulsum, quod ab uno tantum episcopo 
contra jus divinum consecratus fuerat, 
in gratiam recepit ... et eidem pallium 
suppliciter petenti cum integra pctes- 
tate transmisit.—Platina de Vitis Pon- 
tificum: Urbanus II. p. 140. ed. Lo- 
vanii. 1572. But see Ughelli, Italia 
Sacra, tom. iv. p. 158.] 

m (See Wilkins’ Concilia, tom. i. p. 
363, and Johnson’s Canons, vol. ii. p. 
13. ed. Oxon. 1851.] 

" [Speaking of a provincial synod 
the canon says: Et convenientes-omnes 
episcopi pariter introeant, et secundum 
ordinationis sue tempora resideant.— 
Cone, Tolet. LV. (A.D. 633,) can. 4. 


Provinciale 


Concilia, tom. vi. col. 1451, A.] 

© [Ut nullus fratrum prioribus suis se 
aliquando auderet anteponere.—Conce. 
Milev. II. (A.D. 416,) can. 13. ibid., 
tom. iii. col. 383, E. Deinde placuit, 
ut quicunque deinceps ab episcopis 
ordinantur literas accipiant ab ordina- 
toribus suis, manu eorum subscriptas, 
continentes consulem et diem, ut nulla 
altercatio de posterioribus vel ante- 
rioribus oriatur.—Ibid., can. 14. col. 
384, B.] 

p [Item placuit, ut conservato me- 
tropolitani episcopi primatu, ceteri 
episcoporum, secundum sue ordina- 
tionis tempus, alius alio sedendi deferat 
locum.—“Cone, Bracarens. II. (A.D. 
563.) can. 6. ibid., tom. vi. col. 521, B.] 

4 [Concilia generalia et provincialia, 
&c. ed. Binius, tom. vii. p. 482. ed. ult. 
Paris. 1636. (tom. xii. col. 587, C, D. 
ed, Colet.) ] 


ON THE ORDINATION SERVICES. 397 


Angl. Tit. de feriis, c. Anglicane x. usum Sarum, in notis Gul. 
Linwood *. 

Olim Rome magistratus pontifices antecedebant, Cicero in 
Orat. de Aruspicum Responsis®. Ht in senatu quoties sententia 


dicebantur, [si qui erant pontifices atque senatores simul,| sena- 


torio ordine nulla prerogativa pontificatus, rogabantur. Idem, 
lib. iv. Epist. ad Atticum‘. Sane in collegio ipso, atque inter 


pontifices, ut quisque atate antecedebat, tenebat sententia princi- 
patum. trod." Sed dum in officio suo quisque est, ita etiam 


preest ; dum aliud agit, religio antefertur. LIdem.* 

Jus quod honori concessum est non utendo non amittitur. Epi- 
scopis gus est ingrediendi im senatum. Sacerdos qui mala utitur, 
sibi, non sacerdotio prajudicat. Airod. de reb. judicat. 1. i, ¢. 3. 
de episcopis. 


* [Lyndwood, Provinciale Angli- u [Mrodius, ibid., lib. i. tit. 4, de 





canum, lib. ii. tit. 3. c.(5.) Anglicane, Episcopis et Clericis, e. i. p. 37.] 
p. 104. note e, in verb. in usum Sarum. | x (Id., ibid., ad fin. cap. p. 39. ] 
* [The passage referred to is in Cic., y {Id., ibid. cap. 3. p. 41. The 
Orat. de Haruspicum responsis, c.7.] | words cited are the heading of the 
* [Id., Epist. ad Atticum, lib. iv. chapter. ] 


Epist. 2. § 2.] 


SECOND 


SERIEs. 





LITURGICA, 


SIVE 


ANNOTATA AD DIVINA OFFICIA, 


: PRESERTIM EA QUE PUBLICA AUTHORITATE CELEBRAN- 
TUR IN ECCLESIA ANGLICANA, 





SPARSIM HIC ET SINE ORDINE COLLECTA, SED DEINCEPS LOCIS 
QUIBUSQUE SUIS INSERENDA, ET AD MARGINEM LIBRI 
PRECUM RELIQUORUMQUE DIVINORUM 
COLLOCANDA. 


Tue noble and learned Du Plessis thought it a great advantage to 
the cause he undertook against the Mass, if he could demonstrate 
the form of service used in the reformed Churches of France, to be 
more agreeable to that of the primitive Church than that of the 
Mass-book of Rome... This he thought worth his pains to un- 
dertake. 

We shall think it advantage enough to our cause, if we shew the 
points questioned in our order of service, to be of more ancient prac- 
tice in the Church than the later corruptions of the Church of Rome 
which we have left; and that this Church of ours is not to forsake 
the primitive Church, to reform herself to other reformed Churches, 
where the orders in force have both the precedent of such ancient 
practice, and want not the reason of edification to commend them. 

The best method herein, will be by reasons drawn from the 
grounds and rules of Scripture, seconded by the practice of the 
primitive, and confirmed by the judgment and agreement of all 
other famous Churches, and writers in the world. 

We are not of their mind, that had rather despise or neglect, than 
either observe or understand, the ordinances of the Church for the 
public service of God. We will give an account of that form 
of service which we use, deriving it higher than the Roman Breviary 
or Mass, from which it is charged to come; and shewing, where it 


shall be requisite, that the corruptions of the Mass are laid aside 
in it. 








ON THE UNIFORMITY OF COMMON PRAYER. 


An Act for the Uniformity of, &c.} Our hap hath been Turep 
better here in England, than in other Reformed Churches _S®*"®5— 
abroad. In France, and those places that follow Calvin’s 
Reformation, they have neither any form of daily service, 
nor any uniformity in the prayer before the sermon (which 
is all the daily prayer they have) prescribed them. So that 
if there be no sermon, there can be no service; which made 
others in France call that religion a mere preach. Among 
the Lutherans they have several forms, every free city, and 
every Church, making a form to themselves; which, ac- 
cording to Luther’s own counsel (Lib. de formula Misse) 
they use to alter very often, partly because they are new- 
fangled, and desirous of change, (as Luther says?, ib. Coactus 
sum, propter leves et fastidiosos spiritus, qui sola novitate 
gaudent, atque statim ut novitas desiit nauseantes, alios ca- 
.nones, aliamque Missandi formulam prescribere,) and partly, 
because otherwise, if a form were fixed and prescribed to 
continue long, it would in time grow to be thought ne- 
cessary (as in former days it was so enjoined to be used, 
that no man might change it); and therefore he wished 
them, for the upholding of their Christian liberty, to ex- 
change it every month. : 

Before we come to say anything of the particulars in th 
service which we use, it will be requisite to say something of 
that, which in the general point of public service is, or may 
be questioned: of which kind, there is none so much to be 
stood upon as whether there ought to be (according to this 


* [Luther repeatedly expresses the 
opinion that Churches should alter their 
services as they see occasion: ‘‘ Modo 
benedictionis verba sinant integra, et 
fide hic agant.’’ The words cited from 
him are a reason given by him for not 
having, up to the time he was writing, 
made any change in the services. The 
words ‘coactus sum’ are not in the ori- 
ginal. He says, Proinde nihil vi aut 


COSIN, 


imperio tentavi, nec vetera novis mu- 
tavi, semper cunctabundus et formida- 
bundus, tum propter imbecilles et 
tum maxime propter leves illos, &c. 
He afterwards says of such persons, 
Ferre illos cogor.—Formule Missz 
seu communionis pro Ecclesia Wit- 
tembergensi; Lutheri Op. tom, ii. fol. 
384, &c. | 


pd 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


402 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


title) a set uniform order of all public prayers prescribed for | 
our assemblies in the Church. That there ought to be some — 


public service, and some orders given about it, it is not 
denied. This is, that all public prayers in the Church should 
be prescribed, and not left arbitrary to the minister, whose 
spirit, they say, and gift of prayer, is not to be quenched, 
1 Thess. v. 19, or stinted by other men’s prescribed forms ; 
for that then they cannot make demonstration of those graces 
wherewith the Spirit of God hath endued them. And this 
is the best of their argument, which at a distance carrieth 
some show of God’s Word for it; but surveyed near at hand, 
may be a warning to all men, how they trouble the Church 
with their misapprehensions: for when the apostle forbids to 
quench the Spirit, he speaks of immediate inspirations of the 
Holy Ghost, such as they were by which certain men were 
enabled to discern the secrets of other men’s hearts, to speak 
all tongues, to know the will of God for the ordering divers 
things in the Church, and in which the edification of it at 
that time consisted ; and if the Church had not then allowed 
the publishing of such inspirations at their assemblies, it had 
quenched the Spirit. If then they which stand upon this 
prohibition of the apostle will come into our assemblies, and 
speak the mysteries of God’s kingdom in languages un- 
known to them afore: if they will take upon them to reveal 
the secrets of men’s hearts, to do anything in the Church by 
immediate inspiration, and to make proof of these spiritual 
gifts and graces, as the prophets and apostles did; we will 
acknowledge, that the office of composing and conceiving 
prayers in behalf of the Church, is to be referred to them, 
upon the same terms as it was to them of old: nothing com- 
posed by the industry of men shall be so esteemed by us, as 
that which God’s Spirit inditeth. 

But if they dare not pretend to any such immediate and 
inspired graces, why do they claim this privilege? They 
may by as good right pretend to decide all matters contro- 
verted in faith and religion, to order all matters of govern- 
ment in the Church, and to root out and plant there what 
they please. But though they disclaim this pretence, yet 
certain it is, that their very manner of speaking, that their 


frequent sounding and presuming of God’s Spirit before the — 





—— 








ON THE UNIFORMITY OF COMMON PRAYER. 403 


people, and that the very fashion of their conceived prayers Tarp 


(though made perhaps aforehand) insinuateth, and needs must 
insinuate to the people, the pretence of immediate inspira- 
tions, which to men of judgment they are constrained to 
disavow, and to profess no confidence, but of the blessing 
of God’s Spirit upon human endeavours. 

So that inspirations being disclaimed, the point in question 
will be only this, whether it be more for the good order of 
the Church, and the edification of the people, in the direction 
of their public prayers to use those forms, which upon mature 
deliberation, and long advising, have been framed by the 
ablest men of the Church, and prescribed by public consent 
and authority; or those which particular persons shall, out 
of their private judgment, (either by foregoing meditations, or 
by their present readiness of conceiving and expressing such 
things as they think fit to be said,) use in their congre- 
gations. 

Surely, the spirits of the people are as much stinted by 
the form which the minister conceiveth, as his spirit is by 
the form which the Church has prescribed. So that if the 
Church quenches the Spirit in them, when it confineth them 
to forms; they do no less to the people, in confining them to 
the form which they from time to time conceive and frame 
of their own heads. 

Secondly, If men be left to themselves, whatsoever opinion 
in religion, whatsoever debate between neighbours, whatso- 
ever public matter in Church or kingdom a man pleases 
to make his interest, he may make the subject of prayer for 
the congregation; which if it chances to be directed, (as 
what private man is not subject to passion and affection, or 
is free from mistake?) or misapplied by any of the people, 
what scandals may arise from it? Experience tells us that 
such things have been done, and that men’s own conceived 
prayers in the Church have smoked with their choler, both in 
private and public matters. 

Thirdly, Make particular persons the judges of a thing of 
this consequence, and we make them all popes in their con- 
gregations. 

Fourthly, By this new device, many other scandals are 
multiplied in the service of God. Sometimes they shame 

pd 2 


SERIES. 


THIRD 
SERIES. 





40k NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


themselves, even before the meanest of the people, with their 
frequent stops and hums, when they are at a loss what to 
say next; otherwhiles, with their often repetitions, and 
divers expressions, that want sense to make them be under- 
stood, they cause the sacrifice of God to stink in the nostrils 
of men. But when we hear those demurring hums of their 
human imperfections, intituled by them to the unutterable 
groans of God’s Spirit, we have good reason to condemn and 
cry down the occasion of such unsufferable profaneness. 
Fifthly, In the public service of God, where one is to be 
the mouth of many agreeing together (as Christ would have 





them) for what they are to pray; how can the minister be | 


said properly to be the mouth of the congregation, in prayer 
to God for them all, when all are not first made acquainted 
and privy to that which he is to tender to God in their 
names? In a voluntary or sudden conceived prayer of his 
own, the people before him neither are nor can be privy to 
what he will say. And what authority has he to offer up 
any prayers in the Church’s name, to which the Church has 
not formally consented? or to take the people’s spirits from 
them, and to say, ‘We, and every one of us, offer up his 
prayers,’ which perhaps many of them do dislike, and at the 
very instant give no consent with him to offer them up to 
God ; in which case he telleth God a plain untruth. 

But in a set prescribed form, whereupon both the minister 
and the people have agreed, and which the Church, though 
in several places, do, at the same time, and in the same 
words, offer up unto God, all these inconveniences are 
avoided, the unity of the mystical Body of Christ being 
testified by this uniformity and agreement in public prayer, 
which our Saviour tells us is so prevalent with Almighty 
God. : 

Sixthly, Whereas they say, that it is the ordinance of 
God that the people should be edified by the gifts of their 
ministers, as well in praying as in preaching; and therefore, 
that their prayers should be voluntary, and of their own 
invention, because that in following a set and prescribed 
form, this gift cannot be shewn or exercised by them. We 
reply hereunto not without good reason :— 


Sa, re 


1, That there is not in this point the same reason for — 





ON THE UNIFORMITY OF COMMON PRAYER. 405 


_ prayer, and for preaching; for in preaching, he is not the Ture 
mouth of the people, as in prayer he is. 2. The guides and SERIES. 

| pastors of the Church edify the people by their gift of prayer, 

in composing a set form upon good advice and agreement, 
more than any can do in uttering a sudden or an arbitrary 
prayer, without any knowledge or agreement had of it before. 

_ 8. Are not the members of the Church to be edified, as well 
by the spirit of the Church, as the Church, or any congrega- 
tion, or part of it, by the spirit of a particular minister, who 
is but one member of it? 4. This device tends to the os- 

_ tentation of gifts, which St. Paul decrieth; for ostentation 
of gifts is one thing, and edification by them is another. 
Ostentation, indeed, is best seen in a voluntary or suddenly 
eonceived prayer; but the Church is far better edified by a 
set form prescribed, and not made of a man’s own private 
composition. For hereby (besides that) the people are first 
made acquainted what they are to pray for; I mean, are the 
better secured from being engaged in aught that might be 
unfit to be spoken to God, either for the matter or manner, 
which is oftentimes in voluntary prayers such as no man of 
judgment will give his consent thereunto, if they be well 
aware of it. And this is that which reason is able to inform 
us in this matter. 

Now, if we would see which way the practice and authority 
of God’s Church has gone, we shall have no cause to suspect 
our own reason, when the reason of the Church, and the 
guides thereof, have gone before us. That which was done 
in the public service of God in the temple, so far as it was 
moral, and consisted not in offering sacrifices, inforces more 
than our reason can do. And here it is clear, 1 Chron. xvi. 
4, 7, that though the Psalms made and prescribed by King 

_ David were the Jewish liturgy, or the chiefest part of the 
vocal service, wherewith they worshipped God in the temple; 
so Ezra iii. 11, and in many places of the Old Testament 
besides®; which service in the temple the apostles of our 
Lord frequented in the New Testament, as well as the pro- 
phets and their disciples did in the Old; and yet none of 
them all thought their spirits quenched or stinted by it. 

Next, for the time after the apostles, and those extraor- 

® (See 1 Chron. vi. 31, ix. 33, xv. 16, 22; 2 Chron. xxix. 25, 26.] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


406 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


dinary gifts and graces which ceased with them, no time 


of the Church can be shewed, wherein a prescript form of 


public service and prayer hath not been used, or wherein 
any other was in use, or allowed. Some men there be, who 
will needs make Justin Martyr dream, as much as them- 
selves do, that, in his time, (as he related it to the emperor, ) 
men made show of their faculties, in conceiving prayers of 
their own in the open assemblies of the Church, when he said, 
Apol. II., 6 wpoecrws ebyas épolws Kai evyapiotias bon 
dvvaptis avt@ [avdtepres’|, &. Which (though they trans- 
late it, that he prayed according to his ability) signifies 
nothing else, but that might and earnestness of devotion, 
with which the bishop, or chief presbyter among them, came 
to consecrate the Eucharist. There be others that produce 
Tertullian for their new device, in his Apol., cap. 30, sine 
monitore de pectore oramus*; which, indeed, is nothing else, 
but to say private prayers by heart; a pregnant passage to 
prove rather, that they prayed by prescript forms (even in 
private) than otherwise. 

But for the practice of the primitive Church, many testi- 
monies may be brought. Conc. Laod., can. 15°: “ Besides 
them that are enrolled, and sing out of the parchment, others 
ought not to bring their songs, or sing in the church.” And 
can. 59‘: “The psalms of private persons must not be said 
in the church.” Where by these canons a plain opposition 
is made between such things as came from private persons, 
and such as were entered into the church-books by public 


consent and authority. And can. 18%: “The same service- 


of prayers ought to be said at the ninth hour and the 
vespers.” Cone. Carth. III., can. 23": “* Quicunque sibi pre- 
ces alicunde describit, non eis utatur, nisi prius eas cum in- 
structioribus contulerit ;” that is, let him follow no man’s 


¢ [Justin M. Apol. i. (alit. 2.) § 67. ° £ [8 ob Bet idiwrimods Waduods Ad 


Op. p. 88, D. The word w@s is in 
Nichols before 6 mpoeoras. ] 

@ (Tertullian. Apol., cap. 30. Op. 
p- 27, B.] 

© [wept rod, uh Setv wAdoy THY Kavo- 
vikov WarAT@v Tay ém) Toy tuBova ava- 
Bavdvtwy, kal dd dipbpas WarrAdvrwv, 
Erepous Twas WddAAew ey exxAnola.— 
Cone. Laodicen. (A.D. circ. 364.) can. 
15. Concilia, tom, i. col. 1534, B.] 


yeoOa év TH exkAnaola, od axavdnora 
BiBAta, GAAG pdva Ta KavouiKd THs Kal- 
vns Kal madaias d.a0qKns.—Ibid., can. 
59. col. 1539, D.] 

& [wept Tov, Thy abrhy Aerovpylay 
TaY evxXaY WdyTOTE Kal év Tals évvdras, 
kat év Tats Eomépaus dpelAew ylver@a.— 
Ibid., can. 18. col. 1534, C.] 

h (Cone. Carthag. III. (A.D. 397.) 
can. 23. Ibid., tom. ii. col. 1403, A. ] 








ON THE UNIFORMITY OF COMMON PRAYER. 407 


copy, but with the advice and approbation of the guides of Tutrp 


the Church. II. Conc. Milev.i: “ Placuit ut preces vel ora- 
tiones que probate fuerint in concilio ab omnibus celebrentur, 
nec alia omnino dicantur in ecclesia, nisi que a prudentioribus 
tractate et comprobate fuerint in synodo, ne forte aliquid con- 
tra fidem, vel per ignorantiam, vel per minus studium fuerit 
compositum,”’ 'That such prayers as have been publicly allowed 
by the council, and no others, be used or said in the Church, 
lest perhaps something might be otherwise composed, either 
ignorantly or negligently, or against the faith of the Church. 
Balsamon*, upon this canon, saith, that it seemed some men 
(even bishops) took upon them to say such prayers as were 
not approved by authority, but made by themselves, or other 
private men; and therefore it was provided, that all episcopal 
Churches of those provinces in Africa and Asia should keep 
a prescript uniformity, as here it is in our Church. And 
some of the Western canons have provided to the same pur- 
pose, Con. Ven., cap. 151, Sacrorum ordo et psallendi una sit 
consuetudo per totam provinciam, : 

And whereas some men say, that by the old councils (ut 
supra) every man was allowed to compose his own prayers, 
so they were always the same; let them take notice, that 
Zonaras™, who understood the canons better than they, saith 
plainly, “this canon so orders it, that whosoever would, shall 
not compose his prayers, and use them in open assemblies.” 

Add to all this the constant tradition of antiquity, what 
from time to time has been added to the prayers of the 
Church, and it will appear, both that there was a set form 
from the beginning, and that it was subject to alterations ; 
which is the true reason, why the primitive forms, in the 
very same order that were then in use, cannot now be ex- 
hibited or seen in the Church. 


i [Cone. Milev. II. (A.D. 416.) can. 
12. Ibid., tom. ii. col. 383, D.] 

4: [ Balsamon’s words are: ws Zoe 
tives énloxomo. érexelpouy Aéye evxas 
aouvndes,. . . KwAvovres odv TovTO of 
matépes, pact pwdvas éexelvas Tas edxas 
AéyeoOat Tas MpoKeKuvpwmevas, Fro Tas 
cuvnbers. —Canones cum Comment. 
Th. Balsamon. in Synod. Carthag., can. 
106. p. 726, B, C. ed. Par. 1620. ] 

! [Cone. Veneticum ( A.D. 465, )’can. 
15. Concilia, tom. v. col. 82, A. By} 


m [ Zonaras’ words are: év mao. ovv 
Tots eipnuevois, exelvas bpifer Aéyeo Oat, 
Tas dn Kupwbelo as cbxas, Kah Bh veas 
Tapd. TiVeY ciowyouevas Kare THs i 
orews. & yap ovK edonluacay ot mar épes 
GupiBord eiot. pdBos & dmoTpexet év 
Tos TowvTos, uhwore Kal aceBH dol 
Tia, Kal KaTa THs wlerews, 51d Kal aro- 
BddAAerat Ta ved h cbvodos.—Zonare in 
Canones Comment. in Can. Conc. 
Carth. c, xvii. p. 492. ed. Paris. 1618. ] 


SERIEs. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


408 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


The Liturgies intituled to St. James, St. Mark, St. Peter, 
St. Basil, and St. Chrysostom, have had additions and altera- 
tions since their times whose names they bear. And they 
are at this day the services frequented in the Churches of 
Jerusalem, Alexandria, Rome, the parts of the East that 
followed St. Basil, and Constantinople, that followed St. Chry- 
sostom; being reduced into this form wherein they now 
are, by those divers changes which several ages have made 
from a prescript form at the beginning. That which is 
called St. Peter’s is the same (very near) with the Roman 
canon". That of St. James we may discern to have been 
the service of the Church of Jerusalem, by the particulars 
relating to it, out of the Catechism of St. Cyril, bishop 
there, Catech. 5°. As likewise that of St. Mark to have 
been the service of the Church of Alexandria, by the great 
agreement it has with that of Cyril, the patriarch there, 
and with the Aithiopic liturgy received from thence, as © 
from their mother Church?. 

But as for the alterations to which these and other litur- 
gies have been subject from time to time, we have the con- 
fession of Victorius4 the Maronite at Rome, in his preface to 
Velserus of Augsburg, before the three liturgies, which at 
the request of his friends, he turned for him out of the 
Arabic copy into Latin, where he saith, Nam ut Latini ipsi 
et Greci pontifices multa deinceps in suis liturgiis, quas jam 
inde ab apostolis acceperant, pro re nata vel immutarunt vel 
addiderunt : ita etiam ab Alexandrinis et Aigyptiis par est 
credere, pro temporum opportunitate factitatum. And this 
we are the rather ready to take notice of, because it is of 
great advantage to the alterations which this Church hath 
made of the service, though it hath not altered any sub- 
stantial part of it. 

We conclude out of that which hath been here said, that 


" [The liturgy of St. Peter here re- p. 325—332. See Palmer’s Origines 


ferred to is the Greek S. Petri Liturgia, 
printed from MSS. by Morell. 1595, 
included in the Bibl. Patr. Gr. Lat., 
tom. ii. p. 116, sqq. Paris. 1624. It 
is a translation of the Roman service 
into Greek. ] 

° [S. Cyrill. Hierosol. Catechesis 23. 
Mystagog. 5. de Sacra Liturgia, Op. 


Liturgice. Dissertation on Primitive 
Liturgies, sect.i. Liturgy of Antioch. ] 

P [See Palmer, ibid., sect. iv. ] 

4 [Liturgie Basilii Magni Gregorii 
Theologi, Cyrilli Alexandrini, ex Ara- 
bico converse. A Victorio Scialach 
(Maronita).— Prefat. (p. 8.) Aug. 
Vind. 1604. ] 


* 


ON THE UNIFORMITY OF COMMON PRAYER. 409 


after the apostles’ times, when immediate inspirations ceased, 
they betook themselves on all hands to prescript forms, as it 
had been in the synagogues, and in the temple before ; 
which at the first being derived from primitive practice, 
retained that agreement in several places, that in the sub- 
stance of them (as in this of England) still appeareth. And 
being propagated from the greatest Churches at first, have 
at length in most places yielded, in a manner, to the prin- 
cipal. So by Balsamon, in 32 Can. Sext. Syn.", it appeareth 
how St. Chrysostom’s service, that is, the service of the 
Church of Constantinople, laboured to put down those of 
Jerusalem and Alexandria. And it is well enough known 
how the Roman mass, which was once the Gregorian service, 
hath abolished the Spanish, the Gaulish, the British, and 
the German orders, and confined that which is intituled to 
St. Ambrose to his own Church only at Milan. And this 
» Church of England hath now done the like, in reducing 
all the several old forms of Sarum, York, Bangor, Lincoln, 
&c. to this uniformity which we have now in use. Calvin 
himself, though otherwise he took many exceptions against 
the book, yet for this uniformity of prayer he sent his ap- 
probation to us, and after this manner declared his mind to 
the Protector, Ep. 878: Quod ad formulam precum et rituum 
Ecclesiasticorum, valde probo ut certa illa extet a qua pasto- 
ribus recedere im functione sua non liceat; tam ut consulatur 
quorundam simplicitati et imperitie, quam ut certius ita con- 
stet omnium inter se Lcclesiarum regni consensus: etiam ut 
obviam eatur desultorie quorundam levitati, qui novationes 
quasdam affectant. Sic igitur statam esse sacramentorum 
administrationem oportet, publicam item precum formulam. 
He forgot, it seems, that he had thus written to the Pro- 
tector, when afterwards he wrote, Zp. 200', to the English 
at Frankfort, that he saw multas fuisse in Anglicana liturgia 
tolerabiles ineptias et facis papistice reliquias ; which words 
of his have bred all our contentions and tumults about the 





‘ (This does not appear. In the S. Basil are alleged as authorities— 
canon the liturgies of S. James and Ubi supr., pp. 393, 394. ] 


S. Basil are alleged against the Arme- s [J. Calvinus, Epist. ad Angliz 
nlan practice of consecrating in wine Protectorem, Epist. p, 41. col. ii.] 
only, and in Balsamon’s Commentary t (Id., Ep. ad Anglos Francfurdtie, 


the liturgies of S. Chrysostom and _ ibid., p. 98. col. i.] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


410 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 

liturgy since that time. Cura liturgiam emendandi, qua 
sub Ed. 6, lingua patria edita, Parkero, Billo, Maio, Coxo, 
Grindallo, Whiteheado, et Pilkintono, Theologis [eruditis et] 
moderatis, Thomeque Smitho, equiti doctissimo demandatur, 
re nemini communicata, nisi Marchioni Northamptonie, comiti 
Bedfordiz, Johanni Greyo de Pyrgo, e¢ Cecilio. Camb. in 
Ann. Eliz. 1558", ante inceptam parliamentum. 

The said Act of Repeal shall be void from and after, &c.] 
What did they then, or what was to be done in the mean- 
while, viz. from the 17th of November, when Queen Eliza- 
beth began, to the 24th of June following, when this statute 
was first to take effect*? - Certain it is, that the queen re- 
solved a change from the beginning; but for fear of tumults, 
she came to it by degrees. 
what more, after the death of Queen Mary, there was no 
change at all, but everything continued, and was done in 





A month, therefore, and some-— 


the Church, after the same manner as it was before. And. 


Queen Elizabeth herself came to mass, wherein she forbad 
nothing but the elevation, beckoning once with her hand, 
and telling the priest aloud, that he might let that alone. 
Upon the 27th day of December following, she set forth a 


proclamation’, whereby the Epistle and Gospel, the Lord’s 


Prayer, the Creed, and the Litany, were permitted to be set 
forth in the English tongue; that the Decalogue, with the 
Epistle and Gospel, should be publicly read to the people in 
the church, but without any exposition or sermon upon 


them at all; and that in all other things, the same forms 
and rites should be still used, which had been in use under 
Queen Mary, until the parliament might meet, and settle 


all matters of religion. 


At that time (says Camden’) Quidam novandi studio— 


abrepti novam omnino politiam Ecclesiasticam procudere cee- 
perunt, quos tempestive comprimendos .. . jussit regina...» 


Alii autem verbi ministri more impatientes, dum legibus pre- 
currere quam expectare mallent, primum per privatas ades, — 


« (Gul. Camdeni Annales rerum of Uniformity.] 


Anglicarum et Hibernicarum, regnante 


Elizabetha, &c. in ann. 1558. p. 23. 
Lond. 1615. ] 

x [The new law took effect “ from 
and after the feast of the Nativity of 
S. John Baptist next ensuing.’’—Act 


y [This proclamation is printed in x 


Wilkins, Concilia, vol. iv, p. 180.] 
z (Camden, ubi supr. 


words accordingly. } 


Cosin has— 
omitted portions and altered some 





ON THE UNIFORMITY OF COMMON PRAYER. 411 


mox per Ecclesias, doctrinam protestantium liberius prosemi- 
nare, et plebs novitatis avida ad eos magno numero confluere, 
et de controversis in religione questionibus adeo inter se et 
cum pontificus rixari ceperunt, ut ad contentionum occasiones 
pracidendas regina severe edixerit, ne hujusmodi questiones 
agitarent. | 

Upon the 22nd of March?, a statute of King Edward the 
Sixth’s time was revived (the parliament now sitting) against 
those who should speak irreverently of the Sacrament of the 
Altar, (as they then began to do, calling it “Jack in the 
box,” &c.,) and for receiving the Communion under both 
kinds, unless in case of necessity. And thus stood all 
matters of religion, till the time mentioned in this Act of 
Uniformity, the 24th of June. 

Be it enacted, by the authority of the Queen’s High- 
mess, §c.| Que religionem restaurare (says Camden ad 
an. 1558°,) tum ex informatione a teneris, tum ex certa et 
stabili sententia apud animum jampridem statuerat, re tamen 
cum pauculis communicata. 

With the assent of the Lords and Commons.| Not of the 
lords spiritual and temporal, as in former Acts; for there was 
never a lord spiritual that gave his assent to this act, or 
change of the Service of the Church. Jn superiori consessu 
(says Camden‘) novem qui ab eo die aderant episcopi (nec 
plures quam quatuordecem in vivis jam supererant) Eboracensis 
sc. archiepiscopus, Londinensis, Wintoniensis, Wigorniensis, 
Landavensis, Coventriensis, Exoniensis, Cestriensis et Car- 
liolensis, Abbasque Westmonasteriensis, obfirmate refragate 
sunt. Of the temporal lords none contradicted, except the 
earl of Shrewsbury and Viscount Montacute, whom in 
Queen Mary’s time the parliament had sent to Rome, with 
the bishop of Ely, to unite themselves to that see. But 
among the commons, the number of those that assented to 
this Act was far greater. Pontificiis interim’ obmurmuranti- 


® [See the Act 1 Eliz.c, 1. § 5, re- 
viving the Act 1 Edw. VI. c. 1, An 
Act against such as shall unreve- 
rently speak of the Sacrament of the 
Body and Blood of Christ, commonly 
called the Sacrament of the Altar, and 
for the receiving thereof in both kinds. ] 

> [{Camden, ubi sup., p. 19. The 


substance only of Camden’s state- 
ment is given. | 

¢ [Id. ibid., in an. 1559, Mart. 18, 
.2 


6.] 
: 4 [Id. ibid., p.27. The rest of Co- 
sin’s statement is derived from Cam- - 


den, ibid. ] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


412 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Taro hus plures e protestantibus data opera, tum e comitatibus, tum 
SERIES. een . ° . 

———— e civitatibus et burgis fuisse electos, et Norfolcie ducem Arun- 
delieque comitem inter proceres potentissimos, in suam sive rem, 
sive spem, Caciliumque sua solertia suffragia emendicasse. 

_ But the recusants here say, (if they have any better 
ground for what they say,) that this mutation was carried on 
in the upper house, but by six voices only: that the earl of | 
Arundel (persuaded and helped thereunto by the duke of | 
Norfolk) engrossed into his hands the proxies of a great © 
many lords, wherewith to serve the queen’s intentions for | 
the passing of this Act: that the queen made divers lords — 
before the parliament began, of purpose to sway the voices: 
and that the whole convocation-house came up with a peti- 
tion, or a bill of protestation against the passing of this Act; 
so that there was not the assent of one clergyman to it: for 
all the protestant bishops, deans and archdeacons, were made 
after the parliament was ended, upon their refusal of the 
oath of supremacy, into whose rooms they came and suc- 
ceeded. | 

Upon pain of punishment by the censures of the Church.| 
Wherewith the Church standeth encharged by the Scrip- 
tures. 

Be it enacted, that all Archbishops &c. shall have full 
power, &c. by virtue of this Act, to correct and punish, &c.] 
Not that this power is here, or was first bestowed by the in- — 
dulgence of Christian princes, but by them continued upon 
the practice of the Church in former ages, even before there 
were any Christian princes in the world, as it received the 
same from the apostles, and the power given them by Christ 
Himself. But because our Lord endued not the ministers 
of His kingdom with any external power to constrain obe- 
dience, therefore the laws of kingdoms and commonwealths 
have enforced the execution and outward effect of that 
power which is instituted in the Scriptures. And in this 
respect, not the power of excommunication alone, but of 
preaching and ministering the Sacraments, and whatsoever — 
else belongeth to the office of a minister in the Church, is — 
derived from the power of the commonwealth ; that is, in our 
particular, from the imperial crown of this kingdom ; because 
it is exercised with effect outwardly, or doing the work 





Se eS 


ON THE PREFACES. 413 


(though not of producing the inward end and purpose of 
converting the soul) by laws enforcing thereunto. The 
secular arm does not herein give, but cherish, the power of 
the Church in the bosom of the kingdom. 


THE PREFACES, 


There never was any, &c.| There are great clamours 


made against our Order of Service, as being taken wholly 


out of the Breviary and Missal. How unjust and untrue 
that clamour and charge is, may appear from the Order 
appointed for the Psalter to be read over once in a month, 
and for the Scriptures once in a year, and in many other 
particulars. But they that clamour, it would concern either 


their honesty or their shame, if not to look into the Breviary 


or Mass, of which they are so confident by bare report of 
others, yet to look upon this preface, and to consider 
whether men of common sense would use all the reasons 
here specified, to excuse the alteration of that course, which 
now they are accused only to retain. But grant that to be 
true which is apparently false; were the Mass and Breviary 
yet worse than they are, and all our Order contained in 
them, is it possible that any man of judgment or conscience 
should think it enough to say that this or that is in the 
Mass, and never trouble himself to shew that it is part of 


_ the corruptions contained in it ? 


For the ancient fathers so ordered the matter, that the whole 
Bible, or the greatest part thereof, should be read over, &c.| 
The order of reading the Scriptures in the ancient primitive 
Church is set forth in the Constitutions of the Apostles, lib. ii. 
cap. 57°. “And two Lessons of the Old Testament being 
read, &c. after that our Acts, and the Epistles of St. Paul 
our work-fellow, which he sent to the Churches by the 


© [uéoos & 6 avayvdorns ed’ inrod 
twos éoTas dvaywwoKéTw TA Mwoéws 
kal *Inood Tod Navh’ Ta Tay KpiTav Kal 
Tay Baclirei@v’ Ta TOY TapaderTomevwy 
kal Ta THs emavddou" mpds TovTos TA TOD 
IMB kal Tod SorAou@vros’ Kal Tov ex- 
Kaldexa mpopnTav. ava dvo 5& yevoue- 
vov avayvwoudTwv, €repds Tis TOUS TOD 
AaBlS WarrAérw Buvovs Kat 6 Aadbs TH 


&Kpoorixia SroparAérw* meTa TODTO ai 
mpaters al nuerepa dvayiwecKécbwoar 
kal é@mioctoAal TlavAou tov ouvepyou 
jquav' as éwéoreiAe Tals éexKxAngoiats 
Kal spnynow Tov ayiov Tyebvuaros’ 
kal wera Tada SidKovos } mpeaBirepos 
avayiwwoKéerw Te evayyéALa.—Constitut. 
Apostol., lib. ii. cap. 57. apud Concilia, 
tom. i. col, 294, E.] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


414 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Turp direction of the Holy Ghost; and, after all this, let a 
SERIES. deacon, or a presbyter read the Gospel,” like as it is 
afterwards ordered in our book; the Lessons first, after 
the Epistle, and after all, the Gospel, which was always 
the last. 

Intending thereby that the clergy, &c. and all the people, by : 
daily hearing the Holy Scriptures read in the Church, might 
profit, &c.| That by this means they might become familiar 
to them, as Josephus said of the Jews‘, who, by hearing 
Moses read so often in their synagogues, became as perfect 
in their laws as a man is in telling his own name. 

Yet the wilful transgression of a common order and disci- 
pline, is not small offence before God.| The more have they 
to answer for, to make it their employment to extinguish in 
the minds of the people that respect to the solemn order 
and form of God’s service among us, which the Church by 
that order has laboured to procure, and which the blessing 
of God had without doubt generally procured also, had not 
their peevishness been, that will not have God served, unless 
it be in their own way, that they have lately set up, and 
like best. But whatever honour the praises of God, re- 
verently and attentively performed, might have yielded Him ; 
whatever good fruit the learning of His will might have 
brought forth in the people; is with justice to be required 
at their hands, who have been the means to interrupt it, 
by the unjust disgrace and contempt which they have cast 
upon it. 

No private man ought to presume to alter any public 
order, &c.] What this amounts to, St. Austin’s experience 
may teach us, Serm. 144, de Temp.* : Volueram aliquando, ut 
per singulos annos, secundum omnes evangelistas etiam passio 
legeretur ; factum est: sed audierunt homines quod non con- 
sueverant, et perturbati sunt. 

Some of the old ceremonies are retained still, without which — 





f [ob elodrat axpoaraupévouvs ovdt Td EavTod* Tovyapody amd Tijs mpérns — 
dls } worAAdKis, GAA’ Exdorns EBdSouddos edOds aicOhoews adro’s exuavOdvoyrTes 
Tov hArdwv Epywv aheuévous, em Thy eExomev ey Tals Wuxais borwep eynexapay- 
axpdacw Tod vduov éxédevoe ovddrAéye- eévovs.—Ibid., cap. 18. ]} 


eS a 


c0a Kat TovToy axpiBOs exmayvOdvev.— s [S. Aug. Serm. 232. de Temp. (ed. 
Josephus cont. Apionem, lib. ii. cap. Ben.) (aliter Serm. 144. de Temp.) 
17. Op. tom. ii. p. 484. § 1. Op. tom. v. col. 980, E. St. Au- 


jay & dévtwodv etris Zporro rovs  gustine’s words are “non audierunt ho- 
vouous pGov by tro: mdvra } totvoua mines quod non consueverunt,” &c. } 


ee 


ON THE PREFACES. A415 


at is impossible to keep order, &c.| And from the beginning, 
as early as the records of the Church are able to inform us, 
we are sure it was never without such ceremonies and out- 
ward observances, as, according to the state of time, tended 
to maintain and witness the inward life of religion. The 
apostles’ ordinance for men to be bare-headed, and for women 
to be veiled in the church; the salutation, and kiss of 
peace; the imposition of hands in divers acts of public 
service; the stretching out the hand to give the blessing, 
are of this nature: and where the apostles speak of putting 
off the old man, and putting on the new, Col. iii. 9,—of being 
buried in baptism, Col. ii. 12, Rom. vi. 4,—of the unction of 
grace, 1 John ii. 20, 2 Cor. i. 22; allusion is made to some 
rites of ecclesiastical offices, used even in their times. As 
for the old writers, it will be hard to name any of them, in 
whom are not found divers particulars of this kind, even in 
the times of persecution, which is like an antiperistasis in 
nature, in preserving any solemn order in the Church offices. 
But after the world came in, and the state of the Church 
increased, it was but requisite that the ceremonies and 
solemnities of divine offices should increase likewise with it. 

In these our doings we condemn no other nations.| Nimis 
enim inhumanus est, gui non concedendum putat, mores et con- 
suetudines et ritus suos quibusque (sequi), modo non adversen- 
tur verbo Dei. . . . Non necesse est ab omnibus Christianis 
cuncta eodem modo fiert et geri: unam oportet esse fidet 
doctrinam, . . . unum charitatis vinculum ; cetera sunt di- 
versa locis, conditionibus, temporibus, que unitatem religionis 
et Ecclesie non scindunt: nisi et hoc est existimandum sepa- 
rationem facere, si non eodem sermone utantur omnes in reli- 
gionis cultu. In Britannia alii sunt hominum mores, ut sermo 
guoque, quam vel in Italia vel Germania. Alesius in proemio 
in Liturg. Lat. Ed. V1.® 

Ceremonies abolished and retained.] TI find no difference 
between that in the 2nd of King Edward’s and ours, but in 


h [Ordinatio ecclesiz seu ministerii ubicunque locorum ac gentium, his 
Ecclesiastici in florentissimoregno An-  tristissimis temporibus, edita ab Alex- 
gliz, conscripta sermone patrio, et in andro Alesio Scoto, sacre Theologize 
Latinam linguam bona fide conversa, et Doctore. Lipsia, 1551.— Procm, ad 
ad consolationem Ecclesiarum Christi, fin. ] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


416 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


THIRD 


: this expression', “As we have taken away those that were 
ERIES., 


unprofitable, so we would not have those that are left to bind 
men’s consciences,” (for so it is in the Latin edition) ; which 
words are now altered (as they were in 5th Edw.) to this 
tenor, “As those be taken away which were most abused, 
and did burden men’s consciences without any cause; so the 
other, that remain, are retained for order and discipline; 
which upon just reason may be altered, and therefore are — 
not to be esteemed equal with God’s law.” In the end of 
the Book 2 Edw. after this discourse of ceremonies abolished 
and retained, are certain rules added concerning the cere-_ 
monies themselves‘: 1. That the minister, at all times of — 
his ministration, at Matins, Evensong, Baptisms, Burials, &c. _ 
shall wear a surplice in the parish church; and in cathedral — 
and collegiate places, that they shall also wear their ornaments 





and ensigns of their several degrees and dignities. 


2. That 


in the celebration of the Lord’s Supper, the priest shall wear, 


i [There is no difference between the 
first and second books of Edw. VI. 
(that sent out in the 2nd and that in 
the 5th year of his reign) in this ‘Of 
Ceremonies’ except four minute verbal 
differences. In the passage cited by 
Cosin they agree exactly. In the first 
book this ‘ Of Ceremonies’ was placed 
at the end of the Prayer-book. In the 
second book at the beginning, after the 
preface, as it now is. Cosin followed 
the Latin of Alesius, fol. 65, b, in 
Bucer’s Scripta Anglicana, p. 454, 
where the words are: Sicut inutiles 
czremonias sustulimus, ita eas, que 
relique sunt nolumus obligare hominum 
conscientias, &c. He appears to have 
had only the Latin. } 

k [These are taken from the Latin 
of Alesius, fol. 66, in Bucer, ibid., ex- 
cept the words “at all times of his 
ministration,” which are those of the 
Book of Elizabeth. The words of the 
original are: 

Certain Notes for the more plain Ex- 
plication and decent Ministration of 
Things contained in this Book. 

In the saying or singing of matins 
and evensong, baptizing and burying, 
the minister, in parish churches and 
chapels annexed to the same, shall 
use a surplice; and in all cathedral 
churches and colleges, the archdeacons, 
deans, provosts, masters, prebendaries, 


in the quire, beside their surplices, 
such hoods as pertaineth to their several 
degrees, which they have taken in any 
university within this realm: but in all 
other places, every minister shall be at 
liberty to use any surplice or no. It is 
also seemly, that graduates, when they 
do preach, should use such hoods as 

pertaineth to their several degrees. 4 

4 And whensoever the bishop shall 
celebrate the Holy Communion in the 
church, or execute any other public 
ministration, he shall have upon him, 
beside his rochette, a surplice or albe, 
and a cope or vestment; and also his 
pastoral staff in his hand, or else borne 
or holden by his chaplain. 

q As touching kneeling, crossing, © 
holding up of hands, knocking upon ~ 
the breast, and other gestures, they may — 
be used or left, as every man’s devo- 
tion serveth, without blame. 

| Also upon Christmas- Day, Easter- 
Day, the Ascension- Day, Whit-Sunday, — 
and the feast of the Trinity, may be © 
used any part of holy Scripture here- — 
after to be certainly limited and ap- — 
pointed, in the stead of the Litany. 

{| If there be a sermon, or for other 
great cause, the curate, by his discre- 
tion, may leave out the Litany, Gloria 


and the Exhortation to the Commu- 
nion. } 


in Excelsis, the Creed, the me 
z 
#) 


and fellows, being graduates, may use 


417 


ON THE PREFACES. 


besides his surplice or alb, a vestment or cope; and being a 
bishop, he shall also have his pastoral staff. 3. In all other 
places it shall be at the minister’s choice, whether he will 
wear the surplice or no. 4. As for kneeling, crossing, hold- 
ing up the hands, knocking on the breast, and the like ges- 
tures, they may be used or omitted, as every one thinketh 
meet. 5. That upon the Feasts of Christmas, Easter, Ascen- 
sion, Pentecost, and Trinity, some place of Scripture may be 
read (so it be proper to the feast) instead of the Litany. 
6. That by reason of the sermon, or any other just cause, 
the minister may (if he will) omit the Litany, the Glory to 
God on high, the Creed, and the Exhortation at the Com- 
munion: for the Litany was then annexed to it. But this 
freedom is not now allowed. 

Bucer!, in his Censure upon this Preface of Ceremonies 
abolished and retained, findeth great fault with the ringing 
of bells in a peal, which he saith is a custom still kept up by 
superstitious men and foolish boys, that carry the ringers 
beer or ale to drink; and that it is against reason to ring 
all the day-time, and all the night-time too when they please, 
doing this especially upon superstitious holydays; as upon 
All-Souls’ Day, the Feasts of the Conception, the Presenta- 
_ tion of the Virgin Mary, upon St. George’s, and other fabu- 
lous saints’ days; with much more to that purpose. 

And now by this passage of Bucer’s, we know the reason 
why Archbishop Grindal (who was well acquainted with him, 
and affected his ways) inquired in his Articles of Visitation, 
“ Whether there was any superstitious ringing upon saints’ 
days,” &c.™ For Bucer will allow no ringing at all, but to 


! [Bucer’s words are: Ad quam  bularum, quam vere historie. Et 


enim vel decentiam vel ordinem reli- 
gionis, ad quam disciplinam fideive zdi- 
ficationem conferat ille tam multus et in- 
tempestivus campanarum abusus, quem 
superstitiosi et copiosi homines aliquanta 
solent cerevisia a stultis juvenibus, 
quos interim oblectat inanis tintinna- 
bulorum sonitus et inepte fabule, quas 
interim potu excitati non suo loco con- 
ferunt? Quam etiam tintinnabulorum 
concussionem illi nunquam adhibent 
insolentius dies et noctes quam ad festa 
sua superstitiosa, ut ad diem Anima- 
rum, atque in festis Conceptionis ac 
Presentationis Mariz, Georgii, et alio- 
rum divorum de quibus plus extat fa- 
CCSIN. 


quam rationem habet et noctu et die 
ita campanis perstrepere: quibus ta- 
men temporibus nemo ad templum co- 
gitat? Usus sane hujus sonitus alius 
esse non debet, quam ut populus ad 
sacrum se yel reipublice coetum aut 
preparet aut veniat.—Bucer, Censura 
in Ordinatione Eccl. in Anglia... . 
Scripta Anglicana, p. 493. ] 

m [(Cosin had a copy of Grindal’s 
Visitation Articles for the Diocese of 
London, A.D. 1565, to which he re- 
fers repeatedly in this series of not:s, 
which the editor has not seen. In the 
Remains of Abp. Grindal, published 
by the Parker Society, Cambridge, 


Ee 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


er 
& 


sk 
ote 


418 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


THIRD 


ay call people to church, or to pray for the sick, or to come to 
IES. 


public meeting for the affairs of the commonwealth”. 

He likewise finds fault there® with those ministers that 
still used vestments and lights in the church; with the 
gestures of bowing and crossing; with making clean the 
chalice; taking the bread and wine into the priest’s hand, 
when he repeats the words of institution over them; re- 
moving the Service Book from the right to the left side of 
the table (as they did when they read the Epistle ;) setting 
the table in the same place where the altar stood; and with 
shewing the bread and the cup (though they did not elevate) 
to old doting and superstitious persons, who were ready to 
adore them. All which he wished to have altered; and so © 
it was in the 5th of Edw. VI. ; 

But in the beginning of Queen Elizabeth, all the orna- — 
ments of the Church were restored again, by the Act of 
Uniformity”, and the posture of the table in the place where 
the altar stood, was specially appointed by the queen’s in- 
junctions‘. 

He moved to have fewer holydays kept", and they made 
an Act to that purpose the same year, or thereabouts‘. 

He was content to let the days of Christ’s Nativity, Cir- 
cumcision, Epiphany, Passion, Resurrection and Ascension, — 
stand still; together with Whitsunday, Annunciation, St. 
John Baptist, St. Peter, St. Paul, with St. Michael and All 


ae hh” eae Oe eT eee ee 


1843, his articles for the visitation of 
the province of Canterbury, A.D. 1576, 
are reprinted, and there, Art. 9, (p. 160,) 
the substance of this will be found. ] 

n [Necesse itaque erit statuere ut 
campane non pulsentur nisi quum po- 
pulus monendus et convocandus est ad 
sacrum coetum aut ad res necessarias 
Reipublice. Deinde ut pulsentur certis 
differentiis ac notis ut populus queat 
agnoscere ad quid vocetur. Nunc enim 
confundunt sonitum tintinnabulorum, 
ut populus non scire possit, ad quam 
rem, ad conciones, vel ad alias sacras 
czremonias, vel ad precandum pro 
egrotis, vel ad publicum aliquod ne- 
gotium evocetur.—Bucer, ibid., p. 494. ] 

° [ Adbzc non desunt qui colant ad- 
hue loca in quibus singularis viguit 
idolatria et AenpavoAarpela. Sunt qui- 
buscunque possunt signis, nunquam 
satis execratam Missam suam repre- 


sentare student et vestibus, luminari- 
bus, et inclinationibus, crucibus, ab- 
luendo ealicem, aliisque Missalibus 
gestibus, halitu super panem et calicem 
Eucharistie, transferendo librum in 
mensa de dextra ad sinistram mense 
partem, mensam in eodem ponendo loco 
quo stabat altare: ostendendo panem 
et calicem Eucharistie, adorantibus 
illa vetulis aliisque supersitiosis homi- 
nibus qui Sacramentis tamen non com- 
municant.—Id. ibid.] 

P (See above, p. 233. ] 

4 [See above, p. 85, note k.] 

® [The Act 5 and 6 Edw. VI. cap. 3, 
an Act for the keeping Holydays and 
Fasting-days, is probably what Bp. Co- 
sin refers to. ] 

’ (Ita et festa moderanda erunt ut 
neque nimia indicentur neque que in- 
dicta fuerint, tam flagitiose profanen- 
tur.—Bucer, ibid. ] 


tors Se" 





¥ 
k 
§ 
4 





ON THE TABLE AND KALENDAR. 419 


Angels‘: But if they would retain any of the apostles’, or 
other martyrs’ days, he wished they should be kept only in 
the afternoons. In this they followed him not. 

He would have all the churches kept shut, but in service- 
time only, that they might not be profaned with talking and 
walking in them". And he would have no children suffered 
(that cry or make a noise) in churches during the time of 


any service there. 


THE TABLE AND KALENDAR, &c. 


The Kalendar.| In this kalendar, which preserves the 
memory of some ancient holy men and women that were 
famous in the Church (although their days be not now 
appointed by the new statute to be kept holydays, nor 
were they all of them appointed to be kept so before) there 
is some difference between this edition and that of Edw. VI. 
to which the Act of Uniformity referreth’. In January, 
Lucian and Prisca are omitted, with Fabian. So Bast! is 
added in the 5th of Edw. VI. In February, Dorothy and 
Mildred are added. In March, Perpetua, St. Gregory, and 
St. Benedict are omitted; Adrian is added. In April, 
Richard and Alphage are omitted. In May, John Beverley, 
Prancrace, Helena, Adelina are added, and Pernelle. In 
June are added Edmund, and the Translation of Edw. In 
July, Martin and Swithin are omitted, Seven Sleepers are 








* [Atque utinam populus adduci 
possit, ut, cum Dominicis diebus, vel 
ea tantum festa Christo et proprie sa- 
luti non profligande sed instaurande, 
vere sanctificaret, quibus celebratur 
Domini incarnatio, Natalis, Circum- 
cisio, Epiphania, Supplicium, Resur- 
rectio, Ascensus in ccelum, et Spiritus 
Sancti missio. Item quibus visitatio 
Marie matris Domini, natalis Johannis, 
et Divi Petri atque Pauli Martyrum, 


_Angelorumque peragitur memoria. Si 


alterum vel Apostolorum vel Martyrum 


-memoria sunt habendz solenniter, pos- 
Set sane his, ut populus nunc in reli- 
_giones ardet, satisfieri, si pomeridiano 


tantum Ecclesie conventibus celebra- 


| rentur.—Id. ibid. ] 


" (Templa itaque, dum in illis non 


_ eoit populus Christi ad sanctas actiones 


religionis, clandenda erunt, quumque 
in illis populus ad has actiones congre- 
gatur, nemo in eis quidquam aliud 
agat quam quod religionis sit. Faces- 
sant impiz ille in templis deambula- 
tiones, et fabulationes, omnis puerorum 
strepitus, qui nimis importunus est 
passim in templis, etiam dum sacre 
habentur conciones, &c.—Id. ibid., 
p- 495. ] 

v [The editor has not been able to 
find any Prayer-book of Edw. VI. with 
the names of saints as here described. 
The first book contains our festivals, 
with the addition of S. Mary Magdalen. 
The second omits that, and puts the 
Conversion of S. Paul, and S. Barna- 
bas, in black letters, and adds S&S. 
George, S. Laurence, and S, Clement, 
also in. black letter. ] 


Ee2 


THIRD 
SERIES. 


1 [Sebast. ] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


420 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


added. In August, Name of Jesus, and beheading of St. John 
Baptist, are omitted; Assumption of the Virgin Mary, Mag- 
nus, Bernard, Felix and Cuthbert are added. In September, 
Enurchus, Holy Cross, Lambert and Cyprian are omitted. 
In November, Brice, Machute, St. Hugh B., St. Edmund 
King, and Cecily, are omitted; and Theodore is added. In 
December, Qs Sapientia and Silvester are omitted, and Os- 
mund is added. 

In August*, the note and alteration of the Lesson con- 
cerning the 13th of Daniel; in October, concerning the 
6th of Exodus; in November, concerning the 26th and 24th 
chapters of Ecclesiasticus; came from the Order of King 
James and his bishops, upon the exceptions taken by the 
puritans, against the Lessons formerly appointed by law, 
in the Conference at Hampton Court. Whereupon we have 
now that proclamation set at the beginning of this book’, 
which before his time we had not; neither was it lawful 
to make any alterations in the Liturgy, but by the whole 
convocation and parliament, as it should seem by the Act of 


Uniformity; of the penalties wherein contained, for making - 


any alteration, the bishops were not mindful to inform the 
king; who, I believe, would otherwise have let thebook 
alone as it was, both here, and in other places after. 


Then shall follow certain Psalms in order.| Conc. Laod. 
Can. 17%, Dion. Ar. cap. 5°, Const. Ap. 2.57". The Council 


x [In the kalendars prefixed to the 
Prayer-books from 1604 to 1662 there 
were the following notes: August 26, 
Note, that the 13th of Daniel, touching 
the History of Susanna, is to be read 
until these words: ‘‘ And King As- 
tyages,’’ &c. October 1, Morning, To- 
bit v. was left out and the note added. 
Note, that the 6th of Exodus is to be 
read the first of October at Morning 
Prayer, unto these words: ‘‘ These be 
the heads,’”? &c. November 7, Note, 
that the beginning of the 26th chapter 
of Ecclesiasticus (unto) ‘ But when one 
is,’ &c. must be read with the 25th 
chapter. November 17, Note, that the 
46th chapter of Ecclesiasticus is to be 
read unto these words: ‘ After this he 
told,” &c, as ordered in the letters of 
James I. to the Commissioners for 
Causes Ecclesiastical, authorizing cer- 


tain changes in the Service-book, in 
Rymer, vol. xvi, p. 565, sqq., and 
Cardwell’s History of Conferences, p. 
221.] , 

y [A Proclamation for the author- 
izing of Uniformity, prefixed to the 
Prayer-book, after the Act of Uni- 
formity, from 1604 to 1662.—See 
above, p. 184. ] 

7 (See above, p. 55, note z. } 

® [‘H 8¢ trav Wadudr leporoyia ovvov- 
Tiomévn TWaot oxeddv Tois lepapxiKots 
bvotnpios, ovK EwedAev Ganpricba Tod 
mdvtwv iepapxikwrdrov. — S. Dionys. 
Areop. de Eccles. Hierarchia, cap. 3. 
§ 4. Op. tom. i. p. 189, D. “Oray ody 
q) TAavEeKTiKh TOY Tavieépwy buvoroyla Tis 
PuxiKcas Hudv Ekers evapuoviws 5:a0H mpds 


Ta puKpov barepoy icpoupynOnoduera, Kar — 


TH Tav Oelwy wdGv Suopwrla Thy mpds 


oe aoe ; 
TAS Sees te 


Ta Beta Kal Eavtods Kal GAAHAOUS buo~ 


ON THE TABLE AND KALENDAR. A2QL 


‘of Laodicea, can. 15°, ordereth, that none but canonical 
singers (such as be enrolled in the list of the church) should 
sing the Psalms. They found (it seems) an inconvenience, 
in the ungrateful and harsh sound that was made in the 
church, when all the people sung together as aforetime they 
‘did. There was another course, much used in some parts of 
the church, of singing the Psalms by sides, or antiphones. 
And another, of singing the acrostics, or the end verses of 
the Psalms, by all the men and women together, Phil. de vit. 
Contemp.*, which were nothing else, but that the congrega- 
tion might join together in the praises of God with more 
comeliness and order, according to the several conditions of 
divers places. 

Proper Psalms on certain days.| In divers copies (through 
the negligence or presumption of the printer) they vary 
from those that are appointed in the first and second edi- 
tion of this book’, which last is only allowed by the Act 
of Uniformity’. The true copy, according to the fifth of 
Edw. VI., is this: 


: Matins | Evensong 
Christmas-day + Psal. 19| €9 110 
45 85 | 1382 
Easter-day 3 57 re May 
Ascension-day | . 15 a se 
Whit-Sunday { §° 104 \ 








ppoctrny, as wia Kal buorddyw Trav tepwv 
Xopeia vomoberhon, kal Ta cuvreTunueva 
kal ouveskiaguéva waAdov ev TH voepa 
THY Yaruayv tepodroyia, Sia mAcidvwY Kar 
capertépwy cixdvwy kal davapinoéwv edpd- 
veTat Tals lepwrdrais TaY ayLoypddwy 
ouwtdtewy avaryvecerw.—ld. ibid., § 5. 
p- 190, e.] 

® (ava 500 5& yevoudvwr avayvwopd- 
_ Tov ETEpos Tis TOUS TOD AaBlS Wadrr€rw 
Buvous* kal 6 Aads Td dKpoorixia broWar- 
Aérw.—Const. Apostol., lib. ii. cap. 57. 
Concilia, tom. i. col. 296, D.] 

© [wept rod, wh Seiv wrA€ov KavoriKaev 
Wartav rav em) tov tuBwva avaBawdv- 
Tov Kat ard dipOdpas WarAdvtwy érépous 


tTivas wWdddrAew ev éxxanotg.—Concil. 
Laod., can. 15. Concilia, tom. i. col. 
1434, B.] 

d [See above, p. 55, note y. | 

© {e.g. For Whit-Sunday matins the 
Paslms are xlv., xlvii. in a Book of 
Common Prayer of 1622. ] 

f [The ‘‘second edition of this book” 
is the Second Book of Edw. VI., viz. 
that of the fifth year of Edw. VI., which 
was restored by the Act of Uniformity, 
1 Eliz. c. 1, with the exception of cer- 
tain specified alterations; and was the 
standard and only allowed book.—See 
below, p. 422, note k. ] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


422 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


The Old Testament is appointed for the First Lessons, the 
New Testament for the Second.| In the Constitutions of the 
Apostles’, the Scriptures to be read in the church are reckoned 
in particular. So in the canon of Laodicea®, the last canon ; 


and Dionysius setteth forth the subject of all the books of | 


Scripture, which he saith are read after the Psalms, to en- 
large with more ample declaration and examples, those things 
which in the Psalms are but darkly and briefly delivered, 
C. 5. 

Proper Lessons on the Sundays, &c.| As in the Act of 
Uniformity it is appointed, “ with one alteration or addition 
of certain Lessons, to be used on every Sunday in the year.” 
For in the former edition of this book there were no proper 
Lessons set, but only for the high festivals and holydays. 
And they that were employed to make this alteration, seem 
not to have been mindful of a clause in the preface (which 
they suffered to stand there still) wherein is faulted the very 


same thing that is here now ordered. As, the Book of Esay — 


to begin in Advent, and the Book of Genesis in Septua- 
gesima!; and when a few chapters of them were read, to 
leave out the rest. Indeed, a supply hereof was made in the 
whole course of the year, but that these Sunday-Lessons do 
every week break off the course, (as the former Lessons for 
the festivals and holydays did not,) one of the chapters ap- 
pointed by the kalendar to be read in due order being 
omitted for that day; and so no book of the Scripture (by 


& [Constit. Apostol., lib. ii. cap. 57. 
apud Concilia, tom. i. col. 296, D. ] 

h [Concil. Laodicen., can. 60. Ibid., 
col. 1539, E. The list of the books 
there given is the same as ours, except 
that the Book of the Revelations is 
omitted. | 

i [avadtcas 5¢ wddAw emi 7d Oetov 
buciacrhpiov ardpxetai(é fepdpxns) Tis 
iepas TOV Waruav pmeAwdias ohvadovans 
avTge Thy Waruihy iepordoylay, amdons 
THs ‘ExxAno.aotikys Staxooufoews. €- 
és 88, did Tey Aerroupyav 7H TAY Gyt0- 
ypdowy SéAtwv avdyvwots aKodrovdws 
viverat, k.A.—S. Dionys. Areop. de Ec- 
cles. Hierarchia, cap. 3. Op. tom. i. 
p- 187, e.]} 

k [The words of the Act of Uni- 
formity, 1 Eliz. c. 1, are: ‘ And that 
the said Book (that authorized by Par- 


liament, 5 and 6 Edw. VI.) with the 
order of service, and of the administra- 
tion of Sacraments, rites, and ceremo- 
nies, with the alteration and additions 
therein added and appointed, shall stand 
and be in force.” And again, “The said 
Book, so authorized by Parliament in 
the said 5th and 6th years of King 
Edw. VI. with one alteration or addi- 
tion of certain Lessons to be used on 
every Sunday in the year,” &c.] 

1 [The words of the preface con- 
demning the old rituals are: “ Com- 
monly where any book of the Bible was 
begun, before three or four chapters 
were read out, all the rest were unread, 
and this sort the book of Esay, &c.; but 
they were only begun and never read 
through.’ } 





Re Ree ee Se 


Def be oo 


sa et 


Bl a 


ON THE TABLE OF PROPER LESSONS. 423 


this means as in the preface is intended and promised) is 
entirely read or continued on, without interruption, through- 
out the whole year. Either the preface, therefore, or the 
kalendar, (if we would make them agree and avoid contra- 
diction,) seem to want some amendment. | 

Lessons proper for holydays.| They are not here upon 
every day the same that they were in the former editions 
of this book: the differences are these; in the first edition, 
the second Lesson at matins upon Christmas-day was St. 
Matt. i., and the second Lesson at evensong, Tit. iii., was 
appointed, both in the first and second edition, to proceed 
no further than unto these words, “ foolish questions.” Upon 
St. Stephen’s-day no first Lessons were ordered, nor upon 
St. John’s-day, nor upon Innocents’-day at evensong. Upon 
the Epiphany, the second Lesson at Morning Prayer, Luke 
lil., was to begin at these words, “ And it fortuned when the 
people were baptized,” &c. Upon St. Paul’s, St. Barnabas’, 
and St. Peter’s-day, Monday and Tuesday, both in Easter- 
week and Whitsun-week, there were no first Lessons ap- 
pointed, either at Morning or Evening Prayer. On Ascen- 
sion-day there were two second Lessons, and here be none. 
Upon Trinity-Sunday was no Lesson for Evening Prayer. 
Upon Easter-day, at evensong, no first Lesson. Upon Whit- 
Sunday no first Lessons, either at matins or evensong. 
Upon the days of Purification, St. Matthias, Annunciation, 
St. Mark, St. Philip and Jacob, St. James, St. Bartholomew, 
St. Matthew, St. Michael, St. Luke, St. Simon and Jude, 
St. Andrew, and St. Thomas, no Lessons at all. Upon All- 
Saints, the second Lesson at Morning Prayer is ordered to 
begin at these words in Heb. xi.: “Saints by faith subdued 
kingdoms ;” and so should it be printed in our books, where 
for want of the words, ‘“‘subdued kingdoms,” since the Old 
Bible was out of use, (I know not by what authority left off, 
seeing these references of the beginnings and endings of 
Proper Lessons relate to that old translation which was in 
use 5th Edw. VI.) they commonly begin at the first verse 
of the chapter, and read it through; and sometimes also 


(for want of printing this table exactly according to the 


first copy) they leave off where they should begin; and 
sometimes, instead of the true Proper Lesson, read another 


THIRD 


SERIEs. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


424 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


that is nothing to the purpose of the day; so that for the 
first Lesson upon the Circumcision-day at evensong, they 
commonly begin the chapter, Deut. x., and leave off at the 
words, “ And now Israel,” &c. where they should begin, and 
read out from thence to the end of the chapter. And upon 
Epiphany-day, usually for the first Lesson at matins they 
read Esay xl. (which is nothing to the day), instead of Hsay Ix., 
which is proper to it. And upon St. John Baptist’s-day, the 
second Lesson at Morning Prayer is printed Matt. xiii., when 
it. should be Matt. iii.; and all this, and more, through the 
carelessness of the printer, and the negligence of them who 
should have the oversight of these books, and be better 
acquainted with them than they are. 


ON THE KALENDAR, 


JANUARY. 


13. Hilary.| St. Hilary was bishop of Poictiers in Aqui- 
tain. St. Hier. in Catal.™ Latine eloquentie Rhodanus, Pref. 
in Epist. ad Gal.“Clarissima Latini sermonis tuba adversus 
Arianos. adv. Ruff., lib. ii. cap. 5°. By their faction he was 
banished into Phrygia in the year 354, but afterwards, when 
that storm was over, he returned; and setting himself to re- 
pair the ancient faith of the fathers, he enlightened the 
Churches of Illyria, Italy, and France, with so much splen- 
dour, that, like the sun in his strength, he dispelled the 
clouds of that heresy; and those Churches owe their re- 
stitution to him. 
followed his banishment, as Severus thought, lib. ii.?, nor in 
the fourth year of Valentinian, as St. Jerom4, Greg. Tur.’, 


After that (not in the sixth year that 


m [S. Hieron. de Vir. Illust., cap.100. 
Op. tom. ii. col. 919. ] 

2 (Id. Pref. in lib. ii. Comment. in 
Galat. Op. tom, vii. col. 427, 428.] 

° [Id. contra Ruffinum, lib. ii. § 9. 
Op. tom. ii. col. 513, C.] 

P [Hilarius sexto anno postquam 
redierit, in patria obiit.—Sulp. Severus, 
Hist. Sacr., lib. ii. ¢. 45. Op. tom. ii. 
pp. 247, 248. Verone, 1741. See the 
note there. } 


4 [Hilarius Episcopus Pictavis mo- 
ritur.—S. Hieron. Chronicon, ad ann. 
Valentiniani 5. A.D. 372. Op. tom. viii. 
col. 811. ] 

* (Quarto Valentiniani et Valentis 
anno, sanctus Hilarius apud Pictavos, 
plenus sanctitate, et fide ... migravit 
ad ceelos.—S. Gregor. Episc. Turonens. 
Hist. Francorum, lib. i. ¢. 36. col. 28. 
ed. Paris. 1699. } 








ON THE KALENDAR. 4.25 


Hermannus’, and Marianus*, &c. were persuaded) but in the 
seventh of Valentinian, and near the year 371, the ninth after 
his return from banishment, Id. Jan., he died at Poictiers, 
the tenth year after the pseudo-synod of Ariminum, from 
which he pulled off the vizard. 


APRIL. 


25. St. Mark.| Dorotheus, following therein Epipha- 
nius’, makes him one of the seventy disciples: but Eusebius, 
far more probably out of Papias, lib. ii. cap. 39%, says, that 
St. Mark neither heard Him, nor was any of His followers ; 
which, if he had been one of the seventy, could not be true. 
See Eusebius also, lib. vi. cap. 14*. St. Jerom in his Cata- 
loguey, and Isidore de Obit. Sanct., &c.* He was martyred in 





the eighth year of Nero, the year 62 of Christ. 


And yet 


Dorotheus? says it was under Trajan. 
Epiph. Heres. 51, Dorotheus’, and Origen‘, in his dia- 
logue de Recta Fide, make him to be one of the seventy. 


MAY. 


1. St. Jacob.| Hegesippus in Luseb., lib. ii. cap. 23¢; the 


§ [Hilarius Episcopus Pictavie mo- 
ritur.— Hermannus Contractus, Chro- 
nicon, ad an. 367. ap. Bibl. Patrum 
Max., tom. xviii. p. 353, H.] 

t (A.D. 367. 4, Valentinianus 2, et 
Valens. 2. Hilarius episcopus Pictaviis 
moritur.—Marianus Scotus, Chronica, 
lib. ii. et. vi. col. 323. Basil. 1560. } 

« [See below, note c. | 

Y [See below, note b. | 

w [Mdpxos... otte Hrovce Tod Kuptov, 
o}re TwapyKkorAovdncey avTov.—Euseb., 
Hist. Eccl., lib. iii. c. 39, p. 137 ; being 
a citation from Papias. } 

x (Id. ibid., lib. vi. c. 14, (al. 15.) p. 
274. This passage is to the effect that 
S. Mark’s Gospel was composed from 
the teaching of S. Peter. ] 

Y [ Mortuus est octavo Neronis anno. 
—S. Hieron. de Vir. Illust., cap. 8. Op. 
tom. ii. col, 829. ] 

* [Mareus, evangelista secundus, 
Petri discipulus ejusque in baptismate 
filius.—Isidor. Hispal. de Vita et Morte 
Sanctorum, cap. 84. Op. p. 366, E.] 

* [Sub Trajani reqno in Alexandria 


..+ combustus.— Dorothei Epise. et 
Mart. de Vita et Morte Prophetarum, 
&c. Synopsis, ap. Bibl, Patr. Max., tom. 
iii. p. 427, E.] 

b [obros 5& cis erbyxavey ex TaY 
EBdounnovradto tav S:acKkopmicbevTwy 
én) T@ phuati @ eiwev 6 Kipios* édv wh 
tis wou payy Thy odpKa Kat mln Td alua 
ov fort pov &tos.—S. Epiphan. Adv. 
Her., lib. ii. tom. i. Heres. 57. cap. 6. 
Op. tom. i. p. 428, A.] — 

¢ {Istis (LXX Discipulis) Marcus 
et Lucas evangelista connumerantur. 
—S. Dorotheus ubi supr. col. 429, H.] 

4 [Mdpkos obv kal Aovkas, éx TaY 
of’, dvres, MatAw Te amrootdAw edny- 
yéAicavto. — Dialogus de recta in 
Deum fide, Origeni falso ascript. Sect. 
i. Origenis Op. tom. i. p. 806, D.] 

e { Hegesippus, ap. Eusebium, Hist. 
Eccles., lib. ii. cap. 23. p. 78. None 
of these authors say that S. James 
the Less was one of the seventy dis- 
ciples. Some of them, as will be seen, 
distinguish him from them.} 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


“ 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


426 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


author of the Recognitions, lib. i.£; Euseb., lib. i. cap. 118, 
and lib. ii. cap. 1"; Nysi, de Resur. Orat. 2'; St. Jerom 

in his Cataloguej, lib. v. in Isaiam, cap. 17*, et in Gal. 
cap. 1!; and Dorotheus™, all number him among the 
seventy disciples. The Constitutions, lib. 1. cap. 55°, ex- 
pressly make him to differ from any of the seventy dis- 
ciples. Clemens, Hypotyposeon lib. vii. apud Euseb. lib. ii. 


cap. 1, makes him one of that number®, and says, he was 
preferred before all the apostles but Peter and John?. 


St. Jerom‘ says he was buried near to the temple of Jeru- 
salem, from a pinnacle whereof he was thrown down head- 
long: but Dorotheust untruly says that he was buried — 
within the temple, near to the altar, where the law would 





suffer no man to be interred. 


f [S. James is mentioned repeatedly 
throughout the first book of the Pseudo- 
Clementine Recognitions, but he is not 
said to be one of the seventy.—Ap. 
Patr. Apost., tom. i. p. 493, sqq. ] 

& [eis 5€ Kal ovTos TaY pepoméevwr 
TOD Zwrhpos pmabyta@v, GAAG phy Kal 
&deAdav Hv.—Euseb. Hist. Eccles., 
lib. ii. cap. 12. p. 86. The reference 
in the text is a mistake. ] 

h [See below, note o. ] 

i [6 5& Mdpkos "laxéBov rod puiKpod 
kal "Iwo uhrepa abrhy eimev, éwelmep 
hv &ddos "IdkwBos 6 Tod ’AAhatouv Sia 
Tonto méyas btt Tots &mooTdAos Tos 
da5exa cuvynplOunro’ 6 yap wiKpds odK Hv 
avrots évapl@uscos.—S. Gregor. Nyssen., 
Orat. 2. de Resurr. Op. tom. iii. p. 
413, B.] 

) (S. Hieron., lib. de Viris Ilustribus, 
cap. 2. Op. tom. ii. col. 815, sqq. Here 
is a long account of S. James. | 

x [ Duas olivas, et tres, et quatuor, et 
quinque, quatuordecim apostolos inter- 
pretantur, id est, duodecim qui electi 
sunt, et tertiumdecimum Jacobum, qui 
appellatur frater Domini; Paulum 
quoque apostolum vas electionis.—Id. 
Comment. in Isa. lib. v. cap. 17. v. 6. 
Op. tom. iv. col. 194, E.]} 

1 [Hic autem Jacobus Episcopus 
Jerusolymorum primus fuit, cogno- 
mento justus: vir tante sanctitatis et 
rumoris in populo, ut fimbriam vesti- 
menti ejus certatim cuperent attingere. 
Qui et ipse postea de templo a Judzis 
precipitatus, successorem habuit Si- 
monem.—Id. Comment. in Galat., lib. 
i. cap. 1. v. 19. Op. tom. vii. col, 396, 
D. 397, A.] 


~ 


m [De lxxii. Discipulis 1. Jacobus 
frater Domini secundum carnem qui et 
Justus vocatur, et primus Hierosoly- 
morum episcopus constitutus est.—Do- 
rotheus, ubi supr. p. 427, G. ] 

n (‘Huets obv of karatiwbevtes elvat 
Ld.prupes THs Mapovatas avTod abv "laké= 
By TG Tov Kupiov adeAP@, Kal Erépors 


- €BSouhkovra S00 pwalntats.—Constitut. 


Apost., lib. ii. cap. 55. apud Concilia, 
tom. i. col. 293, C. 

° Plakd8e Th Sixalp Kat "lwdvyn rar 
Tlérp» peta Thy avdoracw mapédwxe 
Thy yveow 6 Kupios. Obror Tots Aotwois 
&rooréAots tmapédwkav. Oi 5€ Aorrol 
améartoAot Trois €Bdounkovta.—Clemens 
Alexandr., Hypotyp., lib. vii. apud Eu- 
seb. Hist. Eccles., lib. ii. cap. 1. p. 
44] 

P [Tlérpov yap Kal "Id«wBov Kai *Iw- 
dvyny wera Thy GvdAn uw TOD Swrpos, ws 
by wad brd Tod Kuplov mporetinuévovs, 
by émidind&ecOa Sdéns, GAA’ ’IdnwBov 
Tov Bdikaov eérickorov ‘lepocoAvuov 
€AcoOat.—Idem, lib. vi. apud eundem. 
Ibid. ] 

4 (Juxta templum, ubi et preci- 
pitatus fuerat, sepuitus.—S. Hieron., 
lib. de Vir. Illust., ubi supr. col. 819. 
The statement is derived from He- 
gesippus, ubi supr., who says: kal 
Zdayay abroy eri 7G tTérw Tapa TE 
vag, Kal ért avTov 7 oOTHAN pméver Tapa 
TE vag. | 

x [...lapidibus ibi a Judeis adob- 
rutus accubuit, atque in templo prope 
altare sepultus est.— Dorotheus, ubi 
supr. This is the continuation of the 
passage cited in note m. ] 











ON THE KALENDAR. 4.27 


JUNE. 


11... Sz, Senirolae' Clemens‘, in the second book of his 
Stromata, probably conjectures that he was one of the seventy 
disciples; and out of Clemens, the same is said of [him by] 
Eusebius‘, and Epiphanius", Her. 20, and by Dorotheus* : 
yet Theodoret’, in 1 Cor. xi, expressly distingmishies him 
from any of that number. 


AUGUST. 


24. St. Bartholomew.| Theod., Lect. Collect., lib. 11.2; Procop. 
de Justiniant ALdificiis*, says that he was buried at Ducas, in 
the confines of Persia. Gregory of Tours” says he was 
miraculously translated from thence to Liparis, Mir., lib. 1. 
c. 34; and so say the Martyrologies*’, and Metaphrastes“, from 
whence he was brought to Beneventum, anno 882, and from 
thence to Rome, a.p. 983, yet Nicephorus, lib. i. c. 39°, 


8 [‘O 5é (BaprydBas) rév EBSounKovra. 
hy Kal cvvepyds Tov MavAov.—Clemens 
Alexandr. Stromat., lib. ii. cap. 20. Op. 
tom. i. p. 489. ] 

t [Aéyerai ye why els abrav Baprd- 
Bay yeyavévor.—Euseb. Hist. Eccles., 
lib. i. cap. 12. p. 35.] 

u (mera tovrous 5é rods erra Kah 
MarOiav roy mpd abtav, Mdproy, AouKar, 
*Jovorov, BapydBay. ..Kkal tovs Aoirobs 
mous €BdoutKxovra dSvo0.—S. Epiphan. 
adv. Heres., lib. i. Heres. 20. cap. 4. 
Op. tom. i. p. 50, D.] 

* (S. Barnabas is placed third in the 
list of the seventy disciples by Doro- 
theus, ubi supra; see note m. i] 

y [od pdvov A€yer Tods dadena, GAAG 
kal tovs éBdouhkovra, Kal rovs meta 
TAdTA THs XdpiTos TavTHS TeTUXNKOTAS. 
Kal yap avrdos totepov KAnOels THs xXEt- 
putovias ravrns TeTdxnkKe, Kal 6 waKd- 
pios BapydBas, x.tr.A.—Theodoret. in 
Epist. 1. ad Cor. ¢. xii. v. 28. Op. tom. 
iii. p. 183, D.] 

* (Avaordo.os 6 Baciveds extice 7d 
Adpas* kal «ticas, dvap TeOéatra Bap- 
OoAomaiov Aێyovta Thy a&wrdaToAOY, ws 
autos Thy pvdakhy émwetparn THs 1Wé- 
Aews. 510 Td Aclhbavoy abrod exe? wéeuas 
a&mrédero. —Theodori Lectoris Hist. 
Kecl., lib, ii, § 57. ap. Hist. Eccl. 
Scriptt., tom. iii. p. 583. | 

an AAAS kal iepa& memolyrat dbo, Thy 
TE peyadyy exxAnoiay Kkadrouvmevny, kat 
Thy Tov aroaTdAou BapSorouaiov.—Pro- 


cop. de Aidificiis, lib. ii, cap. 8. Op. 
tom. ii. p. 85, C. This was at Dara, 
which he calls céuny &dotdv twa &y- 
xioTd wn Tv Tepoiay bpwrv.—lbid., 
cap. 1. p. 29, B.] 

b [Sed providentia Dei cooperante 
per secretum opus ejus, sarcophagum 
plumbeum a loco illo aquis subvehen- 
tibus sublevatum, delatum est ad insu- 
lam vocabulo Liparis.—S. Gregor. Tu- 
ron. de gloria martyrum, seu Miracu- 
lorum, lib. i. ¢. 34, ap. Bibl. Patr, Max., 
tom. xi. col. 840, E.] 

¢ [Ejus sacrum corpus primum ad 
Liparam insulam, deinde Beneventum, 
postremo Romam ad insulam Tiberi- 
nam translatum.—Martyr, Roman. in 
Diem. The Martyrolog. Bede, in 
diem, p. 329, does not mention the 
translation to Rome: neither does that 
of Usuard, in diem, p. 486. See Ado 
de festivitatibus apostolorum, Bibl. 
Patr. Max., tom. xvi. p. 825, A.] 

d ((The ‘translation to Liparis only 
is mentioned there.) See Josephi hu- 
milis laudatio in sanctum apostolum 
Bartholomeum, ap. Surium in diem, 
tom. iv. fol. 271, b.] 

" ["Ev ObpBaverdrer THs KiAtkwv 
érapxtas oravpy woAw dvariBels mpos 
Tov pdvov mwobovmevoy avarpéxet Xpic- 
+év.—Nicephorus Callist., Hist. Ec- 
cles., lib. ii. cap. 39. Op. tom. i. p. 
201, B.] 





THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


4.28 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


dreams that he was buried at Urlangiolis, in Cilicia; and 
Dorotheus‘, at Albany, which with Isidore® he says was a 
city in Armenia the Great: but Albany was not a city of the 
Armenians, as appears by Ptolemy, lib. v. cap. 12". 

28. Augustine.] Aurelius Augustinus optimus sacerdos 
(Possid. in vita‘) precipua suo tempore sacerdotum Domini por- 
tio, (Prosp. Ep. ad Ruff.*) Gratia prestantissimus magister, 
vir in Ecclesia summus, concilii Africani Ingenium (Id. de in- 
gratis') Ecclesiasticorum magistrorum lumen (Gelas., Ep. 7™) at 
the request of Valerius, bishop of Hippo, was by Megalius, 
bishop of Calamy, consecrated bishop novo more, ita ut non 
succederet episcopo in cathedra; sed ut accederet™. After in- 
finite conflicts that he had for the defence of the true Chris- 
tian faith, and having endured three months’ siege, made by 
the Vandals against the city of Hippo, made in the year 430, 
Aug. 28, leaving his body among them, his soul was taken 
up to heaven?®. 


SEPTEMBER. 


21. St. Matth.| Origen, tom. i. in Gen., and out of him 
Euseb., lib. iii. cap. 12; Ruffinus and Socrates, lib.i. cap. 154; 
the martyrologists’, Fortunatus’, and Bedet, say that he 


f [Bartholomeus ... obdormivit et ° [See above, pp. 220, 221.] 





sepultus est in Albania, magne Ar- 
‘ee civitate.—Dorotheus, ubi supr. 
¢ [Isidorus Hispal. de Vita et Morte 
Sanctorum, cap. 76. Op. p. 365, H.] 

h [‘Albana civitas’ is enumerated 
by Ptolemy at the place cited as in 
Albania, which adjoined Armenia Ma- 
jor.—Ptolem. Geogr., lib. v. ¢c. 12. p. 
67.] 

i [...de vita... sacerdotis optimi 
Augustini... Possidius Calamensis.— 
Vita S. Aug. Pref. ap. S. Aug. Op. 
tom. x. col. 257, B.] 

k (S. Prosper. Ep. ad Ruffinum, cap. 
38. Op. col. 89, A.] 

1 [Idem. Carn. de Ingratis, cap. 3. 
1. 91. pp. 125, 126.] 

m [... beatee memorize Hieronymum 
atque Augustinum  ecclesiasticorum 
lumina magistrorum.—Gelasii Pape 
Epist. vii. ap, Concilia, tom. v. col. 
306, D.] 

" {These words are in part taken 
from Possidius’ Life, chap. 8. ubi supr. 
col. 262, D.] 


P [The references to Origen and Eu- 
sebius arise from a mistake. In Ruffi- 
nus’ translation of Eusebius, lib. iii. c. 
1, the words run thus: “ Thomas sorti- 
tus est Parthos, Mattheus A®thio- 
piam,’’ &c., the words respecting St. 
Matthew being interpolated by Ruffi- 
nus. At the end of the chapter we have 
Eusebius’ words translated: ‘‘ Hec ita 
per ordinem in tertio libro explanatio- 
num Genesis Origenes exponit,” and 
thus Origen is made to vouch for what 
Ruffinus inserted. —Euseb. Pamph. 
Hist. Eccl. Ruffino Aquleiensi inter- — 
prete, lib. iii. c. 1. p. 46. ap. Eccl. 
Hist. Script. Basil. 1528.] 

4 [Owpuas uty thy MapOwy &rooroAny 
bmredéxero’ Maréaios 5& riv AidtoTiav. 
—Socrates, Hist. Eccles., lib. i. cap. 
19. p. 49.] 

® [ Natalis sancti Matthzi apostoli et 
evangeliste, qui in Athiopia predi- 
cans, martyrium passus_ est.—Mar- 
tyrologium Romanum in diem. Usu- 
ard, in diem, has almost the same 
words. See the note in the Mart. Rom. 


ON THE KALENDAR. 429 


was martyred in Aithiopia, in the city of Maddaver. Isidore", 
that he was buried in I know not what mountains of shep- 
herds; Nicephorus, lib. ii. c. 41*, at Myrmena, among the 
Anthropophagi: but Dorotheusy, at Hierapolis, among the 
Parthians, i. e. nowhere. 

26. St. Cyprian.| St. Cyprian was an African born, and 
there professed rhetoric, with great applause ofall men. By 
the persuasion of one Cecilius, a priest, (from whom he had 
his surname,) he became a Christian. And, giving all the 
substance he had to the poor, he was constituted bishop of 
Carthage in the year 248. He was called magister orbis, et 
opera edidit sole clariora: 8. Hier. in Catal.*; Prudent. in 
Hymn. de Cypr At length, in the year 258, Sept. 14, the 
6th of Galienus, he suffered a glorious martyrdom. 


OCTOBER. 


18. St. Luke.] The same authors” number him also among 
the seventy disciples: and yet Nicephorus‘* is the less to be 
trusted in it, for that he saith St. Luke was converted by 
St. Paul from being a Gentile to be a Christian, at Thebes in 
Beeotia; which could not be seventeen years after Christ’s 
passion, before which time St. Paul came not into Greece. 
Eusebius? says better, (out of St. Luke’s own Gospel,) Hvan- 








from which, or some similar authority, 
Cosin seems to have derived these 
references. | ; 

s [Inde triumphantem fert India 
Bartholomezum: Mattheum eximium 
Naddaver alta virum.—Venant. Fortu- 
natus, Op. pars prima, lib. viii. cap. 6. 
de Virginitate, tom. i. p. 269. Rome, 
1786. } 

t [...apud AXthiopiam predicavit, 
et multos ad fidem convertit: missus- 
que est spiculator ab Hirtaco rege, qui 
eum gladio feriebat, efficiens martyrem 
Christi.—Bedz Martyrologium in diem, 
Op. tom. iii. col. 336. ed. Colon. 1612. 
This is an addition to the genuine text, 
which is simply, Natalis S. Matthei 
apostoli et evangelistee.—See Smith’s 
Bede, p. 424. ] 

« {Postmodum in Macedonia pre- 
dicat: requiescit in moutibus casto- 
rum.—Isidor. Hispal. de Vita et Morte 
Sanctorum, cap. 77. Op. p. 865, H.] 

x { Nicephorus Callist. Hist. Eccles., 


‘lib. ii, cap. 41. Op. tom. i. p. 203, B.] 


y [Mattheus ... obiit Hierapoli 
Parthiz, ubi et cum honore sepultus 
est.—Dorotheus, ubi supr. B. ] 

2 [Hujus ingenii superfluum est in- 
dicem texere cum sole clariora sunt 
ejus opera.—S. Hieron. de Vir. Illust., 
cap. 67. Op. tom. ii. col. 893. ] 

* (Punica terra tulit... Cyprianum 
decus orbis et magistrum.—Prudentius 
Peristeph. Hymn. 13. Cypriani Passio, 
Op. tom. ii. p. 12038.) 

> [That is, the authors referred to in 
the note on St. Matthew. ]° 

© [Aounas ... OnBas 5¢ ev Exramd- 
Aots TG Ocoreciy mepitvxav TlavAg, 
Thy watpdav wAdynv ameirato XpioT@e 
mpoolwyv.— Nicephorus Callist. Hist. 
Eccles., lib. ii. cap. 43. Op. tom. i. pp. 
209, B. 210, A.] 

4 ['O 5& Aoukas apxduevos Kat abtds 
Tod Kat’ avroy ovyypdupatos, Thy aiti- 
av mpovOnne 50 hv werolnke Thy obvTa~ 
Ew"... Tov doparH Adyor Gy abrds ika- 
vas Thy GAnOelay KareiAnhoet, ee THs 
dua MatA@ cuvovcias te kat diarpiBijs, 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


430 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


gelium se exarasse testatur, sicut ei tradiderunt, qui ab initio ipst 


viderunt, verbique ministri fuerunt : quos etiam ait se a sein 
in omnibus secutum. 

And who can believe that he was one of Christ’s disciples, 
who took all he had from the relation of others? Vid. Hier. 
in Catal.* et Isidorum‘, &c. Dorotheus® says vainly that he 
died and was buried at Ephesus; whereas the Martyrology*, 
and Isidorei, (who adds, that by the most writers before him 
he was accounted a proselyte, and that he understood not the 
Hebrew tongue,) say that he died at Bithynia; Nicephorus*, 
at Thebes, in Achaia. Gaudent., Ser. de Dedic. Eccl. ad Pa- 
tr[{as|!, there; St. Jerom™, that in the twentieth year of Con- 
stantine (which was the 357th year of Christ, March 3,) his 
bones were brought, with the relics of St. Andrew, from 
Achaia to Constantinople. Vid. Idacii Chron. Fastos Grecos*, 
et Theodorum Lector. Collect.°, lib. 11. 

28. St. Simon.|] Dorotheus?, and out of him Nicephorus4, 


Kal Tis TOV AoiToY arocTéAwy duirAlas ccles., lib. ii. cap. 43. Op. tom. i. p. 





abeanuevos 81 Tod idiov wapédwxev ed- 
ayyeAlov.—Euseb. Hist. Eccles., lib. iii. 
cap. 24. p. 117.] 

€ [Quidam suspicantur, quotiescum- 
que in epistolis suis Paulus dicit, juxta 
evangelium meum, de Luca significare 
voluisse, et Lucam non solum ab apo- 
stolo Paulo didicisse evangelium qui 
cum Domino in carne non fuerat, sed 
et a ceteris apostolis.—S. Hieron., de 
Vir. Illust., cap. 7. Op. tom. ii. col. 
827. ] 

f [See Isidore, cited below, note i. ] 

g [Lucas ... Ephesi vero mortuus 
et sepultus est.—Dorotheus, Synopsis, 
de xii. apostolis; ap. Bibl. Patr. Max., 
tom. iii. p. 427, F.} 

h [Natalis beati Luce evangeliste, 
qui multa passus pro Christo, Spiritu 
Sancto plenus obiit in Bithynia.—Mar- 
tyrol. Rom. in diem, p. 461. The 
other Martyrologies are substantially 
the same. ] 

i [Lucas... quem plerique tradunt 
proselytum fuisse et Hebrzeas literas 
ignorasse. Hic tamen fuit Pauli dis- 
cipulus et individuus comes peregrina- 
tionis ejus, quique ab ineunte pueritia, 
castissimus fuit et evangelice predi- 
cationis opus exercuit. Obiit lxxiiii. 
vite suze anno sepultus in Bithynia.— 
Tsidor. Hispal. de Vita et Morte Sanc- 
torum, cap. 83. Op. p. 366, D, E.] 

Bi [ Nicephorus Callist.. Hist. Ec- 


210, C.] 

1 [Andreas et Lucas apud Patras 
Achaiz civitatem consummati refe- 
runtur.—S.Gaudent. Sermo 17. de De- 
dicat. Basilic. Op. p. 190. ed. Patav. 
1720.] 

m {Sepultus est Constantinopoli ad 
quam urbem vicesimo Constantii anno 
cssa ejus cum reliquis Andrez apostoli 
translata sunt.—S. Hieron. de Vir. Il- 
lust., cap. 7. Op. tom. ii. col. 827.] 

» {Constantio 9, et Juliano Ces. 2. 
His conss. introierunt Constantinopo- 
lim Reliquie SS. Apostolorum An- 
dree et Luce die 5 Non. Mart.— 
Idacii Epise. Fast. Cons. ad cale. 
Chronici ap. Bibl. Patr. Max., tom. vii. 
p- 1239, D.] 

° {In the reign of Constantius, 
eiajAbov ev Kwvoraytivov moder Ta Ael- 
Wava tév aylwy aroordvwy. . .*Avdpéa 
dé nal Aouad, mpd wévte vévyvwy Map- 
tlwv’ Kal KateréOncay év T@ bm” avTov 
eyKavicbevTs meydAw vag Tav ayiwy 
amooréAwy.—-Theodori Lect. Collect., 
lib. ii. § 61. ap. Eccl. Hist. Script., 
tom. iii. p. 583. | 

P [Simon Zelotes peragrata Mauri- 
tania et Afrorum regione Christum pre- 
dicavit. Tandem in Britannia cruci- 
fixus occisus ac sepultus est.—Doro- 
theus, Synopsis de xii. Apostolis, ap. 
Bib]. Patr. Max., tom. iii. p. 427, B.]} 

4 [Els ras Bperavvixas vhoovs evay- 


Ey 6 ee “s 








\ 


universe Mesopotamize 
Domini predicavit. 
_ Edessenorum rege in Beryto occisus, et 


o 
& 
{ 


§ 
c 
é 


ON THE KALENDAR. 


431 


and the later Greeks, say, that after he had gone about Tuirp 
Africa and Mauritania, he was crucified in Brittany. But the 
Martyrology', and Fortunatus, lib. viii. Carm. 38, and Bede, 
in Ad. ex Abdiat, say, that he preached the Gospel in Egypt, 


and was put to death in Persia. 


Isidore", in his book, de 


Obitu Sanctorum, says he died at Bosphorus; but I know 


not from whence he had it. 


St. Jude.| Isidore* says he preached in Mesopotamia 
-and Pontus. The Martyrologists’ and Fortunatus’, that he 
was martyred in Persia; yet Dorotheus* fondly writes, that 
he was slain sub Augara Edessenorum rege in Beryto: for 
what had the king of Edessa to do with Berytus in Phe- 


nissia ? 


NOVEMBER. 


2. Festum omnium Animarum, All Souls’ Day.| Wherein 
they were wont to pray for all souls departed, that they 
-might be delivered out of purgatory. A day still observed in 
the Roman Church. But this original it had, as we learn 
out of Sigebert’s chronicle, ad ann. 1100”. 


yedioduevos .... mpds Toy abrod diddo- 
Kadov petexapynoev.—Nicephor. Cal- 
list. Hist. Eccles., lib. ii, cap. 40. Op. 
tom. i. p. 202, C.] 

* [Simon in A’gypto, Thaddeus in 
Mesopotamia evangelium predicavit : 
deinde in Persidem simul ingressi, cum 
innumeram gentis illius multitudinem 
Christo subdidissent, martyrium con- 
summaverunt.— Mart. Rom. in diem, 
p- 477. So the rest. ] 

8 [Hine Simonem et Judam lumen 
Persida gemellum, Leta relaxato mittit 
ad astra sinu.—Venant. Fortunatus, Op. 
pars i. lib. viii. cap. 6. tom. i. p. 269. ] 

t [See Abdias, Apostolica Historia, 
lib. vi. § 7. &c. ap. Fabricii Cod, Apoe. 


_N. T. p. 608, sqq. ] 


« {Bosphoro jacet.—Isidor. Hispal. 
de Vita et Morte Sanctorum, cap. 81. 
Op. p. 366, B. | 

x [Idem, ibid., cap. 79. p. 366, A. | 

y [See above, note r. | 
2 a8 above, note s. | 
@ [Judas Jacobi ... Edessenis et 

evangelium 
Sub Augaro vero 


cum honore sepultus est.— Dorotheus, 
Synopsis de xii. Apostolis, ap. Bibl. 


Patr. Max., tom. iii. p. 427, C.] 

b [The date should be 998. Hoc 
tempore quidam religiosus ab. Hiero- 
solymis rediens, in Sicilia reclusi cujus- 
dam humanitate aliquamdiu recreatus, 
didicit ab eo inter cetera, quod in illa 
Vicinia essent loca eructantia flamma- 
rum incendia, que loca vocantur ab 
incolis Olle Vulcani, in quibus anime 
reproborum luant diversa pro meri- 
torum qualitate supplicia, ad ea exse- 
quenda deputatis ibi demonibus; quo- 
rum se crebro voces, iras et terrores, 
spe etiam ejulatus audisse dicebat, 
plangentium quod anime damnatorum 
eriperentur de manibus eorum per elee- 
mosynas et preces fidelium, et hoc tem- 
pore magis per orationes Cluniacen- 
sium orantium indefesse pro defunc- 
torum requie. Hoe per ipsum abbas 
Odilo comperto, constituit per omnia 
monasteria sibi subjecta, ut sicut primo 
die Novembris solennitas omnium sanc- 
torum agitur, ita sequenti die memoria 
omnium in Christi quiescentium cele- 
bretur. Qui ritus ad multas ecclesias 
transiens fidelium defunetorum me- 
moriam solemnizari facit.— Sigeberti 
Chron. ad an, 998, ap. Mirzi Chronica, 
p. 142.] 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


482 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


There was a monk that went to visit Jerusalem, and when 
he returned from thence, and passed by into Sicily, he had a 
mind to see Vulcan’s kettle, out of which much smoke and 
flames of fire did usually ascend: being there, he heard the 
devils within complain that many dead souls were taken out 
of their hands by the prayers of the Cluniack monks. This 
he related to his abbot, Odilo, as a sure story ; who thereupon 
appointed this second of November to be annually kept in his 
monastery, and prayers to be made there for all dead souls. 
And the monks got it afterwards to be made a general holy- 
day in the West, by the appointment of the pope; till in 
ours, and the other reformed Churches, it was deservedly 
abrogated by us all. | 

23. St. Clement.| That this man was ordained bishop of 
Rome by St. Peter, we are told by Tertullian, de Prescrip., 
cap. 32°; Ruff., Pref. Recogn.4; the author of Liber Pontifi- 
calis®, Althelmus, de Virgin.', and by the Martyrology of Bede®, 
Ado", &c.; and most of the Latin writers, as St. Jerom says 
in his catalogue Script. Eccl.', accounted him the second 


after St. Peter. 


But Irenzeus, lib. i. cap. 3*, Euseb., lib. iii. cap. 22}, lib. v. 


¢ [Sicut Romanorum (Ecclesia re- 
fert)...-Clementem a Petro ordinatum 
itidem, perinde utique et ceterz exhi- 
bent quos ab apostolis in episcopatum 
constitutos apostolici seminis traduces 
habeant.— Tertull. de Prezscriptione 
Hereticorum, cap. 32. Op. p. 213, B.] 

4 (Quidam requirunt, gquomodo cum 
Linus et Cletus in urbe Roma ante 
Clemeutem hunc fuerint episcopi, &c. 
.. + cujus rei hanc accepimus esse ra- 
tionem, quod Linus et Cletus fuerunt 
quidem ante Clementem episcopi in 
urbe Roma sed superstite Petro... 
Clemens tamen post obitum Petri do- 
cendi susceperit sedem.—Ruffini Pre- 
fatio in S. Clementis Recognitionum 
libros, ap. Patr. Apost. Cotelerii, tom. 
i. p. 492.] 

¢ [Clemens... Hic ex precepte B. 
Petri suscepit Ecclesiam et pontifica- 
tum gubernandum, sicut ei fuerat a 
Domino Jesu Christo cathedra tradita 
vel commissa,— Anastasius de vitis 
Pont. Rom. ol. dict. Liber Pontificalis, 
iv. tom. i. p. 7.] 

f [Clemens ceelestis clavicularii pri- 
mus successor, et secundus Romane 
Ecclesia dispensator (quanquam non- 


nulli Linum et Anacletum in ponti- 
ficatus regimine nequicquam sine causa 
preferant.—Aldhelmus seu Althelmus, 
episc. Shirb. de laudibus Virginitatis, 
cap. 12. ap. Bibl. Patr. Max., tom. 
xiii. p. 87, C.] 

& [The words of the Martyrology 
are, Hic quartus post Petrum Rome 
Episcopus ordinatus est.... Hic ex 
precepto beati Petri ecclesie suscepit 
pontificatum. Linus et Cletus ideo 
ante eum scribuntur, quia ab ipso prin- 
cipe apostolorum ad ministerium sacer- 
dotale episcopi sunt ordinati—Beda 
Martyr. in diem, Op. tom. iii. col. 351. ] 

h [This does not appear, so far as 
the editor can ascertain it. ] 

i (Clemens... quartus post Petrum 
Rome episcopus; siquidem secundus 
Linus fuit, tertius Anacletus, tametsi 
plerique Latinorum secundum post 
Petrum Apostolum putent fuisse Cle- 
mentem.— S. Hieron., de Vir. Lllust., 
cap. 15. Op. tom. ii. col. 839.] 

Kk [d:adéxera 5¢ abrov ’AveyKAntos. 
peta Todroy St tpitw Témy ard Tov 
GmootéAwy Thy émioKkomyy KAnpodrat 
KAfmns.—S. Irenzus, cont. Heres., 
lib. iii, cap. 3. § 3. Op. p. 176.] 





ON THE KALENDAR. 433 


cap. 28; the books set forth against Artemon™; the author 
of the epistle ad Mariam Cassobelitanam", among the epistles 
of Ignatius®; and Tertullian again, adv. Marcion., lib. ii1.?, 
make him successor to Anacletus. And Epiphanius, Her. 


274, and Optatus, lib. 2", say he followed Cletus: but St. 


Austin’, Ep. 165, Lib. Pontif.*, and the Martyrology", will have 
him again to succeed Linus, who was martyred secundum 


_tabulas Rom. 9*. Cal. Octob. Anno Dom. 67, the thirteenth of 


Nero, (and not, as Eusebius’ mistakes the account, in the 


_ 76th year of Christ, and the first of Titus,) having Clement 


put into his place the year after; who in'the year 96 giving 
place to Cletus, was afterwards martyred in the year 100, the 





1 [év rodr@ 5& ‘Pwualwy efoers KAN- 
Bens iyyetto, tplrov Kal aitbs éméxwv 
Tov THE peta TlavAdy te kal Tlérpov 
émicxotmevodytwy Babudy. Aivos Se 6 
mp@tos hy, kal per’ abroy "AvéyKAntos. 
—Euseb. Hist. Eccles., lib. iii. eap. 21. 
p- 111.) 

m [The place referred to is the ex- 
tract from a work against Artemon, cited 
by Eusebius, now attributed to S. Hip- 
polytus, in which Victor is said to be 


_ the twelfth bishop in succession from 


S. Peter. Clement is only mentioned 


as one of those who had taught the 


divinity of Christ. Bixropos ts jv 
Tpiokadéxatos amd Tlérpov év ‘Pout, 
émiokowos . . . ‘ypdmmata.. . KAf- 
pevtos... & ois. . « OeodroyeiTas 
6 Xpiorés.—Euseb. E. H., lib. v. cap. 
28. p. 252.] 

» [See last note. ] 

° [Ovens cod év TH ‘Pwun mapa Te 
paraplw Tidre Aivp dv Sed€Earo Ta viv 
6 dgiouandpiotos KAhuns, 6 Mérpov Kat 
TlavAov a&kovoThs.—Epist. ad Mariam 
Cassob., cap. 4, opus spurium inter 
Op. S. Ignatii, apud Patr. Apost., tom. 
ii. pars 1. p. 103.] 


P [Ex quibus electum magnum plebique probatum 
Hac cathedra Petrus, qua sederal ipse, locatum 
Maxima Roma Linum primum considere jussit. 
Post quem Cletus et ipse gregem suscepit ovilis. 
Hujus Anacletus successor sorte locatus. 
Quem sequitur Clemens; is apostolicis bene notus. 
Incerti auctoris, libri v. adversus Marcionem, lib. iii. 
275—280. et ad caleem Op. Tertulliani, p. 635. ] 


9 [°Ouws 4 Tay ev ‘Pdun emokdrwr 
Siadoxh tabrny exer Thy GxoAovOlay’ Tlé- 
Tpos kal TlavAos, Aivos kal KAjjTos, KAf- 
pns.—S. Epiphan. adv. Heres., lib, i. 
tom, ii. Her. 27. cap. 6. Op. tom. i. 
p- 107, C.) 

* | Ergo cathedram unicam, que est 
prima de dotibus, sedit prior Petrus: 
cui successit Linus, Lino successit 
Clemens, Clementi Anacletus.—S. Op- 
tatus de Schism. Donat., lib. ii. cap. 3. 
Op. p. 28.] 

8 [ Petro enim successit Linus; Lino, 
Clemens; Clementi Anacletus, &c.— 
S. Aug. Epist. 53. (al. 165.) ad Gene- 


ze, &c. § 2. Op. tom. ii. col. 120, 


* [Ideo Linus et Cletus ante eum 
conscribuntur, eo quod ab ipso principe 
apostolorum ad ministerium sacerdotale 
exhibendum episcopi ordinatii—Anas- 

COSIN. 


tasius, ubi supr. ] 

4 [Natalis Sancti Clementis pape, 
qui tertius post beatum Apostolum 
pontificatum tenuit.—Mart. Rom. in 
diem, p. 516.—But Usuard., Mart. in 
diem, p. 694; Ado, de Festiv. SS. 
Apost., p. 826, F; Bede, Mart. in 
diem, in the common text, p. 853, make 
S. Clement fourth from S. Peter, linus 
being second, Cletus, or Anacletus, 
third. ] 

x [Vide Anastasius, ubi supr. p. 6. ] 

y [O6 (Tirov) kara Sevrepov Eros 
THs Bactrelas Aivos émloxoros THs ‘Pw-~ 
paiwy éxkAnolas SvoKatdexa Tv AetToup= 
ylav éviavtots Katacxmv, *AveyKAnTY 
Tabtny mapadl8wor.—Euseb. Hist. Ec- 
cles., lib. iii, cap. 13. p. 106. See 
also Euseb. Chronic. (Greece), lib, ii. 
p. 207. ed. Scaliger. } 


~ 


Ff 


THIRD 
SERIES. 





THIRD 


SERIES. 


434) NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


third year of Trajan, Nov. 23. Which is affirmed as certain 
by the agreeing testimonies of St. Jerom’, and the Martyr- 
ology*. Irenzus, lib. iii. cap. 3°, says that this Clement 
wrote potentissimas litteras ; Euseb., lib. iii. cap. 16°, that he 
wrote avery profitable epistle ; and St. Jerom4, that he wrote, 
in the name of the Roman Church, to the Church of Corinth. 
Catal. | 

30. St. Andrew.| He was martyred in Achaia, by the pro-| 
consul there. Prosper® (differing herein from all that wrote 
before him) says it was in Asia. Promiss. Dom. Temp., cap. 5. 





| 
DECEMBER. | 


27. St. John.] He was banished, in the 92nd year of his 
age, by Trajan, the third year of his reign. After Trajan’s 
death he returned to Ephesus, and lived 120 years, as Doro- 
theus! feigns. But see Eusebius’, in his Chronicon and His- 
tory, lib. iii. cap. 31, St. Jerom in his Catalogue‘, the Mar- 


tyrology*, and Isidore’. 


z [See above, p. 432, note i. ] 

@ [See above, p. 432, note g.] 

b [ém) robrou obv Tov KAfuevtos... 
eméoteirev H ev ‘Poun exxdAnola ixavw- 
TaTny ypaphy Tots KopiGiows.—S. Ire- 
nus, cont. Heres., lib, iii. cap. 3. § 3. 
Op. p. 176.] 

© [rovrou 5é obv Tod KAfhmevtos bpuo- 
Aoyounevn pla emicToAH déperat, pe- 
ydAn te Kal Oavpacta, hy as amd Tijs 
‘Pwualwy éxxanotas th KopiwOlwy d1e- 
Turéocato.—Euseb. Hist. Eccles., lib, 
iii. cap. 10. p. 107.] 

4 [Scripsit ex persona Romane Ec- 
clesiz ad Ecclesiam Corinthorium valde 
utilem epistolam.—S. Hieron. de Vir. 
Illust., cap. 15. Op. tom. ii. col, 839. ] 

© [Andreas et ceteri per totam’Asiam, 
Petrus et Paulus apostoli in urbe Roma 
gentium Ecclesiam (in qua Christi Do- 
mini doctrinam erudierunt) pacatam 
unamque posteris tradentes, sanguine, 
memoriisquesuis ex dominica Passione 
sacrarunt.—Lib. de Promissis et pre- 
dictionibus Dei, Dimidium Temporis, 
cap. 5. Opus Spur. ap. Op. S. Prosper. 
col. 192. B. in Append.] 

f (Joannes... post mortem Trajani 
reversus est ex insula Patmo, mansit- 
que Ephesi, ac vixit annos 120.—Do- 
rotheus, Synopsis de duodecim apo- 
stolis, ap. Bibl. Patr. Max., tom. iii. 
p. 426, H.] 

& [Tov 5 "Iwdvvov, Ta mev TOD xpdvov 


H5n mws elpnrat.—Euseb. Hist. Eccles., 
lib. iii. cap. 31. ap. Hist. p. 125. ém 
TovTos Kate Thy Actay eri 7G Bip Twept- 
Aerméuevos, avtds éxeivos bv Hydra 6 
"Inoows, dréaTtoAos Suod Kal evayyeAto= 
THs, lwdvyns Tas avTwoO Sietwev ExxAn- 
cias, awd THS KaTa Thy vnooy meTa THY 
Aopetiavod TeAcuTI emaveAOav pvyijs. 
—Idem, ibid., lib, iii. cap. 23. p. 112. 
GAAG Kal H ev ’Edéow éxxAnola brd 
TladAov pév TeOeueAtwuévn "Iwdvvov 8é 
mapauelvaytos a’tots uexpl tev Tpai- 
avod xpdévwv, udptus a&AnOhs ear THs 
Tov and adroctéAwy mapaddcews,—Ire- 
nzus, ap. eundem. Ibid.] 

h [Plwdvyny tov dardorodor, kal ebary- 
yeAuorhv pexpl tev Tpaiavod xpdvev 
mapapetva: TE Bly Eipnvaios toropet.— 
Euseb. Chronic., lib. ii. A.D. 101. 
Regni Trajan. 3. p. 209. ed. Scaliger. 
Greece. | 

i (Quarto decimo igitur anno in 
Patmos insulam_ relegatus, scripsit 
Apocalypsim. Sub Nerva principe re- 
dit Ephesum, ibique usque ad Traja- 
num principem perseverans totas Asiz 
fundavit rexitque Ecclesias et confec- 
tus senio—sexagesimo octavo post 
passionem Domini mortuus juxta ean- 
dem urbem sepultus est.—S. Hieron. 
de Vir. Illust., cap. 9. Op. tom. ii. col. 
851.] 

k [Apud Ephesum natalis sancti 
Joannis Apostoli et Evangelist, qui 





ON THE HOLYDAYS. 435 


These to be observed for holydays, &c.| The remembrance 
of the birth, the passion, the resurrection, the ascension of 
Christ; the coming of the Holy Ghost, the conversion of 
the Gentiles, by sending the blessed apostles, &c.; as it is 
a powerful means to train the more ignorant sort in the 
understanding such great mysteries, so it is a most just 
occasion for all sorts to make that a special time of serving 
God, upon which we renew and solemnize these His won- 
derful works of grace to us. And it is well known, that 
when Christ was upon the earth, the Jew’s kalendars had 
divers solemnities, more than Moses appointed, and that 
Christ observed them; whereby we may be sure, that He 
allowed and commended the institution of religious festivals 
in the Church. 

And no other.| And yet in the table for Proper Lessons 
divers other days; as St. Paul’s Conversion, and St. Bar- 
naby’s-day, besides the four days before Easter, are ranked 
under the title of holydays; and afterwards, special collects, 
epistles, and gospels are appointed both for all of them, and 
some other days, (as Ash-Wednesday, and the Monday and 
Tuesday before Easter,) which are read only now upon holy- 
days: so that to save a contradiction, here seems to want 
some amendment ; especially, when this statute for holydays™ 
was made before the statute of uniformity, which authorizes 
this whole book, and repeals all statutes and ordinances that 
vary from it, 


THE ORDER WHERE MORNING AND EVENING PRAYER 
SHALL BE READ. 


The order where Morning and Evening Prayer shall be 
used and said.| In the first book of Edw. VI." the priest 
“was appointed to say the Morning and Evening Prayer in 


post evangelii scriptionem, post exilii 
relegationem, et apocalypsim divinam 
usque ad Trajani principis tempore 
perseverans, totius Asiz fundavit rexit- 
que ecclesias.—Martyrol. Rom. in 
diem, p. 563.—The others, with Ado, 
(de Festiv. SS. Apost. p. 824, E, F.) 
are to the same effect. ] 

1 [Hic anno lxviii. post passionem 


Domini Salvatoris, sub Trajano prin- 
cipe, longeevo vetustate senio fessus 
...» requievit. Quievit autem apud 
Ephesum.—Isidor. Hispal. de Vita et 
Morte Sanctorum, cap. 73. Op. p. 365, 
F.] 
m [See above, p. 19, note c.] 

[See above, p. 227, and note m, 
there, ] 


Ff2 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


ie and’? 


Nicholls. ] 


436 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


the choir, the people remaining in the church, as aforetimes 
it had been accustomed; for the choir was built for the 
priests, and for that purpose that divine prayer might be 
celebrated and performed by them in it. Against this order, 
there was exception taken by Bucer; who upon Calvin’s: 
complaint, that matters were not then reformed among us 
as they should be, as appears by his epistle to the Protector, 
the Duke of Somerset, Epist. 87°, and to Cranmer?, [was] 
intreated to give his censure upon that Service-book then in 
use, and therein the Act of Parliament, 2 Edw. VI., that 
authorized it; and there was nothing but what was conso- 
nant to the Word of God, and the purity of the Christian 
religion, and which Alesius4, in his Proem, saith was sent 
from heaven; and which Mr. Fox’, in his Monuments, saith 
was agreeable to Scripture, and the primitive Church. All 
which notwithstanding, Calvin’ in foto et solido, and Bucer‘ 
for some particulars only, was of another mind: of which 
particulars this was one, and the first thing in the book 
against which he excepted; alleging, “‘'That it was an anti- 
Christian practice for the choir to be severed from the rest 
of the church, and for the prayers there only to be said, 
which pertained to the people as well as to the clergy; that 
the separation of the choir from the body of the church 
served for nothing else, but to get the clergy some respect 
above the laity, as if they were nearer to God than laymen 
are: that a pernicious superstition was thereby maintained, 
as if priests alone were able to procure God’s favour, by 
reading and reciting a few prayers: that in the ancient 





° [Calvini Epist. ad Protectorem 
Angliz, Oct. 22, 1548, Epistole et 
Responsa, p.40. This letter was written 
before the English Service-book, exeept 
the Order for the Holy Communion, 
was published. ] 

P {Id. Epist. ad Cranmerium, p. 40, 
A.D. 1551, ibid., p. 61, 62. ] 

4 [Hic liber, . . . hoc tempore divi- 
nitus oblatus esse videbatur.—Proe- 
mium Al. Alesii, prefixed to his trans- 
lation of the Service-book, Lipsii, 1551. 
Et ap. Buceri Scripta Anglicana, 
p- 375. ] 

* [The king and his council ap- 
pointed certain “having as well an 
eye and respect unto the most sincere 
and pure Christian religion, taught by 


the Holy Scriptures, as also to the 
usages of the primitive Church, to 
draw and make one convenient’ Order 
of Common Prayer; ‘who after most 
godly and learned conferences, through 
the aid of the Holy Ghost, with one 
uniform agreement did conclude, set 
forth, &c., A Book of the Common 
Prayer,’’ &c.—Fox, Acts and Monu- 
ments, book ix. p. 9. (ad ann. 1549.) 
Lond. 1684. ] 

® [See above, note p. Calvin only 
objected in that letter to some parti- 
cular points, especially to the comme- 
moration of the departed, and the use 
of chrism. ] 

t [See below, passim. ] 


ON THE RULES BEFORE MORNING PRAYER. 437 


times of the Church, their temples were built in a round 
form, and not in a long figure, as ours are; and that the 
|place for the clergy was always in the midst of those 
‘temples; and that therefore this custom of the division of 
churches from chancels, and of the priest’s saying service in 
them, was an unsufferable abuse, to be forthwith amended, 
if the whole kingdom would not be guilty of high-treason 
‘against God'.” | 
This was his declamatory censure of the Church’s custom 
in those times, concerning chancels, and the performance of 
divine service there: and he prevailed so far by it, that in 
the fifth year of King Edward there were very many altera- 
tions made in the former Service-book, which the Duke of 
Somerset, the Protector, got to be confirmed in parliament ; 
among which alterations, this was the first, that the Morning 
and Evening Prayer should be used in such place of the 
church, chapel, or chancel; and that the minister should so 
turn him (for before he kneeled or stood, save when he read 
the Lessons with his face towards the altar) as the people 
might best hear’. Notwithstanding which condescension, 
it was then likewise ordered, that if there were any contro- 
versy about it, it should be referred to the ordinary of the 
place, or his deputy; and that the chancels should still re- 
main, as they had done in times past. 
There arose great contentions about this alteration; some 
kneeling one way, and some another, but not removing out 
of the chancel; others leaving that accustomed place, and 
performing all their service among the people in the body of 
the church. For the appeasing of which strife and diversity 
it was now thought fit, that in our book, when they came to 





« [Ut autem chorus sit tam procul 
sejunctus a reliquo templo, et in eo tan- 
tum sacra represententur que tamen 
ad omnem pertinent populum, clerum- 
que, antichristianum est. Chori tanta 
a reliquo templo sejunctio, eo servit, ut 
Ministri, qualicunque fide sint et vita, 

ipso tamen ordine et loco habeantur 
quasi Deo propinquiores quam laici; 
et qui possint his placare Deum vi ex- 
ternorum operum, que faciunt sibi 
propria, cum sint totius populi Christi. 
Quod vero in choro tantum sacra illa 
_ communia peraguntur, quia confirmatur 


eo superstitio illa perniciosissima, qua 
gratus Deo cultus putatur legere, reci- 
tare, atque audire Scripturas et preces 
sine mente, sine intellectu fidei. 

Hi ergo tam alieno ab instituto 
Christi ritus, ut quibus intoleranda sit 
Deo contumelia, debent quamprimum 
et seyerissime corrigi; alioqui totum 
regnum se lese Divine Majestatis 
obstringit.— Buceri Censura, cap. 1, 
ap. Scripta Anglicana, p. 457. | 

Y | Rubric in the Book of Common 
Prayer, 1552. ] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 





438 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


reduce the English service into the Church again, the rubric” 
should be corrected, and put into this form wherein we have | 
it: that Morning and Evening Prayer should be used in the - 
place accustomed, (that must be before the fifth of Edward *; 
for a year and an half after, which was all the time that 
the second rubric lasted, could not beget a custom,) yet 
referring it to the bishop to order it otherwise, if he saw 
cause so to do. But that the priest should here turn him- 
self to the people, (as he is to do after, when he reads the | 
Lessons to them,) they made no order, nor thought fit to 
continue the former order in that particular. 

And though the Act of Uniformity doth not specify this 
alteration, or receding from the form of the fifth of Edw. VI., 
yet, because it concerns not the things themselves, that are 
to be done, but the manner only, and the resolving of doubts, 
how they shall be done, it was referred to the power of the 
bishops, both by the preface in the last paragraph of it, and 
by this rubric itself, to order as they thought meet; and so | 
they did. 

Such ornaments, &c.¥| Without which (as common reason — 
and experience teaches us,) the Majesty of Him that owneth 
it, and the work of His service there, will prove to be of a 
very common and low esteem. The particulars of these 
ornaments (both of the church and of the ministers thereof, 
as in the end of the Act of Uniformity,) are referred not to ~ 
the fifth of Edw. VI., as the service itself is in the beginning — 
of that Act, for in that fifth year were all ornaments taken — 
away, (but a surplice only,) both from bishops and priests, — 
and all other ministers, and nothing was left for the church, — 
but a font, a table, and a linen cloth upon it, (at the time of - 
the Communion only,) but to the second year of that king, — 
when his Service-book and Injunctions were in force by 
authority of parliament. And in those books many other 
ornaments are appointed; as, two lights to be set upon the — 
altar or communion-table, a cope or vestment for the priest 
and for the bishop, besides their albs, surplices, and rochets, 





‘ 

7 

x [Rubric in the Book of Common note, see the two former series on the — 
Prayer, 1560, and ever since. ] same points, and the references and ex- — 
y [For the Rubrics, Injunctions, and tracts, pp. 43, 44, 230—233. ] 4 
Acts of Parliament referred to in this 











ON THE RULES BEFORE MORNING PRAYER. 439 


the bishop’s crosier-staff, to be holden by him at his minis- 


tration and ordinations; and those ornaments of the church, 
which by former laws, not then abrogated, were in use, by 
virtue of the statute 25 Henry VIII.*, and for them the pro- 
vincial constitutions are to be consulted, such as have not 
been repealed, standing then in the second year of King 
Edw. VI., and being still in force by virtue of this rubric and 
act of parliament. 

-That which is to be said for these vestures and ornaments, 
in solemnizing the service of God, is, that they were ap- 
pointed for inward reverence to that work, which they make 
outwardly solemn. All the actions of esteem in the world 
are so set forth, and the world hath had trial enough, that 
those who have made it a part of their religion to fasten 
scorn upon such circumstances, have made no less to deface 
and disgrace the substance of God’s public service. 

Such ornaments as were in use in the second year of King 
Edward VI.) In that year, by the authority of parliament, 
was this order set forth, in the end of the Service-book then 
appointed. At Morning and Evening Prayer, the adminis- 
tration of baptism, the burial of the dead, &c. in parish- 
churches, the minister shall put upon him a surplice; in 
cathedral and collegiate churches, and in colleges, the arch- 
deacons, deans, presidents and masters, may use the orna- 
ments also belonging to their degrees and dignities. But 
in all other places it shall be free for them whether they 
will use any surplice or not. The bishop administering the 
Lord’s Supper, and celebrating the Sacraments, shall wear 
a rochet or alb, with a cope or vestment; and he shall have 
also his pastoral staff. And before the Communion, upon 
the day appointed for the celebration of the Lord’s Supper, 
the priest having on him an alb, with a vestment or cope, 
shall stand at the altar; and where there be many priests 


[The following is the last section 
of the Act 25 Hen. VIII. c. 19, which 
enacts the revision of the Canon Law 
by thirty-two commissioners to be ap- 
pointed by the crown: “ Provided also 
that such canons, constitutions, ordi- 
nances and synodals provincial being 
already made, which be not contrariant, 
nor repugnant to the laws, statutes and 
customs of this realm, nor to the damage 


or hurt of the king’s prerogative royal, 
shall now still be used and executed as 
they were afore the making of this Act, 
till such time as they be viewed, search- 
ed or otherwise ordered and determined 
by the said two and thirty persons, or 
tlhe more part of them, according to the 
tenor, form and effect of this present 
Act’? 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 
- SERiES. 


440 NOTES ON THE ROOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


and deacons, so many of them as be needful shall help the 
chief minister, having albs’or tunicles upon them. 

These ornaments and vestures of the ministers were so dis- 
pleasing to Calvin* and Bucer?®, that the one in his letters 
to the Protector, and the other in his censure of the liturgy, 
sent to Archbishop Cranmer, urged very vehemently to have 
them taken away, not thinking it tolerable, that we should 
have any thing common with the papists, but shew forth our 
Christian liberty, in the simplicity of the gospel. 

Hereupon, when a parliament was called, in the fifth year 
of King Edward, they altered the former book, and made 
another order, for vestments, copes, and albs not to be worn 
at all; allowing an archbishop, and a bishop, a rochet only, 
and a priest or deacon to wear nothing but a surplice. 

But by the Act of Uniformity the parliament thought fit, 
not to continue this last order, but to restore the first again ; 
which since that time was never altered by any other law, 
and therefore it is still in force at this day. 

And both bishops, priests and deacons, that knowingly 
and wilfully break this order, are as hardly censured in the 
preface to this book concerning ceremonies, as ever Calvin 
or Bucer censured the ceremonies themselves. Among other 
ornaments of the church also then in use, in the second 
year of Edw. VI.° there were two lights appointed by his 
injunctions (which the parliament had authorized him to 
make, and whereof otherwhiles they made mention, as ac- 
knowledging them to be binding,) to be set upon the high- 
altar, as a significant ceremony of the light which Christ’s 
Gospel brought into the world; and this at the same time, 
when all other lights and tapers superstitiously set before 
images, were by the same Injunctions, with many other 
absurd ceremonies and superfluities, taken away’. These 
lights were (by virtue of this present rubric, referring to 


* (See above, p. 436, noteo. The modis omnibus, nihil esse nobis com- 








vestments and ornaments are not men- 
tioned specially in this letter; but see 
below, Letter to Knox, note f, and 
p- 306, notes m, n. ] 

» [ Has opto vestes tolli, non quod 
credam in-.ipsis quicquam esse impii 
per se.... sed, &c. consentaneum est 

_ adspirare nos’... ad simplicitatem 
Christi et apostolorum ; tum testari 


mune cum illis, ae ideo minime om- 
nium cum Romanensibus Antichristis, 
libertatem denique Christianam, qui- 
busvis in rebus preeclare tueri et pre 
nobis ferre.—Bucer. Censura, ubi supr. 
p. 458. ] 

* [See above, p. 231, note q. ] 

4 [See above, ibid. } 





ON THE RULES BEFORE MORNING PRAYER. 441 


what was in use in the second of Edw. VI.) afterwards con- 
tinued in all the queen’s chapels, during her whole reign ; 
and so are they in the king’s, and in many cathedral 
churches, besides the chapels of divers noblemen, bishops, 
and colleges to this day. 

It was well known, that the Lord-treasurer Burleigh (who 
was no friend to superstition or popery) used them con- 
stantly in his chapel, with other ornaments of fronts, palls 
and books, upon his altar. The like did Bishop Andrewes®, 
who was a man who knew well what he did, and as free from 
popish superstition as any in the kingdom besides. In the 
latter end of King Edward’s time they used them in Scot- 
land itself, as appears by Calvin’s Epistle to Knox, and his 
fellow-reformers there, anno 1554, Ep. 206‘, where he takes 
exception against them, for following the custom of Eng- 
land. 

To this head we refer the organ, the font, the altar, the 
communion-table, and the pulpit, with the coverings and 
ornaments of them all; together with the paten, chalice, and 
corporas, which were all in use in the second of Edw. VI. by 
the authority of the acts of parliament then made. . 


At the beginning both of Morning and likewise of Evening 
Prayer, the minister shall read with a loud voice one of the 
sentences, &c. And then that which follows.| These, with 
the confession and absolution, (as preparatory to the ser- 
vice which was to follow, and in imitation of the Church in 
all ages before, which after this manner of confession and 
absolution began their divine service,) were added in the fifth 
year of Edw. VI., omitted in the second year. 

In the primitive Church, most parts of the service were 
referred to be done by inferior ministers: they had such as 
read the lessons, lectores, such as sung the psalms and 
hymns, cantores; and a great part of the prayers were said 
by the deacons. 


® [See the plan of Bp. Andrewes’ plus «quo esse patria addictos..... 
Chapel. Minor English Works, p. Certe luminaria, cruces, et ejus farinz 
X¢Vil..| nugas ex superstitione manasse, nemo, 


f [Conquesti apud me amici quidam __ ut arbitror, sano judicio praditus ne- 
fuerunt, vos ita precise ceremonias  garet.—J. Calvinus Cnoxo et gregali- 
Anglicas urgere, ut satis constaret vos bus; Epistole, p. 98. ] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


4.42 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


With a loud voice.| Ut mentes audientium ad majorem 
animt compunctionem, et ad reddendam Domino gloriam exci- 
tentur. Just. in Novell. de Eccl, Diversis®. 

Yet ought we most chiefly so to do, when we assemble, &c.] 
S. Chrys. de Incomprehens. Dei Natura*. Non eque exoras, 
cum solus Dominum obsecras, atqgue cum fratribus tuis. Est 
enim hoc plus aliquid, videlicet concordia, conspiratio, copula 
amoris et charitatis, et sacerdotum clamores. Praesunt enim 
ob eam rem sacerdotes, ut popult orationes, que infirmiores 
per se sunt, validiores illas complexe simul in coelum evehan- 
tur: that they being the stronger sort, may take with them 
the weaker prayers of the people, and carry them up into 
heaven. Idem in Ep. 2. ad Thess. Hom. 4‘. Quod quis apud 
seipsum precatus accipere non poterit, hoc cum multitudine 
precatus accipiet. - 

To set forth, &c., to hear and to ask, &c.| The particulars 
of that work, which is to be done at the religious assemblies 
of Christians, and the same of the whole service following, 
the psalms, lessons, and the prayers. The same hath Ter- 
tullian* expressed to have been the business of the primitive 
Christians, at their assemblies, de Anim. cap.9. Prout Scrip- 
ture leguntur, aut psalmi canuntur, aut adlocutiones profe- 
runtur, aut petitiones delegantur. Tert., Apol., cap. 39!, and in 
Justin Martyr, 2 Apol.™, where they tell what the Christians 





& [Ad hee jubemus omnes episcopos 
et presbyteros non in secreto, sed cum 
ea voce que a fidelissimo populo ex- 
audiatur, divinam oblationem et pre- 
cationem que fit in sancto baptizmate 
facere, utinde mentes, &c.—(Justiniani) 
Authent. Collat. ix. tit. 20. Novell. 137. 
cap. 6. ap. Corp. Jur. Civ. ] 

h [odx obras akobn Kara cavToy Ty 
Seomdrny mapaKarav, os weTa TOV Ader- 
Pav Tav car, évTavOa yap earl TL TA€ov, 
oiov 7 dudvoia kal h cuudwvia, Kal rijs 
aydrns 6 obvSerpuos, Kad ai Ta iepéwv 
evxal. 51d yap TovTo of iepets mpoeoTh- 
kaow, tva ai Tou mAnOovs edxal aobeve- 
orepat ovoat, Tav Svvarwrépwy ToUTwY 
émiAaBduevat, 6uod cuvavéAwow airais 
eis toy ovpavdv.—S. Chrysost. De In- 
comprehens, Dei Natura, Hom. iii. § 6. 
Op. tom. i. p. 469, C.] 

i (d yap Ka éautdv tis edxduevos 
AaBety od Strata, ToOUTO peTa TOU TAH- 
Bovs edxdmevos Aferat.—S. Chrysost. 
in 2 Epist. Thess., cap. 3. Hom. iv. § 4. 
Op. tom. ii. p. 535, B.] 


k [Tertullian. de Anima, cap. 9. Op. 
p- 270, A.] 

1 (Coimus ad Deum, quasi manu 
facta precationibus ambiamus.... 
Coimus ad literarum divinarum com- 
memorationem, si quid preesentium tem- 
porum qualitas aut premonere cogit 
aut recognoscere. Certe fidem sanctis 
vocibus pascimus, spem erigimus, fidu- 
ciam figimus, disciplinam preceptorum 
nihilominus inculcationibus densamus, 
—Tertullian. Apolog., cap. 39. Op. 
p- 31, A.] 

m [kal TH Tov HAlov Aeyouervn Tuepa, 
mdvrwv Kata models 2) &ypous mevovtwy 
ouvéAcvois ylyvetat Kal Ta d&rouynuo- 
vevmata Tay amooTéAwy, 2) TA OVyypau- 
Mata Tav mpopnTev avayryvéonerat 
méxpis eyxwpet. Elta mavoauévov tov 
avaryryveoKovtos, 6 mpoeatas 51a Adyou 
Thy vov0eciay Kal mpdxAnow Tis TaY 
Kad@v TobTwY pinhoews woretrau. *Ewerra 
avicrducba Kowh mavres, Kal edxas 
wéumouev® Kal @s Tpoépynucy Tavoa- 
Méevev jay Tis evxis, &pros mpoode- 


Ye, 


Pema Moe eo ee ee ee 











ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER. 4.43 


did at their assemblies, the particulars being near the same. Turrp 
And all these are substantial parts of that work for which 522% 
we go to church; all of them principals, none of them. 
accessories in it; which by the nature of the work and the 
primitive custom of the Church, is not to while out the time 
till the congregation be assembled (as we know where reading 
of chapters and singing of psalms are used for no other pur- 
pose). Nor are the prayers of the Church, in the main in- 
tent of them, either to usher in the sermon, or to leave an 
impression of it in men’s minds afterwards; but an entire 
service of itself. 

Confession and general absolution before Morning Prayer. | 
In which confession, we remember our daily offences in 
general; and there is no means so powerful to obtain par- 
don for them, as the daily prayers of the Church to that 
purpose; so that the course which our Church here pre- 
scribeth, for the pardon of our daily offences, being put in 
practice, what can be more just, more due than to declare, 
that forgiveness and absolution, which those that are (as they 
pretend to be) penitent for those sins, do obtain? What 
more comfortable, than to hear the news of it from his 
mouth, by whom the Church ministereth these offices ? 
What more seasonable, than to do this before we come 
to give God His solemn praise and honour in our public 
service, that we may be assured He accepts of the same at 
our hands? In which respect, we cannot but prefer the 
order of the Church of England, before the other Reformed 
Churches, who have no absolution, nor no confession neither, 
but after the psalms and lessons (which is all the service that 
they have) be done, and the preacher goes up into the pulpit; 
which gives the people occasion to think, that all their ser- 
vice before is to spin out their time only till the preacher 
comes, rather than to give God any homage or service at 
all. Whereas the solemn beginning of our service with 
confession and absolution, serves to put the people in mind, 
that all which follows is the solemn service of Almighty God, 
pera: kat ofvos Kal bSwp* Kaldmpocoras éexdor@ ylyverat Kat Tots ob mapodor Sid 
evxas duolws Kal ebxapiotias, bon Siva- Tav Ssiandvwv mwéurera.—S. Justin. 
pus abr@, dvaméuret, kal 6 Aads Emevpn- Mart., Apol. 1. (al; Apol. 2.) § 67. Op. 


Met Aéyov 7Td’duhv' Kal 7H Siddoo1s kat p. $3, D.] 
 meTdAn Wis ard TeV cdxXapioTnIEevTwY 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


444 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


preparing them to that attention of mind, and devotion of 
spirit, which they owe to it, and which is requisite to make 
it acceptable. 

Confession to be said by the whole congregation kneeling.| 
The old fashion of the Christians, at their service of prayers, 
was (as Tertullian in his Apol. cap. 39™. describeth it) to pray 
with hands erect and stretched out, therein protesting their 
innocency; to be bare-headed, therein professing that they 
were not ashamed : manibus expansis quia innocuis, capite nudo 
quia non erubescimus; hereby taxing the Gentiles, whose 
custom it was to cover both hands and faces at their prayers, 
which he interpreteth a confession of guilt in the hands, and 
an acknowledgment of shame in the face; as if they were 
afraid and ashamed of what they were about. 

It was, and is still a general order in all Churches, to 
begin their service with confession of sins; which order 
Morney” laboureth to derive from the ancient practice of 
the synagogue first, and consequently of the primitive 
Church. Aut. de Card. Op. apud Cypr.° Hierarcha confi- 
denter orat pro sua et populi ignorantia, recolens pudibundi 
et contritt animi confessionem, que prevalente peccato deli- 
querunt. S. Basil, Ep. 63». “ We rise in the morning, make 
confession, and then sing psalms.” 

We use this as an entrance and preparation to the service 
of God, because if our confession be such, as it must be pre- 
sumed to be, it is the only sufficient disposition, to make our 
service acceptable to Him. A confession (but not the like) 
is used in the beginning of the breviary and mass, which 
condemns our Church no more than all other Reformed 
Churches that use it; but the ancient Church, from which 
we took it, used it before them all. 

Absolution (or remission of sins).| Added by order from 
the Conference at Hampton-Court4, for the satisfaction of 





m (Tertullian. Apol., cap. 30. Op. 
p- 27, B.] 

" (Mornayus P. de Sacra Eucharistia, 
lib. i. cap. 3. p. 49. ed. Hanov. 1605. ] 

° (Tractatus de Cardinalibus Op. 
Christi (de Coena Domini) opus spu- 
rium ad cale. Op, S. Cypr., p. 42.] 

P [é« vunrds yap dp0pife map’ juiv 
6 Aadbs em roy olkov THs mpocevxis, Kal 
év wévy Kar OAler Kal ouvoxf daxpdwv 


ekouodroyovmevor TH eg, TeAevTatov 
ekavaotdyres TGV Mpocevxay, eis THY 
WaruwSiav cabioravrat.—sS. Basil., Ep. 
207. (alit. Ep. 63.) § 3. Op. tom. iii. 
p- 311, B.} 

4 [See Barlow’s Summe and Sub- 
stance of the Conferences, in Cardwell’s 
History of Conferences, &c., pp. 173, 
174, 205, and the King’s Letter to the 
Abp. of Canterbury and the Commis- 





ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER. 445 


them that took exception against the word absolution, as 
being of too popish a sound. 

The people shall answer Amen.| The ancient doctors of 
the Hebrews have this saying, that whosoever sayeth Amen 
with all his might, the gate of the garden of Eden is opened 
unto him; Musar., cap. 4. And in the same manner of 
speech Maimonides describeth their Morning Service, cap. 9. 
n. 1% “And the people answer, Amen, Be His great name 
blessed for ever, and to all everlastings, with all their might.” 
So saith St. Jerome’, that the sound of their Amen in the 
primitive Church-service was so great, as it came forth like 
a noise of thunder. 


And our mouth shall shew forth Thy praise.| This is the 
answer of all the people. In the second book of Edw. VI. 
the word ‘Choir’ is everywhere put for our word ‘Answer :’ 
and by making this answer, they promise here and undertake 
for themselves, that they will not sit still to hear the psalms 
and hymns read only to them, as matter of their instruction; 
but that they will bear a part in them with the priest, and 
keep up the old custom still of singing, and answering verse 
by verse, as being specially appointed for the setting forth 
of God’s praise; whereunto they are presently invited again 
by the minister in these words, “Praise ye the Lord.” So that 
our manner of singing by sides, or all together, or in several 
parts, or in the people’s answering the priest in repeating 
the psalms and hymns, is here grounded; but if the minister 
say all alone, in vain was it for God’s people to promise God, 
and to say, that their mouth also should shew forth His 
praise. 

As it was in the beginning, &c.| This was added to Gloria 
Patrit, which was only used before, to meet with the poison 
of Arius, who said there was a beginning of time, before 
Christ had any beginning. The like hath been said, of 
taking up the custom to put in De? gratia into the style and 


sioners for Causes Ecclesiastical, ibid., 8 [Romane plebis laudatur fides... 
p- 218. (from Rymer, Foedera, vol.xvi. ubisic ad similitudinem ceelestis toni- 
‘p. 565).] trus Amen reboat, et vacua idolorum 


r (Maimonides, Manus fortis or templa quatiuntur?—S. Hierom. Pref. 
Mischneh Torah, pars prima, lib. ii, in Lib. ii. Comment. in Galat. Op. 
art. 2. de precibus et benedictione sa- tom. vii. col. 427, 428. ] 
cerdotali, cap. 9. n. 1.] * [See above, p. 48, note 1.] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 
SERIES, 





44.6 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


title of kings and emperors, to meet with the poison of Pela- 
gius, who was a great opposer of the grace of God. 

Praise ye the Lord.| It was before the second of Edw. VI., 
Laus tibi Domine; and from Easter to Trinity-Sunday, Alle- 
lujah. 


Then shall be said or sung, Venite, §c.| The word “said” 
is added in the fifth of Edw. VI.* ; 

And then shall follow certain psalms in order.| The 
setting forth of God’s worship and praise in psalms, is that 
part of moral and perpetual service, the order whereof was 
most particularly set down in the Old Testament in Solo- 
mon’s temple. As the sacrifice was burning upon the altar, 
and the wine poured out upon it in the inward court, which 
was their ceremonial and figurative service; in the meantime, 
the Levites stood upon their pulpits in the outward courts, 
where the people, men and women, were licensed to come, 
singing the psalms of God’s praises, which was their moral 
service of it, to last for ever. Other parts of the service are 
not there remembered ; not but that many others were done, 
but to let the world know, that the psalms of God’s praises, 
for the ordinary practice whereof such express order was 
taken and remembered, was not to be reckoned of by the 
by, but as a main part of God’s public service. And this 
was not the personal service of the Levites alone, but of the 
whole congregation of God’s people assembled there, which 
made His praise to be the more glorious; and was there- 
fore so much the more acceptable to Him, when the people 
joined together with the Levites to set it forth. Therefore, 
according to King David’s example, and others inspired by 
the Holy Ghost, the Church here hath appointed this first 
psalm, as an invitatory to stir up the affections of the whole 
congregation to that work, which they perform in some 
places by answering alternately, and in others by singing 
one side of the choir after another. 

Then shall be read the first Lesson of the Old Testament, &c.] 
This is one principal part of the public service of the Church 
appointed, according to the moral, not any ceremonial ser- 
vice of God among the Jews. The law of Moses for that 


t [It is “said or sung” in both books; Cosin was misled by the Latin.] 





ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER. 44.7 


THIRD 


purpose was distinguished into divisions, answerable to the Q 
ERIES. 


number of weeks in the year, that it might begin and end 
with it. And afterwards we find an order of reading the law 
in public, as ancient as Nehemiah’s time. And for the Neh viii. 
lessons of the Prophets we know, that Christ took one of esha 
them for the subject of His sermon at Nazareth, as His 17, 19.] 
apostle did at Antioch, when he stood up after the reading oe 
of the law and the prophets. | 40.) 
The minister that readeth the Lesson standing, and turning 
him so as he may be best heard, &c.| Here he is appointed to 
turn him; therefore, before he reads the lesson, he is supposed 
to stand, and to be turned with his face another way. It is 
a circumstance observable, that at all the services in the old 
synagogues, (from whom the Christian Churches at first took 
their pattern,) the reading of the Law and other Scriptures 
was done by the priest, with his face turned to the people 
as they sat; so did our Lord in the synagogue at Nazareth, 
Luke iv. 16. But the prayers were read by him whom they 
called the apparitor of the synagogue, (correspondent to the 
‘deacon or minister in the Christian Church,) with his back to 
the people, and his face to the ark, representing the majesty 
and presence of God. Maimonides of Prayer, cap. 8. n. 11". 
In the Misna he is called, “ He that cometh down before the 
ark.’ So are (or were) the prayers or litanies used to be 
read in the Church of England. 
Minister that readeth the Lesson standing.|. In the Consti- 
tutions of the Apostles, c. 58’, it is ordered, ‘ Let the people, 
by the deacon’s direction, sit with all quietness and good 
order; and let the women also sit apart, keeping silence ; 
then let the reader stand on high and read,” &c. 
After the first Lesson shall follow (2 Edw. VI., shall be 
sung”) Te Deum laudamus daily throughout the year.| But 
it was in that first book appointed, that the Song of the 
Three Children should be sung in the time of Lent*, instead 
of the Te Deum, and never else; now it is left free to be 
sung any day. 


-™ (Maimonides, Manus fortis or 
Mischneh Torah, pars prima, lib. ii. 
art. 2. de precibus et benedictione sa- 
cerdotali, cap. 8. n. 11.] 

v [mpdvora de rodTwy eis Td erepov 
Lépos of Aatkol naleCecOwoary pera maans 
hovxlas nal edratiass Kal af yuvatkes 


kexwpiopevens kal abra KabeCérOwoar 
cwriv &yovea.—Constitut. Apostol., 
lib. ii. cap. 47. apud Concilia, tom. i. 
col. 294, E. | 

w (It is in the English “ shall fol- 
low.” | 

x [See above, p. 65.] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


448 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


After the second Lesson shall be used and said (Edw. VI1.y, 
per totum annum canitur) Benedictus in English, as followeth. | 
Or the 100th Psalm, which was not appointed before the 
fifth year of Edw. VI. And here those words “as followeth” 
are specially to be noted; as likewise before Magnificat and 
Nunc dimittis, that the metre-psalms, which were not in 
being when these rubrics were made, may not (as the use is 
in divers places) thrust out the service here appointed in the 
book, whereof those metre-psalms are no part, nor were ever 
yet suffered to be printed with it. 


Then shall be said the Creed by the minister and people 
standing.| The Creed was pronounced by the whole con- 
gregation; and it was a very ancient custom to do so, as 
appears by a passage in the Commentaries that go under 
St. Ambrose’s name. 1 Cor. xi. 5%. Prophetari autem est, 
adventum fore Domini voce Symboli post orationem effari. 
«To pronounce in the words of the Creed,” &c. But I believe 
he means the other solemn Creed said after the Collect and 
the Gospel; for before that, I do not find that this Creed 
was from the beginning any part of the Church-service. 

The Holy Catholic Church, the Communion of Sainis.] 
Which in the first place, is to be understood of that Church 
and those saints which framed these articles of the Creed, 
for all Churches that were to succeed them. And truly, the 
consideration of the primitive and apostolic Church, (as it is 
called in the other Creed,) and the precedent of it, pre- 
scribeth two things. 

The first is general, as it is a Church; and all Churches 
make one Church, by acknowledging and maintaining union 
and communion with the Churches that have been in other 
ages before us, as well as with the Churches that are in other 
countries, without substantial difference of belief or prac- 
tice. 

The Donatists in old time, as St. Austin chargeth them, 
fell foul upon the article of the Catholic Church, because 
they acknowledged no Church but their own, but thought 

y [Post alteram lectionem per totum Alex. Ales. edit., Lips. 1551, fol. 12, 
annum canitur Hymnus Zacharie, Be-_ B. 
nedictus Dominus Deus Israelis. — » [Comment. in 1 Cor. Opus spur, 


(King Edw. VI.’s first Prayer-Book in inter. Op. S. Ambros,, tom, ii. Append. 
Latin,) Ordinat, Eccles, seu Minist. ab col. 147, D.] 





\ 


ON THE ORDER FOR MORNING PRAYER. 449 


Wii 


it had failed in all other countries, by communicating with 
_ the Church of Africa, from which, as from a corrupted Church, 
i they had separated themselves. Much more foul must he 
F needs fall upon that article, that shall think the Church 
‘perished almost as soon as it was instituted; and therefore 
renounceth and disclaimeth in his practice, that which was 
used in the first ages. 
_ To maintain this communion, it is not necessary we com- 
mand, but it is necessary that we tolerate all that was then 
in practice, and condemn not any thing. Though we think 
some things may be amended at this time, we must not think 
any thing was pernicious at that time. Which concerns all 
those who think, that they cannot detest the corruptions of 
the Church of Rome enough, till they involve the primitive 
Church, and whatsoever is done upon the precedent of it, in 
the ‘same imputation; which if we should do, then were we 
-as true schismatics, as they of the Church of Rome would 
have us. 

The second is more particular, as it was the Church pri- 
nitive, and near the fountain. That which was then in 
practice, when the coast was clear, must needs appear more 
reasonable and venerable to us, than what is since devised. 
And therefore this Church of ours is not to forsake the 
orders of the primitive Church, that it may be the more 
conformable to other reformed Churches; where the orders 
in force with us have both the precedent of such ancient 
practice, and the reason of edification with them. 


The Lord be with you. And with thy spirit.| St. Chry- 
sostom®, upon these words of St. Paul, “ We know not what 
to pray for as we ought, but the Spirit maketh intercession 
for us,” telleth us, that in the apostles’ time, there was. no 
less peculiar inspiration to make a prayer in a_ public as- 


. [al 6 mev elxe mpopyrelas Xd pio pea, mavTOS HvXETO. « » kal 7d Kowp obp- 


ka) mpoérevye 7a méeAAovra, 6 5e goplas, 
kal édidacKe Tovs moAAdus. 6 ei lapdroov, 
Kad eOepdmeve Tovs vooodyras. 6 5é Su- 
vauéwv, Kal yee Tors vexpdus. 6 Be 
 YAwooay, kat Siapdpors €AdAEr pwvais. 
peta St TovTwy amrdyTwy ay kal edxiis 
— xdpiocpa, 8 Kal adrd mved pa. eAeyero. 
Kal 6 Toro Exwv, bwep Tod mwANVous 


COSIN, 


. &AAous éematdeve.. . . 


pepov ris duecdnotns amdons airds Te 
trip amdvrwy torato air av, kat robs 
od Kah viv obp~ 
Boddy éorw 6 didkovos Tas iwtp Tod 


Shuou avapépwy edxds.—S. Chrysost. in. 


Rom. viii, 26. Hom. xiv. Op. tom, ix. 
p- 586, A, B.] 


Gg 


THIRD 
SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


450 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


sembly of the Church, than there was to prophecy, and to— 
foretel things to come, to cure diseases, to do miracles, and 
to speak strange languages. ‘ For with all these graces,” 
says he, “there was also a grace of prayer which was called 
a spirit, and he that had it prayed for all the multitude, and 
stood up in the name of all, to desire those things which 
were for the good of the Church in common; and he taught 
others to do the like. Answerable whereunto now is the 
deacon, when he offereth to God the public prayers for the 
people.” From whence we gather, that the kind and nature 
of these public prayers which the Church now useth, is the 
same that the Church used (when the matters of them were 
inspired) even in the apostles’ time. And the people’s an- 
swering here, as the fashion also was of old, “ And with thy 
spirit,” had then reference to the spiritual or inspired grace 
of prayer, by which they were known to speak at the be- 
ginning. 

Then the minister, clerks, and people shall say the Lord’s 
Prayer with a loud voice.| In the second of Edw. VI. the 
minister is appointed to say the Creed and the Pater noster 
alone, and the choir to answer, “ But deliver us from evil, 
Amen.” And the Kyrie Eleison is ordered to be said be- 
fore the Creed; but no Dominus vobiscum, with the answer 
ordered to be said, till after the versicles, immediately be- 
fore the Collects. 

Then the priest standing up shall say the versicles.| And 
he is not appointed to kneel down afterwards at the Collects. 

The order for Evening Prayer, the priest shall say, (2 Edw. 
VI., Sacerdos oret,) Our Father, &c.| Always provided, that 
he forgets not his directions, which were given him before at. 
the beginning of the Morning Prayer, where he is appointed 
to read the sentences, and that which follows before Evening 
Prayer also. 


[ON THE CREED OF ST. ATHANASIUS. | 


In the feast of Christmas, Epiphany, &c. shall be sung or 
said, immediately after Benedictus, this confession of our - 
faith, &c.] In the second of Edw. VI. it is called the 
Creed of Athanasius, and appointed to be sung only. In 





ON THE LITANY. 451 


the fifth of Edw. VI. were the apostles’ days here named, 
and St. John Baptist’s day inserted, that by repeating this 
Creed every month (for so are those days divided) it might 


THIRD 
SERIES. 


ae 


become the more familiar to the people. And though it be — 


not here set down, yet I believe the meaning was, that the 
Apostles’ Creed should be omitted that day, when this of 
Athanasius was repeated”. 

Quicunque vult.| The Emperor Jovian wrote letters to 
_ Athanasius, and earnestly entreated him, ut accuratam de 
sacrosancta fide doetrinam sibi conscriberet : “That he would 
set down an exact form of the holy doctrine of the Catholic 
faith.” Theod., lib. iv. Hist. cap. 2°. 


[ON THE LITANY. | 


Here followeth the Litany.| By the position of it in this 
place (though it be not specified after what part of the ser- 
vice it shall be used) it seems that they intended it to follow 
the Morning Prayer’. And in the rubric before the Com- 
mination it is ordered that after Morning Prayer is done 
(which was then done betimes, and while it was yet morning, 
not put off as since till towards noon) “the people shall be 
called together again to the Litany by the tolling of a bell, 
after the accustomed manner®.” So that in those days the 
custom was to go home after Morning Prayer, and to come 
again to the Litany; not to dispatch (as now they do) all at 
once. In the second of Edw. VI.‘ there is a rubric at the 
end of the Communion, wherein the Litany is appointed to 
be sung upon Wednesdays and Fridays, according to the 
king’s injunctions; and that after the Litany ended, the 
priest shall, upon those days, having on him an alb or sur- 
plice, with a cope, go to the Communion ; or if there be none 
to communicate, that nevertheless he shall read that which 
is appointed at the Communion unto the end of the Offer- 


» [This was provided for at the last The letter of Athanasius and the bi- 
Review. | shops in reply rehearses the Nicene 
© [éméoreire 58 Kat mpds’AQavdc.ov Creed, and exhorts him to adhere to it. 
 exetvov tov tobTrwv mpduaxov Tav doy- Ibid., i. 34.) 
parwv, ypadbivas of maparardGv Thy ak- 4 [This was made clear in 1662.] 
piBR wept trav Oclwy d:dacKxarlav.— ¢ [ This rubric was altered in 1662.]- 
Theodoret. Eccl., lib. iv. cap. 2. p. 148. f [See above, p. 84, note h.] 


age 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


452 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


tory, concluding with one or two collects and the bene- 
diction. 

Litany to be used on Sundays, Wednesdays, and Fridaya? 
“ Wednesdays and Fridays not being holydays,” Bp. Grindal, 
1576, Art. 1%. Litany and other service appointed for the 
day, not the Litany alone. Ibid. 


On Sundays, Wednesdays, and Fridays.| 

Epiphanius, in his Hapos. Fidei Cathol.», referreth this 
order to the apostles, upon the Wednesday and Friday, and 
upon the Lord’s Day. The Jews in their synagogues observed 
for their special days of assembling those together that dwelt 
in villages, Mondays and Thursdays, besides the Sabbath. 
Maimon. in Megillah, c.1.n.6. The precedent of the Jews 
directed to the Church, not to do less than they did. They 
made choice of Mondays and Thursdays, in regard of some 
great calamities that befel their nation upon those days; 
and that they might not be three days together, without 
doing some public service to God. The Church had the 
like reasons for Wednesdays and Fridays (Const. Apost. 
v. 14'.) whereon our Saviour was betrayed and crucified, the 
moral reason of once in three days, with a convenient dis- 
tance from Sunday concurring. And how ancient the ob- 
servation of Wednesdays’ and Fridays’ assemblies hath been 
in the Church, is also to be known by the recommendation 
of them in Ignatius, Ep. ad Phil.i, and in Clem. Alex., 





Strom. 5*, 


g.{‘*, . . whether upon Wednesdays 
oad Friday s, not being holydays, the 
Litany and other prayers appointed for 
the day be said accordingly?’ Articles 
to be enquired of within the province 
of Canterbury, in the metropolitical 
visitation of Edmond [Grindall], &c., 
A.D. 1576, Art. 1. (Remains of Abp. 
Grindal, p. 157. Cambridge, 1843).] 
ee [ovvdgess dé émireAotuevar Tax Oet- 
cal ciow ard tov ardécToAwr, Terpast 
Kah mpooaBBdre kad Kuptaty: Ter pant de 
Kal év mpocaBBare, év vnorela, € €ws Spas 
évvdtns, émevdhrep emipwoxotoy TET PASE 
ouverhpon 6 Kipios, kal T@ mposaBBdre 
eoravpadn, Kal mapédwkay vi GardaroAoL 
év ab’rais vnotelas émireAcioba.—S. E- 
| esvag adv. Heres., lib. iii. tom. 2. 

xpos. fid. Cathol., es: i 22. Op. tom. i. 
p- 1104,-C, D.} 


And how uniform the observance of them was 


i [rérpada kal rapackevyy mpooératev 
nuiy vnorevev, THY wey dia Thy mpodo- 
olay, Thy St dia 7d wdh00s.—Constitut. 
Apostol., lib. v. cap. 14. apud Concilia, 
tom. i. col. 362, A.] 

j [era Thy Tod wd0ous EBdoudda, uh 
mapopare tetpdda Kal mapacKeviy, vn- 
orevovTes Téevnow emtxopynyoovTes THY 
meptooelav. — Epist. ad Philippenses, 
cap. 13. opus spurium inter Op. S. Ig- 
nati. apud Patr. Apost., tom. ii. pars 1. 
p- 124. ] 

kK [oldev adrbs ral TAS vnoreias Th 
aiviypara Tay Nmepov TovT wr, THS TE- 
Tpddos, Kal Tis Tapagkevns Aێyw. erl~ 
onuitovra yap, h wey ‘Epuod, 7 5t’A- 
ppodsirns.— Clemens Alexandr. Stro- 
mat., lib. vii. cap. 12. Op. tom. ii, 
p- 877.] 


ON THE LITANY. 453 






in the ancient Church, is to be known again by Epiphanius', 
‘who saith that they were kept in all the climates of the 
‘world. So the orders of our Church stand recommended to 
“us by the practice of the oldest times, both for ordinary and 
‘extraordinary fasting and praying upon those days. 

_ Further, Socrates, lib. v. cap. 22", saith, “That at Alexan- 
dria, upon Wednesdays and Fridays, both the Scriptures 
were read, and that the doctors expounded them; and that 
all was done which belonged to an assembly, except cele- 
-brating the mysteries; and that this was an ancient custom 
“there, for that Origen taught most of his writings on those 
days in the Church.” 

_. These litanies were wont to be said at the celebration of 
the Eucharist, as in the ancient Church; so in this also, 
I, 2 Edw. VI.", when the Communion was administered (as it 
_ still ought to be in Catholic Churches) every Sunday at the 
Bicast. . Now, although the condition of the Church be not 
for the present capable of so excellent a custom, yet was 
there good reason that the litanies should be prescribed 
upon those days howsoever, as being the next solemnity to 
the Eucharist in the public service of God, observed from 
the beginning of the Church. And because they contain 
_ matter of supplication, for the diverting of God’s judgments 
and obtaining His blessings, nothing could be more suitable 
_ than to add them to the daily Morning service upon Wed- 
_ nesdays and Fridays, as the exercise of that continual humi- 
_ liation before God, to which the observation of those in- 
_ tended, to the unspeakable benefit of the Church, and the 
continual discharge of those most excellent offices of fasting, 
_ prayer, and alms, among Christians. 

| From all sedition, privy conspiracy.| It followed. in “ 
second and fifth of Edw. VI.°, “From the tyranny of the 
b bishop of Rome, and all his detestable enormities.” Which 
“4 











— 





ah 


1 [rim 88. ob cuprepdyntra ev mwact 
kAiuace THs oixoupéyns Sri teTpas Kal 
mpocdBBatov vnorela eorly ev TH ex- 
KAnoig apisnéevn. —S. Epiphan. adv. 
Heres., lib. iii. tom. 1. Her. 75. cap. 6. 
Op. tom. i. p- 910, B.] 

og Laddrs 5é ev "Adetavdpela TH Terpddt 
kal TH Aeyouevyn TapacKevy ypapat Te 
dvaywaonovras Kal of diddoKaro Tav- 


TOS épunvetouot, wdvTa TE Ta ouvdtews 
yiverat dixa THs TAY wvoT ploy TEAETIS. 
Kal rodto éotly éy “Adegavdpela eos 
épxaioy, Kah yap *Opeyévns Th TOAAG ev 
Tavras Tats Huépas malverar em) ris 
exxanotas dsiddéas,— Socrates, Hist. 
Eecl., lib. v. cap. 22. p. 295. ] 
" {See above, p. 125, notes h, i. ] 

- © | See above, p. 67, note r.]} ‘ 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIEs. 


454, NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


words, by a special provision in the Act of Uniformity in 
these words, “and the form of the Litany altered and cor- 
rected,” were left out in our book, as being too hard and 
violent an expression. But the preachers since that time 
have got it into their pulpits, though they could not be 
allowed it in their Litanies; and all sorts of men have 
chosen rather to follow them, than this temperance and 
order of the Church. 

The prayer of St. Chrysostom.| Taken out of his liturgy, 
which (it seems) the Church of England acknowledges to be 
his’, In the second of Edw. VI. it follows immediately 
after ‘“ We humbly beseech Thee,” and ends the Litany, with- 
out any other collect inserted between them for the king, 
queen, prince, or clergy, (who were all solemnly prayed for 
already in the Litany itself, as in our book we find them to 
be,) which were there added only by virtue of the queen’s 
injunctions, allowing an anthem to be sung after Morning 
and Evening Prayer, and the collect for the queen to be 
daily said after the anthem; so that this, and the other that 
follow before St. Chrysostom’s prayer, (whereof that for the 
queen and the king’s children were added by the bishops 
upon King James’s coming in‘, and by his authority only, 
not yet by the parliament confirmed,) are no part of the 
Litany, but only additionals to be said after an anthem or 
Psalm, in the end of Morning and Evening service. 

And dost promise, that when two or three are, &c., Thou 
wilt grant their requests, &c.| We know upon what patent 
this privilege stands, St. Matt. xviii. 20. We must know fur- 
ther, that by the rules of the Jewish synagogue (then in use) 
under ten persons that were of years, there was no congre- 
gation, for before that number were present they went not 
to prayers. And by the rules of civil law, decem persone 
faciunt populum, But Christ intending to free His Church 





P [6 ras kowds Tabras Kal cuupdvous 
Nu xapicduevos mpocevxas, 6 Kat do 
kal rpiol cuudwrodtow em te dvduari 
ov, Tas aiThoes mapéxew emaryyeiAdue- 
vos’ avros kal viv trav SovAwY cov Ta 
aithuata mpds To otudepoy TANpwoor, 
Xwpnyav huiv év te wapdvT: aidvi Thy 
éexiyywow THs ons GAnOelas, Kad ev TH 
BAAoVTL Swhy aidviov xapifduevos.— 


Liturg. S. Chrysost. ap. Goar. Rit. 
Grec., p.66. On the supposed genuine- 
ness of the prayer and liturgy see 
Palmer, Orig. Liturg., vol. i. p. 77.] 

4 [See the king’s letter to the com- 
missioners for causes ecclesiastical, 
Rymer, Foedera, vol. xvi. Cardwell’s 
History of Conferences, pp. 222, sqq. } 





ON THE LITANY. 


of all rules that might abridge the privileges of it, and fore- 
knowing of divers occasions that would happen, (especially 
in times of persecution,) to lessen that number, assureth’us 
of His presence where the least number agree in the thing 
they desire at His hands. For that to be the reason of His 
presence among them is clear from the nineteenth -verse, 
“If two of them shall agree touching anything they shall 
ask,” &c. The Jews have an opinion that the prayers of 
their congregations are always heard, not so the prayers of 
particular persons in private. Maim. of Prayer, c. 8. n. 1". 
* Always let a man go morning and evening to the syna- 
gogue, for his prayer is not always heard but in the syna- 
gogue; and he that dwelleth in a city where there is a 
Synagogue, and goeth not thither to pray with the congre- 
gation, this is he that is called a bad neighbour.” 

Nor are the words to be understood of two or three that 
are gathered together in any place, but in any such place as 
is appointed for the holy assemblies. 1 Tim. i. 8, “I will 
therefore that men pray everywhere,” &c., is but a freedom 
from the legal circumstance of the temple, and an applica- 
tion of Mal. i. 11 and John iv. 21. Omnem locum intellige 
sacris cetibus destinatum; agit enim S. Paulus de publicis 
precibus in communi conventu, ut in toto orbe terrarum pura 
hec sacrificia Deo offerantur. Beza, ib.s 

For rain, &c., if the time requireth.| These in the second 
of King Edward are set in the end of the collects after the 
offertory*, being then only two, for rain and fair weather. 
After, in the fifth year of King Edward, they were augmented 
to that number which we have now; but they were placed 
between the collects, “‘ We humbly beseech Thee,” &c., and 
St. Chrysostom’s prayer, which is a direction for us where to 
read them when need is". 

A thanksgiving for rain, &c.] These thanksgivings were 
added upon the complaint of Dr. Reynolds and others, at the 


455 — 


* [Maimonides, Manus Fortis, or 
Mischneh Torah, pars prima, lib. ii. 
art. 2. De precibus et benedictione sa- 
cerdotali, cap. 8. n. 1.] 

s [Beza, Th., annot. in 1 Tim. ii. 8. 
Nov. Test. cum annott. Th. Beze, 
1598.] 

* [That is, after the Collects at the 


end of the Communion Service, entitled 
“Collects to be said after the Offertory 
when there is no Communion.”’,} 

“ [There was not at this time any 
rubrical direction where to read these 
occasional prayers; it was added in 
1662. | 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


456 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


conference at Hampton-court, saying*, “that we wanted par-: 
ticular thanksgivings for particular benefits received ;” the 
same complaint that Cartwrighty and the admonitioners to 
the parliament had made before, whom the king and his 
bishops thought good to satisfy. And to that end were these 
collects of thanksgivings drawn up and inserted into the 
Liturgy by the king’s command’, but they are not yet con- 
firmed by act of convocation or parliament. 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES AND GOSPELS. 


The Collect, Epistle, and Gospel, upon Christmas-day.] 

This was called in the first of Edw. VI. the second Com- 
munion, for there was another before it; the one to set forth 
His nativity of the blessed Virgin Mary, (for which the 
Epistle was Tit. ii. and the Gospel Luke ii.,) the other to 
set forth His eternal generation, which is that we do now 
only still continue, following the alteration made in the fifth 
of Edw. VI., upon Bucer’s* faulting of two Communions. In 
the Church of Rome (and here in England aforetimes) they 
had three masses or services of communion upon that day®, 
whereof this is the last.’ 

If there be a Sunday between the Epiphany and the Circum- 
cision, then shall, &c.] This was added in the fifth of King 
Edward, being casus omissus before; for between the second 
and fifth year of that king, there happened a Sunday after 
Circumcision and before the Epiphanys, and they were at a 
loss, not knowing what to do with it, for in the old missals 
it was cast upon the octaves’, whereof we had none left. 

The sixth Sunday after the Epiphany (if there be so many) 
shall have the same, &c.| This also was added for the same 
reason next before specified. 

Easter-day, at Morning Prayer, instead of, O come let us 


« [This complaint is not mentioned 
im the published accounts of the con- 
ference, in which there is no discussion 
respecting these new forms of thanks- 
givings. } 

y (‘The default of the book, for that 
there are no forms of thanksgivings for 
the release from those common calami- 
ties, from which we have petitions to 
be delivered.” —T. Cartwright, lib. iii. p. 
208, cited in Keble’s Hooker, book vy. 


ch. 43. § 2, note 86.] 

* [See the king’s (James I.) letter, 
Rymer, ubi supra, note q, p. 454, Card- 
well, ibid. ] 

® [Buceri Censura, cap. 6. p. 465, 
and cap. 27. p. 495. ] 

b [See above, p. 252, note n.] 

¢ [In 1550 the Sunday fell on Jan. 
5, andin 1551 on Jan, 4. } 

4 [See above, p. 254, note p. ] 


+f RRR 


ON THE COLLECTS, EPISTLES AND GOSPELS. 457 


sing, &c., shall be sung or said these anthems. So that upon Tuiep 
Easter-day in the morning the’ Venite is left out, which was S=@"* 
thus altered in the fifth [year*] of King Edward, for in the } [Book. 
second it was not so; but the Venite, and these anthems be- Michotle.} 
sides, were both sung, to make the service more solemn. 
Upon that day there were two communions, whereof we have 
retained the first Epistle and Gospel. 

St. Peter’s day.| In the second of Edward VI. there were 
two proper lessons appointed for St. Peter’s even®. dd ves- 
_peras, Mal. iv. S. Matt. xiv. unto “ When Jesus heard,” &c. 

After St. Peter’s day in that book followed St. Mary Mag- 
dalene’s day, and the Collect, Epistle, and Gospel appointed 
for it were these‘, “Grant us Thy grace, O merciful Lord, 
that by the example of any other we may not presume to 
commit sin; andif at any time we fall, and offend Thy divine 
majesty, we may heartily repent us thereof, and bewailing 
our sins after the example of Mary Magdalen, we may obtain 
remission of the same, for the love and merits of Thy only 
Son Jesus Christ our Lord.” The Epistle, Prov. xxxi., ‘‘ Who 
shall find a woman,” &c., unto “her works shall praise her 
in the gates.” The Gospel, St. Luke vii., “ And the Pharisee 
desired Jesus to eat bread with him,” &c., unto “go in 
peace.” But in the fifth of King Edward this was not 
continued, and therefore it is not inserted into this liturgy 
of ours, which by the Act of Uniformity was tied to follow 
that second of King Edward (and not the first) in all things 
but the ornaments of the Church and of the ministers there 
celebrating divine service. 


e [This is a mistake, owing to Cosin’s Anglicana, p- 419.] 


using the Latin version of Alesius. The 
lessons here mentioned are those for 
Evensong on S.John Baptist’s Day, 
which, as was done in the case of the 
proper lessons in the Prayer-book of 
1549, were set down with the Collects, 
Epistles, and Gospels for the day. 
There “the Proper Lessons at Even- 
song”? come after the Gospel of S. 
_ John Baptist’s Day, and immediately 
before S, Peter’s Day. In the Latin 
_ version they were taken as belonging to 
_ 8. Peter’s, and were printed with the 
heading ‘ Profesto S. Petri Apost. Pro- 
-prie Lectiones ad Vesperas.” See the 
Ordin. Eccl. Angl. in Bucer’s Scripta 


f [Cosin has translated from the 
Latin of Alesius; the words in the 
original are: “ Merciful Father, give 
us grace that we may never presume 
to sin through the example of any 
creature; but if it shall chance us at 
any time to offend Thy Divine majesty, 
that then we may truly repent, and 
lament the same, after the example of 
Mary Magdalene, and by lively faith 
obtain remission of all our sins; through 
the only merits of Thy Son our Saviour 
Christ.”— Book of Common Prayer, 
A.D. 1549, Saint Mary Magdalene, 
Collect. ] 


THIRD 


_ SERIES. 


458 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


[RUBRICS BEFORE THE COMMUNION. | 


If any person be a notorious and open ill-liver, &c.] 

In the ancient Church there are many passages found to 
this purpose, and among the rest this for one, 8. Chrysostom 
Ixxxiil. in Mat.¢ Si militum magister quispiam, si prefectus, 
si ipse diademate redimitus imperator indigne adeat, prohibe, 
majorem illo potestatem habes, &c.; hoc dignitas, hoc securitas, 
hoc corona vestra est, &c.; st yse pellere non audes adduc ad 
me: hec attentari nequaquam permittam. Spirare desinam — 
antequam de Domini corpore indigne quicquam tradam; et 
sanguinem ipsum meum fundam priusquam de tam venerando 
sanguine preter decorem concedam. 


The table at the Communion-time having a fair white linen 
cloth upon it, shall stand in the body of the church, or in the 
chancel, where Morning and Evening Prayer be appointed (viz. 
by the ordinary) to be said, and the priest standing at the 
north side of the table shall say the Lord’s Prayer, &c.| 

There was much ado about the posture of the table and 
the priests standing at it in King Edward’s time; for in the 
second year the altar stood still in the usual place, and the 
priest was appointed to stand before the midst of the altar® 
with his face towards it, and this was confirmed by act of 
parliament!. Notwithstanding which act, there were so many 
exceptions taken, and opposition made against that order, 
(some standing at the west side of the altar, with their faces 
turned towards the people, others at the east, others at the 
south, and others at the north,) that at last they agreed to 
set forth this rule in the fifth of King Edward, instead of the 
former set forth in the second year, where the tenor and 
sequence of the service was ordered after this manner; ‘ the 
priest standing afore the altar, saith the Lord’s Prayer and 
the Collect,” the same that we have. Then is the Jnfroit, 
or Psalm of the day, sung by the choir. The Kyrie Eleison | 
thrice. The priest begins “Glory be to God on high;” the | 


& [See the Greek cited above, p. 84, say,’ &c.—Rubric, Prayer-Book of — 
note i. ] 1549. ] : 
h (“The priest, standing humbly i [Act for Uniformity of Service, 
afore the midst of the altar, shall 2 & 3 Edw. VI., cap. 1.) 








ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 4.59 


choir answers and sings out the rest. The priest turns himself 
to the people, saying, Dominus vobiscum, and Oremus. Then 
follows the Collect for the king, the Collect for the day*, the 
Epistle read (in a special place appointed for it) by a sub- 
deacon!. The Gospel (similiter) read by a priest or deacon™. 
And at the naming of the Gospel, the choir and people 
answer, “Glory be to Thee, O Lord;’ and when it is 
ended", then the Creed, the priest beginning, “I believe 
in one God,” and the choir singing the rest. Next followeth 
the exhortation, “ Dearly beloved in the Lord, ye that come 
to the holy Communion,” &c., which in cathedral churches, 
and other places where there were daily Communions, was to 
be read once a month, and in a parish church once a week, 
upon the Sunday®. And if the people were negligent to come 
to the Communion upon Sundays and other holydays, the 
curate was to read another exhortation the Sunday before 
the Communion, which (but for a little difference, and the 
beginning and ending) is the same with our second exhor- 
tation, “‘ Dearly beloved, forasmuch as it is our duty,” &c., 
adding in the end, that they which satisfy themselves with a 
general, and they that think it needful for them to make an 
auricular or private confession, ought not to find fault with 
one another. Then follows the Offertory, which is sung, 
whilst the people go up to offer at the altar’, and besides go 
to put somewhat into the poor man’s box. Then they which 
are to communicate stay in the choir’, the men on the right 
side, and the women apart on the left. Then the priest (con- 
sidering the number of communicants) prepareth so many 
hosts, (laying them upon the corporast,) and as much wine 


k (“The Collect for the day with one 
of these two Collects following for the 
king.’—Ibid. ] 

1 [The English rubric for 1549 was: 
‘the priest, or he that is appointed, 
shall read the Epistle;” translated by 
Alesius, ‘‘Sacerdos aut subdiaconus.’’—- 
Ubi supr., p. 423.] 

m (English: ‘* The priest, or one 
appointed to read the Gospel;’’ Alesius, 
‘* Sacerdos aut diaconus.””—Ibid. ] 

» [Thisis printed in Nicholls; “And 
when it is ended, ; Then the Creed, 
&c.”” There is no appearance either in 
the English or Latin of anything being 





ordered to be said after the Gospel. ] 

° [Upon the week-days it may be 
left unsaid.’’—Rubric of Prayer- Book 
of 1549.)} 

P [The Latin inserted the words ‘‘ad 
altare,”’ ubi supr., p. 425; the English 
does not make any such distinction. } 

a [Or in some convenient place 
nigh the quire, the men on the one side, 
and the women on the other side;’’ the 
Latin translation is, “ Viri a dextris, 
mulieres a sinistris separatim.’’—lIbid. ] 

* {* Upon the corporas, or else in the 
paten, or in some other comely thing 
prepared for the purpose.”’ } 


THIRD 


SERIEs. 


THIRD 


_ SERIES. 


460 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


(mingled with a little pure water) as will serve the commu- 
nicants, and placeth the paten and chalice upon the altar. 
After follows Dominus vobiscum and Sursum corda, with the 


proper prefaces, to the Sanctus, which the choir is appointed 
to sing. Next the priest or the deacon turning himself to 


the people, saith, “ Let us pray for the whole state of Christ’s ; 
Church,” (not militant here in earth only, which was after- 
wards added for fear of praying for the dead,) where at the 
end they especially prayed for the present communicants, 
they gave thanks for God’s virtue shewed in all His saints, 
especially in the most virtuous and glorious* Virgin Mary, 
the mother of our Lord, the patriarchs, prophets, apostles, 


and martyrs, whose examples they desired to follow in the 


holy faith and obedience. They commended to God also 
those that had died in the true religion of Christ, praying 
that they might find mercy and eternal peace, and that at 
the general resurrection we and all they might be saved. 


‘Then follows the Prayer of Consecration, differing from ours 
-only in these words, “ Hear us, we beseech Thee, O merciful 


Father, and by Thy Holy Spirit and Word vouchsafe to bless 
and sanctify these Thy gifts and creatures of bread and wine, 
that they may be made unto us the Body and Blood of Thy 
beloved Son Jesus Christ our Lord, who in the same night,” 
&c. And at the words “took bread,” the priest is appointed 
in the margin to take the paten into his hand, and likewise 
the chalice at the words “took the cup,” (without any eleva- 
tion,) making the sign of the cross upon either when he re- 
peats the words of the institution or consecration. Next 
follows the Prayer of Oblation, which with us is placed after 
the communion or participation, and it differs from it in 
divers expressions, as in these; ‘“‘ Wherefore, O Lord, heavenly 


Father, according to the institution of Thy Son, our Lord, 


we Thy humble servants do here celebrate and remember 
before Thy divine majesty, that which He has commanded 


us to do in these holy and blessed mysteries‘, and calling to 





s [* The glorious and most blessed 
Virgin Mary.’’] 

t (“Before Thy Divine Majesty, 
with these Thy holy gifts, the memo- 
rial which Thy Son hath willed us to 
make; having in remembrance His 
blessed passion, mighty resurrection, 


and glorious ascension; rendering unto 
Thee most hearty thanks for the innu- 
merable benefits procured unto us by 
the same ; entirely desiring Thy fatherly 
goodness mercifully to accept this our 
sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving.” ] 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 461 


mind His blessed passion, His mighty resurrection, and His 
glorious ascension, we render unto Thee all possible praise 
_and thanksgiving, for the innumerable benefits procured and 
exhibited thereby unto us; beseeching Thee that Dis 
“wouldst mercifully accept this our sacrifice of praise,’ &c. 
Aud after the words, “our bounden duty and service,” and 
command these our supplications and prayers to be brought 
“up before Thy Divine majesty, by the ministry of Thy holy 
angels, not weighing our merits,’ &c. After this he sayeth 
_the Lord’s Prayer, the choir only answering, “ And deliver 
us from evil;’”’ and the priest premising, “ As our Lord hath 
taught and commanded us, we are bold to say, Our Father,” 
&e. Priest. “The peace of the Lord be with you.” Choir. 
* And with thy spirit.” Priest. “Christ our Paschal Lamb 
_ was offered up for us all, when He bore our sins in His body 
upon the tree of the cross, for He is that true Lamb of God 
that taketh away the sins of the world; wherefore let us cele- 
_ brate a feast with joy*.” Then followeth, “ You that do truly 
and earnestly,” &c., with the Confession, Absolution, (where 
the bishop is not named,) and the comfortable sentences of 

- Scripture. 
Next he saith, “We do not presume,” &c. And then 
-communicateth himself, ministers, and people. And when 
he ministereth the Sacrament of Christ’s Body, and the 
Sacrament of His Blood, he saith only the two first sen- 
tences, without the addition of those words which in the fifth 
of King Edward were said, and none else, “Take, and eat 
this in remembrance,” &c. But in our book they are both 
joined together, as by the Act of Uniformity appointed. In 
the time of the distribution the choir singeth, “ Lamb of God, 
that taketh, &c., have mercy,” &c. “O Lamb of God, &c. 
_ Grant us Thy peace.” And the distribution ended, they sing 
_ the Post-communion, that is, some of these verses: “If any 
_ man will come after Me, let him deny,” &c. “ He that endur- 
eth unto the end shall be saved.” “ Blessed be, &c., who hath 





slight verbal variations, as Cosin re- 


™ [* And command these our prayers 
translated from the Latin version of 


_ and supplications, by the ministry of 


_ Thy holy angels, to be brought up into 
_ Thy holy tabernacle, before the sight 
_ of Thy Divine Majesty; not weighing 

our merits.” Throughout there are 


Alesius. ] ' 


-* [Keep a joyful and holy feast 


to the Lord.’’] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIEs. 


462 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


visited,” &c. “ Blessed is that servant, whom when his Lord 
cometh He shall find so doing.” “Behold the hour cometh, and 
now is, when the true worshippers,” &c. ‘Behold thou art 
made whole, sin no more,” &c., or the like sentences may be 
added. | 

Afterwards followed the Prayer of Thanksgiving, “ Al- 
mighty and everlasting God, we most heartily thank Thee,” 


&c. Then the Blessing, (where the bishop is not named,) 
“The peace of God,” &c. And all the people answer, 
Amen. 


Rubricy. Where there be no singers, all is read. In the 
week-days, and when the Communion is delivered in private 
houses, the priest may omit the Gloria in Excelsis, the Creed, 
the Homily, and one of the Exhortations’. 


So many as intend to be partakers of the holy Communion, 
shall, &c.| Clemens, who was St. Peter’s scholar, writeth 
thus in an [Epistle ?] quot populo sufficere debeant, which is 
one reason of giving up their names. 


Then shall the minister rehearse distinctly (that is, with 
pauses between every one) all the Ten Commandments.| I do 
not find in any liturgy, old or new, before this of the fifth of 
Edward VI., (here continued,) that the Jews’ decalogue was 
used in the service of the Christian Church. But it seems 
that the rehearsal of it in the beginning of the Communion 
was appointed with the people’s answers, and craving pardon 
and grace to observe them, instead of confession of sins, 
always set in this place. It serves to actuate our repentance 
by calling to mind our offences by retail. 


ON THE NICENE CREED, 


The Epistle and Gospel ended, shall be said the Creed.| In 
Dion. Areop.?, immediately after the reading of the Gospel, 





y [The rubric is, ‘‘ Where there are 
no clerks, there the priest shall say all 
things appointed here for them to sing.”’ 
The Latin translation was ‘ Ubi non 
sunt cantores, dicantur omnia, non ca- 
nantur.’’—ubi supr., p. 430.] 

* ( And the Exhortation, beginning 


Dearly beloved,’ &c. | 

® [oi 5& THs AecroupyiKjs Siakoouh- 
cews Exxpitot, ovv Tots iepedow emt Tod 
Oelov Ovo1acrnplov mporibéact Toy iepdy 
uiprov, kal 7d THs evAoylas moThpiov mpo- 
omoroynbetons brd maytds TOU Tis éK- 
kAnolas mAnpemaros, THs KaV0AUKIS du 





ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 463 


(the hearers and penitents, &c., being dismissed,) follows the 
_ Creed, which he calleth the Catholic hymn, said and acknow- 
ledged by all the congregation of the Church together, as 
_ 8. Ambr., supr.’, which is an argument that the author is not 
more ancient than the Nicene Council, before which time we 
do not read that the Creed was brought into the public ser- 
_ vice of the Church, but then it was, the better to preserve 
men from heresy. Of the Creed there is no mention in 
Justin, Tertullian, or the Constitutions of the Apostles. 

It was a great work to settle such forms as might conclude 
and confirm, and bring to life also the restless malice of 
heretics. And it was long in doing. The next work to that 
was to bring it into the service. For so it was best com- 
mended to the knowledge of God’s people; and had this 
order been better regarded, this new varnish of old heresies, 
which prevailed so far abroad, and at home too, would not 
have taken the people so much as it has done. 

After the Creed, ...the Sermon.| This is one difference from 
the mass-book, where there is no sermon there appointed, 
for they commonly have their sermons in the afternoon. But 
the Church of England hath restored the sermon into the 
due place of it, after the reading of the Epistle and Gospel, 
_ which in the ancient Church was the subject of the sermon 
which followed. As for the afternoon sermon, I am yet to 
learn what place it had, or yet hath, by any order, in the 
public service of God, or by what command either of the 
Scripture or the ancient Church it is pressed. 

After the Creed.| From the Constitutions of the Apostles, 
the custom has been very general to begin the sermon when 
the reading of the Epistle and Gospel was done*®. The Creed 
was afterwards added and interserted, because of the heresies 
newly risen. And hereupon it is, that preachers among the 
_ Latin Church-writers are called Tractatores*, because, when 
they preached, they handled the Scriptures which were that 
day read in the Church. So Optatus, lib. iv.*, charged the 
vororytas.—S. Dionys. Areop. de Eccles, Sidxovor al ras 6 Aabs ornnérwoay mere 


Hierarchia, cap. 3. Op. tom. i. p. moAAjs jovxlas,..Kal étfjs mapaxa- 
188, A.]} Acltwoay of mperBitepa Tov Aadv.— 


& [See the passage cited above, p. Constit. Apostol., lib. ii. eap. 57, apud 
92, note u. | Concilia, tom. i. col. 295, A.] 

© [nal drav dvarywwonduevor F Td €d- a he above, p. 316, note c.] 
ayyeAov, wdytes of mpecBitepur Kat of © [See above, p. 317, note i.] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


464: NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


Donatists, that their fashion was in preaching to leave their 
texts (Lectiones Dominicas et Evangelium) and to fall a railing 
upon the Catholics. 

After the Creed, if there be no sermon, shall follow, &c.| In 
the time of King Edward and Queen Elizabeth, the parsons 
or vicars were not tied to preach above four sermons in the 
year, per se aut per alium. Bishop Grindal, in his Articles, 
1565, Art. 7 and 24°, 

Upon a holyday when there was no sermon, the bishops 
appointed that immediately after the Gospel the curates 
should recite to their parishioners the Lord’s Prayer, the 
Articles of the Faith, and the Ten Commandments in Eng- 
lish. Ib., Art. 10. 

Curate shall declare whether there be any holydays.| One 
reason whereof was, lest the people should observe any such 
days that had been formerly kept, and were now abrogated 
by law. And therefore the bishops enquired in their visita- 
tions, whether the curates bid any other days than were 
appointed by the new kalendar; or whether there was any 
more ringing or tolling of bells to call the people to church 
upon Sundays, more than otherwise was commonly used 
upon every common week-day, for then was the bell rung 
or tolled to church every day of the week, where the curate 
was not negligent of his duty. wach sero. 2 Grind., Art. 8, 
15768, for the whole province. 

_ Pray for the whole state of Christ’s Church militant, &c.] 
Those words “militant here upon earth,” were added to ex- 
clude the prayers that were used in the ancient liturgies, and 
in the former edition of this liturgy, 2 Edw. VI.", for them 


f [The editor has not seen a copy of 
the Articles here referred to, which 
must have been sent out by Grindal, 
when bishop of London. The same rules 
however will be found in his Articles 
of 1571, when archbishop of York. See 
Grindal’s Remains, Cambr., 1843, pp. 
122, sqq.: and the first in the Articles 
issued by the commissioners for eccle- 
siastical affairs, of whom Grindal was 
one, in 1564. See Wilkins, Concilia, 
tom. iv. p. 248.] 

[Articles to be inquired of within 
the province of Canterbury, at the me- 
tropolitical visitation of the most Rev. 


Edmund, Abp. of Canterbury, 1576. 
No. 8. Grindal’s Remains, p. 160.] 

h [We commend unto Thy mercy 
(O Lord) all other Thy servants, which 
are departed hence from us, with the 
sign of faith, and now do rest in the 
sleep of peace. Grant unto them, we 
beseech Thee, Thy mercy and everlast- 
ing peace, that at the day of resurrec- 
tion we, and all they which be of the 
mystical body of Thy Son, may alto- 
gether be set on His right hand,’”’ &c. 
Communion Office in the Book of 
Common Prayer, A.D, 1549.] 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 465 


that have been before us, and are now dead. But for the rest, 


all the form of it is most ancient and apostolical. Next [to] _S®®™*S— 


the apostle (who wills supplications, and prayers, and thanks- 
givings to be made for all men, especially for kings and such 
as be in authority,.that we may lead a quiet and peaceable 
life in all godliness and honesty, which is the sum and sub- 


ject of this whole prayer,) we find in the Constitutions of the 
_ Apostles, (which was a book made to declare the customs of 


the Church before Constantine’s time,) this prayer at large, 
first for the state of Christ’s Church, and then for the par- 
ticular members of it, lib. viii. cap. 1O—12', chiefly for the 
emperor and powers of the world, that they may be at peace 
with us. So Tertullian in his Apology, cap. 389*; Oramus 
pro imperatoribus, pro ministris eorum et. potestatibus, pro 
statu seculi, et pro rerum quiete; and cap.30'; Precamur illis 
vitam prolixam, imperium securum, domum tutam, exercitus 


_ fortes, senatum fidelem, populum probum, orbem quietum, et 


TTL Se ES ee ee 








quecunque hominis et Cesaris vota sunt; which certainly is 
the same prayer that is appointed in the Constitutions of the 
Apostles, as before, and in lib. ii. cap.51™; ‘ Let the minister 
pray for the whole Church, and all the world, and the parts 
of it, for the priests and rulers, for the king, and for the 
general peace ;”’ which is the reason that it is called in the 
Greek liturgies the Catholic or general collect, and ta eipn- 
via, “the prayer for peace.” And it is the source and foun- 
tain of those prayers which were afterwards framed into the 
form of our litanies. 8. Ambr., de Sacram., lib. iv. cap. 4”, 
saith that this prayer was always made before the consecra- 
tion of the Sacrament, Oratio premitiitur pro populo, pro 
regibus, pro ceteris. 

This prayer for the state of Christ’s Church was the prayer 
before the sermon of old time, consisting of several exhorta- 
tions to the people. S. Aug., Hp. 106°, Quando audis Sacer- 
dotem exhortantem populum Dei, ut orent ; and Ep.116, Com- 

i [Concilia, tom. i. col. 470—484. ] Tov BaciAéws kal THs KadAov eiphyns.— 

K (Tertullian. Apolog., cap. 39. Op. Constitut. Apostol., lib. ii. cap. 57. 
p. 31, A.] apud Concilia, tom. i. col. 295, E.] 

1 [Idem, ibid., cap. 30, p. 27, B.] » (S. Ambros., de Sacr., lib. iv. cap. 

m [kal wera tovro mpocevxécOw 6 4. § 14. Op. tom. ii. col. 368, D.] 
Sidkovos bmtp ths exxAnoias amdons, ® [See above, p. 310, note h. } 
kal wavtos ToD Kécmouv Kal T&Y ev a’Te P [{S. Aug., ep. 55, ad Januarium. 


Mepay Kal expopidy* brtp toy fepéwv kal ed. Ben. (aliter ep. 116.) cap. 19. § 36. 
tay apxdytav’ imtp Tov apxiepéws Kal Op. tom, ii. col. 142, C.] 


COSIN: H h 


THIRD 


é 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


4.66 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


munis oratio voce diaconi indicitur, &c. So it is no new thing 
to bid prayers, or exhort the people to pray, as in the preface 
to this prayer for Christ’s Church, and in the form appointed 
for all preachers before their sermons. 

Which practice is the effect of the apostles’ instructions 
mentioned in the beginning of this prayer, (“who by Thy 
holy apostle hast taught us to make prayers and supplica- 
tions, and to give thanks for all men,”) 1 Tim. ii. 1. Where 
St. Ambrose‘, or he that wrote those excellent Commentaries, 
suith, Hec regula ecclesiastica tradita est a magistro gentium, 
&c. “This ecclesiastical rule is delivered to the Church by 
the doctor of the gentiles, which our priests use, to make 
supplication for all, praying for the kings of this world, that 
they may hold all.the nations subject ; that we, being settled 
in peace, may be able to serve our God with tranquillity and 
quiet of mind; praying also for those that are trusted with 
high power, that they may govern the commonwealth in 
justice and truth, with abundance of all good things; that 
trouble and sedition being removed, gladness of heart may 
follow, &c.; praying likewise for them that are in necessity, 
and giving of thanks,” &c. 

Which chiefly contains the particulars of that form in our 
service, and which was related out of the Apostles’ Consti- 
tutions. 7 | 

And to give thanks for all men.| Understanding by thanks- 
givings the action of celebrating the Eucharist. But from 
hence the ancient Church, and the first Service-book of Edw. 
VI.", enlarged the sense of “all men,”’ to comprise the dead 
as well as the living. 

for all men.| Not only for the congregation present, but 
for all the members of the Church and Christian kingdoms, 
which are the same which have been since called litanies, 


4 [Hee regula ecclesiastica est, tra- 
dita a magistro gentium, qua utuntur 
sacerdotes nostri, ut pro omnibus sup- 
plicent, deprecantes pro regibus hujus 
szculi, ut subjectas habeant gentes, ut 
in pace positi in tranquillitate mentis 
et quiete Deo nostro servire possimus. 
Orantes etiam pro iis quibus sublimis 
potestas est credita ut in justitia et ve- 
ritate gubernent rempublicam, suppe- 
ditante rerum abundantia ut amota 


perturbatione seditionis, succedat la~ 
titia.. .. Postulantes vero pro iis qui in 
necessitate varia sunt.... Referentes 
quoque gratiarum actiones.—Comment. 
in 1 Tim. ii, 1. Opus spurium inter 
Op. S.Ambros., tom. ii. in Append., 
col. 292, C.] 

* [The ‘blessing God for all His 
servants departed this life,’’ &c., had 
been put out of our Liturgy in 1552, 
and not restored till 1662. j 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 467 


and in the ancient liturgies here was the place for them. 
Thanksgivings follow well, in reference to the Sacrament, 
from which it is called the Eucharist, because it is always 
consecrated with thanksgiving, wherein remembrance was 
made of all the blessings of God’s providence, but especially 
that of our Lord and Saviour. 

But how “thanks for all men” should stand here as a pre- 


- face, and then no thanks given for any men in the process 


ee a ee ee 


, 
7 
j 
} 





or end of the prayer, nor no Eucharist follow, (as upon holy- 
days, when there is no Communion, none doth,) I confess I 
cannot understand. 

The truth is, these words were forgotten to be strucken 
out of the preface, when in the process of this prayer they 
struck out the thanksgiving and commemoration of the 
saints and apostles before us, who in King Edw. VIth’s time 
had the oversight of altering the Service-book from the form 
made in his second year, which last (all but for ceremonies 
and a few other alterations) is still our pattern. 

Let us pray for the whole state.| The bidding of the com- 
mon-prayers appointed before all sermons in the injunctions® 
and canons‘, is nothing else but this allocution to the people 
extended to particulars. In the ancient Church, as appears 
by the eighteenth canon of the Council of Laodicea", there 
was an order taken for some prayers to be made 6a rpocdw- 
vnoews, by way of speaking to the people, from point to 
point directing them what to desire of God, and the people 
saying afterwards, “Lord have mercy,” as with us, “Our 
Father,” &c. Therefore in the Constitutions of the Apostles 
are they called only “ allocutions to the people ;” lib. viii. cap. 
10°; “ Let us pray for the peace and firm state of the world, 


8 [See the Injunctions of Edw. VI., 
A.D. 1547, Wilkins’ Concilia, tom. iv, 
p.8; and those of Elizabeth, A.D. 1559, 
ibid., p. 188. } 

* [See the Canons of 1603, can. lv. ] 

" [oitws Tay mictay Tas edxas Yyi- 
verOat tpets* play pev thy mpdrny did 
ciwn7s, thy 8 Sevrépay Kal tplrny 
51a mpocpwvhcews TAnpodoba:.—Concil. 
Laodicen. (A.D. cir. 364.) can. 19. 
Concilia, tom. i. col. 1500, C.] 

Y [dmtp ris eiphyns kal ris edora- 
Geias TOD Kéopov, Kal Tov aylwy éxKAn- 
oiav Senbauev, brws 6 TaY dAwY Oeds 


dldiov Kad dvapalperov thy EavTou eciph- 
vnv tywiv wapdoxorro ... bwép THs aylas 
KaboAkys Kal drooroAKhs éxKAnolas... 
irip mdons Tis bxd Thy ovpavoy, THY 
dpOoTomoupévwy Toy Adyov THs os GAn- 
Geias SenOdpuev ... dws 6 oiktipuwy Oeds 
xaplonra abtobs Tais ayiats abtod éx- 
kAnolas cous, évtimous’ ... kal trép 
Tav mpecBuTepwv nuav Senbapev.... 


intp mdons THs ev Xpiot@ Siaxdvias kab — 


imnpeclas SenOauey ... bwep tav ev 
ovtvylous,... bmép tav év éeyxparela 
ka) evAaBela Senbaper, imtp Tay Kapro- 
popotytay ev tH ayla exxanola Kat 


Hh2 


THIRD 
SERIES. 


THIRD 
SERIES. 


468 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


that it may please God, &c.; for the holy Catholic and 


- Apostolic Church; for the dioceses of all bishops, that God 


would give, &c.; for the deacons and inferior ministers; for 
the married and the continent; for those that give alms and 
oblations; that God would, &c.; for the sick and needy; for 
them that are imprisoned; for travellers by land and sea,” 
&e. And whosoever shall take notice of the particulars there 
related, shall receive a very ancient, if not original pattern 
and use of these prayers, which have been since called Lita- 
nies, Prayers for the state of the Church, and bidding the 
Common Prayers before Sermons. 


[ON THE EXHORTATION. | 


The Exhortation at certain times, when the curate shall see 
the people negligent to come to the holy Communion.| This 
was added, 5 Edw., upon Bucer’s special instance in his Cen- 
sure, cap. 27”, where he saith, Modis omnibus instandum, ut 
gui presentes sunt communicent. Sed sunt qui in eo nobiscum 
sentiunt, quo autem id obtineant,.. . non veris utuntur rationi- 
bus. Ali enim eo rarius S. Cenam celebrant, ut in anno vie 
pluries quam ter aut quater. Ali populum qui ad predicatio- 
nem evangelit et preces confluxit omnem dimittunt, ut Canam 
celebrent cum tis tantum qui volunt ea communicare. ...Nam ex 
eo quod Dominus usum hujus Sacramenti commendavit discipulis 
suis,...ad celebrandam solennem sui inter nos memoriam, sane 
a nobis celebrandam in omni solenni conventu, hoc est, omni 
die Dominico. Item ex eo quod Apostolus | Cor. xi. eandem 
Cenam omni frequentiori cetui deputat: et quod Ecclesia 
Apostolica legitur ita fractione panis perseverasse, ut in doc- 
trina Apostolorum, Act. iil., apparet ergo Ecclesias priscas 
illud ex certa apostolorum traditione accepisse, ut sacram 
cenam singulis diebus Dominicis et festis, immo quoties tota 
conveniebat Ecclesia, exhiberent. From whence came those 


TOLWvYTWY TOs TEVHOL TAS EAENMOTIVAS, 
kal tirép trav Tas Ovolas kal Tas arap- 
xas mporpepdvTwy Kuply TE OeG Huav 
5enbduev’ Srws 6 mavdyabos Oeds duewh 
abrovs Tats éroupavlois abrod Swpéais... 
irip trav ev appworia eketalouevwr 
aScAdGy huady SenPaucv,... bwrtp wAé- 
ovtwv Kat d8ovropotytwy' tirtp Tay ev 


peTddrdAas Kal efoplais Kal pudaxais kat 
Seopots dvTwy bia Td Bvoma Kuploy Sen- 
6éuev.—Constitut. Apostol., lib. viii. 
cap. 10. apud Concilia, tom. i. col, 470, 
- © [Censura M. Buceri in Ordinat. 
Eccl., cap. 27. Scripta Anglicana, p, 
495. ] 





ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 469 


rules that were afterwards made, somewhat to this purpose, 
at the end of the Communion. 

Bucer* also, in the last chapter of his Censure upon the 
book, urged very earnestly for the restitution of the lands 
and goods which laymen had taken away from the Church, 
and which they bestowed upon their pleasures of hunting 
and feasting, &c., threatening and forespeaking a general 
calamity and destruction that would come upon this king- 
dom unless such restitution were made, worse than Ger- 
many, or Israel and Judah suffered. But in this particular 
they never gave ear to him, which they did in altering and 
lessening the service of the Church. 

He moved here likewise for a confession of doctrine’ to be 
made, that there might be an uniformity thereof throughout 
the whole kingdom. Whereupon the articles of religion were 
drawn up in the synod, 1552. To this he desired they would 
add a larger catechism than that which was in the Book of 
Common Prayer’, which Archbishop Cranmer did*, but it 
never obtained. 

In the form of Ordination of Ministers (which was then 
extant) he moved to have a stricter examination of them for 
their life and manners, even from their infancy, than was 
then required”. Nor did he like the trial of them by a ser- 
mon, which was deceitful. But the ancient Constitutions 
and Canons had taken order for this matter before. 

Last of all he moved¢, Quia ecclesiarum ministri facilius 
comparantur, quam servantur, et in officio perseverant, qut 
bene coperunt, “that there might be yearly synods and visi- 
tations kept to that purpose.” But this also the old Consti- 
tutions of the Church had provided before. 

He concludes‘, that at the commandment of Archbishop 
Cranmer, he had made all these censures upon the book, sed 
satis precipitanter et crude, for which he craves pardon, 
having had but a very short time to make this his censure in. 


x [Ibid., pp. 498—500.] 


Jonas, See the preface to the Oxford 
y {Ibid., p. 501.} 


edition, 1829, pp. vi—viii. It was 


— * [Tbid.) 

* {This work is entitled Catechis- 
mus: that is to say, a short Instruc- 
tion into Christian Religion: London, 
1548, It is for the most part derived 
from a Latin catechism by Justus 


sent out before Bucer’s Censura was 
written. ] 

> [Ibid., and p. 502. ] 

¢ [Ibid., p. 503, ] 

@ [Ibid.] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


470 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


And he did it Nonis Januarii, 1551, at Cambridge, where he 
died twenty-five days after, viz. Prid. Calend. Mart. 1551°. 


Lift up your hearts.| 8. Chrysostom’, Ubi Cadaver, ibi 
Aquile ; Cadaver Domini Corpus est; Aquilas autem nos ap- 
pellat, ut ostenderet oportere illum ad alta contendere, qui ad 
hoc corpus accedit. Aquilarum enim non graculorum est hee 
mensa. ‘ Whosoever will approach near to that Body must 
get aloft, for this is a banquet for eagles, that soar high, and 
not for jays, that keep the ground.” §S. Hier., ad Hedib.® 
Ascendamus cum Eo ad cenaculum magnum, stratum ; ibi acci- 
piemus ab Eo sursum calicem N. Testament. 

Euseb. Emiss., Exaltata mente adora Corpus Dei Tui». 


Then shall the priest, kneeling down at God’s board, say 
in the name of all, &c. And then the priest standing up, shall 


say, &c.| Before we had the prayers and thanksgivings of the 


whole congregation; now follow the prayers which Justin 
Martyr, Apol. II.', says were made by the bishop or priest 
alone, for the blessing or consecrating of the Eucharist, for 
this belongs not to any of the people. 

We do not presume to come to this, &c.| In the first edition 
of King Edw. VIth’s Liturgy, this was used after the con- 
secration of the elements, and before the receiving of them. 
The reason why it was afterwards (and now is) otherways 
ordered, seems to have been taken at those words (after con- 
secration) contained in this prayer, “So to eat the flesh,” 
&c., which some men thought might otherwise have imported 
transubstantiation. 

For the same purpose were the words in the form of con- 
secration altered from fiat nobis Corpus et Sanguis Domi 
to what now they are. In like sort, because the very term 





e [Tbid. ] 

f [8rov yap 7d mradpa, pnolv, exe? 
Kal of derol’ wr@ua Kad@v Td coua did 
Tov Odvarov... deTovs 5 Kade?, Seur- 
vis bri kal bYnAdyv elvar de? tov rpoclovta 
T® chmatt TOUT, ... deTaY yap, ov 
kKodoa@v aitn  tpdwefa.—S. Chrys., 
in Ep. i. ad Cor. Hom, xxiv. Op. tom. x. 
p. 216, C.] 

& [S. Hieron., Ep. 120, ad Hedi- 
biam. Op. tom. i. col, 818, B.] 


h [See Pseudo- Eusebius Emissenus, 
Homiliz de Pascha 5. ap. Bibl. Patr. 
Max., tom. vi. p. 646, F., though 
the words are not exactly cited. | 

i [&pros mpoopépera Kal olvos kat 
BSwp’ Kal 6 mpocaotws evxas duolws Kal 
edxapiotias, bon Sivaus abe, dvameurer 
... kal bAads erevpyuel, Aéywv TO auhy. 
—S. Just. Mart., Apol. 1, (al. Apol. 2.) 
§ 67. Op. p. 83, D.] 


FW PE ere 


St aa LS a So 





ct gale OR ne aE FR ope Meee ——— = 


>i Ee 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 471 


of “ offering” and “ sacrifice,” though well used of old, and in 
a far different meaning from that sense wherein the papists 
used them, seemed nevertheless to sound their meaning, and 
therefore to give offence, it is altered into another expression 
of ‘‘ Christ’s precious death” only. 

Then shall the priest, &c., deliver it to the other ministers, 
that they may help the chief minister (the priest) when he 
delivereth the bread, &c., and the minister that delivereth the 
cup, &c.| Here is an express distinction between a priest 
and a deacon, who by the ancient canons of the Church was 
not to deliver the bread. Conc. Arelatens. II., cap. 15, Anno 
Dom. 4524: In secretario diacono inter presbyteros sedere non 
liceat, vel Corpus Christi, presente presbytero, tradere non 
presumat. Quod si fecerit, ab officio diaconatus abscedat. 
Conc. Andegav., anno 453*: Diaconi presbyteris noverint 
omnt humilitate deferendum. Gelas., in Epist. ad Episcopos 
Lucania, Anno 494'; yet Crescon., cap. 94™. Diaconos pro- 
priam constituimus servare mensuram, nec ultra tenorem pa- 
ternis canonibus deputatum quippiam tentare permittimus, 
nihil eorum penitus suo ministerio applicare que primis ordi- 
nibus proprie decrevit antiquitas. Absque episcopo vel presby- 
tero baptizare non audeant, nisi ( predictis officiis longe con- 
stitutis) necessitas extrema compellat, &c. Cap. 8°: Non in 
presbyterio residere, cum divina celebrantur, aut ecclesiasticus 
habetur quicunque tractatus. Sacri corporis prerogationem 
sub conspectu pontificis seu presbyteri, nisi his absentibus, jus 
non habeant exercendi. | 

For the making of which decrees occasion was given by 
the frowardness and pride of the deacons, (especially of those 
in chief cities,) about the end of the fortieth year. 

Against whom the Synod of Arles, anno 314, was forced 
to make these canons, cap. 15°. De diaconis, quos novimus 
multis in locis offerre, placuit minime fiere debere. Cap. 18°. 
De diaconis urbicis, ut non sibi tantum presumant, sed hono- 


j [Conce. Arelatens. II. (A.D. 452.) 
cap. 15. ap. Concilia, tom. v. col. 4. | 

k (Cone. Andegavense, (A,D, 453.) 
can. 2. Ibid., col. 18.] 

1 [These words, Diaconos... com- 
pellat, are from the Epist. Gelasii P. I., 
(Epist. ix.) ad Episcopos Lucaniz, cap. 
7. ap. Concilia, tom. v. col. 316, A.] 

m [Cresconius (seuCrisconius) Epise. 
Afric. Breviarium Canonicum, ap. Bibl. 


Patr. Max., tom. ix. p. 489. chapters 93— 
95, refer to these citations. The work 
of Cresconius is a kind of index of 
canons. The word “ yet’? seems a mis- 
take. } 

n [ Gelasius, ibid., cap.8. From Non 
in, to the end.] 

® [Concil. Arelatens., can. 15, Con- 
cilia, tom. i. col. 1428, E.] 

P [Ibid., can. 18. col. 1429, A.] 


THIRD 


‘SERIES. 


TuIRD 


SERIES. 


472 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, 


rem presbyteris reservent, ut sine conscientia ipsorum, nihil 
tale agant. Vid. Ep. 8. Hier., ad Evangelium. 

The priest shall receive the Communion, and after deliver 
it to, &c.| In the time of the Communion it is ordered, in 
the Constitutions of the Apostles, lib. viii", that the 34th 
Psalm be sung, in regard of the special words there referring 
to this action: ‘‘O taste and see how gracious the Lord is.” 
In other of the Eastern liturgies’, the 23rd, 42nd, 118th, and 
145th Psalms are prescribed to be sung; and these, by the 
Latin liturgists, are called Communions, as the thanksgivings 
that follow [are called] Post-communion. 

The minister that delivereth the cup, &c.| Archbishop 
Grindal, Art. 7*, will not have any chalice heretofore used 
at mass, nor any profane cup or glass, used at the Com- 
munion. | 

Priest (or bishop) let them depart with this blessing.] 
Which was the custom of the Jews to do, pronouncing the 
blessing appointed by the law at the end of the service. 
In the temple, (saith Maimonides of Prayer, c. 14, 9",) after 
the morning-service was done, the priests went into the 
pulpit to bless the people, which Ecclesiasticus seemeth 
punctually to describe, cap. 1. v. 20,21: “Then went the 
priest down, and lifted his hands over the whole congregation 
of the children of Israel, to give the blessing of the Lord 
with his lips, and to rejoice in His name; and the people 
bowed themselves down the second time to worship, that 
they might receive a blessing from the Most High.” So 
they received it kneeling. 

By the 103rd of the African Canons in Justellus’, it 





4 [Audio quendam in tantam eru- 
pisse vecordiam ut diaconos, presby- 
teris, id est episcopis anteferret, nam 
quum apostolus perspicue doceat eos- 
dem esse presbyteros quos episcopos, 
quid patitur mensarum et viduarum 
minister, ut supra eos se tumidus effe- 
rat, ad quorum preces Christi Corpus 
Sanguisque conficitur? —S. Hieron., 
Ep. 146, ad Evangelum, al. Evagrium, 
§ 1. Op. tom. i. col. 1075.] 

tr [Waruds 58 AeyéoOw Tpiaxoords 
tpiros év TH pmerarauBdvew mayTas 
Tovs Aowrovs.—Const. Apost., lib. viii. 
or 14. Concilia, tom. i. col. 485, 

“J. 
* {See Bingham, Antiquities of the 


Christian Church, book xv. ch. 5. sect. 
10, where the authorities are given. ] 

t [Whether your parson . . . minister 
the holy Communion in any chalice 
heretofore used at mass, or in any pro- 
fane cup or glass, &c.—Abp. Grindal’s 
Articles for the Province of Canterbury, 
A.D. 1576. Remains, p..159.] 

u (Maimonides, Manus Fortis. or 
Mischna Toreh, ubisupr., cap.14. n. 9. ] 

Y {Placuit etiam hoc, ut preces 
que probate fuerint in concilio, sive 


-prefationes, sive commendationes, seu 


manus impositiones ab omnibus cele- 
brentur, &e.—Codex Can. Eccl. Afr., 
can. 103. ap. Justelli Biblioth. Juris. 
Canonici veteris, tom. i. p. 386. Paris, 


i 
‘ 


q 


a ea 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 473 


seems that the benedictions of the bishop or priest that 


celebrated (to whom this office of blessing also belonged, 


as St. Jerome contendeth*) are called Commendationes et 
_ Impositiones manuum, i.e. to say prayers whereby to com- 


mend the people to God with imposition of hands; and it is 


- further ordered, that they be uniform, and prescribed forms 


of blessing (not arbitrary or voluntary) in all churches. The 


_ people, at the receiving of this blessing, bowed their heads, 


the bishop holding his hands over them, as a sign of God’s 
hand stretched out to bless them. Anaphora S. Basilit, 
published by Masiusy. 

Luther, in his Form of the Communion of the Year 15237, 
saith of this benediction, that it is, Quedam quasi absolutio 
publica communicantium a peccatis, et vox plane Evangelica ; 
therefore rather to be kept than the Jewish form, which the 
Calvinists everywhere use in their assemblies. 

The blessing.| In the second of King Edward it ended at 
these words, “in the knowledge and love of God, and His 
Son Jesus Christ our Lord.” That which follows was added 
in the fifth of King Edward’. 


Collects to be said after the Offertory, when there is no 
Communion. 


Assist us, &c. O Almighty Lord, &c. Prevent us, &c. 
Almighty God, &c. . . . . which hast promised, &c., with two 
Collects for rain and fair weather’. 

Rubric. “That the Litany shall be sung upon Wednes- 
days and Fridays, according to the king’s injunctions. That 
after the Litany, though there be no Communion, yet shall 
the priest put upon him an alb or surplice, with a cope, and 
say all that is appointed at the Communion, until he cometh 


1661. et ap. Concilia, tom. ii. col. 


traducta per Andream Masium. Bi- 
1336, A.] 


blioth. Patrum, De la Bigne, tom. vi. 


x (Quid enim facit excepta ordina- 
tione, Episcopus quod presbyter non 
facit? —S. Hieron., Epist. 146, ad 
Evangelum, Op. tom. i. col. 1076, C.] 

¥ [ Diaconus. Post sumptionem sanc- 
torum Sacramentorum que exhibita 
sunt coram Domino misericorde capita 
nostra inclinemus. 

Populus. Coram te, Domine Deus 
noster. 

Anaphora §, Basil. ex Syriaca lingua 


col. 41. } 

* [Pax Domini, &c., que est que- 
dam, &c. as in text.— Formula Missz 
sive Communionis pro Ecclesia Witte- 
berg. Lutheri Op. tom. ii. fol. 384, b. ] 

® {This is a mistake; the blessing 
is the same in both. } 

>» [The collects and rubrics that 
follow are those of the first book of 
Edw. VI., derived through Alesius’ 
Latin translation.] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


4:7 4, NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


to the Offertory, and so dismiss the people with the blessing. 
That the host be of the usual matter and form; that is, a 
wafer, but without any impression upon it, somewhat broader 
and thicker than before, that at least it may be broken into 
two parts, yet that no man must think less to be received by 
him in that part than in the whole. That the priest-shall 
bear the charges of the bread and wine, and in lieu thereof 
that the people shall offer every Sunday (during the time 
that the Offertory is sung) the price of the holy loaf, which 
they were wont to find before, besides their other wonted 
oblations. 

“That, according to the king’s injunctions, the people 
be present at service and sermon with quietness and rever- 
ence, and once in the year at least to communicate, other- 
wise to be punished by the censures of the Church. And 
that the Sacrament of the Lord’s Body (when it is distri- 
buted) be given into the people’s mouths, and not into their 
hands, (though it was otherwise used many years after the 
apostles’ times,) lest they should carry it home, as they did 
otherways of old, and use it superstitiously.” 

Of all which order, so set forth in the second year of King 
Edw. VI., this was Bucer’s first Censure’, “ That at his first 
coming into this kingdom, he set himself diligently to study 
this book, wherein he found all things purely reformed; and 
that in all the ceremonies there was nothing but what was 
either taken out of the Word of God, or was not any way 
against it, if they were rightly taken and candidly inter- 
preted.” But afterwards himself (as it seems) forgetting or 
neglecting his own rule, he censures and finds fault with 
many particulars as coming from the papists, and tending to 
the maintenance of superstition, and being contrary to God’s 
Word; for which reasons he wishes Archbishop Cranmer 
presently to reform them. Which was the cause (together 
with Calvin’s* vehement letters for a further reformation) that 
a new book was set out in the fifth and sixth years of King 
Edw. VI., a little before the Protector was beheaded. 

1. That the vestments and garments® might be taken 
away, being an occasion of superstition. 


° {Buceri Censura, ad init. ubisupr., of Bucer are not given owing to the 

p. 456. } length to which they would run, Cosin’s 
« [See above, p. 469, note a.] statements being the substance of large 
* [Bucer, ibid., p. 458. The words portions of Bucer’s work.} — 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 4.75 


2. That no part of the Communion-service‘ might be read 
upon holydays, &c., when there was no Communion; the 


_ order appointed by the book being a dumb show, borrowed 
_ from the Roman antichrist. 


3. That Morning and Evening Prayer® should not be read 


in one place, and the half-communion service at another ; 
that is, at the altar: nor that the one should be said in 


a surplice only, and the other in a cope; all which was 
_ a massing fashion. 


4, .That the Sacrament» be not administered in private 
houses, nor in chapels annexed to other churches, nor in the 


_ chapels of noblemen, for fear of superstition. 


5. That liberty might be given to use leavened and com- 
mon bread, as well as wafers and unleavenedi; and that the 
words, “no less received in part than in the whole,” might 
be omitted, for fear of transubstantiation. 

6. That the bread should be fragilis* he likes well, and 
that there should be oblations instead of the holy loaf at the 
Offertory, which he calls, Officium grate pietatis in pastorem 
et ecclesiam. 

7. That he likes not their opinion! who think Christ is 


more received in the Sacrament of His Supper than in bap- 


_ tism and the preaching of the word; or that more prepara- 


tion is to be used for the one than the other. Ib. and c. 27. 
8. That instead of enjoining the people to receive once a 
year at the least™, he would have an exhortation made, to set 


before them the greatness of their fault, if they refused to 


communicate or went away from the Sacrament, so often as 
it was celebrated. Which was the occasion of the first ex- 
hortation of the fifth of King Edward, continued in our book, 
“ We be come together,” &c. 

9. That it was a superstitious practice to give the Sacra- 
ment into the people’s mouths, and not into their hands, 
which were one as holy as the other™; and that the people 
were as holy as the priests, who took it into their hands, and 
might see whether the people into whose hands they are to 
give it did eat the Sacrament or no, no less than if they 


f (Id. ibid., cap. 3.] k (Id. ibid.] 
« [Id. ibid., p. 459. ] 1 [Id, ibid., pp. 460 and 496.] 
h [ Td. ibid. ] m [Id. ibid., p. 461.1 
i (Id. ibid. n (Id. ibid., p. 462. 
P 


THIRD 


SERIES. 
SD 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


476 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


gave it them into their mouths; this manner of receiving 
therefore to be altered. 

10. That at the Offertory he would have a collection for 
the poor®, after the example of the Low Countries, where, 
among the reformed, none were suffered to beg. 

11. That in the time of the Communion the men should 
be placed on one part of the choir and the women on the 
other, he likes well enough”, because it was an old custom, 
and that they should not look upon one another; but then 
he would have the table so placed that both the one and the 
other might hear what was said at it. 

12. That the minister should be enjoined to provide no 
more bread and wine upon the altar than would serve the 
people that communicate, he misliketh utterly1; because by 
this injunction men would be brought to an opinion, that 
what was left of the elements after the Communion was 
done, may not be put to any common use; but that (as of 
old, in the ancient fathers’ time, they were wont to do) what- 
ever remained was to be taken and eaten by the communi- 
cants in the church. Which, because it was like to confirm 
the papists in their conceit that the nature of the bread. and 
wine were changed, and that Christ was inherent in the ele- 


ments themselves, he urged to have it declared, that extra 


usum Sacramenti, that is, when the Communion was ended, 
the bread and wine might be put to any common use. 

13. That he would not have any allowance granted to use 
the gestures of kneeling, crossing, smiting the breast, hold- 
ing up the hands, &c.", as being papistical, and tending to 


the upholding of the mass, which is an execrable thing. 


14. That he likes not two Communions upon Christmas- 
day morning, as the use was then, though aforetimes there 


-were three*; and his reasons are, 1. Because we can shew no 


Scripture for any such practice. 2. Because it makes people 
imagine that this feast is higher than other feasts, and there- 
fore they are to communicate at no other time. 

15. That though the reading the homilies be better than 
no preaching at all, yet that sermons are chiefly to be sought 


° (Id. ibid., cap. 4. p. 463.] * (Id. ibid., cap. 5. p. 465. ] 
P (Id. ibid., p. 464. ] * [Id. ibid., cap. 6. | 
4 [Id. ibid. } 





ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 4.77 


after‘, and an able preacher placed in every church, for that 
he knoweth nothing absolutely necessary to salvation but the 
office of preaching. 

In the meanwhile he would not have the homilies so short, 
nor divided into several parts, but read out at large, as being 
at their full length short enough for a sermon-time; desiring 
that other homilies may be added (for them to read that 
cannot make better themselves) of the same heads which are 
now set forth in the second tome. 

16. The singing of the Sanctus" in the choir he likes well, 
so it be not done (as in some places it was) whilst the priest 
was saying the prayer for the whole state of Christ’s Church. 

17. In the prayer for the state of Christ’s Church* he 
mislikes the commendation and prayer for the dead, because 
there is no precept or example of it in the Scripture, though 
the ancient fathers used it. Against this part of that prayer 
also Calvin, in his Epistle to the Protector, wrote most ear- 
nestly; and therefore order was taken in 5 Edw. to leave 
it out’, because it was an occasion (though otherwise harm- 
less) of bringing in many superstitious conceits and practices 
about purgatory. In the meanwhile Bucer desires that in- 
stead of this commendation and prayer for the dead, another 
clause might be substituted, to beseech Almighty God, that 
we, following the example of His saints in the constant pro- 
fession of our faith and obedience, may, together with them 
and all others departed in the faith of Christ, at His second 
coming have a glorious resurrection. Which is now used in 
the form of bidding the prayers before sermon, and in the 
Burial of the Dead. But he liketh not the expression here, 
“Those that rest in the sleep of peace,’ ne daretur occasio, 
&c., that occasion might not be given for some men to please 
themselves in their opinion, (as the Anabaptist and Socinian 
then did,) that the souls of the dead slept till the day of 
judgment. . 

18. In the Prayer of Consecration’, he would have these 
words of ‘ blessing and sanctifying the bread and wine, that 
they might. be made to us the Body and Blood of Christ,’ 


t (Id. ibid., cap. 7.] effect as Bucer’s. Epist. ad Angliz 
« (Id. ibid., cap. 8. p. 467.] Protectorem. Epistole et Respons., p. 
x (Id. ibid., cap. 9.] 142. col. 2.] 


Y [Calvin’s argument is to the same 2 {Id. ibid., p. 468. ] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


478 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


changed into these of ‘blessing and sanctifying us, that with 
true faith we might receive the Body and Blood of Christ in 
these holy mysteries, as heavenly food.’ To which purpose 
they were afterwards altered, because the former words (as 
he said) gave occasion to confirm men in the popish conceit 
of transubstantiation; and because we had no precept nor 
example from the apostles to make any such prayer for the 
blessing of the bread, &c., for that Christ’s blessing of it in 
the distribution to His apostles at His last supper, was of 
no other kind than the blessing of the loaves and fishes 
wherewith He fed the five thousand. 

19. Therefore he mislikes also the making of any crosses* 
(as the book appointed) over the bread and wine; or that 
the minister should take the bread and wine into his hands, 
when he read the words of institution; because by this prac- 
tice men would think that he said these words to the bread 
and wine, and not to the communicants; and it should seem 
that thereupon those directions in the margin for the priest’s 
taking the bread and wine into his hands, (when he says, 
“took bread,” and ‘took the cup,’’) were afterwards left out ; 
and yet the use could not for all that be left off, it being a 
general custom among us to do so still. © 

20. In the Prayer of Oblation he dislikes those words, 
“And command our prayers to be brought before Thee 
by the ministry of Thy holy angels,” which he wisheth to 
be changed into that form we have after the participation, 
which was then placed before it; because the prayers of the 
faithful (as he instances in Cornelius) use to go up of them- 
selves alone, without the help of any angels. 

21. Those words in the prayer, ‘We do not presume to 
come,” &c.; “so to eat the Flesh of Thy dear Son, and to drink 
His Bloods,” he is not only content to let stand, but falls to 
some kind of intreating that they may be continued, and 
remain unaltered, as fearing that upon the common excep- 
tions taken against them, (which exceptions he answers at 
large,) they also would be changed or left out of the book ; 
for he knew very well that this was the intention-.of the Pro- 
tector, and that for this reason Cranmer had sent for his 


® (Id. ibid., p. 472. > [Id. ibid., pp. 472, 473. 
P 


¢ [Id. ibid, p. 473.) 





eee 


t 


’ 
f ‘ 


——r 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 479 


censure upon the book; and, indeed, all things were pre- 
sently ordered and altered according to his mind and 
censure. 

By Bucer’s‘ directions likewise was this rubric following 
added in the fifth of King Edward (though now® omitted in 
ours) after the rubric where the curate is permitted to take 
the bread and wine that remain to his own use. 

“ Although no order can be so perfectly devised, but it 
may be of some, either for their ignorance and infirmity, or 
else of malice and obstinacy, misconstrued, depraved, and in- 
terpreted in a wrong part; and yet because brotherly cha- 
rity willeth that, so much as conveniently may be, offences 
should be taken away; therefore we willing to do the same. 
Whereas it is ordained in the Book of Common Prayer, in 
the administration of the Lord’s Supper, that the commu- 
nicant kneeling should receive the holy Communion ; which 
thing being well-meant for a signification of the humble 
and grateful acknowledgment of the benefits of Christ given 
to the worthy receiver, and to avoid the profanation and dis- 
order which about the holy Communion might ensue; lest 
yet the same kneeling might be thought or taken other- 
wise, we do declare that it is not meant hereby that 
any adoration is done, or ought to be done, either unto 
the sacramental bread and wine there bodily received, or 
unto any real and essential presence there being of Christ’s 
natural Flesh and Blood; for, as concerning the sacramental 
bread and wine, they remain still in their natural substances, 
and therefore may not be adored, for that were idolatry, to 
be abhorred of all faithful Christians; and as concerning the 
natural Body and Blood of our Saviour Christ, they are in 
heaven and not here; for it is against the truth of Christ’s 


@ (Id. ibid., pp. 474, 475.] natures, was added afterwards. In 


© [This word ‘now’ was misprinted 
‘not’ by Nicholls. The rubric that 
follows was, as appears, added after the 
book was printed. In the ‘ Two Litur- 
gies....of K. Edwd. VI. published 
for the Parker Society, Cambridge, 
1844, at p. 283, is the following note 
on this rubric; “ This paragraph is 
fourth in order in Grafton, 2. It is 
printed on a separate leaf in other 
copies, and, as is evident from the sig- 


Grafton, 1, the leaf is pasted in after 
the copy was bound ; and several copies 
are without it.” The copy from which 
the “Two Liturgies of Edwd. V1. com- 
pared” were printed at Oxford, 1838, 
was without it, and it does not appear in 
this place in that volume; see the pre- 
face to the second edition, 1841, note 
B, p. xliv. The latter part was rein- 
troduced in 1662. ] 


THIRD 


SERIEs. 


THIRD 


SERIES, 


480 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


natural Body to be in more places than one at the same 
time.” 

But by the tenor of it, it seems to be no part of the Com- 
mon Prayer Book. 

And there shall be no celebration of the Lord’s Supper, 
except there be a good number to communicate with the 
priest.| This rubric was made against private masses, 
wherein the priest only communicated alone by himself. 
St. Ambrose (or another such ancient author under his 
name) in illud S. Pauli‘, ‘Alius alium expectate :’ Eapectan- 
dum (inguit) ut multorum oblatio simul celebretur, et omnibus 
ministretur. S. Hier. in 1 ad Cor. cap. xi.8: Cana Domi- 
nica omnibus debet esse communis, quia Ille omnibus discipulis 
suis gui aderant equaliter tradidit Sacramentum. 

Shall all receive the Communion every Sunday at the least. | 
S.Aug.£p.118": Alii quotidie communicant, alii certis diebus, 
alibi nullus dies intermittitur quo non offeratur, alibi Sabbato 
tantum et Dominico. So that this difference notwithstanding, 
it was the universal custom of the ancient Church to cele- 
brate the Eucharist, if not every day, yet upon all Sundays 
howsoever, if not rather by consequence, upon all festivals 
and days of solemn assemblies. Acts x. 7: “On the first 
day of the week the disciples assembled together to break 
bread,” (i. e. to celebrate the Eucharist, as the Syriac 
translates it.) In the meantime it is plain by this rubric, 
and that before, where it is said, ‘ Upon the holydays, if 
there be no Communion ;” and more plain by the rubrics 
in the first book of Edw. VI., which say, “In cathedral - 
churches, or other places where there be daily Commu- 
nions, &c., if upon the Sunday or holyday the people be 
negligent to come to the Communion,” that our Church 
affected the frequentation of this service according to the 


. primitive practice, so far as they thought it attainable; yet 


it seems by this last rubric, which abates much of the former, 
that they descended to Calvin 4. Jnst. 17. § 43 et 46‘, where 


f [Comment. in 1 Cor. xi. 88, opus h [S. Aug. Ep. 54. ad Januarium 
spurium inter op. S. Ambros., tom. ii. (aliter Ep. 118.) cap. 2. § 2. Op. tom, 
in Append. col. 150, B.] ii. col. 124, C. See above, p. 113, 

& (Comment. in 1 Cor. xi. opus note a.] 


spurium inter op. S. Hieron., tom. xi. i [Sic administrari decentissime po- 
col. 931, D.] terat si sepissime et singulis ad mini- 











_ that though there was no necessity, yet there was a liberty 
_ still reserved of using wafer-bread, which was continued in 


ON THE OFFICE OF THE HOLY COMMUNION. 48] 


4 he says he would have the Eucharist celebrated at least once 
 aweek. : 


And to take away superstition, it shall suffice that the 
bread be such as is usual to be eaten.) It is not here com- 
manded that no unleavened or wafer bread be used, but 
it is said only “that the other bread shall suffice.” So 


divers churches of the kingdom, and Westminster for one, 


4 till the 17th of King Charles. 


The first use of the common bread was begun by Farel 
and Viret at Geneva, 1538, which so offended the people 


_ there, and their neighbours at Lausanne and Berne, (who had 


called a synod about it) that both Farel and Viret, and 
Calvin and all, were banished for it from the town, where 
afterwards the wafer-bread being restored, Calvin thought fit 
to continue it, and so it is at this day. Vid. Vitam Calvini 
per Bezam, ad an. 1538, et Ep. Calv.* 

And if any of the bread and wine remain, the curate, &c.] 
Which needeth not be understood of that bread and wine which 
was blessed and consecrated, but of that which was brought 
to the church, and not used for the Sacrament. And yet 
we read of some such thing in the Constitutions of the 
Apostles, lib. viii. cap. 31', tas mepiccevovcas év Tots pu- 
aotixois, &c. ‘Let the deacons distribute the remains of the 


_ blessings at the mysteries to the clergy, according to the 
_ mind of the bishop or presbyters. To the bishop, four parts; 


to a presbyter, three; to a deacon, two; to the rest, sub- 
deacons, readers, singers, or deaconesses, one part.” 


mum hebdomadibus proponeretur Ec- 
clesie.—Calv. Inst., lib. iv. cap. 17. 
§ 43. Singulis ad minimum hebdoma- 
dibus proponenda erat Christianorum 
coetui mensa Domini.—lId, ibid., § 46. 
See the whole passage. | 

i [i e. till 1043.) 

k [The statement in Beza’s Life is 
that common bread was in use at 
Geneva, but not at Berne, and that in 
the year 1538, the Bernese calling a 
synod at Lausanne, ordered the use of 
wafers at Geneva; that Calvin and his 
friends were, on refusing to celebrate, 


COSIN, 


Ii 


expelled from Geneva by the civil 
magistrates; thatafterwards they agreed 
to use wafers, and returned.—See Jo- 
annis Calvini Vita, a Th. Beza, ad 
ann. 1538, prefixed to the first volume 
of his works, Amsterd. 1671.] 

1 [ras wepicoevotcas év tots mvorl- 
kots evAoylas kata yrauny Toy émiokdroy, 
} tav mpeoButépwy oi SidKovor, Staveué- 
TwWOaY THE KANG’ TE emiskdwm pméepy 
Técoapa mpeaButépy pépn Tpla diaxdv@ 
Hépn 5t0.—Constitut. A postol., lib. viii, 
cap. 31. apud Concilia, tom, i. col. 495, 


B.] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 
Fie asta 





meee 


THIRD 
SERIES, 





482 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


ON THE OFFICE OF BAPTISM. 


Public Baptism, when the most number of people may come 


together.| And therefore it is presently afterwards ordered 


that it shall be done in service-time, after the second les- 
son at Morning or Evening Prayer. But because people 
used not so diligently to come to service, Bucer in his Cen- 
sure said™ “it would be better to do it immediately after 
the sermon,” (for there were most people at that,) wherein 
nevertheless he prevailed not, for these rubrics we see con- 
tinue still. 

The ancient Church was wont to administer this Sacra- 
ment of Baptism immediately before the Sacrament of the 
Lord’s Supper; for that they were gemina Ecclesia Sacra- 
menta, the twin-Sacraments, and therefore to go together. 

It is the custom of divers Churches to do so still. They 
both make a Communion among Christians. Quis autem 
(says Bucer" well) sensum aliquem Christiane teneat Com- 
munionis, qui non agnoscat quantopere deceat eos qui sunt 
invicem membra in Christo frequentes adesse, cum aliquis 
natus inter ipsos in eternam mortem, debet in Ecclesia renasci 
ad sempiternam vitam, suscipit inter Filios Det, quo illi simul 
istud beneficium et a Deo pariter orent, et ut Christi Ecclesia 
per ministrum una conferant; et sicut singulorum ille mem- 
brum fit per hoe Sacramentum, ita a singulis quoque tanquam 
membrum recipiatur, et quisque se et coram Domino devinciat, 
ad mutua Christiane Communionis officia, et corporalia et 
spiritualia. -Paulo post®. Natura enim docente solent ho- 
mines eos, quos in honestum collegium suscipere decreverunt 
atque societatem, ut in academiis, et multis aliis longe minoris 
momenti societatibus hominum fieri videmus, id facere, cum 
college frequentiores convenerint; ut ita quasi ab omnibus 
uli in collegas recipiantur, et singuli officia collegarum eis 
deferant, ad eaque ita se publice invicem adstringant. : 

Public Baptism.| If we have here no order about chrism, 
we are as safe as they were three hundred and odd years 
after Christ; for the first canon which is pretended to be 
made about it was in the council which they say was held 


™ [Bucer, ubi supr., p. 477.] n [Td. ibid.} ® (Id. ibid.] 











ON THE OFFICE OF HOLY BAPTISM. 483 


at Rome by Sylvester? ; Constituit clara voce Sylvester urbis 
Rome episcopus, ut nemo presbyter chrisma conficeret quoniam 
Christus a chrismate vocabatur. Where whatever becomes of 
chrism, it is but a wild and a very improbable reason, that 
he gives for this his interdict. But Innocent I.4 would not 
permit a priest to sign in the front (but in pectore only) 
with that hallowed oil, which yet the Church of Rome doth. 
And in the Council of Laodicea, eap. 48": Si a Domino 
instituta, et indesinenter adhibita per quatuor secula, quid ne- 
cesse erat novum canonem condere ? : 

Ask the name, and naming of the child.| Vid. St. Chrys., 
Hom. 21%, 51, et 56% in Gen. 

Which shall be baptized in this water, &c.| In baptism, 
the nature and substance of water doth still remain, and yet 
it is not bare water; it is changed, and made the Sacrament 
of regeneration. It is water consecrated. 

Minister make this exhortation to the godfathers, &c.| 
Because many parents had not such due care as they ought 
in the godly bringing up their children; so that many 
children knew not whether they were baptized or not; and 
many were never taught what covenant had been made 
between God and them in their baptism; and because many 


P [ Concilium Roman. ITI. (A.D. 324.) 
cap. 5. Concil., tom. i. col. 1554, D.]} 

4 [Nam presbyteris, seu extra epi- 
scopum, seu presente episcopo cum 
baptizant, chrismate baptizatos ungere 
licet, sed quod ab episcopo fuerit con- 
secratum, non tamen frontem ex eodem 
oleo signare, quod solis debetur epi- 
scopis, cum tradunt Spiritum Paracle- 
tum.—Innocent. Pape I. Epist. 1. ap. 
Concilia, tom.iii. col. 1029. See the De- 
cretum of Gratian, pars iii. de Conse- 
cratione, dist. 4. c. 119. 120.] 

* [87 Se? robs pwrifouévous peta Td 
Bdrrioua xplecOar xpicuar émoupaviy, 
kal perdxous elvat tHs Baoirelas Tod 
Xpiorov.—Concil. Laodicen. (cire. A.D. 
364?) Can. 48, Concilia, tom. i. col. 
1506, A.} 

8 [eis 7d bvoud, dnot,-Tod mdmrov, 
kal Tod éximdmmov Kadrciabw Td waldiov. 
GAN of madraiol ody obtws, GAA macay 
onrovdny emo.odyro ToLavTas mpoonyoplas 
émiTiOevar Tots TiKTOMEVaLS, al WH Udvov 
avrovs Tos Thy mpoonyoplay Sexouevors 
eis GpeThy évivyov, GAAG Kal Tois %AAois 
dracw kal rais wet Tada yeveais o- 
dackarla pirocopias amrdons &yvyvortTo 


. + » By Tolvuy unde Hueis Tas TUXOVCaS 
Tpornyopias emiTiOGmev Tots matrw pndée 
Tav Tannwy Kal Tov émimdnmwy, Kat 
Tay mpos yévos Siapepdvtwy Tas dvoua- 
alas avtots xapiCoucba, GAAL TOY aylwv 
avipav Tav év dperh Siarampdvrwy, Tov 
ToAAY wappnolayv mpds Toy Ocdy dax7- 
Kkérwyv.—S. Chrysost. in Genes. cap. 4, 
Hom. 21. § 3. Op. tom. iv. p. 185, 
C, D.] 

t [ondwe: moon Tav TWadaav hv 7 
ctveais, maAAov 5& wécn TOD cod 7 
cogla, as Kal Tas yuvaikas mapackevd~ 
Sew wy amwrds pndé ds rvxe Tas mpo- 
onyoplas Tots TexOeiow emiTibévat, GAN 
avarorider Oat TH Tod Taidlov mpoonyopla 
TaV MEAASYT WY EcETOM THY Tpoavaparn- 
oiwv.—Idem in Genes., cap. 26. Hom. 
51. § 1. ibid. p. 500, C.] 

" [ondwe mas ep Exdorov T&v Tat- 
dlwy evxapiote? (Acla) TG Acomdry, kal 
evyvépwv ylvera: wept thy evepyectar. 
"Hroveed, not yap, 6 Kupuos, 8Tt micod- 
Mat, Kal mporédwKé por kal rovTov" Kad 
51a TotTO exdAeoe Td bvoMa adTod Sv- 
pedv.—ldem in Genes., cap. 80. Hom, 
56, § 3. p, 544, A.] 


5 te 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


‘THIRD 


SERIES, 





484 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


swerved away of old from Christian profession, and became 
pagans, 


ON CONFIRMATION, OR LAYING ON OF HANDS. 


The order for the Confirmation of children.| First book of 
Edw. VI., against this word ‘children’ Bucer took exception* ; 
and therefore, in the second book of King Edward, the title 
was amended, and called Confirmation only. In our book 
the title was explained, after the Conference at Hamp- 
ton Court, for the satisfaction of the ministers there, who 
thought there was some popish meaning in the word Con- 
firmation, as if it added strength to the Sacrament of Baptism, 
or as if baptism were not valid without it. Therefore the 
title was put into these terms; “The Order of Confirmation, 
or Laying on of Hands upon Children Baptized, and able to 
render an account of their faith, according to the Catechism 
following :” which Catechism was then also augmented, upon 
those ministers’ complaint that it was insufficient in not 
setting forth the nature of the Sacraments. 

Confirmation.| There is an old canon in the first Arausi- 
can Council’, De non iteranda chrismatis benedictione ; quia 
inter nos placuit semel chrismari; where the canon ended. 
The addition that follows was added by others before Isid, 
Mercator’s time, who first corrupted the canon, but it 
bears the same sense. So that chrismation in confirmation 
(being had before in baptism) was not accounted necessary 
in France, whatever it was at Rome. 

And that no man shall think, &c. by deferring their Confir- 
mation, &c.| Confirmation (though it be very behoveful) is not 
absolutely necessary to salvation, being not of Christ’s own 
institution, as the Sacrament of Baptism is; for it was insti- 
tuted only by the Church, in imitation of the apostles, as 


x [See Bucer, Censura, cap. 17. pp. 
482, sqq. } 

y [See Barlow’s account of the 
Hampton-court Conference; Cardwell’s 
History of Conferences, pp.172,173,182, 
183, 205. The king raised difficulties 
about it, and wished it to be entitled 
an Examination with Confirmation. ] 

[Nullum ministrorum, qui bap- 
tizandi recepit officium, sine chrismate 
usquam debere progredi, quia inter nos 


placuit semel chrismari. De eo autem, 
qui in baptismate quacunque necessi- 
tate faciente non chrismatus fuerit, in 
confirmatione sacerdos commonebitur, 
Nam inter quoslibet chrismatis ipsius 
non nisi una benedictio est: non ut 
prejudicans quidquam, sed ut non ne- 
cessaria habeatur repetitio chrismatis,— 
Conc, Arausican. I. ann. 441. can. 2. 
tom. iv. col. 701. See the notes there. } 


* 


le Bee 


i a 


Pie ee SAL, 


y 


EE ee eS eee ee es ee 


a Ah” at 


Ol ee te ee 





f 
i 
} 
fe 
F 
ke 
t 


the Church. So do Alexander Hales, par. iv. q. 9°; 


it. 


ON THE OFFICE OF CONFIRMATION. 485 


Cornelius the pope, apud Huseb. (lib. v. cap. 36%,) fetches 
the first original of it ab Ecclesie Canone: and Gul. Anti- 
siodorensis, Jract. IX. lib. iv.», and Vitriacus, Oriental. 
Hist., cap. 39°, write expressly that it was instituted by 
and 
Bonaventure, 4 Dist. 7. q.1, ef 2°; and Eugen. IV. anno 1439, 
in his Monita to the Armenians, makes this to be one, that 
confirmation was appointed in the Church in imitation or 
instead of the imposition of hands used by the apostles, 
Acts vii.', which abundantly prove it not to have been of 
divine right; but being long in use, before the Council of 
Laodicea, anno 363%, and then disapproved by the faction 
of the Novatians, which inhabited Phrygia, and scorned it ; 
there was a canon then, and divers after, made to establish 
Socr., lib. iv. cap. 17; Soz., lib. vi. cap. 4, lib. vii. 
cap. 18". 

That confirmation of children after baptism was not ac- 
counted to be of absolute necessity, it is plain from the use 
of old, in receiving some such to the Communion, and to 
sacred orders also, who had never been confirmed. Anno 240, 
Novatian, after he was recovered of his sickness, obtained 


@ [od phy ovde Tay AoiTaY ervxXE, 
Siapuyov thy vdcov, @Y Xp} meTadau- 
Bdavew xara tov THs éxKkAnolas Kdvova, 
Tov Te ohpayicOjva brd Tov émoKd- 
mov.—Epist. Cornelii, ap. Euseb. Hist. 
Eccles., lib. vi. cap. 43. p. 313. ] 

+ [The words of Gul. Altissiodorensis, 
Summa Aurea, lib. iv. are: ‘* Unde 
dicitur quod confirmationis sacramen- 
tum, ortum habuerit ab apostolis ead 
tum ad manus impositionem... 


quantum vero ad chrismationem ortum ° 


habuit ab institutione ecclesie: sed 
melius est dicere quod quantum ad 
utrumque ortum habuit [ab ] apostolis. 
— Fol. eclvii. col.i., ed. Paris. 1500. } 

¢ {The editor has not access to this 
work.] 

4 [Confirmationis sacramentum.... 
Ordinatum est ab Ecclesia ob reveren- 


_tiam sacramentorum predictorum scil. 


Baptismi et Eucharistiz, &c.—Alexan- 
dri Alensis Summa ‘Theologiz’, pars iv. 
quest. 9. Art. i. p. 220, col. i. ed. Co- 
lon. 1622. ] 

© [Postquam bases Ecclesia Apo- 
stoli . . . defecerunt, instituit Spiritus 
Sanctus hujus sacramenti formam, cui 
etiam virtutem sanctificandi dedit.— 


S. Bonaventura in Sententias, lib. iv. 
Dist. 7. Art. 1, quest. 1. p. 98. Op. 
tom. v. Rome, 1596. 

Nec materiam, hec formam apostoli 
dispensaverunt; sed rem hujus sacra- 
menti sine forma a Spiritu Sancto im- 
mediate acceperunt. ... Institutum est 
igitur hoe elementum Spiritu Sancto 
dictante ab ipsis Ecclesiz rectoribus.— 
Ibid., quest. 2. ibid.] 

f {Loco autem illius manuum im- 
positionis datur in Eeelesia_ confir- 
matio.—Conce. Florentinum, A.D. 1439. 
Decretum Pape Eugenii ad Armenos, 
ap. Concilia, tom. xvii. col. 548, B. It 
should be remembered that unction 
was regarded as the essence of con- 
firmation. | 

€ [Concil. Laodicen., can. 48. Con- 
cilia, tom. i. col. 1506, A, cited above, 
p- 483, note r. ] 

s [ These references are incorrect ; 
the fact stated respecting the Novatians 
is affirmed by Pacian, Epist. iii. cont. 
tractatus Novatianorum, § 3. apud 
Gallandii Bibl. Patr., tom. vii. p. 262; 
and by Theodoret, Heret. Fab., lib, iii, 
ce. 5. Op, tom, iv. p. 229, D.] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


436 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 

no confirmation of the bishop; and yet within a while, 
Fabian the pope made him priest; Euseb., lib. vi. cap. 354, 
The Greeks, Russians, Armenians, Jacobites, and Nestorians, 
use no other confirmation than the chrism in baptism, which 
is sufficient; and therefore they have wrong done them by 
Guido de Perpiniano, de Heres., art. 21*; Joannes Sacranus, 
Elucid. de Err. Ruth., cap.2!; Guagninus, de Ruthen. Relig.™; 
Thevet., Cosmogr., lib. xix. cap. 12"; and others, who affirm 
that they admit not confirmation, but abhor from it, and 
account it superfluous; for they have the same that was 
used in the ancient time, when those that were newly bap- 
tized were brought to the bishop to be consigned. Vid. 
Hier., adv. Lucifer., cap. 4°. 

The blow upon the cheek there given by the Romanist, 
Antiquitatis totius authoritate caret. Vid. Blond., Apol., 
pp. 214, 215. The Romanists impose no hands, but hold 
them up and over the child. So the ancient use was abo- 
lished, and new fashions brought in, without any example 
of the apostles in the primitive Church. Tandem juris sui 
pleneque potestatis conscia Anglicana Ecclesia, renovato ve- 
teris yeipo0ccias instituto, omnem chrismatis confectionem 
atque usum multis retro seculis in superstitionem versum, 
facessere [ jussit. Protestantes vero cismarini priscorum ce- 
remontis que per se suaque| natura nihil religiosarum rerum 
adumbrationes typique humanitus efformati erant sepositis, in 
res ipsas typis illis a pia antiquitate designatas toto animo 


i [See Euseb. Pamph. Hist. Eccl., 
lib. vi. cap. 43. p. 313, cited above, p. 
485, note a. No mention is made there 


rum. Ibid., p. 232.] 
n [Ils rejettent le Sacrament de Con- 
firmation, comme chose superflue.— 


of his ordination, but he is called mpec- 
Burepos. | 

k [Errant etiam, quia negant sacra- 
mentum confirmationis.— Guido de 
Perpiniano, Summa de Heresibus; de 
Heresibus Armenorum, cap. 21. p. 63. 
Colon. Agr. 1631. ] 

1 [Dicunt confirmationis Sacramen- 
tum nullum esse.—Joannes Sacranus, 
Elucidarius errorum ritus Ruthenici, 
cap. ii. § 13. ap. Lasitski, de Russo- 
rum, &c. religione. 
191.) 

m [Confirmationis, seu inunctionis 
Sacramentum maxime abhorrent. — 
Alexander Guagniuus, de Religione 
Moscovitarum omniumque Rutheno- 


Spire, 1582, p. — 


A. Theyvet, Cosmographie universelle, 
lib. xix. ch. 12. p. 856, Paris. 1575. ] 

®° {Non quidem denuo hance esse ec- 
clesiarum consuetudinem ut ad eos qui 


_longe a majoribus urbibus per presby- 


teros et diaconos baptizati sunt. Epi- 
scopus ad invocationem Sancti Spiritus 
manum impositurus excurrat.—S. Hie- 
ron. dial. adv. Luciferianos, cap. 9. Op. 
tom. ii. gol. 181, A.] 

P {Blondelli Apologia pro sententia 
Hieronymi de Episcopis et presbyteris, 
sect. iii. de Confirmandi potestate. The 
words just cited are from page 214, 
those that follow from page 215; the 
other authorities are derived from Blon- 
del. | ; , 


ON THE OFFICE OF CONFIRMATION. 487 


THIRD 


defixa, nulla externe chrismationis fidelibus necessitate im- s 
ERIES, 


posita, celestibus doctrine Ewangelice monitis sanctisque pre- 
cibus redemptas [Christi athletarum| mentes, ad commune 
_ fide certamen ungere, ac invocato Spiritus Sancti auxilio con- 
_ firmare officii sui esse duxerunt 4. 
_ Sirmondus himself, Ant. 2. part. 1. cap.7*, describes those 
men that, with Th. Walden, lib. ii. cap. 135, imagine chris- 
mation to be imposition of hands, Quia, ut ait, ungendo im- 
ponitur manus. For the abuses in selling the chrism for 
confirmation, the Greek Church broke from the Latin, ab- 
horring their avarice and pride, Arcad., lib. ii. cap. 9t; for 
the legates of the pope carried the chrism every year from 
Rome to Constantinople, and there sold it too dear,—two 
hundred Hungarian crowns for a little cruet of oil. 

They may with their own mouth, and with their own con- 
_ sent, openly, before the Church, ratify and confirm the same.] 
_ When the children of Christians had learned Christ’s reli- 
_ gion, they were brought to the church, and presented to the 
bishop, and professed openly their faith, and said they would 
live and die in it. Then the bishop and all the people 
prayed for them; and the bishop, laying his hands upon 
them, commended them to God. This was the ratifying of 
_ their profession, made by others in their name at their bap- 
_ tism; and for that cause was it called confirmation; for they 
_ promised, that neither tribulation, nor anguish, nor perse- 
cution, nor famine, nor nakedness, nor fire, nor sword, nor 
life, nor death, should ever make them deny their faith. 

Children, servants, &c., which have not learnt their cate- 
chism.| It seems by Bucer’s Censure" that the former order 





[ “ duxit,’”’ 
Nicholls. } 








OR ee Soe EEN ree iE ee 
a Caen ° 


4 [Id. ibid.] 

’ (Sirmondus, Antirrhet. 2. parte 1. 
c. 7. as cited by Blondel, ibid.] 

* [Non enim minus manus imponit, 
qui ungendo imponit.—Thomas Wal- 
densis, Doctrinalis antiquitatum Fidei, 
tom. ii. c. 113. § 4, fol. 186, b. Venet. 
1571.] 

t [The passage referred to is in Ar- 
cadius, lib. vii., de concordia Ecclesiz 
Occidentalis et Orientalis in septem Sa- 
cramentis, lib. ii. c. 9. p. 80. Paris. 
1626. ] 

" (The rubric in the first book of 
Edward was: ‘And all fathers &e. 
shall cause their children, servants, and 
apprentices, (which are not yet con- 


firmed) to.come to the church at the 
day appointed, and obediently hear and 
be ordered by the curate,’’ &c. Bucer 
comments on this, and says: “ Tol- 
lendum igitur optarim istam paren- 
thesim, (which are not confirmed,”’) &c. 
(Censura, cap. 18. ibid., p. 485,) and 
in 1552 the words in parentheses were 
altered to ‘‘ which have not learned their 
catechism.” The words in the paren- 
theses are omitted in Alesius’ Latin 
Version, reprinted in Bucer’s Scriptura 
Anglicana, which, as has been said, was 
the only form in which Cosin had the 
first book of Edward when writing these 
notes. | 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


488 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


was to send them only who are not confirmed; but because 
many are confirmed young, and before they understand their 
catechism at least, though peradventure they can repeat the 
words of it, therefore he desires that they may still be sent 
to the church, till the curate shall think them fit, (as being 
sufficiently instructed) ; hereupon the words were somewhat 
altered. 

And whensoever the bishop shall give knowledge for children 
to be brought, &c.| Which Bucer* says would be most con- 
veniently done in their visitations; and to that commonly 
did the bishops ever since hold themselves, which was much 
too seldom. 

And there shali be none admitted to the Communion until 
such time as he can say the Catechism, and be confirmed.| 
Many can say their Catechism, and are confirmed at seven 
years old; shall it be then in the power of the curate to 
admit them also to the Communion? Non credo :-but this 
shews that they should not be confirmed so young as they 
use to be, but when they are of perfect age, and ready to be 
admitted to the Holy Communion, which is between fourteen 
and sixteen years of age. 

Such as can say in their mother tongue the articles of the 
Creed, the Lord’s Prayer, and the Ten Commandments ; and 
can also answer the questions, &c.| This was much faulted 
by Bucer’, who would have none admitted to confirmation 
upon a bare recital of the words in the Catechism, till their 
manners of life, and sense and fruits also of religion, had 
been manifested to the Church; making herein no difference 
between the old competentes and the catechumeni, who had as 
yet no baptism at all, and children that were already bap- 
tized: yet his censure prevailed so far with the next reform- 
ers of the book, that they altered divers passages in this 
order of confirmation’: as by adding, “ when children come 


x [Bucer, ibid. cap. 18. § 3. p. 
486. | 

y {See Bucer’s words below, p. 491, 
note u, ibid., pp. 482, 483. | 

* [This is amistake. No alterations 
were made in these points. Cosin was 
misled by Alesius’ translation, which 
renders the second paragraph in the 
introduction to Confirmation (‘ first, be- 
cause that when children come to the 


years of discretion, and have learned 
what their godfathers and godmothers 
promised for them in baptism, they 
may then themselves, with their own 
mouth, and with their own consent, 
openly before the Church ratify and 
confirm the same”) thus: Primo ut pueri 
propriam fidem confiteantur, et se ratam 
habere testentur confessionem, quam 
patrini eorum nomine fecerunt in bap- 


‘a 








Le rae Sa 


bed LO ae Nr a ee ee ak ial eS 


rest ae ee 


a ee Pe 


i Ng a a 


ee ee eee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee 





_ to years of discretion,” which words were not in before; and 
_ by leaving out that “ godfathers and godmothers may be 
_ released of their promise which they made for them in 


baptism,” (as the words were 2 Edw. VI.) and that “ they 


ON, THE OFFICE OF CONFIRMATION. 489 


shall promise, that when they come to age they shall en- 
deavour,” &e. 

Confirmation should be ministered to them that were of per- 
fect age.| “Of perfect age,” added as before, for Bucer’s 
exception *. 

The usage of the Church in times past.| In the second of 
King Edward, is Primitive Ecclesia, at least so expressed in 
the Latin copy. 

Then shall he be brought to the bishop, by one who shall 
be godfather.| The former godfathers and godmothers 
being released, as it was ordered before in the Rubr. 
2 Edw. VI.” 

Then shall the bishop lay his hand upon every child severally, 
saying, Defend, O Lord, &c.] Bucer had said, Cens. cap. 17°, 
Oratio quidem recte fit super pueros qualibet etate, et quic- 
quid habent fidei, dum se patiuntur doceri evangelium Christi. 
And this seems to be rather a prayer that may be said by 
any minister, than a confirmation that was reserved only to 
the bishop: for in the second year of King Edward this was 
the form’:—Bishop. “ Sign them, O Lord, with the sign of 
the holy cross, that they may be Thine for ever: confirm and 
strengthen them with the unction of Thy Holy Spirit, that 
they may inherit Thine eternal kingdom.” Resp. “ Amen.” 
Bishop. ‘‘N. I sign thee with the sign of the holy cross, and 
lay hands upon thee, and confirm thee, in the name of the 
Father,.and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.” Resp. 
« Amen.” 


tismo, et ut patrini exonerentur illa 
sponsione, facta pro infantibus ecclesiz. 
—Ordin. Minist. in Anglia, ap. Buceri 
Script. Angl., p. 439. ] 

@ {Not so; the English is the same 
in both books of Edward. ] 

6 [For the cause of this mistake see 
above, note z. | 

© [Bueer, ubi supra, p. 483. Bucer 
seems to mean, Prayer is rightly made, 
&e. | 

4 (The words in the original are, 

‘ Minister. Sign them (O Lord) and 


mark them to be Thine for ever, by the 
virtue of Thy holy cross and passion. 
Confirm and strengthen them with the 
inward unction of Thy Holy Ghost 
mercifully unto everlasting life. Amen. 

‘‘ Then the bishop shall cross them 
in the forehead, and lay his hand upon 
their head, saying, 

‘*N. I sign thee with the sign of the 
cross, and lay my hard upon thee, in 
the name of the Father, and of the Son, 
and of the Holy Ghost. Amen,’’] 


THIRD 
SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


490 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


All this was changed into a prayer, and imposition of © 
hands. : 

The bishop shall confirm, &c.| It seems that before the 
time of Arius a priest might have confirmed, but after his 
heresy it was reserved to the bishop, for the better preser- 
vation of the Catholic faith and religion, whereof the Church 
would have a due account first rendered to the bishop. Lid. 
Pontif. in Sylvestro¢, et Conc. Rom. sub eod.‘ vid. Conc. Araus. 
anno 441. can. 1%, where the Church of France admits a 
priest to confirm in the absence of the bishop: and post ann. 
700. Bede in Psal. xxvi.4, writes, that confirmation (which is 
the same thing with chrism at baptism) propter arrogantiam 
tamen non concessa est singulis sacerdotibus, sicut et multa 
alia, 

Aitate Cypriani, ep. 73'. Prepositis Ecclesia oblatt sunt 
baptizati, ut per eorum orationem et manus impositionem, 
Spiritum Sanctum consequerentur ; eundemque morem in suis 
prepositis, annis post Cypriani Martyrium 150 Ecclestam 
servasse scripsit Augustinus (de Trin. lib. xv. cap. 26*.) rant 
secundum canonem ab episcopo consignandi quotquot diebus 
solennibus sacro lavacro tingebantur, ac si quis fidelis, non 
diaconus, in infirmitatis necessitate, aut diaconus regens ple- 
bem, sine episcopo vel presbytero, aliquos baptizaverat, epi- 
scopus eos per manus impositionem perficere debebat. Cone. 


Elib., c. 38!, et 77™. 


e {Sylvester...constituit... chrisma 
ab episcopo confici; et privilegium epi- 
scopis dedit, ut baptizatum consigna- 
rent propter hereticam suasionem.— 
Anastasius Bibl. de Vitis Pont. Rom., 
tom. i. p. 29. ] 

f [Constituit enim clara voce Sil- 
vester episcopus urbis Rome ut nemo 
presbyter chrisma conficeret, dicens, 
quoniam Christus a chrismate vocatur. 
—Concil. Roman. 2. cap. 5. Concil., 
tom. i. col. 1550, D.j 

& {Hereticos in mortis discrimine 
positos, si catholici esse desiderant, si 
desit episcopus, a presbyteris cum 
chrismate et benedictione consignari 
placuit.—Concil. Arausicanum L., ann. 
441. can. i, ibid., tom. iv. col. 701.] 

h [Sciendum qutem, quod illa unctio, 
qu per manuum impositionem ab epi- 
scopis, quasi alia a duabus preedictis, et 
vulgo confirmatio dicitur, eadem_ est 
cum secunda; propter arrogantiam ta- 


men non concessa est singulis sacer- 
dotibus, sicut et multa alia.—Bede 
Comm. in Psalm. xxvi. Op. tom. vii. 
col. 435. ] 

i [Quod nunc quoque apud nos ge- 
ritur, ut qui in ecclesia baptizantur, 
prepositis Ecclesiz offerantur, et per 
nostram orationem et manus impo- 
sitionem Spiritum Sanctum  conse- 
quantur, et signaculo Dominico con- 
summentur.—S. Cypr. Ep. 73. ad Ju- 
bianum, Op. Epist. p. 202. The whole 
paragraph is from Blondel, ubi supr., 
pp. 209, 210.] 

k [ Neque enim aliquis discipulorum 
ejus (Christi) dedit Spiritum Sanctum. 
Orabant quippe ut veniret in eos qui- 
bus manum imponebant, non ipsi eum 
dabant. Quem morem in suis prepo- 
sitis etiam nunc servat ecclesia.—S, 
Aug. de Trinit., lib. xv. cap. 26. § 46. 
Op. tom. viii, col. 999, A. ] 

1 [Peregre navigantes aut si Ec- 





ON THE CATECHISM. 491 


THE CATECHISM. 


 Catechism.| Bucer™ found fault with the shortness of it, 


| and therefore Archbishop Cranmer set forth a larger cate- 
_ chism, and would have all curates to use it°, but it was never 
_ received by any public authority into the Church; nor his, 
- nor Nowel’s?, which was afterwards set forth in Queen Eliza- 


beth’s time, and became the pattern of many private cate- 


_chisms, which by their variety and novelty of doctrine have 
- done much hurt. 


In the conference at Hampton Court, great complaint was 
made by the ministers there 4, that this public short catechism 
was defective in the point of the sacraments: whereupon it 


was ordered, that the bishops should make an addition, 


and so they did; which by King James’ authority only was 


- annexed to the former catechism, which ended after the 
- answer following the Lord’s Prayer. 


The addition was first 
penned by Bishop Overall, (then dean of Paul’s) and allowed 
by the bishops. 

The curate shall diligently upon Sundays and holydays, &c. 


_ instruct, &c.] It is not said here that he shall do it upon 


every Sunday, and every holyday ; and therefore the words are 
to be understood, as often as need requires, according to the 
largeness or number of children in his parish. In the second 
of King Edward he was limited to do it once in six weeks, 
at least"; against which words (as being too large a time, and 
the ministers in Germany doing it otherwhiles three times 
in a week) Bucer*® took exception; whereupon it was thus 


clesia in proximo non fuerit, posse fide- 


lem, qui lavacrum ‘suum integrum 
habet, nec sit bigamus, baptizare in 
necessitate infirmitatis positum cate- 
chumenum, ita ut si supervixerit ad 
Episcopum eum perducat, ut per manus 
impositionem proficere possit.—Concil, 
Eliberitan. (A.D. 305,) cap. 38. Con- 
cilia, tom. i. col. 996, D.] 

m [Si quis diaconus regens plebem, 
sine episcopo, vel presbytero aliquos 
baptizaverit, episcopus eos per bene- 
dictionem perficere debebit.—I bid. , cap. 
77. col. 1001, B.} 

® [Bucer said: Nec ea paucula tan- 
tum verba tradenda et exigenda sunt 
pro toto Christi catechismo, que in 
libro sunt prescripta: sed debent cate- 


chumeni in classes distribui, omniaque 
Christi mysteria creditu necessaria, 
eaque ratione, diligentia atque copia 
explicari et elucidari, &c.— Bucer, ibid., 
cap. 18. § 2. pp. 485, 486. ] 

© [See above, p. 469. note a. ] 

P [Catechismus: sive prima insti- 
tutio disciplinaque pietatis Christiane, 
Latine explicata; Lond. 1570.] 

4 [See Barlow’s Summe and Sub- 
stance, in Cardwell’s History of Con- 
ferences, p. 187. ] 

r (The rubric in the first book of 
Edw. was ‘‘once in six weeks at the 
least ;”? in the second, “‘ upon Sundays 
and holydays.” } 

* [Bucer, ibid., p. 442.] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


492 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


ordered in the fifth of King Edward, and set down in terms 
indefinite, though he urged to have it singulis festis. 


THE SOLEMNIZING OF HOLY MATRIMONY. 


First the banns must be asked.|  Bucer likes this order 
very well, calling it Preceptum salutare', and would have no 
dispensation granted to any. To this he wishes that another 
precept had been added, Ut matrimonium non nisi in clara 
die, et frequenti ecclesia consecrare liceat. To that a third, 
Ne rata habeantur eorum conjugia, qui ea contraxerint, abs- 
gue eorum consilio et voluntate in quorum sunt potestate abs- 
gue piis et gravibus arbitris; quo multa avertentur stupra 
ad que puelle pauperes et alie mulieres nonnunquam falsa 
conjugit promissione pelliciuntur. In the first he was not 
heard, for dispensations are still granted: for the second 
there was a law of the Church before, Ut inter horas 8 et 12 
ante meridiem in ecclesia celebrentur matrimonia. And so it 
is, or should be still observed. For the third it is not yet 
made a law: but they that grant dispensations use to take a 
bond for that purpose, if either party be under age. 

The persons to be married shall come into the body of the 
church.| 2 Kdw. VI." In medio ecclesie ante chorum. 

The causes for which matrimony was ordained. One was 
the procreation of children, &c. Another to avoid fornication. 
The third for mutual society, help, and comfort in prosperity 
and adversity.| This last Bucer* would have had put first, 
as being the chiefest and most general cause for which mar- 
riage was ordained, even in paradise, Fuciamus in adjutorium ; 
but they thought it better to let it stand as it was ; for society 
and help may be had without marriage, though that be also 
one end of marrying; but procreation of children cannot be 
lawfully had without it. 

If any man can shew any just cause, §c. If either of them 
do know any impediment.| These words referred to the com- 
mon known impediments: but because some of them were 
taken off by law, and for that there was no new law made 


t [See Bucer, ibid., cap. xix. p. English original is ‘the body of the 
486. | Church.’’} 
« [i.e in Alesius’ translation ; the x [Bucer, ibid., cap. xx. p. 488.] 


? 
5 
EF 
: 


t; 








F 


ON THE SOLEMNIZATION OF HOLY MATRIMONY. 493 


concerning the degrees of consanguinity and affinity, (which 


_ Bucer urged very earnestly’,) therefore Archbishop Parker set 
_ forth a table to that purpose’; for before his time there was 
no rule but what the canon law prescribed, with reference 
_ to the law of God, which was made a statute law here in 
_ the time of King Henry VIII. 


Who giveth this woman to be married to this man?| Mos 


 laudabilis, quo declaratur, ea tantum matrimonia celebranda 


_ esse in Ecclesia, que contracta sunt eorum consensu, in quorum 
_ potestate et fide sunt, qui contrahunt. Buc. ibid., cap. 20°. 


And the man shall give unto the woman a ring, (2 Edw. VI. 
and other gifts of gold and silver‘,) laying the same upon the 
book.| Admodum commodus ritus, si modo, quid ista omnia 


| significent, populo subinde explicetur. Ut, quod annulus et 


~~ a ae 


i ee) ei ee * ee 


igh #4 ot OD 


cetera dona, quibus sponsus sponsam ornare vult, prius in li- 
brum sacrorum deponuntur, et a ministro rursus sponso tra- 
duntur, tribuenda ab eo sponse, significare, oportere nos nostra 
omnia, priusquam illis utamur, offerre Deo, cujus sunt, et con- 
secrare, et illa tanquam ex Ipsius manu accipere, ad Iliius glo- 


_ riam usurpanda*, And some marvel it is that those words, 


‘and other gifts of gold and silver,” should be taken out of 


_ the book in the fifth of King Edward, whenas Bucer liked 


them so well: but it is a general custom still to observe this 


| order in the north part of the kingdom. 


With this ring I thee wed, §c. (and in the second of King 
Edward, before the words’, “ with all my worldly goods,” &c. 


_ was added, “this gold and silver I thee give,”’) which of 


likelihood was afterwards left out because some men had 


- none to give. 


And put it on the fourth finger of the woman’s left hand. | 


_ In which finger they say is a vein that comes from the heart, 


and which foldeth itself with the other veins there; unde 
significetur cor sponse semper debere sponso esse devinctum 


_ vinculo amoris perpetuo, ut annulli nullus finis est. Buc., ib.‘ 


y [Id. ibid., p. 487.] silver.’? | 

z [See Wilkins’ Concilia, A.D. 1563, 4 [This is cited from Bucer, ibid.] 
tom. iv. p. 245. ¢ [These words were omitted, as was 

@ [See above, p. 439, note z. ] that clause in the rubric preceding, in 

> [Bucer, ibid., p. 488. ] King Edward’s second hook. ] 


© {The words are, ‘‘a ring, and f [ Bucer, ibid., p. 489. ] 
other gifts of spousage, as gold and ; 


THIRD 


SERIEs. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


A494 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


In.the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Hely 
Ghost.| 'Therefore are these words added as a conclusion to 
all that was done or said before, wt cogitent nihil inter ipsos, 
vel natum fore, vel revera bonum et salutare, nisi ex singulart 
favore et benignitate Dei. Ibid.8 | 

That as Isaac and Rebecca (in the second of King Edward 
was added, “after other gifts given and received by one 
another,”) lived together". 

And have declared the same by giving and receiving a ring. | 
In the second of King Edward was added, “and of gold and 
silver',” 

Going to the Lord’s table, §c.] In the second of King Ed- 
ward it was, “ Going into the choir and singing*.” 

The Psalm ended, the man and the woman kneeling afore the 
Lord’s table.| It was (2 Edw.) ‘The bridegroom and the 
bride (in the meanwhile) kneeling before the altar!.” 

And as Thou didst send Thy blessing upon Abraham and 
Sarah.| (2 Edw.) “didst send Thy holy angel Raphael to 
Tobias and Sarah the daughter of Raguel™.” 7 

This prayer next following shall be omitted, &c. When the 
woman is past child-birth.| This rubric was added in the 
fifth of Edward, for there was none such before®. 

4nd bless you.| Here, in the second of Edward, the priest 
made over them the sign of the cross. 

The new-married persons, the same day of their marriage, 
must receive the Holy Communion.| And this, (says Bucer®,) 
is a godly ordinance. Nam non nisi in Christo Domino debent 
Christiant inter se matrimonio JUNG}; ideo una quogue de 
Christo participent. Ibid. 


THE ORDER FOR THE VISITATION OF THE SICK. 


When he cometh he shall say, kneeling down, Remember not, 


& [Id, ibid. ] 

h |The words were, “ after bracelets 
and jewels of gold given of the one to 
the other, for tokens of their matri- 
mony.” j 

i [The words in Edward’s first book 
were “giving and receiving gold and 
silver,” without mention of the ring. ] 

k [shall go... and sball say or 
sing this Psalm:’” the Latin trans- 
lation was only ‘ ingrediantur in cho- 


rum, ministris aut clericis canentibus 
Psalmum.”’—Ibid., p. 444. ] 

1 (That is the Latin translation 
only. } 
rf [“ Thy angel’? are the words of 
the original. ] 

(This is not correct: the rubric 
was in the first book, but omitted by 
the translator. | 

° [ Bucer,.ibid., p. 489. ] 





VA 
re 


‘ig 
hy 
tf 
4 


_ Lord, &c.| In the second of King Edward it was, “ He shall 


; 


3 
F 
- 
¢ 
i 
Be 


& 
‘ 


ON THE ORDER FOR THE VISITATION OF THE SICK. 495 


say the 143rd Psalm, ‘Hear my prayer, O Lord,’ &. And 
after this the Antiphone, ‘ Remember not,’ ” &c. Ibid. 
Ff the person visited be very sick, then the curate may end 


his exhortation here.| This rubric was added in the fifth 


; of King Edward?; for before it needed not, because they 


: 
Fd 


always sent for the priest in due time, before the person was 


_ so very sick, 


But men must be often admonished, (2 Edw.) rich and 


_ great men must be often admonished in sermons, to make 
_ their wills, &c. 


These words before rehearsed, &c.| A rubric added in 
5 Edward’. 
Lhe minister may not forget to move, &c.| Similiter ut 


supra. 


Adding this, “O Saviour.”| 2 Edw. “this anthem.” Then 


3 in the second of King Edward followed Extreme Unction’, 
- against which Bucer urged many arguments, and earnestly 


desired to have omitted, as afterwards it was, 5 Edw.* 
Yet some order was taken about the omission of it before; 


- for in the form 2 Edw. at the end of it (apud Buc. Script. 
_ Angi.) there is this rubric, Si videtur commodum dicatur 
- Psal. 13. Usque quo Domine, &c. pro usitata ante hec tem- 


_ pora unctione*. 


But for all the rest of the order appointed 


in the Visitation of the Sick, Bucer saith, that it is made ad 


divinarum Scripturarum regulam convenientissime», 
If we anoint not now with the oil, it is because we doubt 
whether it be lawful to continue that extraordinary and 


miraculous custom, that was well used in St. James’s time. 


And herein we do no more than Decentius the bishop of 
Eugubium did, Anno Dom. 416, Mar. 19, who professes so 
much ignorance in that matter, that he wrote to Innocent 
the First (then pope of Rome) to be resolved whether it 


P [The rubric is the same in the 
first book, but omitted in the transla- 
tion. | 

4 [The mode of expression only 
was altered, but the rubric had been 
omitted by the translator. } 

* [The rubric was, “ If the sick per- 
son desire to be anointed, then shall 
the priest anoint him upon the fore- 


head or breast only, making the sign 
of the cross, saying,” &c. This was 
omitted in the next book.] 

s [ Bucer, ibid. } 

* (These words are inserted by the 
Latin translator, the Psalm follows the 
prayer at the unction, without any 
rubric. | 

« {Bucer, ibid. ] 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


THIRD 


SERIES. 


496 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


were lawful for a bishop to anoint the sick or no. 
c. 3, ab Isidoro de Off., lib. 11. ce. 26, descript.* 


Ep. i. 


THE COMMUNION OF THE SICK. 


Ewvhort their parishioners to the receiving in the church of 
the Holy Communion of the Body and Blood of our Lord.) 
2 Edw.’, ‘‘ That they shali often communicate of the Sacra- 
ment of ‘the altar.” 

And having a convenient place, &c., where the curate may 
reverently minister, S:c., with all things necessary, &¢c., he shall 
there minister the Holy Communion.| But in the second of 
King Edward’, the rubric (instead thereof) was this: “ And 
if the Communion be celebrated that day in the church, 
then shall the priest reserve so much of the Sacrament as 
shall serve for the sick person, together with others in his 
company ; and first he shall communicate those that go with 
him, and were present at the Sacrament in the church*; 
and after them he shall communicate to the person that is 
sick. But first shall the general confession be made, with 
the absolution and the collect, as in the order of Communion 
is appointed. Yet if the sick person shall desire the Com- 
munion upon any other day, when it was not celebrated in 
the church, then the priest, having a convenient place, &c., 
ut supra, shall celebrate the same after this manner: Ps. 117, 
‘O praise the Lord all ye, &c. Lord have mercy, &c. Christ 
have, &c. Let us pray. Almighty, everlasting God, &c. 
And after the Gospel, John v. ‘ Priest. The Lord be with 
you. Answ. And with thy spirit. Priest. Lift up your 
hearts, &c. usque ad finem.” 

But if any man, either by reason of extremity of sickness, 
or for lack of warning, &c. In 2 Edw. this was the rubric”: 


x {Dicit enim (Innocent. ad Decen- 


made from the translation. ] 
tium) non ab alio quam ab Episcopo 


“ {The rubrics here given are trans- 


fieri licere: nam presbyteri, licet sint 
sacerdotes, pentificatus tamen apicem 
non habent. Hoc autem solis pontifi- 
cibus deberi, ut vel consignent, vel 
Paracletum Spiritum tradant, &e.— 
Isidor. de Off. Eccles., lib. ii. cap. 26. 
ap. Hittorp. de Div. Off, col. 31. ] 

Y [The book of 2 Edw. is the same as 
the later ones; Cosin’s observation is 


lated by Cosin from the Latin, but 
they do not materially differ. ] 

« [‘ He shall minister the same first 
to those that are appointed to com- 
municate with the sick, (if there be 
any, »)” &e.] 

[The ee of 2 Edw. was the 
same as afterwards; what Cosin gives 
is from the Latin, being Ales’ infer- 





q ON THE OFFICE FOR THE COMMUNION OF THE SICK. 497 


“But if the sick person be in extremity, and shall desire 
the Sacrament, either at the evening, or in the night- time, 
‘the curate shall say to him that his faith and desire of the 
‘Sacrament is accepted for the receiving of it.” 
_. When the sick person, §c. In the time of plague, Sc.] 
“These two rubrics, as being casus omissi before, were added 
‘in the fifth of King Edward*. But in the second there was 
this addition, which in the fifth was omitted’: “The private 
F Communion being ended, the anthem shall be repeated, 
“Remember not, O Lord, our iniquities, &c. Lord, &c. 
Our Father,’ &c. Let us pray, ‘O Lord look down,’ &c. 
with the first part of the Exhortation, and the Psalm, ‘ In 
Thee, O Lord,’” &c. 

And of all this order (even as it was in the second year 
of King Edward) Bucer gave his censure’, “That it was 
altogether agreeable to the word of God.” 





ain OF 


eee a Oe 


a 
7 
- 
: 

THE ORDER FOR THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD. 


: 
_ Bishop Andrewes calls it “ Our office of the dead.” 

And so go (“either into the church or”) added 5 Edwardf. 
| In the midst of life we be in death.| Here (2 Edw.) fol- 
lowed, ‘‘When the priest casteth earth upon the body §,”” 
(from whence we observe the custom still, though in our 
book another standing by is appointed to do it,) “he saith, 
‘I commend thy soul to Almighty God, and thy body to 
the grave; earth to earth,” &c. In the meanwhile the 
anthem was sung, “I heard,” &c. And then, “Let us 
pray. We commend into Thy merciful hands, O Lord, 
the soul of this our brother NV. departed; and we commit 
his body to the ground, beseeching Thee to grant us grace, 
that we may live in Thy fear, and abide in Thy love; that 






when the Day of Judgment 


a 
ence from a previous rubric, that “the 
curate shall come and visit the sick 
before noon.” ] 
_ © [The second only was added.] 
} 4 [The difference between the books 
is, that that of the 2 Edw. set down the 
service to be said when the sick was 
visited and communicated at the same 
_ time, which was afterwards expressed 
in a rubric. The Latin omitted the 


COSIN. 





shall come, which Thou hast 


rubric explaining this, and by mistake 
substituted “ Finita privata commu- 
nione, repetatur antiphona,”’ &c.] 

¢ [That is, excepting the unction.— 
Bucer, ibid., p. 489. ] 

f [This statement is a mistake, owing 
to Cosin using the Latin translation. ] 

& [See above, p. 168, note e. The 
whole of these extracts are verbally 
different from the original. } 


Kk 





498 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. _ 


‘angi committed to Thy well-beloved Son, as well this our brother 
—~ as we all may be found acceptable in Thy sight,” &c. Then 
followed this thanksgiving: ‘“ We yield Thee thanks, O Al- 
mighty God, for this Thy servant, whom Thou hast delivered 
from the misery of this life, the body of sin and temptation. 
And as we believe that Thou hast placed his soul, which he 
commended into Thy hands, in a place of rest, light, and 
gladness; so we beseech Thee that his soul, together with 
the souls of all Thine elect departed out of this life, may 
with us and with them have the full fruition of Thy pro- 
mises, and be made perfect, by the glorious resurrection 
of Thy Son Jesus Christ our Lord.” Then the suffrages to 
be said before or after the burial. Ps. cxvi.: “I am well 
pleased,” &c. Ps. exxxix.: “O Lord, Thou hast searched 
me,” &c. All which, from the anthem, “I heard a voice,” 
&c., was omitted or altered (because Bucer® found fault with 
Prayer for the Dead) in the fifth of King Edward. 

After the Lessons, and the Pater noster, (2 Edw.) followed 
these verses and answers: “Priest. Enter not into judgment 
with Thy servant. -Answ. For in Thy sight shall no man 
living be justified. Priest. From the gates of hell. Answ. 
Deliver their souls. Priest. I believe to see the goodness of 
the Lord. Answ. In the land ‘of the living. Priest. O Lord, 
hear our prayer. -Answ. And let our cry come unto Thee. 
Let us pray. O Lord, with whom do live the spirits of the 
dead, and with whom the souls of them that be elected, 
after they be delivered from the burden of the flesh, be in 
joy and felicity; grant unto this thy servant, that the sins 
which he committed in this world may not be imputed unto 
him; but that he, having overcome the gates of death and 
eternal darkness, may for ever dwell with Abraham, Isaac, 
and Jacob, in the region of light, where there is no sorrow 
or grief; and when the fearful Day of Judgment shall come, 
make him to rise again with the. just and elect, and to re- 
ceive his body again to glory and immortality; that being 
placed among the chosen at the right hand of Thy Son our 
Lord Jesus Christ, he may with them hear the most sweet 
voice of, Come ye blessed of My Father,” &c. For which 


h [See Bucer, p. 490, and pp. 467, sqq. ] 





ON THE OFFICE FOR THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD. 


Bucer would that the prayer at the Communion should be 
used', : 

Then the Communion followed, where the introit was 
Ps. 42: “As the hart desireth the water-brooks,” &c. The 
Collect: “O merciful God,” &c. (the same with our last.) 
The Epistle, 1 Thess. iv.: “I would not have you,” &c. The 
Gospel, John vi.: “Jesus said,” &c. “All that the Father,” &c. 


| All which was omitted or altered, 5 Edw., for the reasons 


next before specified, and for Calvin’s letters to the Pro- 
tector, Cranmer, and Cheke*. 

The spirits of them that depart in the Lord.| Before it 
was only “the spirits of the dead.” For those that depart not 
in the Lord, (says Bucer',) i. e. in the Communion of the 
Church, (as they that are excommunicated or unchristened,) 
are not to be buried by the priest, in this public form. 


OF THE CHURCHING OF WOMEN. 


If she be an unmarried woman, the form of thanksgiving 
shall not be said for her; except she hath either before her 
child-birth done her penance for her fault, or shall then do 
it at her coming to be churched, by appointment of the 
ordinary ; Archbishop Grindal’s Art. for Cant. Prov., 1576". 
It is to be done immediately before the Communion-service, 
Bp. of Norwich, Art. 1536". If there be a Communion, she 
is to receive it. 

The churching.| In the second of King Edward the title 
was, “ Purification or Churching of women after child- 
birth°.”” | 
_ The woman shall kneel down in a convenient place.| In the 
second of King Edward the rubric was?, “The woman shall 


to the communion-table before the se- 


499 | 


i [That is, our second prayer, “ The 
Collect’’ appointed in the first book of 
Edward to be used at the Communion. 
—lIbid., p. 490. ] 

k [For these letters, see above, p. 436, 
notes 0, p. | 

1 [Bucer, ubi supra. ] 

m (Articles, &c., within the pro- 
vince of Canterbury, 1576, Art. 22. 
Grindal’s Remains, p. 164. } 

» [That the churching of women 
begin as soon as the minister comes up 


cond service. Particular orders &c. for 
the diocese of Norwich, given by Mat- 
thew [Wren], Bishop, A.D. 1636.— 
Wilkins’s Concilia, vol. iv. p. 526. ] 

° [The title was simply, ‘‘ The Order 
for the Purification of women;’’ in the 
Latin ‘ Purificatio Puerperarum,’’ } 

P [The women shall kneel ‘‘ in some 
convenient place nigh unto the quire 
door,’’ ] 


Kk 2 


THIRD 


SERIES. . 


THIRD 


SERIEs. 


500 NOTES ON THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER. 


kneel down before the entrance into the choir, and the 
priest standing by her,” &c. 

The woman that cometh to give her thanks must offer 
the accustomed offerings, &c.4 In the second of King Ed- 
ward this rubric was, ‘The woman shall offer the chrism, 
which was put upon the child at his baptism, according as 
has been accustomed.” Against which Bucer excepted’, and 
therefore was it altered, 5 Edw., though to this day they 
generally observe that custom in the north parts of this 
kingdom. 


THE COMMINATION. 


The Commination to be used divers times in the year.| Inthe 
second of Edward, “‘upon Ash-Wednesday‘® ;”” whereunto the 
words following have reference “at the beginning of Lent.” 
Bucer, Salutaris ceremonia, sed non video, cur debeat exhiberi 
solum uno die, et non sepius saltem quater in anno‘. Here- 
upon was the rubric altered; and the bishops in their Arti- 
cles of Visitation appointed to have it used four several 
times in the year. So ready were they to observe Bucer’s 
directions in almost everything that he said. 

To be used divers times, &c.| Which times were appointed, 
by the archbishop of Canterbury, in the visitation of his ~ 
province, 1576, to be three times in the year", viz. upon one 
of the three Sundays next before Easter, one of the two 
Sundays next before Pentecost, and one of the two Sundays 
next before Christmas, Art. 3. 

In the primitive Church there was a godly discipline, &c.] 
Cypriani etate i.e. anno 250 et seg.; ad exomologesin venie- 
bant et per manus impositionem episcopi et cleri jus com- 
municationis accipiebant peccatores ; nec in minoribus delictis, 
multo magis in gravissimis post penitentiam et exomologesin 
ullus ad communicationem venire poterat, nist prius uli ab 





4 [“ The woman that is purified must 
offer her chrism, and other accustomed 
offerings.” ] 

* [ Bucer, ibid., p. 490. ] 

* [The title or beginning of the ru- 
bric in the first book was “The first 
day of Lent, commonly called Ash- 
Wednesday ;’’ in the second “ A Com- 
mination against Sinners, with certain 


prayers to be used divers times in the 
year.’? ] 

t [Bucer, ibid., p. 491.] 

u [That is, ‘‘over and besides the 
accustomed reading thereof upon the 
first day of Lent.’’ Articles to be en- 
quired of within the province of Can- 
terbury, 1576. Art. 8. Grindal’s Re- 
mains, p. 158.] 


cate ee CK 


STP POI) oe Be 


ON THE COMMINATION SERVICE. 501 


episcopo et clero manus fuisset imposita. 8S. Cypr., Ep.10, 11, 
12*; viz. Soz., lib. vii. cap. 10Y. 

Instead whereof, until the said discipline may be restored. | 
Publicas peccatorum exomologeses nostra patrumque etate 
desiisse nemini mirum fuerit, gui Cabilone A. 813%, congregatos 
patres decrevisse memoria recoluerit, poenitentiam agere, juxta 
antiquam canonum constitutionem (jam tum) in plerisque ab 
usu recessisse, &¢. cap. 25. 

Notorious sinners were put to open penance.| It was an 
ancient order of the Church, that if any had openly offended 
he should come openly to make an amends, and satisfy them 
whom he had offended. There he fell down upon his knees, 


confessed his fault, and wept and lamented for it; prayed 


the Church that they would forgive him, and that they would 
pray unto God to be merciful to him. Then the people fell 
down before God for him, their hearts melted, their eyes 
gushed out into tears, they held up their hands, prayed 
together for him, and gave thanks to God, that their brother 
which had been lost was found again. And this was satis- 
faction made to the Church; and to God it was acceptable: 
‘But this was never done but when the crime was notorious, 
and the Church had taken offence at any man’s doings that 
were openly evil, and declared by the judge to be notorious 


and scandalous. 


x [Hic contra Evangelii legem.... 
ante actam pcenitentiam, ante exomolo- 
gesin gravissimi et extremi delicti fac- 
tam, ante manum ab episcopo et clero 
in peenitentiam impositam, offerre pro 
illis et Eucharistiam dare, id est sanc- 
tam Domini corpus profanare audeant. 
—S.Cypr. Ep. 15. ad Martyres et Con- 
fessores, (Ed. Pam. 11.) Op. Epist. 
p. 34. 

Nam cum in minoribus peccatis 
agant peccatores pcenitentiam justo 
tempore, et secundum discipline or- 
dinem ad exomologesin veniant, et per 

“manus impositionem episcopi et cleri, 
jus communicationis accipiant: nunc 
. .. ad communicationem admittuntur 
et offertur nomen eorum, et nondum 
peenitentia, nondum exomologesi facta, 
nondum manu eis ab episcopo et clero 
imposita, Eucharistia illis datur.— 
Idem, Ep. 16. ad Clerum, (Ed. Pam. 


10.) Op. Epist. p. 37. 

Nam cum in minoribus delictis, que 
non in Dominum committuntur, poeni- 
tentia agatur justo tempore, et exomo- 
logesis fiat, inspecta vita ejus qui agit 
peenitentiam, nec ad communicationem 
venire quis possit, nisi prius illi ab epi- 
scopo et clero manus fuerit imposita, 
quanto magis in his gravissimis et ex- 
tremis delictis caute omnia et moderate 
secundum disciplinam Domini observar 
oportet.—Idem, Ep. 17. ad Plebem, 
(Ed. Pam. 12.) Op. Epist. p. 39.] 

y {This reference does not appear to 
be correct. | 

2 [Peenitentiam agere juxta anti- 
quam canonum. institutionem in ple- 
risque locis ab usu recessit, et neque 
reconciliandi, antiqui moris ordo ser- 
vatur, &c.—Cone. Cabilonens. II. can. 
25. tom. ix. c. 364. ] 


THIRD 
SERIES. 





APPENDIX, No. I. 


PARTICULARS TO BE CONSIDERED, EXPLAINED, 
AND CORRECTED, 


IN THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER:. 


1. Tux Proclamation» lately added to the book after the 
conference at Hampton Court, is no legal part thereof, and 
were better omitted; for the Act of Parliament prefixed to 
the book forbids any addition thereunto. 

2. In the order betwixt the Preface and the treatise of 
Ceremonies, it is allowed to all men to say the morning and 
evening service privately in any language (besides the Eng- 
lish) which they understand. Here an explanation is want- 
ing, whether this word “ privately”? may not be extended to 
colleges in either of the universities, and some other places 
(as Westminster, Eton, and Winchester schools*) for whose 
use Queen Elizabeth, in the second year of her reign, caused 





* [These observations, contained in 
several leaves, are bound up at the end 
of the interleaved Book of Common 
Prayer of 1619, in which the first series 
of notes is written, but the handwriting 
is of a later hand than the notes them- 
selves. ‘They were printed by Nichols 
at the end of the additional notes, p. 67, 
with the following notice :—‘* Whether 
or no these following observations were 
drawn up by Dr. Cosins before the 
restoration of King Charles, or after- 
wards upon the last review of the C. P., 
I cannot say; but this is plain, that 
those reviewers had very great regard 
to these remarks, they having altered 
most things according as was therein 
desired. And it is probable, that they 
were laid before the board, Bishop Co- 
sins being one of the principal com- 
missioners.”’ 

The handwriting, however, is of a 
much earlier period of Cosin’s life, and 


the observation No. 30, shews that they 
were made in the reign of Charles I., 
as does their tone throughout. It 
appears, however, from additions in a 
later hand, that Cosin retained ‘and im- 
proved this paper, and it is by no means 
improbable that he made use of it in 
1661. Most of the alterations set down 
here as required were suggested by Co- 
sin in his proposed changes of the 
Prayer-Book, (see the end of the Pre- 
face to this volume,) and almost all 
were adopted. The observations refer to 
the Prayer- Books as commonly printed 
with many typographical errors in the 
reign of Charles I. The marginal notes 
indicating the alterations made in 1662 
are Dr. Nichols’, here reprinted. ] 

b [See above, p. 184.] 

© [Cosin suggested, and the bishops 
submitted, an alteration to this effect in 
1661, but it was not accepted. | 


CORRECTIONS IN THE PRAYER-BOOK SUGGESTED. 503 









the Common Prayer-book to be set forth in Latin, as being 
the most proper language for them. 

_ 8%. In the same order every curate is enjoined to say “the 
‘morning and evening prayer daily in the church, unless he 
| be otherwise reasonably letted.’ Which requires an expla- 
nation® (against them that account themselves reasonably 
Tetted by any common and ordinary affairs of their own) 
whether anything but sickness or necessary absence abroad 
‘Shall be sufficient to excuse them from this duty. 


the Psalter, is appointed to be read, it is said, ( 
‘Testament shall be read through every year once, except®,”’ 
‘&e., which in King Edward’s first service-book was accord- 
‘ingly done; but afterwards, since the lessons were interposed 
for Sundays and holydays, this order-cannot be. observed, 
cand therefore ought to be amended.) 
_ “That whensoever any proper lessons are appointed for 
‘the Sundays or for any feast-day, then shall the lessons ap- 
pointed in the kalendar for the day of the month be omitted.” 
But here is no provision made for the feast-days that fall 
‘upon a Sunday, whether the lessons appointed for the Sun- 
‘day or that feast-day shall be taken. For want of which 
provision, in some places they read one lesson, and in other 
some another, according to the curate’s choice, which breeds 
‘diversity in the service, and is against the uniformity in- 
‘tended in it by the Act of Parliament, and the prefaces 
before named. 
5. In the same order there wants the like provision for 
the collect, epistle, and gospel, when a feast-day falls upon 
a Sunday, which of them shall be taken. 

6. In the last clause in that order‘, the first word there, 
“item,” seems to contradict the former clause, which com- 


ee ene 


«¢ And wheresoever it is not expressed 





Fe Oy ee eee 


_ 4 [In this place Cosin proposed ‘let 
_ by some urgent cause, which the bishop 


of the diocese shall approve:’ these 
words were struck out by the bishops, 
and ‘by sickness, or some other urgent 
cause,’ substituted. | 

¢ [This passage in brackets is a mar- 
ginal note, added later. See above, 
p- 422. ] 

f [The order referred to is this: 


how far shall be read, then shall you 
read to the end of the chapter. Jem. 
So oft as the first chapter of St. Mat- 


4. In the order how the rest of the Holy Scripture, besides These 
“That the Old words are 


altered to 
“the most 
part there- ’ 
of shall be 
read.”’ 


thew is read . .. ye shall begin with » 


the same at ‘The birth,’ &c.’’ Cosin 
suggested the omission of ‘Item,’ in 
1661, but the whole passage was 
omitted. | 


In the last 
Review 


made ‘‘Ec- 


clus.,” 
whereby 
the mean- 


ing is plain. 


Set right 
in the last 
Review. 


Now alter- 
ed as it 
should be. 


Agreed to 
in the last 
Review. 


Now set 
right. 


504 APPENDIX.—NO. I. 


mandeth all chapters to be read, from the beginning to 
the ending, where it is not otherwise expressed. This item, 
therefore, should rather be “ excepted only, that,” &c. 

7. In the lessons proper for holydays there are divers ap- 
pointed to be read out of “ Kccl.,” (as upon St. Stephen’s-day, 
St. John’s-day, Annunciation, St. Mark, St. Philip and Jacob, | 
and St. Barnaby, besides St. Peter, St. James, St. Bartho- 
lomew, St. Matthew, St. Michael, and St. Luke,) but whether 
it be Ecclesiastes or Ecclesiasticus, it is not there specified 
at large, which hath occasioned much diversity in reading 
those lessons; and therefore this would be explained, for 
better uniformity to be therein observed. 

8. Upon the Feast of Circumcision for the first lesson at 
evensong is appointed “ Deut. x. unto, And now Israel,” 
whereas it ought to be, ‘‘ beginning at, And now Israel,” unto 
the end. For so it was ordered in the first edition of this 
book, which since that time the printer’s negligence has thus 
disordered, and appointed the first part of that chapter to be 
read, that hath no relation to the day, (as all the latter part 
of the chapter hath,) and the lesson to end where it should 
begin. ; 

9. Upon the feast of the Epiphany for the first lesson at 
morning prayer is appointed Isa. xl., which is a lesson that 
has no relation to the day. It should be (as it was at first 
printed) Isa. lx., which altogether refers to the calling of the 
Gentiles that day remembered. But this mistake also came 
from the printer’s negligence by putting the x here before l, 
whereas it ought to follow its. 

10. Upon Good Friday, for the first lesson at morning 
prayer is appointed Gen. xxii., concerning the sacrifice of 





Isaac, which is all that refers to that day, and therefore it 


would be advised, whether it were not fit here to order the 
end of that lesson at the 19th verse of that chapter, “ unto, 
And it came to pass after these things,” &c., all which 
following verses are not proper for that day. 

11. Upon St. John Baptist’s-day, for the second lesson at 
matins is appointed St. Matth. xiu., which is an error com- 
mitted by the printer’s negligence since the first edition of 
this book, where it was St. Matthew iii., for this is proper to 


® [See above, p. 19, note z.} 


CORRECTIONS IN THE PRAYER-BOOK SUGGESTED. 505 


_ St. John the Baptist, whereas the other refers nothing to 
him at all. 
(Upon St. Bartholomew’s-day the lessons appointed out of The xxvth 


- Keclesiasticus against women have been so offensive, that oe 
they were better to be changed for others*.) ee chang- 
or iLC- 


12. Upon All Saints’-day, for the second lesson at morning clus, xxiv. 
_ prayer is appointed Heb. xi. and xii., beginning at these Altered in 
_ words, “Saints by faith,” which refer us to the old English ‘3s 
Bible (commonly called the Bishops’ Bible) and named in 

the order, before, how the Psalms ought to be read. For in 

the new translation these words are not to be found, which 
causeth many curates to begin some at one verse, and some 

at another. That therefore there may be an uniformity ob- 

served as well in this lesson as in some others before, (upon 

the day of St. Paul’s conversion, second lesson at matins, 

&c.) either the verse where to begin ought to be specified, or 

the Bishops’ Bible only used, which seems here to be only 
authorized for the public lessons of the Church, by the Act 

of Parliament prefixed before the Book of Common Prayer. 

13. The proper Psalms for morning prayer upon Whit- In the last 
sunday are in some books 45 and 47, in others 47 and 68 ; = gosta 
which numbers are mistaken by the negligence of the printer, aber 304 
for in the first edition of this book, the Psalms appointed and of Ps. ixvii. 
the true numbers are 48, 677. Se eee 

14. In the ends of the months of August, October, and Those 
November, there be three several directions to alter certain syanee ts 
lessons formerly appointed in Queen Elizabeth’s time!, which the last 
seems to be against the Act of Parliament that forbiddeth ——e 
any alteration to be made in the book. And these alterations 
were only by the king’s order, A. 1604, at the instance of 
Dr. Chadderton and Mr. Knewstubbs, &c., in the conference 
at Hampton Court, where they took exceptions against the 
reading of Tob. v., and got the king’s consent to change 


it into Exod. vi. (a lesson 


» {This paragraph was added in the 
margin. | 

i [See above, p. 421.] 

j [In August: ‘‘ Note that the 13th 
of Daniel touching the History of Su- 
sanna, is to be read until these words ; 
‘And King Astyages.’’’ In October: 
‘* Note that the 6th of Exodus is to be 


altogether set out of order) 


read the first of October at Morning 
Prayer, unto these words; ‘These be 
the heads,’’’? &c., the place for the 
lesson of that day in the kalendar 
being left blank. In November, are 
rules for reading parts only of certain 
chapters of Ecclesiasticus. ] 


But now 
there is. 


506 APPENDIX.—NO. I. 


upon the first day a October, &c. 
changed. 

15. In the months thioinchat the whole kalendar the 

printer hath set the names of Februarii, Januarii, &c., at the 
14th, 15th, or 16th day of every month, among the names 
of the saints, without any distinction of letter, or other note 
of difference from them; which hath occasioned many to ask 
what those saints (Januarius, Februarius, &c.) were ; whereas 
they are to be only notes of the old Roman account, and put 
into a several character from the rest, as the solstices and 
equinoctials are. 
16. In those months there be some saints put down 
whereof question is made whether there were ever any such 
persons or no, (as St. Catharine and St. Faith,) and the Con- 
ception of the Virgin Mary“ is mentioned, which was first put 
in by that party among the papists who believed her to be 
conceived without original sin; a thing offensive to some 
other party of the papists themselves, as well as to all Pro- 
testants. And therefore it would be considered whether these 
particulars were not better left out of the kalendar. 

17. The addition of the king’s birthday, or the beginning 
of his reign, is not authorized to be put there by Act of 
Parliament. 

18. In the order what days are to be observed for holy- 
days, and no other, there is no mention made of St. Paul’s 
Conversion, and St. Barnabas’-day; which nevertheless are 
numbered before among the holydays in this book, where 
proper lessons are appointed for them as holydays; and the 
like may be said for Good Friday and other days in the 
Passion-week, all set under the title of holydays. So that 
here is some explanation wanting to reconcile these two 
places of the book together'. 

19. In the rubric before the morning and evening prayer™, 
there is no order at what hour the service for morning or 


But this was not legally 


k [In Cosin’s corrected Book, this 
was struck out, but the alteration was 
not adopted. } 

1 [See above, pp. 19 and 435.] 

m [See above, p. 66. On this point 
Cosin proposed, in the alterations sub- 
mitted to the bishops, in 1661, to in- 


sert in the third rubric in italics, be- 
fore the Morning Prayer, ‘‘ convenient 
time,... which may be between six 
and ten of the clock in the morning, 
and between two and six of the clock 
in the evening.’’] 


CORRECTIONS IN THE PRAYER-BOOK SUGGESTED. 507 







evening shall begin, for want whereof in most places, when 

the morning is past, and when the evening is not yet come, 

those services are commonly begun; which in the morning 

is cross to those words,in the third collect for grace, where 

we say to God, “ Who hast safely brought us to the begin- 

ning of this day, defend us in the same,” &c. 

_ And in the same rubric, “The minister is appointed to use 

‘such ornaments in the church, and at all times in his minis- 

trations, as were in use in the second year of King Edward 

the Sixth, according to the Act of Parliament".’ But what 

those ornaments of the church and of the ministers were, is 

‘not here specified, and they are so unknown to many, that 

“by most they are neglected. Wherefore it were requisite 

| “that those ornaments used in the second year of King Ed- 

ward, should be here particularly named and set forth, that 

_there might be no difference about them. 

_ 20. After the confession is appointed the absolution, which 

“some ministers read standing and some kneeling. For uni- 

{ formity herein, it should be declared what posture he ought Thie is nate 

‘to use, and the posture of kneeling is not agreeable to it?, 0 

because it is no prayer to God, but pronouncing so many 

words to the people. 

_ 21. The words there (in the rubric) “‘ or remission of sins,” 

were added at the instance of the ministers? in the conference 

‘at Hampton Court; but it is no legal addition, for the Act of It is now 

Parliament forbids it. iia 
22. In the rubric before the Lord’s Prayer‘, the minister is The people 

“appointed to begin it, but the people are not appointed to say 4") °F 


dered to 
after him, as in cathedral churches and most places besides repeat it 


they use to do. To prevent all diversity therein, there wants seid 
here an explanation to that purpose. 
23. The Gloria Patri, and the Venite exultemus, are ap- 
pointed next to be said or sung; but whether by the minister 
F Falone, or by him and the people alternatim, there is not here 
or anywhere else (in the hymns and psalms following, besides 
the Quicunque vult) any order given; which for an uniformity 


herein ought in this place to be added. 











Pe Oe RL a ean “ay Pua ee i eS Oe ee ae et eee 


™ [See above, pp. 42, sqq., 230, sqq., P [Cosin had first written it ‘ Puri- 
; 438, sqq. ] tans’’ and altered it to ‘‘ ministers,”’ 
_ ° [See above, p. 47.] 4 [See above, p. 47. ] 


508 APPENDIX.—NO. I. 


24. In the rubric after the Venite exultemus, which is the 
95th Psalm, the Psalms in order are appointed to be said for 
every day of the month, as they are set down in a table be- 
fore; where, upon the 19th day of the month, are appointed 
the 95th, 96th, and 97th. If this order be strictly observed, 
the 95th Psalm will be twice said over without any inter-— 

An excep- mission. Wherefore it were not amiss, that an exception 

ies sya ‘were here made of that Psalm for the 19th day. — 

month is 25. In the same rubric the Gloria Patri, &c. is appointed 

now made, : 
to be said at the end of every Psalm throughout the year. 
There is a difference between many, whether it ought to be 
said by virtue of this order at the end of every portion of the 
119th Psalm, which are appointed for so many Psalms upon 
the 24th, 25th, and 26th days of the month; for if it shall 

pe order not be said before the whole Psalm is ended, it will not be 

now made. Said during three whole days together. To avoid this doubt 
an explanation of the rubric is here needful. 

ring enn 26. And it is as needful to name the Jubilate after the 

now made. Denedictus, and the Cantate Domino after the Magnificat, and 
the Deus misereatur after the Nunc dimittis ; for else some 
men shall be in a doubt whether they may repeat the Gloria 
Patri, &c. after these Psalms or no. 

27. Before the collects at Morning and Evening Prayer it 
is appointed that the first collect shall be that of the day, 
which is appointed at the Communion, and the Collect for 
Peace to be always the second’. But when a feast-day falls 
upon a Sunday, it is not said here which of the collects ap- 
pointed for either of those days shall be read; or whether 
they may both be read one after another. Somewhat there- 
fore is wanting to settle an uniformity herein. 

(When the Communion-service is read, this collect is re- 
peated the second time; which were fit to be so ordered, that 
at one and the same service, or assembly of the Church, it 
should be said but once, at the Communion-service only .) 

Cake bets 28. At the beginning of Evening Prayer the rubric only 


sentences, i8, that the priest shall say “ Our Fathert,” &c. which gives 


exhorta- . . : : : . 
tion, &e, occasion to divers curates to begin this Evening Prayer with 
r [Cosin proposed to correct this, so * [This is a marginal note written 
far as the verbal incongruity went, but much later by Bp. Cosin. ] 
the bishops determined to leave it as it t [See above, p. 450.] 
was. | 


See 


CORRECTIONS IN THE PRAYER-BOOK SUGGESTED. 509 


Paternoster, and to omit what is before appointed to be said being print- 
at the beginning both of Morning and likewise of Evening pie 
Prayer, daily throughout the year. That therefore the sen- the Even- 
tences, the exhortation, and the confession, with the abso- aes 
lution following, (which are all but preparatory to the Morn- 
‘ing and Evening Service) be never omitted, it is requisite 
that in this place some word of direction or reference were 
given to the former rubric. 

29. In the rubric before the Litany there is no appoint- Now it is 
ment at what time of the day, or after what part of the ser- pr’<rs¢ *° 
vice, it ought to be said"; so that a contentious man may oly in the 
take his liberty to say it after Evening Prayer, or at any time ae 
of the day, upon Sundays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, &e., at 
his own choice, unless an order be here added to confine 
him. Nor is the place of the Church here specified, where 
it shall be said; though in the rubric before the Commina- 
tion it is presumed that a peculiar place is appointed for it; 
and in Queen Elizabeth’s injunctions’, that appointed place 
is said to be in the midst of the choir, as in cathedral and 
many other churches hath been accustomed. 

(In the Litany”, where we pray for the Catholic Church, This now 
the word “universally” is falsely printed; for it ought to be ™™4e¢ 
*‘ universal,” as it is in the Latin Catholicam.) 

In the petition for the clergy there is a distinction be- Now al- 
tween bishops and pastors, which are all one. Inferior priests Bitte 
were never anciently called pastors. priests, and 

In the petition for the magistrates that word would be ats pe 
altered or explained; for the magistrate (as we now under- 
stand the word) is properly none but the king*. 

30. The prayer for the queen and the royal progeny is Now con- 
not authorized by Act of Parliament, but first added by the sear e 
order and commandment of King James’, and since con- of Uni- 
tinued by King Charles, with some variation, agreeable to cs 
his own time and condition. Which, to free it from any ex- 


u [See above, p. 451. ] mately adopted. 

Y [See above, p. 67. Cosin proposed w {This is added in the margin. ] 
to add to the rubric, ‘‘the priests or x [Cosin suggested the insertion of 
clerks kneeling in the midst of the ‘subordinate’ before magistrates, which 
quire, and all the people kneeling and the bishops allowed. | 
answering as followeth;’? which was y [See above, p. 454.] 


allowed by the bishops, but not ulti- 


Now con- 
firmed by 
law. 


Now alter- 
ed to ‘‘as 
at this 
time.”’ 


510 APPENDIX.—NO. I. 


ception that a Parliament might take against it, were not 
amiss to be here noted by a special rubric in the margin. 

31. The like ought to be added at the thanksgiving for 
rain, fair weather, plenty, peace, and victory, with those two 
for deliverance from the plague; all which are here inserted 
without any legal authority or Act of Parliament, (at the in- 
stance of those men that excepted against the book for want 
of these thanksgivings, in the conference at Hampton Court?,) 
only by the permission of King James. 

32. In the rubric upon the Sunday after Christmas, the 
same collect is appointed to be read which was used upon 
Christmas-day. But if the Feast of Circumcision and this 
Sunday fall together, it will be a question which of the col- 
lects ought to be read. (It is likewise here ordered that the 
same collect shall be used upon every day unto the Circum- 
cision. But how can it be said in iisdem terminis, and that 
said to be done upon “this day,”’ which those following days 
are not*?) And for resolution herein some direction would 
here be added; because both cannot be used, being incon- 
sistent together. 

33. In the rubric after the Circumcision, it is ordered, 
that if there fall any Sunday between that day and the Epi- 
phany, the same Collect, Epistle, and Gospel shall be read, 
which was used upon the Day of Circumcision. This defect 
may be otherwise supplied by appointing both a Collect, 


_ Epistle, and Gospel more proper for that time’. 


The new 
translation 


isnowmade 


use of. 


34. For if the Epiphany shall fall upon Monday or Tues- 
day, &c. what Collect must be used for all the days of the 
week after? It is a great incongruity to use the Collect 
of the Circumcision after the Epiphany is past. Therefore 
there wanteth an order here either to continue the Collect 
of the Epiphany all the days of the week following, or to 
make a new Collect for the Sunday before. 

35. In the Gospel upon the second Sunday after the Epi- 
phany, there is a translation of some words, commonly 
spoken in old time without offence, but now in our days not 
so fit to be used. The words therefore, ‘And when men be 


2 [See above, p. 456. ] > [Cosin, however, in 1661, only sug- 
* {The wordsin parentheses aremar- _ gested the rubric which was adopted, 
ginal additions. ] and which we now have. | 





SENOS aT a 


RESIS te 


a a 





CORRECTIONS IN THE PRAYER-BOOK SUGGESTED. 51l 


drunk,” would be now rendered ‘‘And when men have drunk 
well,” according to the later translation of our Bible. 

36. After the fifth Sunday there it is appointed, that if This isnow 
there be a sixth, the same Collect, Epistle, and Gospel shall Soden 
pe used which was read upon the fifth. But it were both fit 


| and easy rather to supply the day with Collect, Epistle, and 


- Gospel proper to itself, than to suffer this defect to stand 


i 


still without need®. 


37. And if there be but three or four Sundays after the 


Epiphany, (as sometimes it will happen,) the Epistle, Gospel, 


. t 


and Collect upon the fifth, referring to the great Epiphany of 


_ our Saviour at the end of the world, will be more proper for 


the third or fourth Sunday, than those which are appointed. 
There wants a provision here to be made in that case. 

38. At Haster-day it is appointed, that instead of the 
Venite exultemus, the two anthems, (“Christ rising,’ and 
*‘ Christ is risen,”’) shall be used. But there is no Gloria Patri 
set to follow either of them, as after the Venife is ordered 
before. Therefore the question is, whether “ Glory be to the 


_ Father,’ &c. should not be here added after either or both 


of these anthems. 
39. Upon Monday and Tuesday in Whitsun-week the Now alter- 


ed into “fas 


same collect is appointed which was read upon Whit-Sunday ¢) this 


itself. But upon those two days, and all the week following, time.” 
we cannot say “As upon this day.” Therefore there is a 
direction here wanting for the change of that word “ this 


: day” into some other. 


40. In the end of the twenty-fifth Sunday after Trinity 
it is ordered, that if there be any more Sundays before 


_ Advent, the office omitted in the Sundays after the Kpi- 


phany shall be taken in to supply the same. But it will be 
easy and more fit to appoint Collects, Epistles, and Gospels 


peculiar to this time, when the Sundays after Trinity exceed 


the number of twenty-five. And because the last words of Tidads now 
one ac- 


the Gospel appointed upon the twenty-fifth Sunday refer to oo,aingly. 


the Advent, or Coming of Christ into the world, next to 


follow, and to be remembered in the Church-service, there- 


¢ [The Collect, Epistle, and Gospel Epistle 1 John iii. 1—9, and ‘‘ print it 


for the Sixth Sunday were among Co- __ out at large’’ being added in Sancroft’s 


sin’s suggestions in 1661, Cosin writing hand. } 


512 APPENDIX.—NO. I. 


fore it were requisite that here a rubric should be added, to 
make this Epistle and Gospel of the twenty-fifth Sunday to 
be last of them all, both when there be more, and when 
there be fewer Sundays after Trinity. 

Thisisnow 41. At the Purification there wants an Epistle es to 

supplied. itself, which might be easily supplied. 

: a rams 42. In the Collect upon St. John Baptist’s-day, the word 

by making penance (which is now abused by the papists) would be sub- 

pened ject to no offence if it were altered into our ordinary word of 
lation. repentance, now more usual with us than that of penance is, 
and more consonant to the later translations of our Bibles. 

oo On St. Matthew’s-day there is in the Collect, “Thy said 

“the same SON;” it were better that the word ‘said’ were left out. 

Thy Son.” 43. In the first rubric before the administration of the 
Holy Communion, the order appointed for “the communi- 
cants to signify their names to the curate immediately after 
Morning Prayer,’ seems to cross the common custom in 
all or most places of reading the Morning-service and the 
Communion-service both at one time. For if they be read at 
once, without any intermission or due space of hours between 
them, what time or convenience can the communicants have 
to give in their names, or the curate to take them? Here, 
therefore, a direction is wanting, what space of time is to be 
allowed between these two services®. 

Thisisnow 44, In the second rubric there, it is not clear whether the 

altered. curate may refuse to give the Communion unto “an open 
and notorious evil liver,’ nor who is to be accounted so 
notorious ; which therefore requires here some explanation 
for the avoiding of disputes, doubts and contentions at that 
time between such communicants and the curate, who other- 
whiles challengeth that power of refusing or admitting a 
communicant in that case by virtue of this rubric, the rather 
because in the rubric immediately following it is said, “ That 
he shall use the same order with those that are in malice 
with one another, where he has power given him to refuse 
the obstinate person.” 


45. In the fourth rubric there, which appoints the “ Table 
4 [The rubric itself was altered in sometime the day before,’ as we have 


Cosin’s hand to ‘ two days before at it.] 
least,’ and in Sancroft’s to ‘at least 








; 


4 be covered with a linen-cloth only, and to stand in the 
chancel or body of the church, where Morning and Evening 

Prayers are ordered to be said,” somewhat is wanting to 

make it agree with the Injunctions of Queen Elizabeth, (still — 

in force,) and the common practice in most churches®. And 
somewhat is also wanting for a direction when and where to 

set the bread and wine for the Communion upon the table‘. 

46. In- the rubric after the Ten Commandments, it is This is now 
appointed, “That then shall follow the collect of the day, tate 
with one of the two collects there specified for the king, 

the priest standing up and saying, ‘Almighty, &c.” But 
fwhether the collect for the king, or the collect for the day, 

‘shall be first said, is not there determined; which for the 
favoiding of dispute and diversity herein, should be further 
explained. And the collect for the day is always most pro- 

| perly used together with the epistle and gospel, whereunto 

many times it relateth. 

47. At the reading of the gospel, there is no posture ap- But this 

| pointed for the people, which gives many of them occasion §7st3s 10" 
to refuse the posture of standing, as in all places and times 

hath been accustomed. This therefore it were requisite to 

‘be here added. Nor is there any order after the naming of But no 
the gospel for the people to say “Glory be to Thee, O Lord,” cacti a. 
‘as hath been likewise accustomed, and was specially ordered 

in King Edward’s time, together with ‘‘ Thanks be given to 

God,” at the end of the gospel. For uniformity and ad- 
-vancement of our devotions herein, that order would be 

fitly here renewed. 


CORRECTIONS IN THE PRAYER-BOOK SUGGESTED. 5138 


_ © [See above, p. 85, note h. In 
Bp. Cosin’s altered Prayer-book this 
fourth rubric is crossed out and the 
following substituted: ‘‘ The table al- 
ways standing in the midst of the upper 
part of the chancel, (or of the church 
_where a chancel is wanting,) and being 
at all times covered with a carpet of 
silk, shall also have at the Communion 
time a fair linen cloth upon it, with 
(paten, chalice, and) other decent fur- 
niture meet for the high mysteries there 
_to be celebrated.’’ The words in pa- 
-rentheses are added in the margin. 
The word “ part,’’ printed in italics, is 
crossed through and ‘end”’ substituted 
in Sancroft’s hand; and so it appears to 
_ have been agreed to by the bishops. | 

_ * [See below, p. 515, note on § 50.] 
COSIN, 





“ & [The alterations proposed by Cosin 
are as follows ; the additions he made to 
the old rubrics for reading the Epistle 
and Gospel being inserted in paren- 
theses, the words of the old rubrics 
which he struck out being printed in 
italics: ‘‘Immediately after the Col- 
lects the priest (or one appointed) 
shall (turn to the people and) read 
the Epistle, (in the place assigned for 
it,) beginning thus, The Epistle (is) 
written in the chapter of 

(and ending thus, Here endeth the 
Epistle,) and the Epistle ended, he 
(or a deacon that ministereth, ) shall say 
the Gospel, beginning thus, (shall read 
the Gospel, saying first,) The (Holy) 
Gospel (is) written in the chap. 
of (and the people all standing 


Ll 


This is now 
appointed. 


There is a 
table of 
fasting- 
days now 
placed in 
the begin- 
ning of the 
Common 
Prayer. 
There isa 
rubric now 
for this. 


This rubric 
now ex- 
punged. 


514 APPENDIX.—NO, I. 


48. At the Nicene Creed there is likewise no posture 
of standing specially here appointed; by reason of which 
omission many people refuse to stand, though at the other 
Creed of the Apostles they are appointed to do it, as here 
likewise they ought to do; and at Athanasius’s Creed be-} 
sides; for all which provision may be made in their several| 
places. | 

49. In the rubric following the Nicene Creed, the curate 
is ordered to “bid the fasting-days;” which being not 
usually known to every curate, it would be here specified 
what days are appointed to be fasted by the laws of the king- 
dom and Church of England, throughout the year. 

50. In the rubric following the sentences at the Offertory, 
“The churchwardens, or some other by them appointed,” 
are ordered to “gather the devotions of the people, and to 
put the same into the poor men’s box;” which being seldom 
or never observed in most churches, nor agreeing to divers 
sentences (before set down) would be otherwise here ordered 
or explained, ‘‘ And the accustomed offerings to the curate 
are here appointed to be paid by every man or woman, after 
which done the priest shall say,” &c. Which if it should be 
thus observed and at this time when they come to receive 
the Communion, would breed a great disturbance in the 
church, and take up more time than can be allowed for that 
purpose. Wherefore it is needful that some alteration were 
made of this rubric; and that the offerings or devotions of 
the people then collected should be brought to the priest, 
and by him presented and laid upon the altar or communion- 
table for such uses as be peculiarly named in the sentences 
then read by him?. 





up shall say, Glory be to Thee, O Lord; 
and at the end of the Gospel he that 
readeth it shall say, Here endeth the 
Gospel, and the people shall answer, 
Thanks be to Thee, O Lord.) And the 
Epistle and Gospel being ended (then) 
shall be said (or sung) the (this) Creed 
(all still reverently standing up).” 
The alterations made in Sancroft’s hand 
are at the reading of the Epistle ‘or 
the Epistler appointed,’ for ‘ or one ap- 
pointed.’ At the reading of the Gospel 
‘‘ the priest or the gospeller appointed,” 
for ‘‘he &c.,’’ shall read &c. | 

* [For the rubric following the Offer- 
tory sentences Cosin proposed to sub- 


stitute the following: “ While the priest 
distinctly pronounceth some of (or all) 
these sentences for the Offertory, the 
deacon, or if no such be present, one of 
the churchwardens shall receive the de- 
votions of the people (and the alms for 
the poor) in a decent basin provided 
for that purpose, and reverently bring 
them it to the priest, who shall humbly 
present the same before the Lord, and 
place it upon the holy table.”” In this _ 
part the words in parentheses are inter-_ 
lined by Cosin himself. The words in_ 
italics are struck out (the word them 
obviously by Cosin himself) and the 
words ‘‘and the other devotions of the 


CORRECTIONS IN THE PRAYER-BOOK SUGGESTED. 515 


51. In beginning of the prayer for the state of Christ’s ene 
|‘ Shurch militant, there be these words, (set as a preface to Biving bow 
hat is intended to follow, and to have relation thereunto,) inserted. 
Fe Which hast taught us to give thanks for all men;” and 
| cordingly, in the old form of this prayer set forth in King 
‘Edward’s time, such thanks were given, that one part of 
t he prayer might be correspondent to the other. But here 
our form, the thanksgiving is omitted, and yet the preface 
of giving thanks is suffered to stand still; being indeed 
Breotten to be put out. Therefore ought it ie now to be 
faken away, or else the former (or the like) thanksgiving 
Boeht to be added unto the prayer; for otherwise we say 
to God, (in effect,) that though He hath taught us to give 

shanks for all men, yet we think fit to let it alone. 

_ 52. The first and second exhortations that follow are more This isnow 
ft to be read some days before the Communion, than at the “e* 
ery same time when the people are to come to receive it. 

I or first, they that tarry for that purpose are not negligent, 

and they that are negligent be gone, and hear it not. ‘Then, 
secondly, they that should come to the minister for the 
Guieting of their conscience and receiving the benefit of 
absolution, have not then a sufficient time to doit. Where- 

fore requisite it is, that these two exhortations should be 
Beveentcd to be read upon the Sunday, or some other holy- 

day before. 

53. Likewise in the third exhortation there be these words As like- 
ie appointed to be read somewhat out of due time: “If any of ates 
you be a blasphemer of God, a hinderer or slanderer of His 
yord, an adulterer, or be in malice or envy, or in any other 
srievous crime, bewail your sins, and come not to this holy 
able, lest after the taking of that holy Sacrament, the devil 


a 




























re 
is 





people’”’ are inserted in Sancroft’s hand if present need requires.’ The words - 
fter the words ‘‘the alms for the poor;’’ in parentheses are in Sancroft’s hand. 
the editor conceives the other words Then Cosin had written this rubric : 
vere struck out by him, as the bishops’ ‘‘ And if there be a Communion, the 
corrections of Cosin’s alterations. priest shall then offer up and place the 

After this a rubric was inserted, part bread and wine in a comely paten and 
of which as originally written by Cosin chalice upon the table, that they may be 
is illegible: it appears to have been ready for the Sacrament, so much as he 
l first altered in Sancroft’s hand, and shall think sufficient.” The words in 
fi hen struck cut altogether. ‘‘ And italics are crossed out, and after the 
patter the Communion is ended (they word “table” ‘as much bread and 
paall put the same alms) into the poor wine” inserted in Sancroft’s hand. } 
men’s box, or (forthwith) distribute (it) 


L12 


: 
i 
i 
: 


This now 
seems to be 
altered, ac- 
cording to 
this pro- 
posal. 


The word 
sacrifice 
was not 
put in. 


This is now 
altered. 


516 APPENDIX.—NO. I. 


enter into you as he did into Judas,” &c. For is any person 
who comes at that time purposely to receive the Communion, 
likely to discover himself (if he be guilty) in the presence of 
all the congregation by rising up and departing suddenly 
from it? Therefore this clause were fitter to be omitted 
in this third exhortation, and to be added to the second, 
a week or some days at least before the Communion is 
administered. . 

54. In the next words which the priest is to say unto 
them that come to the holy Communion, they are invited 
“to draw near;”? and though in many places they use so 
to do, where chey are to remove from their seats, and to 
approach nearer to the table in the church or chancel, for 
the taking of the holy Sacrament; yet in other places, where 
the chapels are small, and the communicants so few that 
they are all fixed already in their several places within the 
chancel or church near to the table before these words 
come to be read unto them, there will be no need to have 
them remove, and therefore no need of any such words. 
For which reason there would be provision here made to 
that purpose. 

55. In the rubric before the Confession, there wanteth 
a direction for the people to say the words of that Con- 
fession after the minister; whereunto they are all invited 
by the words before, “ Make your humble confession, meekly 
kneeling.” 

56. In the prayer of Consecration, where the priest saith, 
“To continue a perpetual memory of that His precious 
death,” here seems to want “and sacrifice... until His 
coming again!;” which, if added, would be more consonant 
to the nature of that holy action, and the words of the 
catechism following, made'and set forth for that purpose. | 

57. Again, at the words there, “ He took bread and He 
brake it, and He took the cup,” no direction is given to the © 
priest, (as in King Edward’s Service-book there was, and as : 
in most places it is still in use,) to “take the bread and cup 
into his hands,” nor to “ break the bread before the people - 
which is a needful circumstance belonging to this Sacra-_ 


i [Cosin in his suggested alterations gin; which is inserted in the text in 
added here “and sacrifice” in the mar- _Sancroft’s hand. ] 


ee eT Oe eae hie Badr 


CORRECTIONS IN THE PRAYER-BOOK SUGGESTED. 517 


ment; and therefore, for his better warrant therein, such 
direction ought here to be set in the margin of the book. 

| 58. In the priest’s taking of the Sacrament to himself, This seems 
|there is no direction either for his kneeling when he takes ate 
it, or for the words which he is then to say*; which is there- heen 
ore needful here to be added, lest otherwise some conten- not very 
fious minister might say, that he is not enjoined to kneel bee: gt 
in this holy action himself, nor to say any words at all when 

‘he takes the Sacrament. 

_ 59. If there be any consecrated bread or wine wanting for Provision 
‘the communicating of the people, here is no order (as there \de for 
‘ought to be) for the consecrating of more, nor for the words this- 
which the priest shall use for that purpose, as in the first 

‘form of the Communion set out in King Edward’s time, and 

in the canons of the Church, is enjoined. This therefore 
‘should be here added. 

_ 60. There wants likewise an order for the people to con- 

‘tinue kneeling at their prayers and devotions (as is most 

meet) during all the time of the whole action’. 

_ 61. The prayer of Oblation is here placed after the par- 
ticipation and distribution of the Sacrament made to the 
‘people, which in King Edward’s first Service-book, and in 

all other ancient liturgies, is set before it, and next after the 
prayer of Consecration. If it were so ordered here, and the 
prayer of Thanksgiving (‘ Almighty and everlasting God, we 

most heartily thank Thee,” &c.) appointed to follow for the 
‘post-communion, it would be more consonant both to former 


precedents and the nature of this holy action™. 








for the remembrance of Christ who shed 
His blood for me, and am thankful’). 


__ * [The rubrics were thus prepared 
by Cosin: “ Then shall the priest that 


celebrateth receive the Holy Commu- 
nion in both kinds upon his knees, and 
| when he taketh the Sacrament of the 
_body of Christ he shall say, The body 
of our Lord Jesus Christ, which was 
given for me, preserve my body and 
soul unto everlasting lifes Amen. I 
take and eat this for the remembrance 
of Christ who died for me, and I feed 
-on Him in my heart by faith with 
thanksgiving. And when he taketh 
_the Sacrament of Christ’s blood he shall 
_ say, The blood of our Lord &c.,’’ (then 
in Sancroft’s hand, “‘ which was shed 
_ for me, preserve my body and soul unto 
everlasting life. Amen. I drink this 





“Then shall he stand up and pro- 
ceed to deliver the Holy Communion 
first to the bishops, priests, and deacons, 
if any be present, in both kinds, and 
after that to the people. in due order 
into their hands, all humbly kneeling, 
and so continuing (as is most meet) 
at their devotions and prayers unto the 
end of the whole Communion.” ] 

1 [See the note on § 58.] 

m [Cosin in his alterations placed 
the Prayer of Oblation (with the Lord’s 
Prayer) immediately after the Prayer of 
Consecration, before the participation 
of the Sacrament, making very consider- 
able additions toit. The second prayer, 


518 APPENDIX.—NO. I. 


62. At the Gloria in excelsis, which is appointed to be 
“said or sung,” there is a question whether the people are to 
say it after or with the minister, or no: where, for the ayvoid- 
ing any diversity herein, some direction would be given. 

63. In the fourth rubric after the Communion, “The 
priests and deacons of cathedral and collegiate churches are 
enjoined to receive the Communion with the priest there, 
every Sunday at the least.” Questions are here moved, 
whether the Church did not hereby intend to have the 
Communion administered in such places every day of the 
week, or oftener than once in the week at least. And, whether 
the priest, who there waits in his week, ought not to com- 
municate oftener than every Sunday, or upon every Sunday 
at the least. Which questions would be in this rubric 
determined by some few words added to it. 

64. In the next rubric it is said, that at the Communion 
“it shall suffice, that the bread be such as is usual to 
be eaten, so it be the best and purest that may be gotten.” 
It is questioned here, whether by virtue of this order any 
Church is restrained from their custom of using wafers at the” 
Sacrament, as in Westminster, and many other places, they - 





‘‘ Almighty and everlasting God, we 
most heartily thank Thee &c.,” he 
placed after the distribution of the ele- 
ments. He also proposed other altera- 
tions after the manner of the Scottish 
Liturgy. At the bottom of the page is 
the following note in Sancroft’s hand: 
‘My lords the bishops at Ely House 
ordered all in the old method, thus: 
First the prayer of address, We do not 
presume, with the rubric, When the 
priest standing &c. The Prayer of 
Consecration unaltered, (only ‘one’ for 
‘own’ and ‘Amen’ at last,) with the 
marginal rubrics. Then (the memo- 
rial or prayer of oblation omitted, and 
the Lord’s Prayer) follow the rubrics 
and forms of participation and distri- 
bution to the end of the rubric, ‘ And 
when all have communicated &c.,’ alto- 
gether as in this book [i.e. as altered 
by Cosin; see above, note k,] only the 
rubric, ‘In the Communion-time shall 
be said or sung &c.,’ with the sentences 
following, wholly omitted, and then 
the Lord’s Prayer,the Collect, ‘O Lord, 
[and Heavenly Father, |’ and ‘ Hear, Fa- 
ther,’ &c. &c. to the end.’ In the fair 


copy of the alterations in Sancroft’s hand 
in the Bodleian, both the old order with 
some alterations and the order proposed — 
by Cosin (the latter being written on in- — 
serted pages and marked B, with the 


¥ 
4 


ee aT Fe eet 


heading ‘* Another method of the Con-— 
secration, Oblation, Address, and Dis- 
tribution’) are given, with the memo- — 
randum, ‘“‘ what follows from hence to 
the end of the distribution is somewhat 
otherwise methodized in the paper B, 
and both left to censure.’’ The rubric 
and sentences alluded to above are these, 
which Cosin had proposed: ‘‘In the 
Communion:time shall be sung, (where 
there is a quire,) ‘O Lamb of God, that 
takest away the sins of the world, have’ 
mercy upon us,’ &e. ‘O Lord, grant 
us Thy peace,’ together with some or 
all the sentences of holy Scripture fol-_ 
lowing;”’ then is added in Sancroft’s: 
hand, “Rom. xi. 33, Ps. ciii, 1—4, 
Lue. i. 68, 74, 75, 1 Cor. i. 30, 31, 
John v. 13, (142), viii. 31, 32, Matt. 
xxiv. 18, Luc. xii. 87, 40, John xii, 35, 
36, Rom. xiii. 12—14, 1 Cor. iii, 16, 
17, vi. 20, John xv. 8, 12, Eph. v. 1, 2, 
Rom, viii. 28, Apoc. v. 12, 13.’’] 














t CORRECTIONS IN THE PRAYER-BOOK SUGGESTED. 519 


“have been always wont to do. To avoid dispute and conten- 
tion herein, an order would be annexed for that purpose. 
_ 65. It is likewise here ordered, “That if any of the bread The word 
and wine remain, the curate shall have it to his own use.? ycgnse” 
Which words some curates have abused and extended so now put in. 
far, that they suppose they may take all that remains of the 
consecrated bread and wine itself, home to their houses, 
and there eat and drink the same with their other common 
“meats; at least the Roman Catholics take occasion hereby 
to lay this negligence and calumny upon the Church of 
England ; whereas the rubric only intends it of such bread 
“and wine as remains unconsecrate of that which was pro- \ 
vided for the parish, (as appeareth by the articles of en- 
quiry hereabouts in the visitations of divers bishops). And 
therefore for the better clearing of this particular, some 
words are needful here to be added, whereby the priest 
‘may be enjoined to consider the number of them which 
are to receive the Sacrament, and to consecrate the bread 
and wine in such a near proportion as shall be sufficient for 
them ; but if any of the consecrated elements be left, that 
he and some others with him shall decently eat and drink 
_ them in the church before all the people depart from it. 
_ 66. In the last rubric there it is ordered and said, “‘ That The words, 
_ every parishioner shall communicate at the least three times ogee: 
in the year, &c., and shall also receive the Sacraments, &c., Sacra-_ 
according to the order in this book appointed.””’ Where the singel 
word Sacraments, in the plural number, being annexed to Puset- 
their communicating of the Lord’s Supper, (which is one 
‘Sacrament already past, and supposed to have been taken by 
the people, who are likewise already baptized in another,) 
_ occasion is hereby given to think that the Church of Eng- 
— land alloweth of more Sacraments than two°; but this being 
contrary both to the articles of religion and the Catechism 
here following, it is requisite that in this place some expla- 
~ nation be made of the word Sacraments, that there may be 
no difference between one place and another in our books. 
67. The like explanation ought to be made of those words 





-  ® ([Cosin suggested this, and the ment in the conference about Mon- 

bishops allowed it, but it was not tague at York House, A.D. 1620. See 

passed. | Works, vol, ii. p. 34. ] 
° [Cosin himself alleged this argu- 


Altered 
now as was 
here pro- 
posed. 


520 APPENDIX.—NO. I. 


in the act of parliament set at the beginning of this book, 
where, in the second paragraph, it is said, That all ministers: 
shall be bounden to say and use...the celebration of the 
Lord’s Supper, (which is one Sacrament,) and administra- 


tion of each of the Sacraments, (which is more than one 
besides). 


In the administration of Baptism. 


In the prayer which is used for blessing the water which 
is in the font, before the children (then brought to the 
church) be baptized in it, there is this expression: ‘ Grant 
that all Thy servants which shall be baptized in this water 
may receive,” &c. Where “all Thy servants’ cannot be said 
when there is but one child brought to the font for that 
purpose. And therefore those words would be better changed 
into these, “Grant that this child (or these children) which 
shall now be baptized,” &c. 

At signing the child with the sign of the Cross, it is said, 
““We receive this child into the congregation of Christ’s 
flock,” which word congregation, both here and in many 
other places of the book, is a new word, never used by any 
former liturgy, or ancient writer in the Church. It were 
therefore requisite for the avoiding of that exception, which 
the Roman Catholics with some advantage to themselves — 
take against it, that wherever this word is found in the whole 
book, (as in divers Collects and in the Gospel upon St. Peter’s 
day it is,) it may be altered, and put into the old usual ex- — 
pression of the word, that is, “ Church of Christ?.” : 

In the exhortation to the godfathers, &c., it is appointed, — 
that the children “shall be taught the Creed, the Pater 
Noster, and the ten Commandments in the English tongue.”” | 
But suppose (as it falls often out) that children of strangers, — 
which never intend to stay in England, be brought there to 
be baptized, shall they also be exhorted and enjoined to learn | 
those principles of religion in the English tongue only? It — 
would be freer from exception if these words were thus ex- — 
pressed, “In the vulgar tongue that they shall use.” 


P [Cosin had altered “congregation Christ,” but in Sancroft’s hand is 
of Christ’s flock” into “Church of written over the altered words ‘ stet.’ } 














CORRECTIONS IN THE PRAYER-BOOK SUGGESTED. 521 


There also it is said, “ And all other things which a Chris- The word 


tian man ought to know,” &c. But suppose it be a woman, 
or a female child, therefore that word “ man” were better left 
out, and the word Christian only would then remain indefi- 
nite; as likewise the words his and him (many times used 
in this form of administering baptism) ought rather to be 
changed into “this child,” that they may refer either to 


male or female. 


In private Baptism. 


In the first rubric there, the cause and necessity of bap- 
tizing in private houses, ought to be expressed; as, “‘ When 
the child is in sudden danger of death, and not likely to live 
so long a time that it may be brought to public baptism in 


the church,” lest otherwise every one take upon them to be 


judge of this “ cause and necessity” at their pleasure’. 

In the next rubric, the lawful minister is appointed in this 
urgent cause to baptize the child, which was added by King 
James’s direction only in the conference at Hampton-court, 
to avoid the baptizing by midwives or others, that were no 
lawful ministers ordained for that purpose. This alteration 
was well, but it wanteth the force of a law, according to the 
Act of Uniformity prefixed to the book. 

It is not here said what shall be done in this case when a 


‘man’ now 
expunged. 


But this is 
now con- 
firmed by 
law. 


lawful minister cannot be found, or whether the child ought ~ 


to be baptized again or no, when only a midwife or some other 
such hath baptized it before. 

It is not here ordered, whether the child thus suddenly 
baptized shall have the sign of the Cross made upon it, 
neither then, nor when it is appointed to be afterwards 


The use of 
the Cross 
in private 
Baptism is 
now en- 


brought into the church; which, for the avoiding of all joinea, 


scruple and question in this case, ought here to be sup- 
plied’. 

Nor is it ordered, at what distance of time the child shall 
be brought into the church after it is thus privately bap- 
tized. 


4 [Cosin made no alteration as to saying “ We receive this child into the 


‘the cause and necessity.” Church of Christ &c.,’”’ but this is all 
¥ [(Cosin inserted a direction that crossed out. ]. 
the sign of the Cross should be made ® [Cosin added'a direction for the 


on the child’s forehead, the minister child to be brought to the parish church 


This is now 
confirmed 
by law. 


522 APPENDIX.—NO. I. 


At the end of this form of baptism it is said, “ And so forth 
as in public baptism,’ where there is nothing more added 
than what is here printed at large. This therefore seems to 
be an error of the printer. 


In the Catechism. 


All the questions and. answers (after the Lord’s Prayer) 
concerning the Sacraments, were added by the order of King 
James, given in the conference at Hampton-court. They 
want only the confirmation of a law, without which the 
minister is in danger of the penalty set down in the Act of 
Uniformity. 


At Confirmation. 


The place whereunto the children shall be brought for 
their confirmation is left to the appointment of the bishop. 
If the place were ordered here to be none but the church, 
and there the office to be done with the Morning or Evening 
Prayer annexed, it would avoid the offensive liberty that 
herein hath been commonly taken, to confirm children in 
the streets, in the highways, and in the common fields, with- 
out any sacred solemnity’. 


In the form of Matrimony®*. 


In the first rubric, the minister’is enjoined not to “cele- 
brate matrimony unless the banns have been first published 


by the godfathers and godmothers on 
a Sunday or holyday ‘‘ within three 
months following.” The last words 
are crossed out, and ‘fas soon as con- 
veniently may be’”’ substituted in San- 
croft’s hand. } 

t [Cosin inserted, ‘‘ Upon the day 
appointed, after Morning or Evening 
Prayer is ended, the bishop shall go to 
the Lord’s table, and all that are to be 
then confirmed being placed and stand- 
ing in order before him, near unto the 
same, he or his chaplains, or some other 
minister appointed by him, shall read 
this preface following: ‘ To the end 
that’? &c.] 


«" [Bp. Cosin suggested the form 
for the publication of banns, as we 
have it, which was accepted; he added, 
‘‘The impediments of marriage are, 
pre-contract, or a suit depending there- 
upon, consanguinity or affinity within 
the degrees prohibited by the laws of 
God and this realm, sentence of divorce 
from a party yet living, want of com- 
petent years, (consent of parents in 
minors,) instruction in the Catechism, 
and of confirmation, and such like.’’ 
In this the words in Italics are struck 
out, those in parentheses are inserted 
in Sancroft’s hand, and then the whole 
is crossed out. It would seem to have 


CORRECTIONS IN THE PRAYER-BOOK SUGGESTED. 523 


three several times ;” where, to secure him from the penalty 
contained in the Act of Uniformity, it were requisite that 
_ this exception be added, “ And unless there be a dispensation 
or license granted by the bishop in some special or urgent 
cause,” to celebrate the marriage without the publishing of 
- the banns, or by other laws yet in force it is permitted him 
to do. 

It is not here ordered at what time of the service this form 
of marriage shall be celebrated. . Nor at what time of the 
year (according to other laws) the solemnization of matri- 
mony is prohibited. 








The impediments of caatrmiony: or the just causes why 
any persons may not be joined together, are not here speci- 
| fied. For want whereof, or a direction at least that should 
_ be given to seek them in the known table set out for that 
__ purpose, and in other books of the law, the curate is com- 
monly ignorant of them, and unable to give any resolution 
herein either to himself or others whom it may concern. 
: The man and woman are appointed to take each other “by This is now 
the right hand;” it should be also each other with the same ~° sep 
‘right hand. 
. The words here used by the man to the woman, when he 
saith, (“ With my body I thee worship, and with all my 
_ worldly goods I thee endow,”) the former being not (as the 
_ phrase is now usually understood) so consonant to religion 
riage but publicly in the parish church 


been first altered, then wholly given 


up. 

P After the words “‘from the Curate 
of the other parish,” Cosin had added, 
*‘and none shall be married till their 
Banns be thrice thus published, un- 
less the bishop a lawful dispensation to 
the contrary be procured, neither shall 
any persons under the age of twenty- 
one years complete be married without 
the express (consent) of their parents, 
if they be living, or otherwise of their 
guardians or governers; nor in any 
other place.’’ (The words in Italics are 
crossed out, those in parentheses are in 
Sancroft’s hand.) 

No minister shall celebrate any mar- 


or chapel, where one of the parties 
dwelleth; nor at other time than be- 
tween the hours of eight and twelve in 
the forenoon.’ 

And here it is to be noted, that by 
the Ecclesiastical laws of this realm, 
there be some times in the year when 
marriage is not ordinarily solemnized. 
The following table of prohibited times 
is in Cosin’s and (fairly copied) San- 
croft’s hand, after the table of fasts in 
the kalendar. “ By the ecclesiastical 
laws of this realm, there be some times 
of the year wherein marriages are not 
usually solemnized ; as 


Advent 8 days after the Epiphany. 
From | Septaucsin Sunday until < 8 days after Kaster. 


Rogation 


Trinity Sunday.” 


entire 
Ey emognee 
SSG 


524 APPENDIX.—NO. I. 


or reason, and the latter not so agreeable to law or custom, 
require some consideration, that they may be explained. 

The like consideration is to be had of those words where 
the minister saith and prayeth, that the woman may be 


This now 
altered into 


the words, 
ave faith- amiable as Rachel, wise as Rebecca, which are not so fit for 
an Oa all persons. 

At the Communion of the Sick. 
ak sioe The Collect, Epistle, and Gospel, is here especially ordered, 
there is a 


“satel but what part of the public order at the Communion is to be 

prescribed, used, and what omitted, (as some part of it seems needful to 

though I be,) is not here said. 

sufficiently In the last rubric there, no leave is given to communicate 

particular. +h sick person without other company but in the times of 
contagious sickness, when none can be procured to commu- 
nicate with him. If there might be here some indulgence 
given in case the sick person doth so earnestly desire the 
Sacrament that he cannot be in a quiet state of mind 
without it, it may be delivered to him by the minister, 
though there be no contagion in the sickness, when others 
cannot be gotten to communicate with him; it would be to 
the greater satisfaction both of him and the minister, who is 
here restrained to that case only*. 


At the Churching of Women. 


This tile The title of thanksgiving was here added by the king’s 
i Sd authority only at the conference in Hampton-court, and 
thority of wants a confirmation of a law. 

ae In the rubric there, the words “or such like as the case 
ter isnow Shall require,” seem to give too much liberty to the minister, 
mateo to alter and add at his pleasure. He were better to be con- 
lar form. fined, that an uniformity herein might be observed. 


x [Cosin, as it seems, proposed to 
alter this last rubric by adding after 
the words ‘‘contagious times of sick- 
ness or diseases,’’ “‘ and at other times,”’ 
and crossing out “for fear of infec- 
tion;” and after the words ‘upon 


special request of the diseased,” add- 
ing, ‘‘ for the better peace and quiet of 
his mind.”” The words thus added are 
crossed out, and over the words crossed 
out is written “stet’? in Sancroft’s 
hand. ] 








ae i is 


i EE Os 


CORRECTIONS IN THE PRAYER-BOOK SUGGESTED, 


525 


The woman is not appointed in what habit she shall come 
to church for this purpose, nor in what time after her re- 


covery ; which, for the avoiding of questions, and too much 


liberty herein taken, requires here to be duly ordered’. 


At the Commination. 


This is appointed to be used at divers times in the year, 
but those times are not specified; for want whereof few know 
when to read it, and some read it not at all. 


y [The rubric before the Churching 
of Women, as altered by Cosin, is as 
follows, and nothing in it is crossed 
out: ‘*The woman, a month after her 
delivery, being recovered, shall upon 
some Sunday or other holyday come 
decently vailed into the parish church, 


and at the beginning of the Communion 
service shall kneel down in some con- 
venient place, appointed unto her by 
the minister, before the holy table; at 
which he standing, shall thus direct 
his speech unto her.’’ } 


APPENDIX, No. II. 


ON CONFIRMATION? 


ConFIRMATION is by the Church of Rome, that now is cor- 
rupted with many errors and novelties in religion, held to be 
a sacrament. But we, who by the grace of God are num- 
bered among the reformed Churches, whereof this Church of 
England is, both for doctrine and discipline, the most emi- 
nent, and the most pure, the most agreeable to Scripture and 
antiquity of all others, we hold it to be none. 

And yet we hold it to be a sacred and a solemn action of 
religion, which being accompanied with fervent prayer, will 
be a special means to convey the graces of God’s Holy Spirit 
upon those persons that have duly prepared themselves to 
receive it; that thereby they may be established in their 
faith, and the better fitted to every good word and work, as 
all true Christians ought to be. 

The ancient custom of the Church of Christ was, after the 
persons were once baptized, to add unto their baptism impo- 
sition of hands, with earnest prayer for the gifts of God’s 
graces to be bestowed upon them, whereby they might be 


® [The following discourse on Con- sent preface, and to have been submit- 


firmation was printed in Nichols’ addi- 
tional notes, p. 57, with this observa- 
tion: “This note is not among those 
of Bp. Cosin’s first MSS., nor in his 
Additional Notes, but was sent me by 
Dr. Pickering, being taken out of a 
Common Prayer-book of his, written 
in his own hand.’ The discourse is in 
Cosin’s hand. The Prayer-book of 
1619, in which it is inserted, is that 
which is described in the preface to this 
volume, as corrected and altered by 
Bp.Cosin. It may have been designed 
by Cosin as an introduction to our pre- 


ted as such to the bishops; but there is 
no reference to it in what is written in 
the Prayer-book itself, or in the cor- 
rections made by the bishop, as written 
by Sancroft; from which the editor in- 
fers that it was not actually submitted 
to them, and from the character of the 
handwriting, he is inclined to suppose 
that it was written by Bp. Cosin after 
1662, for his own-use, as an address 
before confirmations, and was after- 
wards inserted by others in his Prayer- 
book of 1619. ] 





Seer eee ee 


ON CONFIRMATION. §27 


confirmed and strengthened in that holy profession which in 
the sacrament of baptism they had first begun to make. 

For our means to obtain the graces which God doth be- 
stow, are our prayers, and our prayers to that intent are 
available as well for others as ourselves. 

When we pray for others, (as now in this action we shall 
do for you that come to be confirmed,) we implore God’s 
blessing upon them for whom we pray, and thereby we do 
actually bless them, because our prayers and imposition of 
hands in those prayers, are an especial means ordained by 
God to procure that blessing from Him upon them whom 
by this solemn rite we present unto Him for that purpose. 

So Israel blessed: the sons of Joseph, and imposed his 
hands upon them. And the like custom was usually ob- 
served from the time of Moses to Christ, who used it Him- 
self, and His apostles after Him, as His Church hath done 
after them in all ages. 

And the reason why the Church hath always hitherto con- 
tinued it, is for the great benefit which every member of the 
Church thereby enjoyeth, or may at least enjoy if it be not 
their own fault, and want of true preparation and devotion 
that hindereth them. 

And therefore the ancient fathers and bishops of the 
Church everywhere in their learned, godly, and Christian 
writings, impute unto it those gifts and graces of the Holy 
Ghost, which doth not make men and women Christians, as 
they were at first in their baptism, but when they are made 
such there, assisteth them in all virtue, and armeth them the 
better against all the several temptations of the world and 
the devil, to resist the vices of the flesh. 

When baptism was at first administered to them of full 
age, who in their infancy were either Jews or heathens, there 
was no reason to sever confirmation from it; but when it was 
administered to infants, (as it was to you,) though they 
might very well be admitted to live in the family of Christ, 
(as you have been,) yet forasmuch as to fight in the army of 
God, and to discharge the duties of a Christian man or 
woman, to bring forth the fruits of their religion, and to do 
the works of the Holy Ghost, their time of ability was not 
yet come, their confirmation was deferred till they arrived to 


528 APPENDIX.—NO. II. 


riper years, (as yours now is,) that in the meanwhile they 
might be seasoned with the principles of true religion, (as we 
hope well you now are,) and a good foundation laid betimes 
for the better direction of your lives ever after. 

For that which in our baptism we first professed by others, 
being infants without any understanding of our own, when 
we come afterwards to acknowledge ourselves, (as you now 
do,) what do we else but only bring to ripeness that very 
seed which was sown in us before? Whereunto imposition 
of hands and prayer being added, (as now we intend to do,) 
our warrant and trust for the good effect thereof, is the same 
which the patriarchs, the prophets, the apostles, and men of 
God have practised and set before us. 

Nor is there any cause that we should doubt of the benefit, 
if it be not our own fault; but truly there is great cause to 
make complaint of the great and general neglect of this 
Christian duty. Let no man take it in evil part, the small 
regard hereof hath done much harm in the Church of God, 
and the frequenting of it may do much good. 





APPENDIX, No. III. 


A DETERMINATION ON THE IMMUTABLE OBLI- 
GATION OF THE LORD’S DAY. 





: 
Tuts determination is preserved among the MSS. of Bp. Barlow at Queen’s 
College, Oxford, (No. 219, fol. 336,) and has the following title in Barlow’s 
hand: ‘* D". Cosins de Die Dominico; D®® D™ Bernard e Galliis transmissa 
erat hec determinatio (olim Cantabrigie habita) cum responsum D" Petro 
: Heylin contra institutionem Diei Dominici disputanti meditabatur; anno 
: 1658*.”’ 


CANTABRIGIZ IN MAGNIS COMITIIS, A.D. MDCXXXX. 
Prima Thesis disputata et defensa. 
: DIES DOMINICUS EST IMMUTABILIS. 


Preceps ruit hora, et jam satis disputatum est. estat ut D.D. J. 
ornatissimum Respondentem cum cumulatissimis suis laudibus di- C™ Ft 


cancell. 
mittamus, dignum virtutis et literarum premio. D.D Bry 
Sige the ton he- 
Hruditissime Doctor, §c... . Descende. spond. 


= (Bp. Cosin was in France in 1658, 
as he had been for some years pre- 
vious to that time. Nicholas Bernard, 
D.D., the chaplain and biographer of 
Abp. Ussher, published in 1657 a book 
entitled: ‘‘ The Judgment of the late 
Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of 
Ireland; concerning, first, the extent 
of Christ’s Death and Satisfaction ; 
secondly, of the Sabbath, and Obser- 
vation of the Lord’s Day, and of Or- 
dination in other Reformed Churches, 
with a vindication of him from a pre- 
tended change of opinion in the first, 
some advertisements upon the latter,”’ 
&c. To this Heylyn replied in a vo- 
lume called; “ Respondet Petrus; or 
the Answer of Peter Heylin, D.D., to 
so much of Dr. Bernard’s book, en- 
titled, &c., as he is made a party by 
the said Lord Primate in the point of 
the Sabbath.” Lond. 1658, 4to. It would 
appear that « Determination here 


COSIN, 


printed was sent to Bernard by Bp. 
Cosin, from France, when he was con- 
templating a reply to this work. Hey- 
lyn had published his “‘ History of the 
Sabbath” in 1636, and this Determina- 
tion throughout refers to matter con- 
tained in that history, and uses freely 
the authorities alleged in it. 

It will be observed that Cosin only 
transcribed so much of the Determina- 
tion as concerned the question of the 
Lord’s Day, which was the second 
thesis in the Disputation. The first 
thesis appears to have been respecting 
Holy Orders. The Respondent was 
Dr. Breton, of Emmanuel College, 
Cosin was at the time Master of St. 
Peter’s College, Cambridge, and Vice- 
chancellor, in which latter capacity he 
presided in the disputations at the Com-. 
mencement, at which, as it appears, 
Abp. Ussher was present. ] 


Mm 


¢ 


530 APPENDIX.—WNO. III. 


Ego autem quod reliquum est negotii breviter absolvam; atque 
ad utriusque questionis veritatem astruendam non imiquos testes et 
judices advocabo. Ordiar a prima. Quero, m Lege quid scriptum 
sit, quid in Evangelio, &e. 


a * *k * *® ¥ 


i. Transeo ad secundam causam (de die Dominico) quam et sum- 
ma etiam qua potero brevitate perstringam. Sequar autem in 
hae re non ratiunculas humanas sed ductum Verbi Dew, et praxin 
Ecclesia purioris inter Christianos. Quamvis enim ea nune esset 
alicujus moments ratio et non prorsus inidonea, ut que sapienter 
initio tustituta sunt, et longo tempore obtinuerunt, nulla imterve- 
niente causa necessaria, mutari vie possunt absque temeritatis 
nota; nos tamen ob aliam multo majoris moments rationem, thesin 
hance nostram de die Dominico non immutando asseveranter susce- 
pimus defendendam. Credimus nempe hune diem a Deo finum et 
sacris cultibus dicatum, neminemque prater Deum (qui temporis et 
opportunitatum Dominus est) posse illum quovis pratertu in alium 
diem transferre atque immutare. Constitutus enim est ex causa 
jam nune penitus invariahili atque eternum immota, que univer- 
sum genus humanum prohibeat (nisi quis se posse Resurrectionem 
Domini in alium diem traducere existimat, quam quo Ipse semet 
surrexit et redemptionem nostram perfecerit) quidquid attentare 
contra w quod factum est, infectumque fiert non potest. | 

ii. De Sabbatho nune nihil disputamus, cujus in N. T. ita fit 
mentio ut ejus antiquatio et abrogatio ibidem manifestissime decla- 
retur: Col, ii. 16. “ Nemo vos judicet in Sabbathis, que sunt 
umbra futurorum, at corpus Christi ests? abrogato uno Sabbatho 
Judaico, Dies Dominicus Christianorum est, gui nunguam im sacra 
NV. T. Scriptura nec apud primitive Ecclesia scriptores Sabbathum 
vocatur. 7 

il. Praeceptum quidem fuit fidelibus N. T. ut ultimum diem 
septimane quiett sancte dedicarent, quam circumstantiam certi et 
singularis diet inter ceremonialia typica et mutabilia hujus precepti 
esse, totus orbis Christianus agnoscit ; eaceptis quibusdam Sabba- 
thariis nostris nuper exortis, gui eundem diem Sabbathi ex vi hujus 
praceptt nobis observandum contendunt, et veteribus Ebionitis, qui 
diem Sabbathi pariter ac Diem Dominicum ex aquo observari volu- 
erunt ; sed utrique ab orthodoxa Ecclesia propterea hereseos con- 
demnati sunt, quia apostolo- repugnabant: (Kuseb., List, Heel. 


. 











DE DIE DOMINICO. 531 


lib. iii. ec. 27%; Conc. Laod., can. 29°): e¢ Greg. Mag. quoque 
hune errorem refutavit, Epist. iii. lib. 11°, atgue inter alia seripsit, 
* Antichristum renovaturum Sabbathi observationem,” quam a crea- 
tione mundi usque ad Resurrectionem Domini stetisse fatemur ; ab 
hoc autem tempore factum est, ut dies hie divine quietis nova ordi- 
natione mutatus sit atque alius divine operationis dies ei substi- 
tutus, qui dies primus Sabbathi sive hebdomadis in Evangelio dicitur, 
et in Ecclesia nominatus est Dominicus, Apoc. 1. 10, ac proimde 
demum factus immutabilis. 

iv. Quicguid vero jure divino institutum est, id nulla potest 
humana auctoritate abrogari ; aut (quod eodem recidit) quicquid a 
Domino traditum est apostolis ut ab omni Ecclesia in perpetuum 
observetur, nulla id unquam lege, nullo hominum consensu, nec 
contraria quavis consuetudine licebit fidelibus vel abolere vel pro 
suo eorum* arbitrio mutare. 


‘ Pew es 
v. Hoc vero quum apud omnes veritatem et pacem amantes im 


confesso sit, ut causam nostram obtineamus, duo hic tantum pro- 
banda nobis atque explicanda sunt; 1. Hujus diet divina insti- 
tutio; 2. Ejyusdem traditio apostolica. 

vi. Quero igitur (sicut et antea faciebam in questione prima) 
quid de isto hoc die in Lege nobis revelatum atque prescrip- 
tum sit, Legem dico tam Vetert quam Novo Testamento com- 
prehensam. 

vii. Atque equidem ex Veteri habemus decantatissimam illam 
Psalmiste prophetiam, quando diem hune nostrum expectans dice- 
bat David, Ps. exviii. 24, “Hic est dies, quem fecit Dominus,” Sc.; 
que verba unanimi omnium consensu Patrum, ne uno quidem ex- 


_cepto, de die tantum Dominico Resurrectione Christi illustrato, et 


deinceps sacris cetibus ae divino cultui consecrato, palam et per- 
spicue explicantur. Testem advoco Wintoniensem nostrum, virum 
in divinis literis et SS. Patrum scriptis exercitatissimum ; ‘ Om- 
nis,’ inquit, “dies Dominicus habet testimonium et observationis 
sue auctoritatem ex, hac ipsa sacra Dei Scriptura” (Cone. 13. De 


RL PY SE DTS yet 


>» [kal 7d wey odBBarov Kat rhv 
lovdaikhy &AAnv aywyhv duotws éxel- 
vos mapeptAatroy, Tals 9 ai Kupiaxais 
heépas huiv Ta mapamdAhowa eis wyhuny 
Tis TOD Kuplov avacrdcews eet éAovy.— 
Euseb. Hist. Eccl., lib. iii. c. 27. (of 
the Ebionites,) p. 121, 122.] 

© [6rt ob Set Xpioriavods “lovdalfev, 
Kal ev t@ oabBdrw cxodrdfew, GAAG 
epydgerOar abtods ev TH ait hucpa’ 


Thy St Kkupiaxiy mpotiuavras, evye Sv- 
vawto, oxorddfev &s Xpiorriavol.— 
Conc. Laod. (A.D. 364?) can. 29. Con- 
cilia, tom. ii. col. 570, A, B.] 

4 (Qui (Antichristus) veniens diem 
Sabbatum atque Dominicum ab omni 
faciet opere custodiri—S. Greg. M., 
Epist., lib. xiii. Indict. vi. Ep. i. Op. 
tom. ii. col, 1213, B, ed. Bened. | 


Mm 2 


1 [Sic in 


1S.] 


532 APPENDIX.—NO. III. 


Resurrect.©, et Cone. 2. de Prod. Pulv£): cui suffragatur non tantum 
Ignatius Apostolis tpsis coetaneus (Epist. ad Magnes.*) sed ipsa 
etiam Patrum catena a Procopio Gazao ante mille annos edita™. 
Aiunt enim “Non abs re dicitur, ‘Dies quem fecit Dominus,’ siquidem 
ab ipso Domino resurgente cognomen desumptum erat, ut diceretur. 
Dies Dominicus,?’ quem ex hoe ipso Dei instituto universa nune 
observat Ecclesia. Quid quod firmiorem adhuc habemus sermo- 
nem, idem hoe comprobante beatissimo Petro Apostolo (Act. iv. 11,) 
qui diem hune de quo Psalmista vaticinatus est Diem esse Resur- 
rectionis Christi apertissime omnibus declaravit? Subsecutus est 
mos populr Dei universus qui unoquoque die Dominico per totius 
anni circulum in ejusdem veritatis recognitionem cetus suos cele- 
brarunt atque eundem. Davidis prophet@ versiculum jam nune 
utique impletum solenniter omnes et publice decantarunt. 

vill. L Novo itidem Testamento proferimus locum superius ad- 
notatum (ad Col. ii. 16) : “ Nemo vos judicet in diebus Sabbathorum, 
qua sunt futurorum umbra ; corpus autem (sive veritas) Christi.” 
In hee verba ditigentissimus atque optimus omnium sacrarum lite- 
rarum interpres 8. Aug. ad hune modum commentatus est: “ Quod 
Judai in figura custodientes Sabbathum, nos in veritate celebra- 
mus, observantes diem Dominicum.” Quis autem post impletam 
jiguram immutare nunc poterit ipsam veritatem? Similiter et 
Leo Magnus}, “ Implebatur umbra Sabbathi, quando mutabatur in 
diem Dominicum.” Quod autem impletur, fixum est nec amplius 
movert queat. 

ix. Accedo ad apostolorum chorum, qui a Christo Domino edocti 
hune ipsum diem per totum terrarum orbem perpetuis futuris tem- 


¢ [The Lord’s Day hath testimony 
in Scripture. I insist upon that;.... 
for how came it to be ‘the Lord’s 
Day,’ but that, as it is in the Psalm, 
‘the Lord made it ?’—Bp. Andrewes, 
Sermon xiii. ofthe Resurrection, Works, 
vol. ii. p. 426.] 

f (Such in the Gospel of Christ’s 
Resurrection, ‘made’ by God Dies 
Dominicus ; and to it do all the fathers 
apply this verse.—Id., Serm. i. of the 
Gunpowder Treason; ibid., vol. iv. 
p- 206. ] 

& (unrére caBBarifovres, ¥AAa Kara 
Kupiakhy Cwhy Corres, év 7) Kal wh huay 
avéretAev 82 aivrov.—S.Ignat. Epist. 
ad Magnes., c. x. ap. Patr. Apost. tom, 
ii. p. 20.—In the Interpolated Epistle, 
ibid., p. 27, Eopralérw ras pirddxpioros 


THY KUplakhy, Thy dvacrdotpmoy, K.T.A. |: 
« ® {Non ab re inquit, ‘‘Quem fecit 
Dominus :’’ siquidem ab ipso Domino 
cognomen desumpturus erat, ut dice- 
retur dies Dominicus, tanquam soli 
Domino consecratus et dedicatus sit 
ille unus dies.—Procopii Gazzi So- 
phistee Comment. in Genes. cap. i. p. 
16. Tigur. 1555: who describes his 
Enarrationes in Octateuchum (of which 
the Comment. on Genesis is part) as 
an abridgment of quotations “‘ ex patri- 
bus orthodoxis aliisque scriptoribus.” 
Ibid. p. 1.] 

i [ This reference has not been found. } 

J [Legalis festivitas dum mutatur, 
impletur.—S. Leo, Serm. lviii., in Pas- 
sione Domini vii. § 1. Op. tom. i. col.. 
219.] 


DE DIE DOMINICO. 533 


\ 


poribus observandum tradiderunt, et successoribus suis universim 
reliquerunt. 

x. Ld ipsum omnes fere cum antique tum recentioris Ecclesia 
scriptores inferunt ex tribus potissimum locis N. T. in quibus ob- 
servationis die illius fit mentio (Act. xx. 10; 1 Cor. xvi. 2; et 
Apoc. i. 19): adeo ut frustra sint pontificir Romanenses et inter 
— eos prasertim novi Jesuita, qui a traditione non scripta hujus fest 
religionem nobis relictam esse volunt. Neque hic audiendi sunt e 
reformatis nostris aliquot (eorum ego nominibus parco), qui unum 
Calvinum* (virum alioquin doctissimum, et non sine honoris pre- 
fatione mihi nominandum) una cum Centuriatoribus Magdebur- 
gensibus' secuti de loco Act. xx. aliter sentire aut saltem dubitare 
videntur. Calvinus tamen ita ambigebat, non quia non putavit 
institutionem diei Dominici ad apostolos esse referendum, sed quia 
non existimabat iltam mutationem tam mature ab illis esse fac- 
tam ; ait enim, ‘‘Verisimilius est apostolos diem imitio retinuisse gam 
tum usitatum (ne forte Judaos alienarent, et contra Ecclesiam 
suscitarent), postea vero Judaica superstitione coactos illo abrogato 
Dominicum diem substituisse, et sacris actionibus consecrasse.” 
Interim Beza™ conjunctissimus Calvini collega, (notis in Apoc|a- 
lypsim|) non veretur asserere, “ Traditionem hane esse vere divinam*. 
et Spiritu Sancto dictante id ab apostolis fuisse factum.” , Idem 2 
affirmant Gallasius™ ttidem Calvini collega (in Exod. xxxi;) et 
Ant. Fayus° ejusdem Calvini in professione theologia successor (in 
il. Precept.), prater alios Eeclesiarum reformatarum clarissimos 
Doctores, quorum hic tongam seriem adnumerare supervacaneum 





K 
pe 
f 
: 
F 


k [Calvin’s words on Acts xx. 7 


are; ‘‘Uno autem die. Vel primum 
diem hebdomadis, proximum sabbato in- 
telligit, vel unum quodpiam Sabbatum, 
quod posterius mihi videri posset magis 
probabile: hac ratione quod dies ille ad 
conventum habendum ex more aptior 
fuit.’’—Joan. Calvini Comment. in Acta 
Apost., cap. xx. v. 7. Op. (tom. vi.) 
Amstel. 1667. ] 

1 (Docet autem ibi in Sabbato,— 
Centuriatores Magdeburgenses, cent. i. 
lib. 2. cap. 2. tom. ii. col. 16. Basilez, 
1559. ] 

m [Spiritu Sancto proculdubio istud 


- Apostolis dictante, pro prioris szculi 


Sabbato, sive septimo die, assumptus 
fuit novi hujus mundi primus. .... 
Dominice igitur diei ccetus. . . . apo- 
stolicw ac vere divine sunt traditionis. 
—J. C. D. N. Novum Testamentum 


cum Th. Bezze Annotationibus, 1582, 
not. in Apoc. i. 10, ] 

» {Non abs re igitur sublata inter nos 
Sabbati observatione, Dominicus dies 
in ejus locum substitutus est. Neque 
hoc institutum ab hominibus, sed jam 
inde ab apostolis accepimus: hoc est, 
a Spiritu Dei quo ipsi regebantur.— 
Nic. Gallasius, in Exodum Commen- 
tarii, (in Exod. xxxi. 17,) p. 195. 
Geneve, 1560. ] 

° [{Merito igitur dixerimus apo: 
stolos Spiritu Sancto duce pro septimo 
illo die Legali eum substituisse qui 
primus erat in prioris mundi creatione, 
&c.—Antonius Fayus, Theses Theols- 
gice in Schola Genevensi, &c., ab Ant. 
Fayo et Theodoro Beza proposite ct 
disputate, Thes. xxxiii. In Quartum 
Legis Dei Preceptum, § 12, p. 66. 410. 
Genev, 1586. | 


534 


foret. Id autem omnes ex his tribus locis unanime 
comprobant. 

x1. Sed prestat antiquos patres im eandem sententiam proferre, 
viros omni laude omnique exceptione majores. Ignatium premisi': 
subsequatur Justinus Martyr?, “ Die qui solis dicitur conventus 
jit omninm ;? atque hune morem Christus Dominus apostolos suos 
docuit (Apolog. 2. ad Imp.) Scripsit inter Gracos Melito® Sarden- 
828 Bpiscopus librum integrum de die Dominico circa annum Domini 
170, e¢ Dionysius Corinthiorum presul (ei coevus) in Epist. ad 
Soterem* (que extat apud Eusebium, lib. iv. ec. 22,) expresse diem 
Dominicum cultur divino dicatum dixit. Eundem vero a toto orbe. 
Christiano simul fuisse invariate receptum docent nos vetustissimt 
scriptores, Tertullianus (lib. de Cor. Mil. et Apol. adv. Gentes *) 
et Cyprianus (Epist. ad Fidum, et lib. de Opere et Eleemos.)*: 
Eusebius autem hujus diet celebritatem ad Christum authorem 
manifestissime refert, (ad finem Orat. de Laud. Constantini™.) 
Quis,” inquit, “ Gentilium Deus aut heros idem fecit quod Chris- 
tus, qui cunctis totius orbis incolis, seu terra seu mari illi sint, 


APPENDIX.—NO, III. 


CONSENSU 


P [Cosin appears to have referred to 
the following passage of S. Justin M.: 
Thy dt Tod HAlov Hucpay Kowh wavres 
Thy cuvérevow tmotovpmeda, emerdy rpoTH 
éotly nucpa, ev 7 6 Geds Td okdTos kar 
Thy UAnv tpévas Kdo mov érolnre, Kar 
"Inoois Xpirrds 6 Teer Epos TwThp TH 
avTh Tuepa éx vexpav avéorn’ TH yap 
mpd THs KpoviKys egrabpwoay airdy, kal 
TH META THY KpovLKhy, ris eoriv HAtov 
gpa gavels Tots GrootéAas abo Kat 
Mabynrais édidake ravra, dep eis éwioke- 
ww Kal duty dveddxanev.—S. Just. M. 
Apol, i. c. 67. Op. p. 84, A, B. See also 
the passage cited above, p. 442, note 
m. The words ‘‘atque,’’ &c., are not 
in Justin. ] 

4 [In Eusebius’ Hist. Eccl., lib. iv. 
c. 26. (p. 188.) in a list of Melito’s 
writings there occurs: kal 6 mepl Ku- 
piaxhs Adyos: and in Jerome (De Vir. 
Illust. c. 24. Op. tom. ii, fol. 851, de 
die Dominica librum unum. } 


(Op. p.'102, A.) Sidie solis letitiz in- 
dulgemus, alia longe ratione quam 
religione solis, &c. Id. Apol. c. 16, 
(p. 16, B.) Alii plane humanius, solem 
Christianum Deum estimant, quod 
innotuerit ad orientis partem facere nos 
precationem, vel die solis letitiam cu- 
rare, &c.—Id. ad Nationes, lib. i. c. 13, 
(p. 50, A.)] 

t {Nam quia octavus dies, id est, 
post Sabbatum primus, dies futurus erat, 
quo Dominus resurgeret, et nos vivifi- 
caret, et cireumcisionem nobis spirita- 
lem daret, hic dies octavus, id est, post 
Sabbatum primus et Dominicus, pre- 
cessit in imagine.—S, Cyprian. Epist. 
lxiv. ad Fidum, Op. p. 161. (ed. Fell.) 
Locuples et dives es, et Dominicum 
celebrare te credis, que... in Domi- 
nicum sine sacrificio venis. — Id. de 
Opere et Eleemosyna, p. 203, (ed. Fell.) 
see Fell’s note in loc. ] 

" [ris mdroTe Ocbs Kat iipws pe hes 


® [ry onmepov ov Kupianhy aylay -Tois To méeya TT OLX ELOv THs iis oikovaet, 


Tyuepay dinydyouev, ev h aveyvoKapev 
buav thy émictoAjv.—Dionysii Epise. 
Corinth. Epist. ad Soterem Episc. Rom. 
apud Euseb. Hist. Eccl., lib. iv. c. 23. 
(p. 187.) The Latin version is: * Ho- 
die sacrum diem Dominicum transegi- 
mus.’ } 

§ [Die Dominico jejunium nefas du- 
cimus. Tert. de Corona Militis, c. 3. 


Tois TE KATH ynv Kal Tots KaTd OddAaT- 
Trav, éd’ Exdotns éBdouddos Thy Kupia- 
Khy xpnuatiCovcay juépay, Eopriy &yewv 
émitavTd ouvidvras mapadédwKe* Kal 
abr d oépara matvey, Tas 5é wuxas 
evOéous radevuacw avatwrupey mape- 
oxevace.—Euseb. Orat. de Laudibus 
Constantini, c. 17.ap. Hist. Ecel.Script., 
tom. i. p. 773. ] 


DE DIE DOMINICO. 535 


prescripserit ut singulis septimanis in unum convenientes diem 
Dominicum festum celebrarent, institueritque ut sieut corpora 
pascerent cibariis, sic animas divinis disciplinis perficerent ?? Hé 
alibi’, * Inse enim Christus Servator noster tradidit nobis hune 
diem observandum.”  Athanasius*, éveretharo pvddrrew TH Kv- 
praxny,  mandavit Dominus servari diem Dominicum ;” et iterum’, 
peréOnke 8& 6 Kupsos thy tod caBBdrov iypepay els Kuptaxny, 
* Dominus transtulit diem .Sabbathi in Dominicam.” Simailiter 
Nazianzenust; “ Dicitur dies Domini, quia a Domino instrtutus 
est.”” Imprimis vero illustria sunt 8S. Aug. verba (Hfist. 19. ad 
Jan. c. 13*,) “ Dies,” inquit, “ Dominicus non Judais sed Chris- 
tianis resurrectione Domini declaratus est, et ex blo cepit habere 
Jestivitatem suam.” Et alibi (Serm. 15. de Verb. Ap.) “ Do- 
mint resurrectio promisit nobis aternum diem, et consecravit nobis 
diem Dominicum.” Sicut enim Sabbathum Creator noster bene- 
dixit, ita primam Sabbathi Salvator noster dedicavit. Quis autem 
hac omnia poterit legere, et institutionem divinam non agnoscere 2 
Sane quod fecit Christus, quod docuit, mandavit, transtulit, trad- 
dit, consecravit, dedicavit, declaravit, atque prescripsit, quin id 


divine sit institutionis, nulli dubium esse potest. Adeo ut miran- 


dum sit, esse nune in Heclesia, qui contra consensum Ecclesia tum 
antique, cum recentioris, aliter sentire videantur: post tot enim 
accurata prejudicia im ipso Dei verbo fundata, velle unius aut 
duorum triumve opponere novam opinationem, id profecto nimis 
est temerarium. 

xii. Ante Constantini Magn. Imp. tempora martyrium passos 
‘esse quamplurimos legimus, ob defensatam quoque (inter alia) hane 
diem Dominicam, tanquam insignem religionis Christiane charac- 
terem. Interrogabant enim pagani, “ Numquid Dominicam ser- 
vasti? et responsum est a singulis, Utique Christianus sum, neque 
iblam diem omittere possum, immutabili lege ab unwersis fidelibus 
custodiendam.”’ 


* [This has not been traced. ] 
x {This seems to be a mistaken re- 
ference to the passage; &smep oby éve- 


‘ relAaro puddrrety mpoTepov Tov cap- 


Bdrov thy Tuepay ee + OUTWS THY 


; Kupiaichy TMG LEY, pvhenv vioay ap- 


xis Seurépas dvaxrioews. — Pseudo- 
Athanasii de Sabbato et Circumcisione, 
§ 4. Op. S. Athan., tom. ii. p. 57, D. 
See Heylin’s History of the Sabbath, 
part ii. chap, 1. § 3. p. 8, where the 
words are cited in part. ] 


Y [meréOynne 5¢ 6 Kbpios thy Tod oaB- 
Bdrov tuépay eis Kupiaxhy.—Pseudo- 
Athanasii Homilia de Semente, § 1. 
ibid., p. 60, A.] 

- CT his has not been traced. ] 

« (S. Aug. Epist. lv. (al. xix.) ad 
Januarium, cap. 13. § 23. Op. tom. ii. 
col. 136, F.] 

> [Id. Serm. clxix. (al. xv. de Verb. 
Apost.) cap. 2, § 3. Op. tom. v. col. 
809, F.] 


536 APPENDIX. 





NO. IIIf. 


xi. Labentibus tamen postea saculis, cum in multis aliis, tum 
in hac re plurimum, pietatem hominum deferbuisse fatendum est. 
Lt postquam exorti sunt scholastict atque ordines Mendicantium, 
non tanty esse putabatur apostolorum pracepta conservare, quanti 
erat autoritatem Pape promovere. Hi enim primi omnium nune 
in dubium vocare, nune etiam contra definire quam que olim ab 
apostolis et recepta sunt et tradita, atque adeo omnia potestati 
ecclesiastice h.e. Romano Pontifici subjicere ceperunt. Hine 
etiam orta Jesuitarum dogmata, per que liceat. nunc Christianis 
unoquogue die Dominico ludis theatralibus, scenis, spectaculis, 
choreis, et venationibus vacare, h.e. si non diem ipsum, religionem 
tamen ipsius diet pro cujusque libitu immutare. Accedunt Ana- 
baptista, qui utriusque questionis (tam hujus quam alterius a doc- 
tissimo hodie respondente proposite atque defense) tollunt sub- 
yectum, et sub pratertu Christiane libertatis, omnem omnino 
tum sacrorum ordinum tum dierum differentiam, etiam quoad 
usum, sublatam volunt. Periculum autem est, ne et illi visdem 
quibus Anabaptista et Jesuite argumentis pugnent, gui diem hune 
nostrum Dominicum sede sua fixum, vel mutatum velint, vel saltem 
mutabilem esse contendant. Inter nostrates nullus mihi hactenus 
visus est, qui hoc expresse affirmaret ; si qui tamen sint, eorum 
temeritatt opponimus jus divinum tam Vetert quam Novo Testa- 
mento exploratum, Ecclesiam universam, nominatim autem hane 
nostram Anglicanum (Homil. de loco et tempore precum®), et lauda- 
tissimos virorum R. Hookerum*, L{ancelotum] praesulem Winto- 
mienseme, et venerandum antistitem D™ Primatem Hibernia‘, qui 
comitia hec nostra academica suo hodie splendore illustrare voluit, - 
et quas nunc tuemur theses utrasque calculo suo comprobare. 

xiv, Denique, ipsa quoque omnium seculorum experientia sen- 
tentie nostra veritatem confirmat, quum Ecclesia Christiana in 
nullist concilis aut synodis vel diem hunc primum wstituerit, vel 


¢ [This example and commandment 
of God the godly Christian people be- 
gan to follow immediately after the 
ascension of our Lord Christ, and be- 
gan to choose them a standing day of 
the week to come together in; yet not 
the seventh day, which the Jews kept, 
but the Lord’s Day, &c., &c.—Hom. 
‘on Place and Time of Prayer, P. i. 
p. 343. ed. Corrie, 1850. ] 
4 (Hooker, Laws of Ecclesiastical 
Polity, book v. c. Ixx. § 9.] 
© [See Bp. Andrewes’ Speech against 


Traske, (Minor English Works, p. 83, 
Oxford, 1854); and above in p. 532, 
notes e, f.] 

f [ Ussher finally quitted Ireland early 
in 1640, and resided for the latter part ° 
of that year principally in Oxford. No 
other trace occurs of his visit to Cam- 
bridge. See his Life by Elrington. ] 

& Quod vero universa observat Ec- 
clesia, nec conciliis institutum, sed sem- 
per retentum est; id non nisi ab apo- 
stolis Christi traditum rectissime credi- 
tur.—S. Aug. 1. 4. de Bapt. contra Do- 


DE DIE DOMINICO. 537 


institute mutationem diet unquam attentaverit ; neque unquam 
Suturum sit ut sine maximo Christianorum scandalo eam quoquo- 
modo attentet, quia nulla causa aut occasio singularis cogitart 
potest, que diem hane memoria resurrectionis Domini et sanctis- 
simis usibus dicatam mutabilem reddat: contra de aliis legibus ad 
tempus tantum institutis censendum est, harum enim cum causa 
mutata sit, ipse etiam leges mutari possint, et soleant ; at in hac 
nostra, causa perpetua et sempiterna erit, nec convellt aut loco suo 
movert queat. Nec quicquam valet illud a Suarezio™ suggestum ; 
“mutari scilicet hunc diem posse in alium per autoritatem Ec- 
clesiea absolutam, non vero practicam :’ non minus enim valuisset 
hee distinctio in Sabbathum olim Judaorum, quam in nostrum qua- 
drat Dominicum, quum in neutro erat aliquid intrinsecum quod 
hujus vel ilius mutationem vetuit, sed externum tantum Dei man- 
datum. st vero lex divina positiwa, nulla autem reals sancti- 
tas, que vel Sabbathum Hebraicum vel Dominicam Christianam a 
quavis alia die dispescuit. Aio igitur, quod stante lege Evangelica 
non magis in nobis sita est potestas mutandi Dominicam, quam im 
Judais olim erat transferendi Sabbathum stante lege Mosaica. At- 
que hac tandem conclusio sit utriusque questionis immota et immu- 
tabilis. Quod restat, gratias agamus Domino Deo nostro, 8c. 

natist. c. 24. [§ 31. Op. tom. ix. col. h [Quoted by Heylin, Pt. ii. c. 6. 


140, C, D. Quoted by Cosin himself  p. 173.] 
in the margin of his MS.] 





~~ ae 


GENERAL INDEX. 


A. 


Absolution, authority of, 47, 234; value 
of, 163, sqq.; efficacy, 164. 

, posture in giving, 47. 

by the bishop, if present, 103. 

Adoration in the Eucharist, to what di- 
rected, 345. 

Agatha, St., 26. 

Agnes, St., 25, 193, 194. 

Agnoeta, heretics, 258. 

All Souls, Day of, 431, 432. 

Alms at burials, 172. 

Alphage, St., 197. 





Altar, name of, 85, 88, 309; its early 


use, 87. 

» place of, 85. 

Ambrose, St., his day, 30; his life, 196, 
197; author of hymns, 61; of Te 
Deum, 64; of antiphonal singing, 
54. 

Amen, ancient use of, 369; power of, 
445; said by the communicants at 
receiving, 112, 113. 

Andrew, St., feast of, 82, 290, 434. 

Anne, St., 34. 

Apostles’, see Creed. 

Ash-Wednesday, ancient service on, 
385. 

Assumption of the Blessed Virgin, 203— 
218. » 

Athanasius, St., see Creed. 

Augustine, St., of Canterbury, 32. 

of Hippo, 218—222, 

428 ; complained of multiplied cere- 

monies, 187, 188. 








B. 


Banns of Marriage, 157, 368. 

‘Baptism, times of administering, 135, 
482; place of, 135,136; element of, 
137, 358, 359, 483; affusion in, 359 ; 

. use of Cross in, 359, 360; minister 
of, 141; exorcism used in, 139. 

, Private, rules for, 141, 142. 

Barnabas, St., 32, 427. 

Bartholomew, St., 427. 

Bells, ringing of, condemned by Bucer, 
417; Grindal’s rule respecting, ibid. 

Benedicite, 65; when to be said, ibid. ; 





ancient manner of saying it in Lent, 
236. 

Benedict, St., 29. 

Bible, our translations of the, 188. 

Bishops, ordination by three, 895; suf- 
fragan, what, ibid. ; precedence of, in 
England, 396. 

Blase, St., 26. 

Blessing, proper to bishops, 124, 472, 
473. 


Boniface, St., 32. 

Book of Common Prayer, see Common 
Prayer. 

Bread, breaking of, manner of, 342. 

Bread and Wine, consecrated, 130, 
131, 356; unconsecrated, ibid, 

Breviary, ancient, its difficulties, 185. 

Bucer’s objections to ringing bells, 417; 
to vestments, lights, gestures, &c., 
418; to many holydays, ibid.; to 
keeping churches open, 419; urged 
taking away vestments, 440; wished 
that all present should communicate, 
468 ; that the Church-lands should 
be restored, 469; recommended a 
uniform confession of faith, ibid. ; 
stricter examination before ordina- 
tion, ibid.; yearly synods, ibid. ; his 
censures on the Service for the Holy 
Communion, 475, 480; objections 
respecting Service for Confirmation, 
488, 489; to Catechism, 491; cen- 
sures on Service for Matrimony, 492, 
sqq.; urged table of Consanguinity ; 
his censures on Service for Visita- 
tion of the Sick, 495,496; and for 
Burial of the Dead, 498, 499, 

Burial of the Dead, see Dead. 


C, 


Candles on the Altar, see Ornaments. 

Catechism, Bucer’s objection to, 491; 
how often to be used, ibid. 

Ceremonies, 12,13; uses of, 13, 415; 
rules in reforming, 15; what we re- 
tain, 306, 807; those of Edwd. VI.’s 
first book not condemned, 12, 416, 
418; rules there respecting, 416, 
417 ; Bucer’s objections to, 418. 


Chad, St., 27. 


5 40 


Chalice, material of, 346. 

Chancellor, what, 185. 

Chancels, 227, 228. 

Chanting, of what character, 235. 

Chapels, private, what, 180. 

Chrism, vot essential to baptism. 

CHRIST, growing in wisdom, explained, 
199—202. 

Christian, name of, 360. 

Chrysostom, St., prayer of, 454, 455. 

Church, the whole, includes the de- 
parted, 107, 119. 

Church militant, prayer for, like primi- 
tive intercession, 465—468 ; changes 
in, ibid. 

Churching of women, rules respecting, 
499, 500. 

Civil Power, authority in matters of 
religion, 179, 181; delegated to ec- 
clesiastics, 412. 

Clement, St., 432. 

Clergy, whether secular employment 
allowed to, see Ordination, 390— 
392. 

Collects, &c., 69, sqq.; origin of name, 
245 ; compared with those of Sarum 
Missal, 246, sqq. 

Commination, how often to be used, 50. 

Common Prayer to be used daily, 6, 
9—12, 186. 





» Book of, derogation of, 
180. 





, First of Edward, indi- 
rectly confirmed by ours, 7; cere- 
monies of, not condemned, 12, 416. 

Communion, Holy, see Eucharist, Sacra- 
ment. 

, daily celebration supposed 
by our Church, 16, 104, 124, 125; 
see 518. 

————, frequency of, 128, 129, 132, 
sqq., 857, 480. 

» preparation for the service, 


82. 
——-——, preparation for receiving, 
100, 101. 


—————, manner of receiving in the 
hands, 111. 

» admission to, 84. 

,» non-communicants not to 

be present at, 98, 99. 

, two on Christmas- Day, 456. 

, of the Sick, 496, 497. 
of Saints, 361, 448; 





























see 
Creed. 

Confession in Morning Prayer, Bp. An- 
drewes’ enlargement of, 46; use of, 
443, 444, 

—_———— to the priest, duty of, 99, 
100, 102; virtue of, 163. 

Confirmation, its relation to Baptism ,140; 

» names of, 142; nature of, 142, sqq.; 
its antiquity, 490; a Sacrament, (in a 


GENERAL INDEX. 


sense,) 132; age for receiving, 144, 
146, 488; virtue of, 145, 147; neces- 
sity of, 146, sqq.; not absolute, 484, 
485; must precede admission to Com- 
munion, 156; what is essential to, 
148; ceremonies in, 149, 486, 487; 
ratifying baptismal vow at, 487; 
address respecting, 526—528. 

Consecration in the Eucharist, its con- 
tinued effects, 131; ancient words 
of, 109; effectual, 106; ours as full 
as the Roman, 106; by what words 
perfected, 110; of bread and wine 
separate, 342. 

Corpus Christi, feast of, 283. 

Creed, Apostles’, Comment on, 236, 361, 
448, 449, 

——, Nicene, when first said in the 
Church-service, 91, 92, 462, 463; 
comment on, 311, 316. 

- of St. Athanasius, comment on, 
238—241, 450, 451. 

Cross, Invention of, 30, 199—202. 

Custom, see Desuetude. 

Cuthbert, St., 28. 

Cyprian, St., 429. 





= D. 


Daily Service, 6, 9—12; obligation to 
say it, ibid., 186; see 503. 


David, St., 27. 


Days of week, names of, 22. 

Deacons, age for ordination of, 385; 
see Ordination ; distinguished from 
priests, 471. 

Dead, burial of, who to be admitted 
to, 371; rites at, 165, sqq.; service 
in King Edward’s first book, 497— 
499; communion at, 171; its object, 
ibid., 351, 352, 378, 382; alms at, 
172. 

prayers for, in Church of Eng- 

land, 169, 241, 351, 373—379. 

do not imply purgatory, 374, 375. 

Desuetude, does it excuse non-observ- 
ance? 184. 

Dunstan, St., 31. 








E. 


Easter- Even, ancient rites on, 279. 

Edmond, St., King, 222. 

Edward ¥I., Common Prayer-books of 
his reign, see Common Prayer. 

Edward, St., 28, 33. 

Elevation of the Host, not primitive, 
340, 341. 

Ember Days, why fasts, 91. 

Epiphany, proper lessons for, 19; great- 
ness of festival, 71. 

Sundays after, service on, 

76; comments on, 255, sqq. 


FS eS ae ram 


' GENERAL INDEX. 


Epistles and Gospels, why selected, 69 ; 
antiquity of, 247; manner of read- 
ing, 90, see 513; anciently, 248, 311. 

Etheldred, St., 223. 

Eucharist, institution of, 339, 340; 
names of, 299; order for adminis- 
tration of, ancient, 303, 318, 321; 
our own, 8083—305, 458—462; daily 
celebration supposed, 16, 10+, 124, 
125, 128, 129; benefits to the re- 
cipients, and to those for whom we 
pray in it, 336; see Communion, Sa- 
crament, Sacrifice, Adoration. 

Eves of Holydays, why fasts, 24, 91. 

Exorcism, in baptism, 139. 


F. 


Fabian, St., 25. 

Fasting, its objects, 272, 273; days 
for, what, 25, 24, 95; part of our re- 
ligion, 94; not on Sundays or Christ- 
mas Day, 39. 

Funerals, banquets at, 171; see Dead, 
burial of. 


G. 


Gloria Patri, history of, 48, 55, 56, 
4.46. 





in Excelsis, history of, 123. 

Good Friday, why so called, 277; an- 
cient rites on, 279. 

Gospels, see Epistles ; manner of read- 
ing, 90, 91. 

Gradual, what, 249. 

Gregory, St., 28. 


H. 


Hallelujah, when said of old, 50. 

Hilary, St., 25, 424. ; 

Holydays, discrepancies in rules re- 
specting, 20, 21, 37, 38, 226, 435, 
506; why observed, 38, 435; con- 
currence of, 188, 503. 

Homilies, antiquity of, 316, 318, 463 ; 
English written in haste, 93; their 
authority, ibid. 

Hymns, antiquity of in service, 59—63 ; 
at funerals, 167. 


J. 


James, St., the Greater, 203, 

— the Less, 198, 425. 

Jerusalem, siege of, 285, 286. 

JESUS, name of, Feast, 35. 

John, St., Evang., 224, 434; ad Port. 
Lat. 31. 





541 


John, St., Bapt., beheading of, 86. 
Jude, St., 431. 
Jurisdiction, who have it, 182. 


ge 
Kalendar, filled in by Cosin, 225; com- 
parison of several, 419. 
King, power of in appointing bishops, 
395. 


—— prayer for, 243, 245. 

Kneeling, proper posture for humble 
prayer, 45, 237, 584; for priest in 
receiving the holy Sacrament, 112; 
see 517. 


L. 


Lawrence, St., 35. 

Lent, Sundays in, services for, 78. 

Lessons, origin of, 17; ancient use, 
ibid., 413; use in divine service, 
56, &c., 446, 447 ; proper, for certain 
days, 189, 422; manner of reading, 
57, 58, 447; alteration of, 420. 

Litany, place of saying, 67; wnen to 
be said, 67, 451—453; comments 
on, 67, sqq:, 241—245, 453. 

Lord, The, be with you, 449. 

Lord’s Day, rules respecting work on, 
362, 863; immutable obligation of, 
599, sqq. 

Lord’s Prayer, Bp. Andrewes” enlarge- 
ment of, 48; the foundation of all 
our prayers, 234; always said at the 
consecration of the Eucharist, 114, 
847; concluding clause of, 234; 
manner of saying, 384. 

Lucian, St., 5, 24, 

Luke, St., 429. 


M. 


Magdalene, Mary, St., 33, 457. 

Margaret, St., 33. 

Mark, St., 198, 425. 

Marriages, second, did not receive the 
Church’s benediction, 161. 

Martin, St., 33. 

Mary, St., nativity of, 222; visitation 
of, 33 ; assumption of, 208—218. 
Mass, name and reality, 301, 802, 356; 

solitary, condemned, 98, 99, 126, 
127; special, of old against the 

plague, &c., 246 ; see Communion. 

Matrimony, why ordained, 58, 492; 
rites of, 156; times of, 367, 523; 
legitimate, 157; banns of, 157 ; im- 
pediments of, 158, 159, see 523; 
ring in, 160, 493; gifts at, 493; 
blessing of priest in, 160, 161; 
priest’s instructions previous to, 162; 
our service illustrated from the Sa- 
rum rite, 367—370. 


542 


Matthew, St., 222, 428. 

Maundy Thursday, ancient rites on, 
276, 277. 

Minister, what, 230. 

Missa Catechumenorum, 219, sqq.; Fi- 
delium, ibid. 

Months, names of, 21. 


N. 


Nicomede, St., 32. 

Novelties in religion to be avoided, 3, 
4; avoided by the Church of Eng- 
land, 13. 


O. 


Oblation, prayer of, proper place for, 
114, 347; its import, 119, 120, 347, 
351,852; where said by Bp. Overall, 
114, see 517. 

Offertory, ancient manner of, 321, 322; 
other sentences for, suggested by Bp. 
Andrewes, 96; manner of offering, 
97, see 514. 

Oratories, see Chapels. 

Ordinary, what, 183. 

Ordination, age for, 386; qualifica- 
tions for, 386, 390; impediments to, 

889, 390. 

Ornaments in divine service, justified, 
40, &c., 229; what are enjoined, 42, 
43, 230—233, 305—307, 416, 438— 
441, 507. 


FP; 


Passover, our Lord’s celebrating it, 337, 
338; rites of, 339, 340, 

Paul, St., Feast of Conversion of, 26; 
service on, 83. 

Perpetua, St., 27. 

Peter, St., 203; his prerogatives, 294, 
295. ? 

Philip, St., 198. 

Pie, 185. 

Praise ye the Lord, said of old, 49, 50. 

Prayer, repetition in, 244; posture in, 
307, 308, (see Kneeling); prescript 
form of, 401—410; Morning and 
Evening, time for, 66, 506; place 
for, 227, 435—438 ; preparatory por- 
tion of, why added, 44, 47,441; see 
Common Prayer and Daily Service. 

Prefaces in Communion Service, anti- 
quity of, 330, 331. 

Presence, see Sacrament. 

Priest, name of, 88, 308, 309; all 
Christians in a sense priests, 353. 

Prisca, St., 25. 

Proclamation for Uniformity in Com- 
mon Prayer, 184, 503. 

Prose Tract, what, 255, 

Psalms, use of in service, 51, 53, 446; 


GENERAL INDEX. 


a 
singing of, 52; manner of singing, 
53, 55; what to be sung, 421; pro- 
per Psalms, 421, 
Pulpit, 383. 


Q. 


Quinquagesima, see Septuagesima. 


R. 


Reformation of Services, 8; ours gradual, 
410,412; how carried in parliament, 
412, 

Richard, St., 29. 

Ring-finger, 160, 493. 

Roman, ritual practices, not necessarily 
to be observed, 5; agreement with 
no objection, 413. 


Ss. 


Sabbath, 560, sqq.- 

Sacraments, nature of, 366,367; num- 
ber of, 180, 151, 363—366. 

—— of the Body and Blood of 
Christ, elements of, 151—154, 481; 
Christ’s Body and Blood present in, 
after consecration, 104; truly ex- 
hibited, 336; really, not corporally, 
155, &c., 345, &c.; received with the 
elements, 336; whether extra usum 
Sacramenti, 130—132, 345, 357; 
elements not called Bread and Wine 
after consecration, 109, 120; they 
remain there still, ibid.; what re- 
mains of, how to be consumed, 130, 
132, 356, 481, see 519; mode of 
delivery, 111; the cause of immor- 
tality, 122. 

Sacrifice, nature of, 115; kinds of, 117, 
3847—3850; that of the Eucharist, 114, 
115, 354, sqq.; contrasted with that 
on the cross, 107, 333, 350, 351; com- 
memorative, 101, sqq., 151, 334, 335, 
343, 344; representative, 119, 349; 
in one sense true, real, efficient, and 
propitiatory, 107, sqq. (see pp. 118, 
119,) 120, 336; not a proper sacri- 
fice, 847—851, 354; virtue of it 
affects the absent, 352; and the 
dead, ibid. ; see Dead. Of ourselves, 
120, 352. 

Saints’ days, origin of, 23 ; reasons for, 

_ 81,192; see Holydays. 

— All, Day, 36. 

Salisbury Use, 185, (compared with that 
of the Common Prayer-book through- 
out second series of notes). 

Septuagesima, &c., origin of, 77; Les- 
sons for, 18; Epistles and Gospels, 
for, comment on, 265—272. 

Sequences, what, 20. 











eee ae epee 


GENERAL INDEX. 


Sermons, antiquity of, 316—318; rules 
respecting, ibid.; ancient place of, 
463, 464. 

Sexagesima, sce Septuagesima. 

Simon, St., 430. 

Singing, use of, 52; antiphonal, 53, 
445; at funerals, 165; see Psalms. 

Souls’, All, Day, 431, 432. 

Standing, posture for prayer, 307, 308; 
proper posture in absolution, 47; 
in psalmody, 54. 

Sunday, why observed, 38, 39; see 
Lord's Day. 


Sursum Corda, why said, 103, 104, 329, 


330, 341, 470. 
Swithun, St., 33. 


i 


Tapers at funerals, 166; in church, 
see Ornaments. 

Te Deum, antiquity of, 64; authors of, 
ibid., 235. 

Terms, law, why inserted in kalendar, 
40. 


Thanksgivings, special, 455, 456, 510, 
Thomas, St., his day, 82. 


543 


Tractatus, old name for sermons, 316, 
463. 

Transfiguration, Feast of, 34. 

Trinity, last Sunday after, rubric re- 
specting, 80, 289, 


U. 
Uniformity, need of, 179, 401, sqq. 


¥. 


Valentine, St., 27. 
Vincent, St., 26. 


W. 
Wafer-bread for the Holy Communion, 
481, see 518, 519. 
Water mixed with wine for Commu- 


nion, 151, sqq. 
Wilful neglect, what, 179, 180. 


i 


Year, beginning of, 190, 191; Chris- 
tian, how divided, 69. - 


PRINTED BY MESSRS. PARKER, CORN-MARKRET, OXFORD. 


ate 
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p. 9, 


ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS. 


note q, insert at beginning of note, ‘* Rather, the Council of Vannes.” 


21*, after line 16 insert the first four lines of p. 192, and the note on them. 
28*, after line 18 insert the last five lines of p. 197 and first seven of p. 198, 


106, 
122, 
130, 
141, 
152, 
192, 
217, 
235, 


299, 
315, 
334, 


400, 


and the note. 

for note n substitute, “* Becon’s Reliques of Rome, No. 58, Of Fasting.— 
Works, vol. iii. fol. 353. Lond. 1560—64.”’ 

line 18, for ‘‘ Blood’’ read “* Death.” 

dele last line of text: it belongs to the second series, see p. 355. 

second column of notes, second line, dele comma after MS. 

note w, line 3, for “ col.’’ read ‘* Col.” 

note k, line 7, for “ Conscr.’’ read ‘* Consecr.”’ 

note f, line 3, for “ Apol.’’ read ‘‘fol.” 

note z, line 2, after ‘* Ut supr.” insert ‘* See above, p. 206, note p.” 

after line 2, insert “ In such places where they do sing, then shall the Lessons 
be sung in a plain tune.’? | 

note, col. 2, last line but one, for ‘end’ read “ beginning.” 

note r, for “ Baronii,” read ‘‘ Baronius.”’ 

note y, for “ are cited by Lanfranc,” read ‘‘ are found in Lanfranc, and are 
cited by.” 

line 1, after Du Plessis put note-mark *, and at the foot of the page add 
this note: * [This is the argument of the work of Philip Du Plessis 
Mornay, De Sacramento Eucharistie ; see the Prefatio, pp. 28, 29, 
(ed. Hanov. 1605,) ‘ ab initio non fuit sic.’’ | 


* In these two cases, notes belonging to the first series were omitted, and 
printed in the second series. 


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