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A31329 The catechism for the curats, compos'd by the decree of the Council of Trent, and publish'd by command of Pope Pius the Fifth / faithfully translated into English.; Catechismus Romanus. English Catholic Church. 1687 (1687) Wing C1472; ESTC R16648 482,149 617

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in S. John says Which I will give is my Flesh for the Life of the World to wit calling the Bread his Flesh And a little after he subjoyns Vnless you shall eat the Flesh of the Son of Man and drink his Blood ye will not have Life in you And again My Flesh is Meat indeed and my Blood is Drink indeed When therefore in so plain and clear words he call'd his Flesh Bread and true Meat and his Blood true Drink It might well seem sufficient do have declar'd That there remains no Substance of Bread and Wine in the Sacrament And that all the Holy Fathers Fourthly by the Authority and consent of Fathers Lib. 4. de Sacr. c. 4. c. 5. always agreed in this Doctrin He that is so minded may easily understand For thus writes S. Ambrose Thou saist perhaps my Bread is us'd But that Bread is Bread before the words of the Sacraments But when the Consecration is added of Bread it is made the Flesh of Christ Which that he might the better make appear he thereupon brings divers examples and Similitudes And elsewhere De Cons dist 2. c. omnia interpreting those words All things whatsoever the Lord pleas'd he has done in Heaven and in Earth For tho says he the Figure of Bread and Wine be seen yet after consecration nothing is to be believ'd to be there but the Flesh and Blood of Christ The same sense St. Hilary has taught and almost in the same words Altho outwardly Bread and Wine appear yet there is truly the Body and Blood of the Lord. Hil. de Trin. l. 8. de Consec dist 2. c. 28. But let the Pastors admonish XXXVIII Why after the Consecration of of the Eucharist it is call'd Bread That in this place it is not to be wonder'd at if even after Consecration it be call'd Bread For the Eucharist is us'd to be call'd by this name both because it has the species or Resemblance of Bread and also because it still retains the natural vertue of feeding and nourishing the Body which is proper to Bread Now that it is the usual manner of the Holy Scripture to call things as they appear to be that plainly shews which is written in Genesis Gen. 18.2 Act. 1.10 That three Men appear'd to Abraham which yet were truly three Angels And those Two that appear'd to the Apostles at the Ascension of Christ our Lord into Heaven tho they were Angels yet are they call'd Men. See D. Thom. 3. p. q. 75. art 3 4. The explication of this Article is altogether extream difficult XXXIX How cautiously the Conversion which is in the Eucharist is to be explain'd to the people but yet the Pastors shall endeavor to instruct those who are more skill'd in the the Contemplation of Divine Matters for it may be fear'd that those who are yet more weak may be oppress'd with the Greatness of the thing they shall endeavor I say to teach the Manner of this admirable Conversion which is so done that the whole Substance of the Bread and Wine by the divine power is chang'd into the whole Substance of Christ's Body and the whole Substance of the Wine into the whole Substance of Christ's Blood and this without any change of our Lord. For Christ is neither begotten anew nor chang'd nor increases but remains whole in his own Substance Which Mystery when St. Ambrose had declar'd D. Amb. lib. 4. de Sacr. c. 4. Thou seest says he how operative Christ's Word is If therefore there be so great a power in the Word of the Lord Jesus that those things began to be which were not to wit the World how much more operative is it to make those things to be which were before and to change them into another thing According to which sense other very grave and antient Father have written Citatur de Consec dist 2 c. Nos Autem Lib. 4. de Orthod fid c. 14. St. Austin thus We faithfully confess that before Consecration it is Bread and Wine which Nature has form'd but after Consecration it is the Body and Blood of Christ which the Blessing has consecrated Damascen The Body according to Truth is join'd to the Divinity that Body which came of the Holy Virgin Not that that Body which he took comes down from Heaven but that this Bread and Wine are chang'd into the Body and Blood of Christ This admirable Change therefore is conveniently and properly call'd by the Catholic Church Transubstantiation XL. This Conversion call'd Transubstantiation as the sacred Council of Trent has taught For as the Natural Generation when the Form is chang'd in it may rightly and properly be call'd a Transformation so also because in the Sacrament of the Eucharist the whole Substance of One thing passes into the whole substance of another thing the word Transubstantiation was rightly and wisely invented by our Forefathers See Trid. sess 13. c. 4. de can de Consec dist 2. cap. Panis But the Faithful are to be admonish'd LXI We are not too narrowly to enquire into Transubstantiation that tho' this be very often repeated by the Holy Fathers yet that they enquire not too curiously by what means this Change is wrought for neither can it be perceiv'd by us neither have we any example of this matter in natural Changes or in the very Creation of things But whatsoever is here done it is to be known by Faith but how it is done must not too curiously be search'd into The Pastors ought also to give them no less a Caution in explaining that Mystery how the Body of Chritt our Lord is contain'd whole in the least particle of Bread XLII The whole Body of Christ contain'd in the smallest particle for scarce ever are there any disputations of this kind to be allow'd but yet when Christian Charity requires it let them first of all remember to fore-arm the minds of Faithful with this word Luke 1.37 There is no word impossible with God Vide D. Thom. 3. p. q. 76. Trid. sess 13. c. 5. can 3. Florentin Decret Eugenii And then let them teach XLIII After what manner Christ is in the Eucharist it is not in the Sacrament as in a Place for Place belongs to those things that have Magnitude But we say not that Christ is in the Sacrament after that manner as he is Great or Little because that belongs to Quantity but as he is a Substance For the Substance of Bread is chang'd into the Substance of Christ not into Magnitude or Quantity But no one doubts that a Substance is equally contain'd in a Little as in a Great space For it must needs be that the Substance of the Air and its whole Nature is the same in a little as in a great part of the Air so also the whole Nature of Water is no less in a little Pitcher than in a River When the Lords Body succeeds
Christ our Lord the same has bin always us'd in the Catholic Church We might here forbear the Testimonies of the Holy Fathers By Fathers and Councils which to reckon up would be endless and the Decree of the Council of Florence which is open and ready for all to see especially since by those words of our Savior Do this in commemoration of me we plainly see the same thing In Decret de Sacram. Item Trid. Sess 13. cap. 1. For what the Lord commanded to be done Note ought to be referr'd not only to what he did but also to what he said And we must know that indeed it chiefly belongs to the Words which were utter'd no less for the sake of Effecting than for the sake of Signifying As to the Fathers see Amb. lib. 4. de Sacram. c. 4. 5. Chrys hom de Prodit Judae Aug lib. 3. de Trinit c. 4. Iren. lib. 4. cont Haer. c. 34. Orig. lib. 8. cont Celsum Hesich lib. 6. in Levit. c. 22. Cyril Alex. Epist. ad Calosorum Episcop Tertul. lib. 4. contr Marc. in Hier. Epist. 1. But this may easily be perswaded by Reason By Reason For the Form is that whereby is signifi'd that thing which is wrought in this Sacrament Now when these words signifie and declare that thing which is done i. e. the conversion of the Bread into the true Body of our Lord it follows that the Form is to be put in those very Words in which meaning we may take that which is written by the Evangelist He Blessed Mat. 26. For he seems to mean as if he had said Taking Bread he Blessed it saying This is my Body For tho the Evangelist plac'd these words Take and Eat before Note yet it is plain that thereby is signifi'd not the Consecration of the Matter but the Vse only Wherefore they ought indeed by all means to be pronounc'd by the Priest but to the making the Sacrament they are not necessary As also that Conjunction For is pronounc'd in the Consecration of the Body and Blood Note for otherwise it would come to pass that if this Sacrament were to be administer'd to no body it ought not or cannot be done Whereas there can be no doubt but the Priest pronouncing the words of our Lord after the manner and appointment of Holy Church doth truly consecrate the proper matter of Bread altho it may then chance that the Holy Eucharist be not administer'd to any body at all And now as to the Consecration of the Wine XXI The Form of the Eucharist as to the Win● defin'd and prov'd Decretal lib. 3. de celeb Miss c. 6. which is the other Matter of this Sacrament for the same reason before mention'd there is need that the Priest rightly know and understand the Form That therefore we must certainly believe is comprehended in these words This is the Chalice of my Blood of the New and Eternal Testament the Mystery of Faith which shall be shed for you and for many for the remission of sins ● Of which words there are many gather'd from Sacred Scripture By Scripture Luc. 22.20 1 Cor. 11.25 Mat. 26.28 But some have bin preserv'd in the Church by Apostolical Tradition For that which is said This is the Chalice is written by S. Luke and by the Apostle But that which follows Of my Blood or my Blood of the New Testament which shall be shed for you and for many for the Remission of sins was partly said by S. Luke and partly by S. Matthew But those words Of the Eternal and Mystery of Faith Holy Tradition By Tradition the interpreter and keeper of Catholic Unity has taught us But of this Form no one can doubt And Reason if he mind in this place also what was said before of the Form of Consecration which is us'd over the Element of Bread For it is manifest that by these words which signifie the substance of the Wine to be converted into the Blood of our Lord the Form of this Element is chang'd Wherefore since those words plainly declare this thing it is plain that there is no other Form to be made But they express besides XXII Three Effects of Christ's Blood certain admirable Fruits of Christ's blood shed in his Passion which specially belong to this Sacrament One is an Entrance to the Eternal Inheritance which comes to us by right of the New and Eternal Testament Another is an Entrance to Righteousness by the Mystery of Faith For God has offer'd Jesus through Faith in his Blood to be our Reconciler that he might be just and the justifier of him who is of the Faith of Jesus Christ The Third is the Forgiveness of Sins But because these very words of Consecration are full of Mysteries XXIII The words of the Consecration of the Wine explain'd Decretal lib. 3. de celeb Miss c. 6. and are very suitable to the matter we must consider them more carefully Now that it is said This is the Chalice of my Blood it must be thus understood This is my Blood which is contain'd in the Chalice Rightly therefore and very fitly here whilst the Blood as it is the Drink of the Faithful is consecrated there is mention to be made of the Chalice or Cup For neither would Blood seem to signifie sufficiently this kind of drink unless it were in some Vessels It then follows Of the New Testament which for this reason is added that we may understand that the Blood of Christ our Lord is not now given to Men in a Figure as it was done in the Old Testament for we read in the Epistle to the Hebrews Without Blood a Testament is not dedicated Heb. 9.16 but really and truly which properly belongs to the New Testament Wherefore the Apostle says Therefore Christ is the Mediator of the New Testament that by means of Death those who are call'd might receive the promise of eternal inheritance But the Word Eternal is to be referr'd to the eternal inheritance which of right comes to us by the death of Christ our Lord the eternal Testator That whit follows The Mystery of Faith excludes not the Truth of the thing but that which lies close hid and farthest off from the sight signifies that it is to be believ'd with a steady Faith But these words in this place have another meaning than they have when they are attributed to Baptism sor it is call'd the mystery of Faith because by Faith we perceive Christ's Blood hid under the Species of Wine But we properly call Baptism the Sacrament of Faith as the Greeks call it the Mystery of Faith because it contains the whole profession of Christian Faith Altho for another reason also we call the Blood of our Lord the Mysterie of Faith to wit because therein especially human reason finds much difficulty and labor when Faith offers to us to believe that the Son of God both God and Man suffer'd Death for us which
Death is indeed signifi'd in the Sacrament of the Blood Wherefore fitly in this place rather than in the Consecration of the Body is the Passion of the Lord commemorated in these words Which shall be shed for the remission of Sins For the Blood being separately consecrated by it self with relation to the Passion of the Lord has greater force and power to lay before the eyes of all Mat. 26.28 Luc. 22.20 both the Death and kind of suffering But those words which are added For you and for many are taken severally from S. Matthew and S. Luke which notwithstanding Holy Church taught by the Spirit of God has join'd together but they belong to the fruit of the Passion and shew the profitableness thereof For if we look at the vertue of it it must be confess'd that our Savior shed his Blood for the salvation of all men But if we look at the fruit which men gather from thence we may easily understand that it comes not to all to advantage but only to some When therefore he said For you he signifi'd either them that were then present or those whom he had chosen out of the Jewish people such as were his Disciples except Judas with whom he spake But when he added For many he would have the rest that were elected either Jews or Gentiles to be understood Rightly therefore was it done that it was not said for all seeing that in this place the design of the discourse extends only to the fruits of the Passion which brought the Fruit of Salvation only to the Elect. And hither do belong those words of the Apostle Christ was once offer'd to take away the sins of many Heb. 9. and that which our Lord himself said in S. John I pray for them I pray not for the World Joh. 17.8 but for those whom thou hast given me because they are thine There are many other Mysteries wrapp'd up in these words of the Consecration which the Pastors by the daily meditation and study of Divine Matters and God assisting them may easily discover But now to return to the explication of those things which the Faithful must by no means be ignorant of And because the Apostle admonishes XXIV We must judge of the Eucharist by Faith not by Sense 1 Cor. 11.29 that they are guilty of a most heinous sin who difference not the Lords Body let the Pastors chiefly teach that the Mind and Reason is here to be call'd off from sense For if the Faithful perswade themselves that those things only are contain'd in this Sacrament which are perceiv'd by the senses they must needs be led into the greatest impiety when with their Eyes their Feeling their Smell their Taste perceiving nothing at all but the Species of Bread and Wine they will judge that there is only Bread and Wine in the Sacrament There must be care tak'n therefore that as much as may be the minds of the Faithful may be abstracted or withdrawn from the judgment of sense and stirr'd up to contemplate the immense Power and Vertue of God Now there are three wonderful and stupendious things XXV Three things done in the Eucharist by Consecration which in this Sacrament Holy Church without all doubt believes and confesses to be wrought by the words of Consecration The First is The First That the true Body of Christ that very same which was born of the Virgin and now sits in Heaven at the Right-hand of the Father is contain'd in this Sacrament See Dionys de Eccl. Hierarch c. 3. Ignat. Epist ad Smyr Just Apol. 2. Iren. lib. 4. c. 34. l. 5. c. 2. Trid. Sess 13. c. 1. de Euch. The Second is that no substance of the Elements remains in it The Second Altho nothing seems more strange and distant to the senses Cyp. de coena Domini Euseb Emiss hom 5. de Pasch Cyr. Hier. Catech. 1 3 4. Ambr. l. 4. de Sacra c. 4. Chrysost hom 83. in Matt. 60. ad Pop. Antioch The Third The Third which is easily gather'd from both the former tho the words of Consecration fully express it is that what is beheld by the Eyes or perceiv'd by the other Senses is in a wonderful and unspeakable manner without any subject matter And one may see indeed all the Accidents of Bread and Wine which yet are inherent in no substance but they consist of themselves because the Substance of the Bread and Wine is so chang'd into the Body and Blood of the Lord that the substance of the Bread and Wine altogether ceases But that the first may be first handl'd XXVI The true Body of Christ prov'd to be in the Eucharist Mat. 26.26 Mar. 14.20 Luc. 22.19 Let the Pastors endeavor to shew how plain and clear the Words of our Savior are which shew the Truth of Christ's Body in the Sacrament for when he says This is my Body This is my Blood There is no one in his right mind can be ignorant what we are to understand Especially seeing the design of the discourse is concerning the human Nature which the Catholic Faith suffers none to doubt that Christ truly had As that very holy and learn'd Man Hilarius has written concerning the Truth of Christ's Flesh and Blood S. Hilar. l. 8. de Trinit super illa verba velut unum 1 Cor. 11.28 when according to the very profession of our Lord and our Faith his Flesh is truly our Food that there is no room left us to doubt thereof But there is another point to be open'd by the Pastors whence it may plainly be known that the true Body and Blood of the Lord is contain'd in the Eucharist For after that the Apostle had remember'd That the Bread and Wine was consecrated by our Lord and the Sacred Mysteries administer'd to his Apostles he subjoyns But let a Man prove himself and so let him eat of that Bread and Drink of that Chalice for he that eats and drinks unworthily eats and drinks judgment to himself not differencing the Lords Body But if as Heretics say that nothing else were to be venerated in the Sacrament besides the memory and sign of Christ's Passion what need was there that the Faithful should be exhorted with such weighty words to prove themselves For by that weighty word Judgment the Apostle has declar'd that some horrid wickedness is committed by him who impurely taking the Lords Body which lies hid in the Eucharist does not difference it from other kinds of Meat Which also before in the same Epistle he more fully explain'd in these words 1 Cor. 11.26 The Chalice of Blessing which we bless is it not the Communication of the Blood of Christ and the Bread which we break is it not the participation of the Lords Body Which words verily shew the true substance of the Body and Blood of Christ our Lord. These places of Scripture therefore shall be explain'd by the Pastors
was instituted of Christ our Lord for Two causes The One is that it might be the heavenly Food of our Souls wherewith we might preserve and sustain our spiritual Life The Other that the Church might have a perpetual Sacrifice whereby our sins might be expiated and our heavenly Father who has often times bin grievously offended by our wickedness might be turn'd from his Anger to his Mercy and from the severity of his just Revenge to Pity We may observe the Figure and Resemblance of this thing in the Paschal Lamb which was us'd to be offer'd as a Sacrifice and eaten as a Sacrament by the Children of Israel Vide Trid. de Sacrif Missae c. 1.3 Dionys l. 17. de Eccl. c. 3. Ignat. Epist ad Smyrn Tert. lib. de Orat. Iren. l. 4. c. 32. Aug. lib. 10. de Civit. Dei c. 10. Et lib. 17. c. 20. lib. 18. c. 35. lib. 19. c. 23. lib. 22. c. 8. alibi passim Nor indeed when our Savior was about to offer himself to God the Father upon the Altar of the Cross LXXVII How great the Benefit of the Eucharist is could he give any more illustrious signification of his immense Love towards us than when he left us a visible Sacrifice whereby might be restor'd that which was a little after to be sacrific'd once in Blood on the Cross and the memory thereof might every Day be honor'd by the Church spread abroad over all the World to her exceeding advantage even to the end of the World Now these Two ways are very different in themselves LXXVIII The Difference between a Sacrifice and a Sacrament for a Sacrament is perform'd or perfected in the Consecration but the force or vertue of a Sacrifice consists in this that it be Offer'd Wherefore the Sacred Eucharist while it is kept in the Pyx or carry'd to the Sick has not the Nature of a Sacrifice but of a Sacrament and besides as it is a Sacrament it gives them that receive the Divine Hoste or Sacrifice cause of Merit and all those other advantages which were before remembred but as it is a Sacrifice it has not only the Efficacy of Meriting but of Performing also For as Christ our Lord in his Passion merited and satisfi'd for us so they that offer this Sacrifice wherein they communicate with us do satisfie and merit the fruits of our Lord's Passion Now concerntng the Institution of this Sacrifice LXXIX By Whom and when the Sacrifice of Mass was instituted the Holy Synod of Trent has left no more room to doubt for she has declar'd that it was instituted by Christ our Lord at his last Supper and has condemn'd those with an Anathema that assert that a true and proper Sacrifice is not offer'd to God or that to Offer is nothing else than that Christ is given to be eaten Sess 22. de Sacrificio Missae c. 1. can 1. 2. Nor did she omit LXXX Sacrifice to be offer'd to God only and not to the Saints but diligently explain'd that Sacrifice is done to God only for altho' sometimes the Church uses to celebrate Masses in Memory and Honor of the Saints yet she never taught to offer Sacrifice to them but to One God only who has crown'd them with immortal Glory Wherefore neither is the Priest wont at any time to say I offer Sacrifice to Thee Peter or Paul but while the sacrifices to God only she gives thanks to him for the signal Victory of the blessed Martyrs and so implores their Patronage that they would vouchsafe to intercede for us in Heaven whose Memory we celebrate on Earth Now these things which have bin deliver'd by the Catholic Church concerning the Truth of this Sacrifice she receiv'd from our Lords own Words when in that last night commending to his Apostles these Sacred Mysteries 1 Cor. 10.24 Do this says he in Commemoration of me He then Note as has bin defin'd by the Holy Synod made them Priests and appointed that both they and those who were to succeed them in the Priests Office should Sacrifice and Offer his Body And this the Words of the Apostle written to the Corinthians evidently shew when he says 1. Cor. 10● Ye cannot drink the Chalice of the Lord and the Chalice of Devils ye cannot be partakers of the Table of the Lord and of the Table of Devils For as by the Table of Devils is to be understood the Altar whereon Sacrifice was done to them so also that what the Apostle proposes may by probable Argument be concluded the Table of the Lord can signifie nothing else but the Altar on which Sacrifice was done to the Lord. Now if from the Old Testament we would have some Figures and Oracles of this Sacrifice LXXXI Figures and Prophecies of the Sacrifice of the Eucharist first then Malachias has most plainly prophecy'd of it in these words From the rising up of the sun to the going down thereof my name is great among the Gentiles and in every place a clean oblation is offered to my name because my name is great among the Gentiles says the Lord of Hosts Besides this Hoste or Sacrifice was foreshew'd as well before as after the Law was given in divers kinds of Sacrifices for this one Sacrifice as the Perfection and Fulfilling of all the rest contains in it all those good things which were but signifi'd by those other Sacrifices But yet we cannot see the Figure of This better express'd in any thing thah in Melchizedechs Sacrifice for our Savior himself declaring himself to be a Priest forever according to the Order of Melchizedech at his last Supper offer'd his own Body and Blood to God the Father under the species of Bread and Wine We therefore acknowledge it to be LXXXII The Sacrifice of the Mass and of the Cross is one and the same Sacrifice and it ought to be accounted but One and the same Sacrifice which is done in the Mass and which was offer'd on the Cross even as it is One and the same Hoste to wit Christ our Lord who once only offer'd himself in his Blood upon the Cross For the Bloody and Vnbloody Hoste is not Two Hosts but one Hoste only Luc. 22.19 1 Cor. 11.24 the Sacrifice whereof is renew'd daily in the Church after that our Lord had commanded thus Do this in Commemoration of me And there is One and the same Priest Christ the Lord LXXXIII Christ and the Priests are but One Priest For the Ministers that make this Sacrifice undergo not their own but the Person of Christ when they consecrate his Body and Blood as is evident from the words of the very Consecration for the Priest says not This is Christ's Body but This is my Body to wit bearing the Person of Christ our Lord he changes the substance of the Bread and Wine into the true Substance of his Body and Blood Chrys hom 2. in 2. ad Tim.
he commands us to beg our Meat of him every Day Which Sentence has this necessary Reason XXXII The Lords Prayer to be said daily because we all want daily Bread therefore we must all daily use the Lords Prayer And thus much of the Bread which being receiv'd into our Mouth nourishes and sustains our Body which God of his admirable Bounty bestows upon all in common as well on the Faithful as Infidels as well on the Pious as Impious Matth. 5.46 Who causes his Sun to rise upon the Good and upon the Evil and rains upon the Just and on the Vnjust The other Bread XXXIII Fourthly we here pray for Spiritual Bread and which we also pray for in this place is Spiritual whereby all things are signified whatsoever are requir'd for the Safety and Salvation of the Spirit and Soul For as the meat wherewith the Body is nourished and sustaind is of many sorts so the Meat which preserves the Life of the Soul and Sprit is not of one kind only For the Word of God is the Food of the Soul First For Wisdom says Prov. 9.5 Come ye eat of my Bread and drink of my Wine which I have mingled for you Now when God takes away from Men the Use of this Word XXXIV When the Food of God's Word is taken away Amo● 8.11 which he uses to do when he is much provok'd by our Sins he is said to send a Famine upon Men For thus it is in Amos I will send a Famin upon the Earth not a Famin of Bread or a Thirst of Water but of hearing the Word of the Lord. Now as it is a certain Sign of Death approaching XXXV A singular Comparison when Men cannot take Food or having taken it cannot keep it so it is a very great Argument that their Salvation is in danger who either desire not God's Word or if they have it will not endure it and pour out that impious Cry against God Job 21.14 Depart from us we desire not the knowledge of thy Ways In this Madness of Soul XXXVI The Despisers of Gods Word in this Blindness of Mind they are taken who disregarding those Catholic both Bishops and Priests that are put over them and cutting themselves off from the Holy Roman Church have given themselves over to be govern'd by Heretics that corrupt the Word of God But then XXXVII Christ the Bread of the Soul Joh. 6.15 Christ our Lord is the Bread of the Soul For he says of himself I am the Living Bread that came down from Heaven It is past belief with how great Pleasure and Joy this Bread then fills devout Souls they are most afflicted with Earthly Troubles and Inconveniences That holy Quire of Apostles may serve us for an Example of whom it is thus recorded Act. 5.41 They went out from the presence of Council rejoycing The Books of the Lives of Holy Men are fill'd with Examples of this kind And of those inward Joys of Good Men God speaks thus Apoc. 2.17 To him that overcomes I will give the hidden Manna But especially this Bread is Christ our Lord XXXVIII Christ in the Eucharist is the Bread of the Soul which is substantially contain'd in the Sacrament of the Eucharist This unspeakable Pledge of his Love he gave us when he was about to return to his Father of which he said He that eats my Flesh and drinks my Blood dwells in me and I in him Take ye and eat This is my Body Job 6.65 Mat. 26.6 1 Cor. 11.64 And the Curat shall fetch those things which belong to the profit of the Faithful from that place where the Force and Vertue of this Sacrament is particularly explain'd Pag. 181. And here it is said XXXIX How Christ in the Eucharist is the Bread of the Soul Our Bread because it belongs to the Faithful i. e. to those who joyning Charity with Faith by the Sacrament of Penance wipe away the Spots of Sin who remembring themselves to be the Children of God take and worship this Divine Sacrament with the greatest Holiness and Veneration they are able Vide Tertul. lib. de Orat. Cypr. item de Orat. August alios locis citatis supra pag. 473. But why is it call'd Daily There is a twofold Reason XL. Why Christ is call'd our daily Bread Psal 54.25 The one is That in the Sacred Mysteries of the Christian Church it is offered to God daily and given to those that devoutly and holily desire it The other is That we ought daily to receive it or at least so to lead our Life as to be fit daily to take it and eat it Let those that think otherwise Note unless by reason of a long Interval they ought not to he fed with this saving Banquet of the Soul hear what S. Ambrose says If it be thy Daily Bread why dost thou take it but once a Year Lib. 5. Sap. c. 4. Vide etiam de Consec dist 2. But in this Petition the Faithful are specially to be exhorted XLI The Issue of this Petition to be left to God That when they have honestly and well advis'd and been industrious in getting the Necessaries of Life they leave the Success to God and refer their Desires to his Pleasure Psal 45.23 who will not always leave the Just in a tottering condition For either God will grant the things desired Note and so they shall have their Wish or else he will not grant them and that is a most certain Argument that what is desired is neither for their Salvation nor Advantage since God denies it to the Pious who takes greater care of their Welfare than themselves do Upon this Point the Curats may enlarge themselves in explaining those Reasons which are excellently collected by S. Austin in his Epistle to Proba The last thing in discoursing upon this Petition is this XLII Why God gives good things to Rich Men. That Rich Men well consider their Wealth and Plenty and that they receiv'd them from God and let them think with themselves that those good things are therefore heap'd upon them to distribute them to the Needy To which sense agree those things that are disputed by the Apostle in his first Epistile to Timothy 1 Tim. 6.17 whence the Curats may fetch Divine Precepts enow for the clearing this Point both profitably and savingly The FIFTH PETITION And forgive us our Debts as we alsso forgive our Debtors SInce there are so many things that signifie God's Infinit Power to be join'd with the like Infinit Wisdom and Goodness I. Christ's Passion a singular Token of his Love to us that whithersoever we turn our Eyes and thoughts we meet with the Tokens of his Immense Power and Goodness verily there is nothing that more evidently shews his most profound Love and admirable Charity towards us than that unspeakable Mystery of the Passion of Jesus Christ from whence sprang that
I say that we devote and consecrate our selv's forever to our Lord and Redeemer no otherwise than as his meanest Servants And indeed when we were receiv'd into Baptism XX. In Baptism we are devoted to Christ we did before the Church Doors solemnly promise that we wou'd do so For we declar'd that we renounc'd the Devil and the World and gave up our selv's wholly to Christ Jesus But if to be enroll'd in the Christian Camp we devoted our selves with so Holy and Religious a Prosession what punishment shall we deserv if after our entrance into the Church and have known the Will and Law of God if after we have receiv'd the Grace of his Sacraments we shall lead our Lives after the Rules and Commandments of the World and the Devil as if when we were wash'd in Baptism we had giv'n up our Names to the World and the Devil and not to Christ our Lord and Redeemer But what Heart is there which so great a Propensity so great kindness and good Will of so great a Lord toward us cannot enflame with ardent Love to him who tho he has us in his power and dominion as Servants bought with his own Blood yet embraces us with such Love that he calls us not his Servants Joh. 15.14 14. but his Friends yea his Brethren This verily is a most just cause and I know not whether it be not the greatest why we ought always to own and reverence and worship him as our Lord. ARTICLE III. WHo was Conceiv'd by the Holy Ghost born of the Virgin Mary That God bestow'd a fingular Blefling upon Mankind I. How great Gods Bounty towards us when he restor'd us to liberty from the slavery of the most cruel Tyrant the Faithful may perceiv by those things which have been already spoken in the former Article but then if we lay before our Eyes the counsel and way by which chiefly he wou'd accomplish this Verily there is nothing can possibly shine more glorious and magnificent than the Bounty and goodness of God towards us The greatness of this Mystery therefore II. The sense of this Article which the Holy Scripture proposes to us to consider as the chief point of our Salvation the Curat may begin to shew in the explaining this Third Article the meaning whereof he may teach to be this That we believ and confess that this very Jesus Christ our ohly Lord Matt. 1.23 Joh. 1.36 the Son of God when for our sakes he took upon himself Humane Flesh in the Womb of the Virgin was not as other Men conceiv'd of the Seed of Man but beyond all order of Nature was conceiv'd by the power of the Holy Ghost so that the same person remaining God which he was from all Eternity became Man which before he was not That these Words are so to be understood does plainly appear by confession of the Holy Council of Constantinople for thus it says Who for us Men and for our Salvation came down from Heav'n and was Incarnate by the Holy Ghost of the Virgin Mary and was made man And this S. John the Evangelist has also explain'd as being he who drew the Knowledg of this most profound Mystery out of the Bosome of our very Lord and Saviour himself For when he had declar'd the Nature of the Divine Word in these Words In the beginning was the Word Joh. 1.1 and the Word was with God and the Word was God At last he concludes and the Word was made Flesh and dwelt among us For the Word which was a Person of the Divine Nature did so take upon him the Humane Nature that the Hypostasis or Person both of the Divine and Human Nature was but one and the same whereby it came to pass that so admirable a Conjunction preserv'd the Actions and Properties of both Natures and as that great and holy Pope Leo has it Serm. 1. de Nat. That neither did the Glory of the Superior or Divine destroy the Inferior or Humane nor the assuming the Inferior diminish or lessen the Superior But because the Explication of Words ought not to be omitted It is requisite that the Curat teach IV. What works of God are attributed to the whole Trinity That when we say That the Son of God was conceiv'd by the Power of the Holy Ghost this one Person of the Divine Trinity did not make the Mystery of the Incarnation For tho the Son only took the Humane Nature upon him yet all the Persons of the Holy Trinity the Father Son and Holy Ghost were Authors of this Mystery for we must hold this Rule in our Christian Faith That all those things which God does extrà se without himself in the Creatures are common to all the Three Persons nor does one act more than another or one without another But that one One person proceeds from another V. And what to the several Persons this cannot be common to all for the Son is begotten of the Father alone the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and the Son But whatsoever extra illas without them comes from or is done by them the whole three Persons without any difference do it and of this kind we are to believ the Incarnation of the Son of God to be Now tho these things are thus VI. Why Christ is said to be conceiv'd by the Holy Ghost yet the Holy Scripture is us'd to attribute to any one of the Three Persons those things which are common to all the Three Persons for example It ascribes the Power of all things to the Father Wisdom to the Son Love to the Holy Ghost And because the Mystery of the Incarnation of God does manifest the special and infinite Good Will of God toward us for this Reason therefore is this work attributed to the Holy Ghost In this Mystery we are to observ VII The Mystery of Christs Conception declar'd That there are many things done beyond the Order of Nature and some again by the Power of Nature For in that we believ the Body of Christ to be made of the most pure Blood of his Virgin-Mother we therein acknowledg his Human Nature it being common to the Bodies of all Men to be form'd of the Blood of the Mother But that which surpasses both the Order of Nature and the reach of Human Understanding is this That as soon as the Blessed Virgin consenting to the Words of the Angel Luc. 1.38 had said Behold the Hand-maid of the Lord be it unto me according to thy Word immediately the most holy Body of Chrift was form'd and a Reasonable or Human Soul joyn'd with it and so in that very moment of time he became perfect God and perfect Man Now that this was the strange and wonderful work of the Holy Ghost there is no one can doubt since by the Order of Nature no Body can be inform'd by or receiv a Humane Soul but at the limited term of time
Bliss and Glory which they waited for they were in a kind of Torment But Christ our Lord descended not to suffer any more but to free the Saints and Righteous Men from the Misery and Trouble of that Imprisonment and to bestow upon them the Fruits of his Passion That therefore he went down to Hell was no lessening of his supream Dignity and Power These things being explain'd IX Why Christ went down to Hell it must be taught that Christ our Lord went down to Hell that after he had spoil'd the Devils he might lead those Holy Fathers and other pious persons being now freed from Prison with him to Heav'n which wonderfully and gloriously he has accomplish'd For immediatly the sight of him gave transcendant Light to the Captiv's and fill'd their souls with immense joy and gladness on whom he also bestow'd that most desir'd Bliss which consists in the Vision of God which done it is manifest what it was he promis'd the Thief in these words Luc. 23.43 This day thou shalt be with me in Paradice But of this deliverance of the Godly the Prophet Osee so long before propheci'd in this manner O death I will be thy death O Hell I will be thy destruction The Prophet Zachary signifi'd the same thing when he said Thou also by the blood of thy Testament hast sent them that are bound out of the lake wherein there is no water Lastly the same thing the Apostle expresses in these words Col. 2.15 in taking the spoils of principalities and powers he made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in himself But that we may understand the force of this mystery the better X. Who are sav'd by the benefit of Christs Passion we ought often to call to remembrance that devout men not only who were born after the coming of our Lord but those who after Adam were before him or who hereafter shall be to the end of the World have and shall attain Salvation by the benefit of his Passion Wherefore before he dy'd and rose again the Gates of Heav'n were never open to any but the Souls of the Godly when they departed this life were either carry'd into Abraham's Bosome or as now it fares with them who have somewhat to be purg'd or satisfi'd were cleans'd by the fire of Purgatory There is besides XI Another Reason of Christ's going down to Hell Phil. 2.10 another Reason why Christ our Lord went down to Hell namely that he might there shew his Might and Power as he had done in Heav'n and Earth and that as every knee both of things in Heav'n and things in Earth bow'd at the name of him so also of things below and under the Earth At consideration whereof who is there who admires not and even stands not amaz'd at the immense bounty of God towards mankind who was willing not only to undergo the most bitter Death for us but also to go down to the very lowest parts of the Earth that he might carry with him the Souls so very dear to him which he thence victoriously bore away to bliss and happiness Now follows the other part of the Article XII The other Part of the Article concerning the Resurrection 2 Tim. 2.8 in explaining whereof how painful the Curat ought to be appears by those words of the Apostle Remember that the Lord Jesus Christ arose again from the dead For what he commanded Timothy it is not to be doubted but that it is also commanded to all others that have the Cure of Souls And this is the meaning of the Article After that Christ our Lord had giv'n up the Ghost on the Cross upon Friday at the ninth hour of the day and the same day at Even he was bury'd by his Disciples who by leav of Pilate the President laid the body of our Lord when they had tak'n it down from the Cross into a new Tomb in a Garden near at hand the third day after his death which was the Lords day early in the morning his soul was again join'd to his body and so he who was dead those three days arose again and return'd to life out of which he departed by death but by the word Resurrection we are not to understand only that Christ was rais'd from the dead which was a thing common to many others but that he rose again by his own power and vertue which was a singular thing and proper to Him alone For it is contrary to Nature XIV No man can naturally rise again from the dead 2 Cor. 13.4 nor was it even granted to any man to be able by his own power to rais'e himself from death to life but this belongs to the supream power of God only as we learn from those words of the Apostle Altho he was crucifi'd throw weakness yet he liv's by the power of God which seeing it was never separated from Christ's Body in the Sepulchre nor from his Soul when it went down into Hell his Divine Power was both in his Body so that it cou'd be joyn'd again to his Soul and in his Soul so that it cou'd again be brought back to his Body so that by his own power he might revive and rise again from the dead And this thing XV. The Resurrection soretold Psa 97.2 David being full of the Spirit of God foretold in these words His right hand and his Holy arm hath gott'n himself the victory And the Lord himself by the divine testimony of his own mouth has confirm'd it I lay down my life and I will take it up again Joh. 10.17 and I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it up again And also to the Jews for confirmation of his doctrin he said Joh. 2.19 Dissolve this temple and in three days I will raise it up again Which tho they indeed understood of that Temple magnificently built of Stones yet he as is declar'd in the same place by the words of Scripture Act. 1.24 spake of the Temple of his Body Now although we sometimes read in Scripture that Christ our Lord was raised by the Father this is to be understood of Christ as Man ev'n as those things again relate to himself as God whereby is signifi'd that he rose again by his own Power And this also belongs specially to Christ XVI Christ first rose from the dead Apoc. 1.5 1 Cor. 15.20 that He was the First who enjoy'd this divine benefit of the Resurrection For in Scripture he is called the First begotten among the dead and the First begotten of the dead And as the Apostle has it Christ arose again from the dead being the First-fruits of them that sleep for verily by Man came death and by Man came the Resurrection of the dead and as in Adam all dye so in Christ shall all be made alive but every one in his own order Christ the First fruits and afterwards those that are Christ's Which
call to mind how he has by solemn promise oblig'd himself to God when he was initiated in Baptism and will also consider with himself whether in his Life and Conversation he has behav'd himself in such a manner as the very Profession of Christianity obliges and undertakes That therefore what is to be taught III. What the Name Batism signifies Eight kinds of Baptism See Damass lib. 4. de fide Orthod 10 might be made the more intelligible it must be declar'd what the Nature and Substance of Baptism is after that the signification of the word Baptism shall have bin explain'd There is none who know not that Baptism is a Greek word which tho in Holy Scripture it signifies not only that Washing or Cleansing which is joyn'd with this Sacrament but even all other kinds of Washing yea and sometimes is extended to signifie Suffering also Yet among Church-Writers it signifies not every kind of Washing of the Body but that which is annext to the Sacrament and is not ministred without the prescrib'd Form of Words which signification the Apostles by the Institution of Christ frequently made use of Now the Holy Fathers made use of other names also to signifie the same thing For S. Austin testifies that it was call'd the Sacrament of Faith IV. By what other names the Sacrament of Baptism is call'd D. Aug. Epist 25. in sin Heb. 10.15 because they who receiv'd it made profession of the Faith or Belief of the whole Christian Religion Others call'd this Sacrament Illumination because the heart is illuminated by the Faith we profess in Baptism For thus says the Apostle Remember the former days wherein being illuminated ye underwent a great fight of sufferings to wit signifying when they were Baptiz'd Besides S. Chry. 10.5 Chrysostom in his Oration to those who were baptiz'd calls it both a Purgation whereby through Baptism we purge away the Old Leven that we may be a New Lump and a Burying and a Planting and Christ's Cross The reason of all which Names may be gather'd from the Epistle to the Romans And why S. Denys call'd it the Beginning of the most Holy Commandments S. Dionys de Eccl. Hier. c. 2. is evident seeing that this Sacrament is the Gate as it were through which we enter into the fellowship of Christian Life and from thenceforth begin to obey Gods commands and this will suffice briefly to be taught concerning the Name of Baptism Of the various Names of Baptism See Greg. Naz. Orat. in Sancta Lumina Clem. Alex. lib. 1. Paedag. c. 6. But as to the Definition of the Thing Tho there may many others be gather'd out of Sacred Writers V. The Definition of Baptism yet That seems more fit and suitable which we may learn from our Lords own words in S. John's Gospel and from the Apostle in his Epistle to the Ephesians Joh. 3.5 Except a man be born again of Water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God And the Apostle when he spake of the Church Ephes 5.26 Cleansing her in the Laver of Water in the Word For through Adam by nature we are born the Children of Wrath but by Baptism we are born again in Christ the Children of Grace For he gave power to men to become the Sons of God Joh. 1.13 even to them that believe in his Name who are not born of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the wi●l of man but of God But in what words soever the nature of Baptism chances to be explain'd VI. How the Sacrament of Baptism is made the people are to be taught That this Sacrament is made by Washing with which according to the institution of our Lord and Saviour must needs be us'd certain and solemn words as the Holy Fathers have always taught as is shew'd by the plain testimony of S. Austin The Word is added to the Element and so the Sacrament is made But the Faithful must be carefully taught An Error to be mark'd not to fall into that Error not to think as it is vulgarly us'd to be said that That Water which is kept in the Holy Font to make the Sacrament is the Sacrament For then only is it to be call'd the Sacrament of Baptism when in truth we use Water to wash any one adding those words which were instituted by our Lord. Of this see Chrysost hom 24. in Joan. Aug. l. 6. contra Donatist c. 25. Conc. Florent Trid. item August Tract 80. in Joan. Now because in the Beginning when we spake of Sacraments in general VII The Matter of Bap ●●m is natural Water we said that every Sacrament consists of Matter and Form therefore what each of these is in the Sacrament of Baptism must be declar'd by the Pastors The Matter therefore or the Element of this Sacrament is any kind of natural Water whether of the Sea or the River or a Pond or a Well or a Fountain that is us'd to be call'd Water without any adjunct Joh 3.5 For our Savior has taught Except a man be born again of Water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdom of God ● h. 2.26 and the Apostle says That the Church was cleans'd by the Laver of Water And we read in the Epistle of S. John 1 Joh. 5.8 There are Three which bear record in Earth The Spirit the Water and the Blood● this may be prov'd also from other testimonies of Holy Scipture But that which S. John the Baptist said Ma● 3. that the Lord was coming that would baptize with the Holy Ghost and with Fire this can by no means be understood of the Matter of Baptism but ought to be apply'd either to the inward working of the Holy Ghost or at least to the Miracle which appear'd on the day of Pentecost Act. 2.3 when the Holy Ghost came down from Heaven upon the Apostles in the likeness of Fire whereof in another place Christ our Lord foretold Act. 1.5 John indeed baptiz'd with Water but ye shall be baptiz'd with the Holy Ghost not many days hence But this we may observe from the Holy Scriptures to have bin signifi'd before-hand by the Lord VIII The Matter of Baptism figur'd in the Old Testament Gen. 6.5 2 Pet. 3.10 both in Figures and in the Oracles of the Prophets For the Flood whereby the World was cleans'd because the wickedness of man was great in the Earth and all the thoughts of his heart wholly set upon evil carri'd the Figure and Resemblance of This Water as the Prince of Apostles in his former Epistle shews And the Passage through the Red-Sea signifi'd this Water 1 Cor. 10.1 as S. Paul writing to the Corinthians expounds it 4 Reg 5.24 to omit the cleansing of Naaman the Syrian and the admirable virtue of the Pool of Bethsaiday Job 5.2 and many others of the like kind Wherein it plainly appears
sufficient For each of them ceases not to be a Sacrament though it were laid up in the Pyx And then in the making of the other Sacraments there is no change of the Matter and Element into another nature For the Water of Baptism or the Oyl of Chrism when those Sacraments are administer'd lose not their former nature of Water and Oyl But in the Eucharist that which was Bread and Wine before Consecration the Consecration being made is truly the substance of the Body and Blood of the Lord. Now altho there be Two Elements X. The Eucharist ●ut one Sacrament tho double in Matter to wit Bread and Wine of which the whole Sacrament of the Eucharist is made yet being taught by the Authority of the Church we confess that there is not many Sacraments but one Sacrament only Otherwise the Number of Seven Sacraments which number has always bin held and was determin'd in the Councils of Lateran Florence and Trent cannot stand For seeing the Grace of this Sacrament makes us one mystic Body that the Sacrament it self might agree to the thing it makes it must needs be but One and One too not as tho it were individual but because it has the signification of One thing For as Meat and Drink which are two different things but serve only to One purpose to wit to refresh and strengthen the Body so it is fit that those two different Species of the Sacrament should answer to them since they signifie the spiritual Meat wherewith our Souls are sustain'd and refresh'd Wherefore it is said by our Lord and Savior Joh. 6. ● My Flesh is Meat indeed and my Blood is Drink indeed Ex Conciliis citatis Lateranense generale sub Innocent II. non numerat quidem distinctè septem Sacramenta sed ex variis Canonibus satis clarè colliguntur Florent in doct de Sacram. Trid. Sess 7. can 1. But it is diligently to be explain'd what the Sacrament of the Eucharist signifies The Eucharist signifies Three things that the Faithful beholding with their Eyes the Sacred Mysteries may also at the same time feed their Souls with the Contemplation of the Divine things Now there are Three things which are shew'd in this Sacrament The First is the Passion of Christ The Passion of Christ Luc. 22.19 1 Cor 11. which is now past for he taught Do this in Commemoration of me And the Apostle testifi'd As oft as ye shall eat this Bread and drink this Chalice ye will shew the Death of the Lord till he come The second is the Divine and Heavenly Grace Divine Grace which being present in this Sacrament is given to feed and preserve the Soul For as in Baptism we are begotten to a New life Tertul. de R●sur Carnis c. 8. and in Confirmation we are strengthen'd to resist Satan and openly to profess the name of Christ so in the Sacrament of the Eucharist we are nourish'd and sustained The Third Eternal Glory which foreshews somewhat to come is that Fruit of eternal Glory and Delight which we shall receive in Heaven by the promise of God These three therefore which are plainly distinguish'd by the variety of time past present and to come are so signifi'd in Holy Mysteries that the whole Sacrament altho it consists of divers Species may be apply'd to shew any of all these as it were to the signification of one thing But first of all XI The Double Matter of the Eucharist Bread and Wine the Pastors must know the Matter of this Sacrament both that they themselves may know how to consecrate it and also that the Faithful may be admonish'd of what thing it is a Symbol and also may be inflam'd with the love and desire of that thing which it signifies The Matter therefore of this Sacrament is double The one part is Bread made of Wheat of which we will speak first of the other will be spoken afterwards For as the Evangelists Matthew Mark and Luke do teach Mat. 26.20 Mar. 14.22 Luc. 22 19. Joh. 11. Christ our Lord took Bread into his Hands Bless'd and brake it saying This is my Body And in S. John the same our Savior call'd himself Bread when he said I am the living Bread which came down from Heaven Vide de Consecr dist 2. c. 1 2. 55. ubi habes de hac materia decret Alexand. Pap. in 1. Epist ad omnes Orthodoxos Cypr. lib. 2. Epist 3. Ambr. l. 4. de Sacram. l. 4. vide etiam Iren. l. 4. c. 34. l. 5. c. 2. Now since there are divers kinds of Bread XII Wheaten Bread the true Matter of the Eucharist D. Tho. 3. p. q. 74. a. 3. either because it is made of different matter as when some is made of Wheat some of Barley and some of Peas and other Fruits of the Earth or because it has different Qualities for some is leven'd and some is unleven'd As to the first our Saviors words shew that the Bread ought to be made of Wheat for by a common custom of speaking when Bread is absolutely nam'd it is plain enough that Wheaten-Bread is meant And this is declar'd by a Figure of the Old Testament Levit. 24.5 for the Lord commanded that the Loaves of Shew-Bread which signifi'd this Sacrament should be made of the like Matter Now as no Bread but Wheaten Bread can be thought fit to be Matter for this Sacrament XIII Unleven'd Bread the Matter of the Eucharist Ma. 26.17 Mar 14.12 Luc. 22.7 for so the Tradition of the Apostles teaches us and the authority of the Catholic Church has confirm'd so also it may easily be gather'd from what our Lord Christ did that it ought to be Vnleven'd For on the first day of Vnleven'd bread when it was unlawful for the Jews to have in their Houses any leven'd Bread he made and instituted this Sacrament Vide lib. 3. decretal tit de celebrat Missarum c. ul● ubi habes Auctoritatem Honorii Papae 3. But if any one hereto oppose the Authority of John the Evangelist XIV An Objection answer'd who says that all these things were done before the day of the Passover that reason may be easily solv'd For that day which the other Evangelists call the first day of unleven'd Bread because on the fifth day of the week at Evening the feast days of unleven'd Bread began at which time our Savior celebrated the Passover John 13.1 that same day S. John calls the day before the Passover as judging the space of a natural day which is begun at Sun-rising was chiefly to be observ'd Wherefore S. Chrysostom also In Mat. hom 38. interprets the first day of Vnleven'd Bread to be that day whereon at Evening Vnleven'd Bread was to be eaten But how suitable the Consecration of Vnleven'd Bread is to that Integrity and Cleanness of the Soul which the Faithful ought to bring to this Sacrament we are taught by
the Apostle 1 Cor. 5.7 when he says Purge out the old Leven that ye may be a new lump as ye are unleven'd For Christ our Passover is sacrificed therefore let us banquet not with the old Leven nor with the Leven of malice and wickedness but with the unleven'd Bread of Sincerity and Truth Not that this Quality is to be thought so necessary XV. The Eucharist may be made of Leven'd Bread that if the Bread have it not the Sacrament cannot be made For either kind of Bread has the true and proper nature and name of Bread Altho no one ought by his own private authority or rashness rather alter the laudable Rite of his Church And by so much the less is it permitted to the Latin Priests to do it Conc. Floren. Sess ult lib. 3 decret de cel b Miss c. final whom the Popes have moreover commanded to perform the Sacred Mysteries with unleven'd Bread only And let this suffice for the explication of One part of the Matter of this Sacrament Where notwithstanding it is to be noted that it is not determin'd how much Matter ought to be us'd in making this Sacrament since the certain number of them who either may or ought to receive the Sacred Mysteries cannot be defin'd It remains now that we speak of the other Part of the Matter and Element of this Sacrament XVI Wine of the Grape the other Matter of the Eucharist And that is Wine press'd out of the fruit of the Vine wherewith a little Water is mixt For that our Lord and Savior us'd Wine in the Institution of this Sacrament the Catholic Church has ever taught seeing he himself said Mat 26.29 Mar. 14.25 I will not drink henceforth of the fruit of the Vine until that day In which place S. Chrysostom Hom. 83. in Mat. Of the fruit of the Vine says he which surely brought forth Wine not Water that so long before-hand he might be seen to pluck up by the roots the Heresy of them who thought that Water only was to be us'd in these Mysteries Yet the Church of God always mingl'd Water with the Wine XVII Water to be mingl'd with Wine Cypr. lib. 2. Epist. 3. Trid. Sess 22. de Sa●ris Miss c. 7. Can. 9. Apoc. 17.15 First because our Lord Christ himself did so as is prov'd by the authority of Councils and by the testimony of S. Cyprian And then that the memory of the Blood and Water which came out of his Side might be renew'd And then as we read in the Apocalyps Water signifies the People Wherefore Water mingl'd with Wine signifies the Conjunction of the Faithful with Christ their Head And this by Apostolical Tradition Holy Church has always observ'd But altho the Reasons for mingling the Water with the Wine are so weighty Note that it may not be neglected under mortal sin yet tho it should be wanting the Sacrament remains But the Priests ought to take care XVIII A little Water to be mingl'd that as in the Sacred Mysteries they ought to mingle Water with the Wine so also that they pour but a little thereinto For by the Opinion and Judgment of Ecclesiastical Writers That Water is turn'd into Wine Wherefore Pope Honorius writes thus concerning it There has bin for a long time in your parts a pernicious abuse to wit that there is us'd a greater quantity of Water in the Sacrifice Habetur lib. 3. Decretal d● celeb Miss c. 13. than of Wine when according to the reasonable practice of the general Church there ought to be us'd a far greater quantity of Wine than of Water Of this Sacrament therefore there are only these Two Elements Note and it has bin rightly setl'd by many Decrees Et vide de consec dist 2. c. 1 2. seq That none may offer any thing but Bread and Wine notwithstanding which there were some presum'd to do so But now we must see how sit these two Symbols of Bread and Wine are XIX How convenient this Matter of the Eucharist is First John 9. to declare those things whereof we believe and confess them to be Sacraments And first they signifie Christ to us as he is the true life of Men. For the Lord himself says My Flesh is Meat indeed and my Blood is Drink indeed Seeing therefore the Body of Christ our Lord yields nourishment of eternal Life to them who do purely and holily receive the Sacrament thereof rightly is it made of those things wherein this Life is contain'd that the Faithful may easily understand that by the Communion of the Body and Blood of Christ their mind and Soul is fed These Elements also are somewhat available to this end Secondly Damasc lib. 4. de fide Orthod c. 14. that Men may learn and know that the Truth of Christ's Body and Blood are in the Sacrament for when we observe that Bread and Wine is dayly chang'd into human Flesh and Blood by the strength of Nature We may the more easily be led by this similitude to believe that the Substance of Bread and Wine by the Heavenly Benediction is converted into the true Flesh and true Blood of Christ Thirdly This admirable Change of the Elements helps also to shadow what is done in the Soul For as tho there appears outwardly no change of the Bread and Wine yet their substance truly passes into the Flesh and Blood of Christ so also tho nothing seems to be chang'd in us yet inwardly we are renew'd to life while we receive the true life in the Sacrament of the Eucharist Add hereto Fourthly that since the Body of the Church is compos'd of many Members this conjunction is not by any thing more clear'd than by the Elements of Bread and Wine For Bread is made of many Grains and Wine is press'd out of a Multitude of Grapes And so we tho we are Many yet they shew us to be strictly held together by the bond of this Divine Mystery and as it were made One Body Now it follows that we treat of the Form which ought to be us'd at the consecrating the Bread XX. The Form of the Eucharist as to the Bread defin'd and prov'd Not that the faithful people need to be much taught these Mysteries unless there be necessity for it is not necessary to instruct those persons in these matters who are not initiated in Sacred Things But lest by ignorance of the Form the Priests in making this Sacrament may make any foul mistakes We are taught therefore by the Holy Evangelists Matthew and Luke By Scripture Mat. 26.26 Mar. 14.22 Luc. 26.19 1 Cor. 14.22 and by the Apostle that This is the Form This is my Body for it is written when they had supp'd Jesus took Bread and blessed it and brake it and gave it to his Disciples and said Take and eat This is my Body Which Form of consecration seeing it was observ'd of
Bones and Sinews but also that whole Christ is contain'd in this Sacrament For they ought to teach That Christ is the name of God-Man to wit of one Person wherein the Divine and Human Nature are joyn'd together how it conteins both Substances and whatsoever are the consequences of each Substance the Divinity and the whole Human Nature which consists of all the parts of a Body and of Blood also all which we must believe to be in the Sacrament For since in Heaven the whole Humanity is joyn'd to the Divinity in one person and Hypostasis it would be wicked but to imagine that the Body which is in the Sacrament is disjoyn'd from the same Divinity Vide de Consecr dist 2. multis in locis Item Ambr. de iis qui myst init c. 9. D. Thom. 3. p. q. 76. a. 1. Where it will be necessary notwithstanding XXXII Whatsoever things are Christ's are not all contain'd in the Eucharist after the same manner that the Pastors observe that all things are not contein'd in this Sacrament after the same way or with the same vertue For there are some things which we say are in the Sacrament by the vertue and Efficacy of Consecration For seeing those Words effect what they signifie Sacred Writers have bin us'd to say That that Thing is in the Sacrament by vertue of the Sacrament which is express'd in the Form of Words So if it should happen that any thing should be wholly disjoyn'd from the other things That only is in the Sacrament which the Form signifies but the rest they have taught not to be so But there are some things contain'd in the Sacrament because they are joyn'd with the things which are express'd in the Form For seeing that the Form which is us'd at consecrating the Bread signifies the Lords Body when it is said This is my Body the very Body of Christ our Lord is in the Eucharist by vertue of the Sacrament But because his Body Blood Soul and Divinity are joyn'd together XXXIII What things are in the Eucharist by concomitancy all these will be also in the Sacrament not indeed by vertue of the Consecration but as those things which are joyn'd with his Body And these things are said to be in the Sacrament by concomitancy For which reason it is plain that whole Christ is in the Sacrament For if any two things are indeed knit together where the One is the other must needs be there also It follows therefore that whole Christ is so far contein'd as well in the species of the Bread as of the Wine that as not only the Body but also the Blood and whole Christ is truly in the species of the Bread So on the contrary not only the Blood but the Body also and whole Christ is truly in the species of Wine Now tho all the Faithful ought to be fully and assuredly perswaded of these things XXXIV Why the Bread and Wine separately consecrated Yet it was very fitly order'd That two Consecrations should be severally made First That the Passion of our Lord in which the Blood was divided from his Body might more lively be represented for which cause in the Consecration we make a memorial that Christs Blood was pour'd out And then it was most fit that because we are to use the Sacrament for the Nourishment of our Souls it should be appointed as Meat and Drink of which two it is evident that the perfect nourishment of the Body does consist Nor ought this to be pass'd over XXXV Whole Christ in every particle that whole Christ is contain'd not only in either species but in every particle of each species For thus S. Austin writes All severally receive Christ our Lord and he is whole in the several parts nor is he made the less by being distributed severally to many But he gives himself whole to all But this may easily be gather'd from the Evangelists also Citatur Aug. de Consecr dist 2. c. singulis For we are not to believe XXXVI Many particles of Bread not consecrated separately that the several Loaves of Bread were consecrated by our Lord with the proper Form of words but that all the Bread then us'd at the Sacred Mysteries and enough to be distributed among the Apostles was consecrated together with the same Form ' The same thing which appears to have bin done by the Chalice For he said Luc. 22.17 Take and divide it among you What has hitherto bin explain'd is intended that the Pastors may shew that the true Body and Blood of Christ is contain'd in the Sacrament of the Eucharist Now as to the Second thing propos'd XXXVII After the Consecration that the substance of the Bread and Wine remain not prov'd First by Reason they shall teach also that the Substance of Bread and Wine remains not in the Sacrament after Consecration Now tho this deservedly requires a very great admiration yet it is necessarily joyn'd with that which before was shew'd For if after Consecration there be the true Body of Christ under the species of Bread and Wine it is altogether necessary that seeing it was not there before this be done either by change of place by Creation or by Conversion of another thing into it But it is manifest that it cannot be that the Body of Christ in the Sacrament be that which came out of one place into another For so it would come to pass that he must be absent from Heaven because nothing is mov'd unless it leave the place from which it mov'd But it is less credible that the Body of Christ is created and this we cannot so much as conceive It remains therefore that in the Sacrament there is the Body of our Lord and that the Bread is chang'd into it Wherefore it must needs be that no substance of Bread remains Being led by this Reason Secondly by the decrees of Councils our Ancestors and Forefathers in the great Council of Lateran and that of Florence by evident Decrees confirm'd the truth of this Article But in the Council of Trent it was more fully defin'd thus If any one shall say that in the Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist there remains the Substance of Bread and Wine together with the Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ let him be Anathema Lat. Con. c. 1. Flor. in Ep. Eugenii IV. data ad Arm. à Concilio approbata Trid. Sess 13. Can. 4. And it was easie to gather these things from testimonies of Scripture Thirdly by the Authority of Scripture First that in the Institution of this Sacrament the Lord himself said This is my Body For this is the force of the word This to shew all the Substance of the thing present but if the Substance of the Bread remain'd it would seem by no means to be truly said Matt. 26.26 Mar. 14.2 Luc. 22.28 1 Cor. 11.24 Joh. 6.61 This is my Body And then Christ our Lord
the Substance of the Bread we must confess that it is in the Sacrament just after the same manner as the Substance of Bread before Consecration But to confess whether it be under a Great or under a Little Quantity is nothing at all to the purpose Now follows the Third thing which in this Sacrament seems very great and wonderful XLIV The Accidents remain in the Eucharist without the Subject which after the other two being explain'd must be suppos'd may be handl'd by the Pastors with more Ease to wit that the species of Bread and Wine in this Sacrament remain without any subject Matter For seeing it was shew'd before that the Lords Body and Blood are truly in the Sacrament so that there subsists no more any Substance at all of Bread and Wine because those Accidents cannot be inherent to the Body and Blood of Christ it remains that beyond all the order and course of Nature they uphold themselves without any other thing to suport them This has bin the perpetual and constant Doctrin of the Church which will be easie to confirm by the Authority of those testimonies by which it was before made evident that there remains no Substance of Bread or Wine in the Eucharist Vide de Consecr dist 2. c. Nos autem Decretal lib. 1. tit de celeb Miss c. Cum Matt. D. Thom. 3. p. q. 75 a. 3. q. 77. a. 1. But nothing is more suitable to the Devotion of the Faithful XLV The Duty of the Faithful towards the Eucharist than passing by all more nice and subtil questions that they adore and reverence the Majesty of this admirable Sacrament And then that therein they embrace the supream Providence of God that he has instituted these Holy Mysteries to be administred under the species of Bread and Wine For since it is the most horrid thing in the world to the Nature of Man to be fed with Man's Flesh XLVI Why under the species of Bread and Wine the Eucharist was instituted or to drink his Blood he most wisely order'd it that his most Holy Body and Blood should be administer'd to us under the species of those things of Bread and Wine I say by whose common and daily use and nourishment we are mostly delighted And there are adjoin'd these two Conveniencies whereof the first is that we are freed from the reproach of Infidels which we could not easily have avoided if we should be seen to eat our Lord under his own species The other is that while we thus take the Body and Blood of the Lord in such a manner as notwithstanding what is truly done cannot be perceiv'd by the senses this avails very much to increase Faith in our Souls which verily as Gregories known sentence is Faith has no Merit where Human Reason gives the Experiment Hom. 26. super Evangelia Vide Cyril lib. 4. in Joan. c. 22. Cypr. de Coena Domini Ambr. de Sacram. lib. 4. c. 4. Aug. Tract 27. in Joan. D. Thom. 3. p. q. 74. a. 1. q. 75. a. 1. But these things which have hitherto been expounded are not to be explain'd without great caution us'd according to the Capacity of the Hearers and the Necessity of Times But those things which may be said concerning the Influence and Fruits of this admirable Sacrament XLVII The Vertue and innumerable advantages of the Eucharist we must know that there is no sort of the Faithful to whom the Knowledge of these things belongs not and to whom it ought not to seem very necessary Now that the Faithful may understand the Vtility of the Eucharist for this cause chiefly those things which are with so many words discours'd concerning this Sacrament are to be known But because the immense Advantages and Fruits thereof can never by Words be express'd there may One or Two Points be handl'd by the Pastors to shew what a plenty and abundance of all good things are included in these Mysteries Vide Trid. Sess 13. c. 3. can 5. Iren. lib. 4. c. 14. Cyril lib. 4. in Joan. c. 11. 14. Chrys hom 45. in Joan. D. Thom. 3. p. q. 79. And this in part they will thus perform XLVIII The Eucharist the Fountain of all the Sacraments if the vertue and nature of all the Sacraments being laid open they compare the Eucharist to the Fountain and the other Sacraments to the smaller streams for we must needs call it and that truly the Fountain of all Graces because after an admirable manner it contains in it the very Fountain of Heavenly Gifts and Endowments and the Author of all the Sacraments Christ our Lord from which as from the Fountain is deriv'd or drawn to the other Sacraments whatsoever Goodness or Perfection they have From hence therefore the most ample endowments of Divine Grace which are bestow'd on us in this Sacrament may easily be collected It may seem profitable also to consider well the Nature of Bread and Wine XLIX What Food is to the Body that the Eucharist is to the Spirit which are the Symbols of this Sacrament For see of what Vse Bread and Wine is to the Body of the same but in a far better and more perfect manner is the Sacrament of the Eucharist to the Health and Delight of the Soul For neither is This Sacrament chang'd into our substance as the Bread and Wine is but after a certain sort it changes us into its own Nature So that rightly may that of St. Austin be transferr'd hither Lib. 7. Consess c. 10. I am the Meat of Great ones grow great and thou shalt eat me nor shalt thou change me into thee as thou dost thy Bodily meat but thou shalt be chang'd into me Vide Ambr. lib. 5. de Sacram. c. 4. Chrys hom 45. in Joan. Now if Grace and Truth came by Jesus Christ L. Grace flows into the Soul thro the Eucharist Joh. 6.56 57. it must need flow into thy Soul when thou tak'st him purely and holily who said of himself He that eats my Flesh and drinks my Blood dwells in me and I in him for those who being affected with the study of Piety and Religion take this Sacrament no one ought to doubt but that they so take into themselves the Son of God as that they are grafted into his Body as living Members for it is written He that eats me even he shall live by reason of me And Lib. 4. in Joan. c. 12.14 Epist ad Nester 10. The Bread which I will give is my Flesh for the life of the World Which place Cyril interpreting says The Word of God uniting himself to his own Flesh made it quickning It therefore became him after a wonderful manner to be united to our Bodies thro his sacred Flesh and precious Blood which we have receiv'd in the Bread and Wine by his quickning or enlivening Benediction But forasmuch as it is said I.I. When the Eucharist does
wish which is offer'd them from whence tho they get not all the Fruits of the Eucharist yet without doubt they have those which are very great Lastly Sacramentally and Spiritually there are some who receive the Sacred Eucharist both Sacramentally and Spiritually who when according to the Apostles Doctrine they shall first have prov'd themselves and being adorn'd with the wedding Garment come to this Divine Table receive most plentiful Fruits from the Eucharist as we said before Wherefore it is plain Note That they bereave themselves of the greatest celestial Good things who when they may come prepar'd even to take the Sacrament of the Lords Body think it enough to receive the Sacred Communion spiritually only And now it must be taught how the Souls of the Faithful ought to be prepar'd before they come to the Sacramental receiving of the Eucharist And first LVIII Who come to the Eucharist ought to be prepar'd and why First John 13.5 that it may appear that that preparation is very necessary the Example of our Savior ought to be propos'd For before he gave his Apostles the Sacraments of his Body and Blood altho they were already clean he wash'd their Feet that he might declare that all diligence is to be us'd that there be nothing wanting to us to the highest integrity and innocence of Soul when we go about to receive these sacred Mysteries And then the Faithful may understand Secondly that if any one receive the Eucharist with a Soul well dispos'd and prepar'd he is adorn'd with the most ample endowments of celestial Grace So on the contrary if he receive it unprepar'd he not only receives no advantage thereby but also he takes exceeding great damage and hurt For this is proper to the best and most wholesome things that if we use them in season they mightily profit us but if we use them in a wrong season they hurt and destroy us Wherefore it is not to be wonder'd at that those mighty and transcendent Gifts of God when they are receiv'd by a Soul well dispos'd are very helpful to us to get the Glory of Heaven but when we offer to receive them unworthily they bring eternal Death This is prov'd from an Example of the Ark of the Lord An example For the Ark of the Covenant than which the People of Israel had nothing more excellent to whom also by it the Lord gave very great and innumerable Benefits and yet it carri'd with it calamity joyn'd with eternal reproach So also to those who having by the Mouth receiv'd and so let fall into a well affected Stomach they nourish and sustain the Body but to those who use to pour them into a Stomach full of vicious humors they cause grievous diseases De praeparatione ad Euch. requisita vide Trid. Sess 13. c. 7. can 11. Basil q. 172. regul hrev Serm. 2. de Bapt. Cypr. toto fere lib. de Lapsit agendo de Poenit. Aug. Serm. 1. de Temp. Chrys hom 44 45 46. in Joan. in Matt. hom 83. Let the Faithful therefore use this First Preparation LIX Preparations of the Soul to the Eucharist The First To discern Table from Table This Sacred Table from other profane Tables This Bread of Heaven from common-Common-bread And this is done when we certainly believe that the true Body and Blood of our Lord is present whom the Angels adore in Heaven at whose Nod the Pillars of Heaven tremble and shake for fear 1 Cor. 11.19 of whose Glory the Heaven and Earth is full This is to difference the Lords Body which the Apostle admonishes us to do the greatness of which Mystery notwithstanding we must reverence rather than curiously search into the Truth of it in subtle Disputations But another Preparation exceeding necessary is The Second that every one examin himself whether he have peace with others Matt. 5.24 whether he love his Neighbor truly and with all his Soul If therefore thou offer thy Gift at the Altar and there shalt remember that thy Brother has any thing against thee leave there thy Gift before the Altar and go thy way first be reconcil'd to thy Brother and then come and offer thy Gift And then we ought diligently to search our Conscience The third lest haply we may be polluted with any deadly sin for which it is necessary to do Penance that first by the Medicine of Contrition and Confession it might be done away Sess 13. can 21. For it has bin defin'd by the Holy Council of Trent That no one may receceive the Sacred Eucharist whom the Conscience of any mortal sin pricks if a Priest is to be had before he shall have purg'd himself by Sacramental Confession no not tho he seem to himself to be contrite Chrys hom 30. in Genes 20. in Mat. Cypr. in lib. de Lapsis Fourthly The Fourth Let us think with our selves how unworthy we are that the Lord should bestow on us this divine Benefit Wherefore let us say from our Hearts that of the Centurion of whom our Savior himself testifies Matt. 8.10 That he found not so great Faith no not in Israel Lord I am not worthy that thou shouldst enter under my roof Let us also examine our selves The Fifth Joh. 21.15 whether we can truly take up that of S. Peter to our selves Lord thou knowest that I love thee For we must remember that he that sat down at the Lords Feast without a Wedding-Garment was cast into Prison and condemn'd to eternal Punishment Nor is there need of the Souls preparation only LX. The Preparations of the Body for the Eucharist but of the Bodie 's also For we ought to come Fasting to that Sacred Table so that at least from the mid-night of the day before even to that very point of Time wherein we receive the Eucharist we should not either eat or drink any thing at all See Aug. Epist 118. c. 6. lib. 1. ad in quisit Januarii c. 6. And the Dignity of this Sacrament requires LXI 1 Reg. 21.5 that marri'd people abstain from mutual embraces for some days being admonish'd by Davids Example who when he was to receive some Show-Bread of the Priest profess'd that he kept himself and his Servants clean from the communication of their Wives for those three days These are in a manner the things the Faithful are to observe to prepare themselves before hand profitably to receive the Sacred Mysteries For the rest which may seem fit to be taken care for in this matter may easily be reduc'd to these very Heads But lest any grow more sluggish or backward to the receiving this Sacrament bacause they think it a very weighty and hard matter to make so great a Preparation The Faithful are often to be admonish'd That the Law obliges all to receive the Sacred Eucharist Besides it has been decreed by the Church that he that will not at least once
Sess 21. de co●● sub u●raque specie can 1 2 3. For as has bin explain'd by the Council of Trent altho Christ at his last Supper instituted and deliver'd to the Apostles this most profound Sacrament in the Species of Bread and Wine Yet it does not follow from hence That this was made by our Lord and Savior to be a Law that the Sacred Mysteries should be administer'd to all the Faithful under both kinds For the same our Lord when he spake of this Sacrament frequently made mention but of One Species only Joh. 6.51 as when he says If any one shall eat of this Bread he shall live forever and the Bread which I will give is my Flesh for the Life of the World And He that eats this Bread shall live forever That the use of One species only is sufficient to a perfect Communion may be gather'd ex Tertul. lib. 2. ad Vxor Cypr. de Lapsis Orig. Hom. 13. in Exod. Basil Epist ad Caesar patr Aug. Epist. 86. Hier. in Apol. ad Pammach Chrysost hom 41. operis impers in Matth. It is evident that the Church was led by very many LXXI Why the use of both species is not permitted to the Lay people and indeed by very weighty Reasons not only to approve but also to establish by the Authority of a Decree this Custom of communicating chiefly under one species For first The first Reason great heed was to be taken lest the Blood of our Lord should be spilt on the Ground which thing seem'd not easie to be avoided if it should be administer'd in a great multitude of people Besides The second when the Sacred Eucharist ought to be in a Readiness for the Sick it was much to be fear'd lest if the species of Wine were to be kept somewhat longer it might grow sower Besides there are very many who can by no means indure the Tast The third nor so much indeed as the very smell of Wine Wherefore lest that which was given for spiritual Healths sake The fourth might hurt the Health of the Body it was very wisely establish'd by the Church that the Faithful should receive only the species of Bread And this may be added to the other Reasons The fifth that in very many Countries they have a very great scarceness of Wine nor can they procure it from elsewhere but with very great charges and very tedious and difficult travel And then The sixth which is most of all to the purpose the Heresie of them was to be rooted up who deny'd that whole Christ is in each species but asserted that the Body only without the Blood is contain'd in the species of Bread and that the Blood was contain'd under that of the Wine Now therefore that the Truth of Catholic Faith might the more evidently be put before our eyes the Communion of One Species i. e. of Bread was wisely brought in There are other Reasons also collected by them who treat of this Argument which if it shall seem needful the Curats may make use of And that nothing might be pass'd by LXXII The Minister of this Sacrament is only a Priest that seems to belong to the Doctrin of this Sacrament we are now to speak of the Minister altho' there can be no body in a manner ignorant hereof it must be taught therefore that the Power to make and to distribute this Sacrament to the Faithful is given only to the Priests Now that this Manner has always bin kept in the Church that the Faithful People receive the Sacraments from the Priests and that the Priests who consecrate communicate themselves the Holy Synod of Trent has explain'd and shew'd Sess 13. c. 10. that This custom has bin always religiously observ'd as being sprung from Apostolic Tradition Mat. 26.26 especially seeing that Christ our Lord has left us a clear Example hereof who both consecrated his own most Holy Body Mar. 14.22 and did reach it forth to his Disciples with his own Hands But that by all means the Dignity of so great a Sacrament might be consulted LXXIII Lay people prohibited to touch the Sacred Vessels and Linnen not only the Power of Administring it is given only to Priests the Church by Law has also forbid every one that is not consecrated to presume so much as to handle or to touch the Sacred Vessels Linnen and other Instruments that are necessary to the consecration thereof unless there be some very great necessity Whence both the Priests themselves and the rest of the Faithful may understand with how great Religion and Holiness they ought to be qualified that come to the Eucharist either to consecrate to administer or to take it Altho' as was before said of the other Sacraments they are no less truly administred by Evil men LXXIV The wickedness of the Minister diminishes not the Holiness of the Eucharist provided that those things which belong to the perfect reason or nature of them be duly observ'd the same thing avails in the Sacrament of the Eucharist for neither are we to believe that all these things are done by the merit of the Ministers but by the Vertue and Power of Christ the Lord These are the things which are to be explain'd concerning the Eucharist as it is a Sacrament Now what remains to be spoken must explain it as it is a Sacrifice LXXV Of the Eucharist as it is a Sacrifice that the Curats may understand what chiefly they are to teach the Faithful people upon Sundays and Holy-days concerning this Mystery according as Holy Synod has decreed For this Sacrament is not only a Treasure of heavenly riches Sess 22. princip which if we use well we may reconcile the Grace and Love of God towards us but there is in it also a kind of special Mean whereby we return him some thanks for his immense benefits bestow'd on us But this Victim or Sacrifice if it be rightly and legitimately offerd how grateful and acceptable it is to God is gather'd from hence If the Sacrifices of the Old Law whereof it is written Psal 39.7 Sacrifices and Oblations thou would'st not Psal 50.8 And again If thou would'st have Sacrifice I would give it thee accordingly but thou delightest not in burnt Offerings so pleas'd the Lord that God as the Scripture testifies Gen. 2. smelt a sweet savor i. e. were grateful and acceptable to him what may we hope for from this Sacrifice wherein he himself is sacrific'd and offer'd of whom that voice from Heaven was twice heard Mat. 3 17● This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased Let the Curats therefore diligently explain this Mystery that when the Faithful come together to Divine Service they may learn attentively and religiously to meditate on those things at which they are present And first let them teach LXXVI The Eucharist instituted for Two causes that the Eucharist
for two Reasons The one is If any one being imploy'd in an unjust matter kills a Man For example If any one with his Fist or Foot strike a Woman with Child The First whereupon follows an untimely Birth This happens indeed beyond the Design of the Striker yet he is not blameless because it was no means lawful for him to strike a Woman with Child The other is The Second If he carelesly and heedlesly kill any one not looking well about him For which cause also Sixthly if any one for defence of his own Safety using all the care he can kill another it appears plain enough that he is not guilty of this Law And these are the Slaughters we have now mention'd VIII What Killing is forbidden here which are not contain'd in this Commandment of the Law which being excepted all the rest are forbidden whether we consider the Slayer or the Person slain or the Means by which the Slaughter was done As to those that are the Slayers IX Who forbidden to kill there is none excepted neither Men of Wealth nor of Power neither Masters nor Parents but without all difference and distinction all are forbidden to kill If we consider those who are kill'd X. Who may not be kill'd this Law belongs to every one nor is there any one of so mean and base a Condition but he is defended by vertue of this Law Nor is it lawful for any one to kill himself XI None may kill himself seeing no one has so much the power of his own Life that at his own pleasure he may kill himself And therefore by the words of this Law it is not thus appointed Thou shalt not kill another but simply Thou shalt not kill But then if we respect the manifold ways of Murder XII Every way of killing forbidden there is none excepted For it is not only unlawful to take away any Mans Life either with his Hands or Sword or Knife or with a Stone or with a Staff or with a Halter or with Poison but it is utterly forbidden to be done either by Counsel Help or Assistance or by any other Means And here the great Dulness and Stupidity of the Jews appears Note in that they believ'd that they observ'd this Commandment if they restrain'd their Hands only from Murder But to a Christian XIII None may be angry at nor kill another who as Christ has interpreted it has learn'd that this Law is Spiritual and teaches us not only to have our Hands clean but our very Souls chaste and sincere that is not enough which the Jews thought sufficient to themselves For in the Gospel we are taught That it is not lawful so much as to be angry since our Lord says But I say to you Every one that is angry at his Brother shall be guilty of the Judgment but he that says to his Brother Racha shall be guilty of the Council but he that shall say Thou Fool shall be guilty of Hell-fire De ira vide Basil. hom 10 Chrysost hom 29. ad Pop. Antioch D. Thom. 2.2 q. 158. per totam From which words it is evident XIV This place of the Gospel explain'd That he is not free from Sin that is inwardly inrag'd at his Brother tho he contain his Anger shut up in his Mind but he that gives any Token of that Anger sins grievously but he sins yet much more grievously who is not afraid to handle his Brother hardly and to reproach him Vide Aug. de Serm. Dom. in Monte lib. 1. D. Thom. 2.2 q. 158. a. 3. And verily this is true XV. What Anger not forbidden if there be no cause of Anger For the Cause of Anger which is allow'd by God and his Laws is This When we are displeas'd at those who being under our Government and Power are guilty of a Fault for a Christians Anger ought to proceed not from Carnal Sense but from the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 6.17 seeing it is fit that we be the Temples of the Holy Ghost in which Jesus Christ may dwell There are XVI The perfect Observation of this Commandment besides many other things taught by our Lord which belong to the perfect following of this Law of which sort are these Not to resist Evil but if any one smite thee on thy right Cheek turn to him the other also and he that will go to Law with thee and take away thy Coat give him thy Cloak also and he that will compel thee to go a Mile go with him two Vide Aug Epist 5. ad Marcel de Serm. Domini in Monte lib. 2. c. 20. From what has been already said XVII How many offend against this Commandment we may observe how prone Men are to those Sins which are forbidden in this Commandment or how many may be found who tho they commit not Wickedness with their Hands yet do it in their Hearts And because there are Remedies for this Disease in the Sacred Scripture XVIII The Curat 's Duty it is the Curat 's Duty to teach them diligently to the Faithful And this is the Chief XIX How great a Crime it is to kill a Man That they understand how wicked a Sin the killing of a Man is And this may be seen from very many and very evident Testimonies of Holy Scripture for God in Holy Scripture so detests Murder that he says he will punish even the very Beasts for the killing of Men Gen. 9.6 and commands that Beast to be kill'd that hurts a Man Nor would he have Man abhor Blood for any other cause Note but that by all means he should restrain his Mind and his Hand from the Wickedness of killing a Man For Men-slayers are the worst Enemies of Mankind XX. Murderers injure God himself and consequently of Nature who as much as in them lies overthrow the universal Work of God when they destroy a Man for whose sake he testifies that he made all things whatsoever were created Yea and even in Genesis since it is forbidden to kill a Man because God created him after his own Image and Likeness he do's a notable Injury to God and seems as it were to lay violent hands upon him who removes his Image out of the way David having with Divine Cogitation of Mind meditated hereof XXI How prone Man is to Murder Psal 13.36 very grievously complain'd of Blood-thirsty Men in these words Their Feet are swift to shed Blood Nor did he simply say They kill but They shed Blood Which words he uttered for amplification of that Wickedness and to shew their exceeding Cruelty and to shew especially how headlong they are carried by the impulse of the Devil to that VVickedness he says Their Feet are swift But now the things which Christ our Lord in this Commandment requires us to observe XXII The end and scope of this Commandment Mat. 5.24 tend to this That we may
253 There is no Measure set to the Hatred of Sin 253 The proper Grief of Contrition to be apply'd to every Mortal Sin 254 What things are necessary to true Contrition ibid. A Motive to stir up Contrition 256 257 The Fruit of Contrition ibid. The various Names of Contrition 251 Creation 24 c. What God created he preserves 27 28 What a New Creature in Christ is Pag. 336 337 The Cross of Christ how precious it is 525 The Crowns prepar'd of God for them that overcome 542 543 The Curse wherewith Man was condemn'd after Adam's Sin 510 511 D ON the Lord's Day what the Faithful ought to do and from what they ought to abstain 373 The Commandment for keeping Holy-days 369 c. Why the Observation of Holy-days appointed 370 Other Holy-days besides the Sabboth among the Jews 376 Why other Holy-days besides the Lord's-day appointed by the Church ibid. The most celebrated Days in the Church ibid. In what Works Christians ought to exercise themselves on Holy-days 377 Debts what they are which we pray to be forgiven 525 Why those Debts call'd Ours 526 The Precepts of the Decalogue 332 The Decalogue the Sum of all Laws ibid. The Ten Commandments of the Decalogue depend upon Two of Charity 333 With how great Majesty the Law of the Decalogue was given Pag. 335 To believe that God is the Author of the Decalogue is of very great use for the observing of the Law ibid. The Cause of Christ's Descent into Hell 59 Detraction or Defamation see the Eighth Commandment 426 The Devil's Malice against Men. 534 The Devil counterfeiting an Angel of Light persuades Men to seek those things as good which are not so 504 VVhy the Devil call'd the Prince and Ruler of the VVorld of Darkness 534 VVho they are that the Devil opposes not 535 VVhy the Devil is specially call'd the Evil one 548 VVe ascribe to the Devil as the Author and Persuader of it all the Evil we suffer from our Neighbor 549 The proper Office of the Devil 537 VVith what intent the Devil tempts Men. ibid. VVhy the Devil call'd the Tempter ibid. VVhat Means the Devil uses to tempt ibid. E TO love Enemies the most excellent Office of Charity 400 401 VVho love their Enemies are the Children of God Pag. 528 VVe must not be angry at our Enemies but at the Devil 549 VVe must forgive our Enemies if we would be forgiven 527 VVe must love our Enemies 528 VVhat they ought to beg of God who forgive not their Enemies 529 Visible Enemies of what sort they are 533 The Enemies of Mankind use all their Arts against us ibid. They that abstain long from the Eucharist suffer exceeding great loss 228 The Institution of the Eucharist 194 The Dignity and Excellency of the Eucharist ibid. The Sacrament of the Eucharist call'd by many Nanes 185 VVhy the Eucharist call'd a Communion ibid. Not lawful after Meat and Drink to receive the Eucharist 196 The Eucharist truly a Sacrament and One of the Seven ibid. In the Sacrament of the Eucharist we adore the Body and Blood of Christ 197 VVhat things properly have the Nature of a Sacrament in the Eucharist ibid. The Difference between the Eucharist and other Sacraments Pag. 197 The Consecration of the Matter makes the Sacrament of the Eucharist perfect ibid. The Eucharist is only One Sacrament and no more 198 The Sacrament of the Eucharist signifies Three things ibid. The Matter of the Sacrament of the Eucharist double ibid. VVhy a little VVater is mingled with the VVine 201 What the Bread and Wine signifie in the Sacrament of the Eucharist 202 The Form of the Sacrament of the Eucharist 203 The Form of Consecration of the Wine and the Declaration thereof 204 In the Sacrament of the Eucharist Three things very admirable 208 In the Eucharist the true Body and Blood of Christ are contain'd ibid. The Sacrament of the Eucharist not only a Sign of Christ's Body 209 The Fruit of the Eucharist 212 In the Sacrament of the Eucharist whole Christ is contain'd ibid. In the Sacrament of the Eucharist what things are by Concomitancy 213 Why in the Sacrament of the Eucharist are made two several Consecrations 214 In every Particle of both kinds of the Sacrament of the Eucharist is contain'd whole Christ Pag. 214 The Substance of Bread and Wine in the Sacrament of the Eucharist do not remain after Consecration ibid. Why after Consecration the Sacrament of the Eucharist is call'd Bread and VVine 216 The admirable Conversion in the Sacrament of the Eucharist is call'd Transubstantiation 217 The Sacrament of the Eucharist not curiously to be pry'd into ibid. After what manner Christ is in the Sacrament of the Eucharist 218 The Resemblance of Bread and Wine remain in the Sacrament of the Eucharist without any Subject matter ibid. Why Christ appointed the Sacrament of the Eucharist to be administred under the Species of Bread and Wine 219 The Eucharist is the Fountain of all Graces 220 How the Eucharist gives Grace 221 The first Grace not given to Man unless he have first receiv'd the Sacrament of the Eucharist at least in desire 221 222 The Eucharist is the End of all the Sacraments ibid. Manna a Figure of the Eucharist Pag. 222 The Advantages of the Eucharist 223 Three Ways of Receiving the Eucharist 224 They deprive themselves of very great Good that being prepar'd to receive Christ's Body Sacramentally receive it only Spiritually ibid. None may receive the Eucharist before Sacramental Confession if a Priest may be had and if they be conscious of Mortal Sin 226 The Sacrament of the Eucharist ought to be receiv'd Fasting 227 Who are Married ought to abstain from their VVives certain Days before they come to the Communion ibid. The Communion of the Eucharist often to be iterated 227 228 The Soul is daily to be fed with the Sacrament of the Eucharist 228 In old times the Faithful did daily receive the Eucharist ibid. They are excepted from the Communion of the Eucharist who by reason of Age have not the use of Reason 229 VVhy the Eucharist denied to Infants 230 The Eucharist not to be given Mad-men ibid. Lay-people may not receive the Eucharist in both Kinds Pag. 231 VVhy the Church prohibited the Custom of Communicating under both Species ibid. The Power of Consecrating the Sacrament of the Eucharist given to the Priests only 232 VVho is not Consecrated ought not to touch the Sacred Vessels ibid. The Eucharist is a Sacrifice 233 The Eucharist is a Sacrifice most acceptable to God ibid. The Eucharist instituted of Christ for two Causes ibid. The Eucharist as it is a Sacrifice has the Vertue not only of Meriting but also of Satisfying 234 VVhen the Sacrifice of the Eucharist was instituted ibid. The Figures and Prophecies of the Eucharist 235 The Sacrament of the Eucharist an inexpressible Pledge of Charity 517 VVhy the Sacrament of the Eucharist call'd Our Bread 518 VVhy the Sacrament of the