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A64145 The worthy communicant, or, A discourse of the nature, effects, and blessings consequent to the worthy receiving of the Lords Supper and of all the duties required in order to a worthy preparation : together with the cases of conscience occurring in the duty of him that ministers, and of him that communicates : to which are added, devotions fitted to every part of the ministration / by Jeremy Taylor ... Taylor, Jeremy, 1613-1667. 1667 (1667) Wing T418; ESTC R11473 253,603 430

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The Worthy Communicant Which things the Angels desire to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet 1.12 The Worthy COMMUNICANT OR A Discourse of the Nature Effects and Blessings consequent to the Worthy Receiving of the LORDS SUPPER And of all the Duties required in order to a Worthy Preparation TOGETHER With the Cases of Conscience occurring in the Duty of him that Ministers and of him that Communicates To which are added Devotions fitted to every part of the Ministration BY JEREMY TAYLOR D. D. and Lord Bishop of Down and Connor LONDON Printed by T. R. for J. Martyn J. Allestry and T. Dicas and are to be sold by Thomas Basset at his Shop in St. Dunstans Church-yard in Fleetstreet 1667. To the Most ILLUSTRIOUS PRINCESS Her Highness Royal MARY Princess of Great Britain Dowager of Orange c. MADAM ALthough none of the Subjects of these Nations can in propriety of speaking be a stranger to the Royal Family from whom every single person receives the daily emanations of many Blessings yet besides this there is much in your Royal Highness by which your Princely Person is related to all amongst us that are or would be excellent For where Vertue is in her exaltation to that excellent Person all that are or would be thought vertuous do address themselves either to be directed or encouraged for example or for patronage for the similitude of affection or likeness of design and therefore Madam although it is too great a confidence in me something a stranger to make this Address to so high-born and great a Princess yet when I considered that you are the Sister of my King and the Servant of my God I know there was nothing to be expected but serenity and sweetness gentleness and goodness Royal favours and Princely graces and therefore in such fruitful showers I have no cause to fear that my fleece shall be dry when all that is round about it shall be made irriguous with your Princely influence I shall therefore humbly hope that your Royal Highness will first give me pardon and then accept this humble oblation from him who is equally your servant for your great Relations and for your great Excellencies For I remember with what pleasure I have heard it told that your Highness's Court hath been in all these late days of sorrow a Sanctuary to the afflicted a Chappel for the Religion a Refectory to them that were in need and the great Defensative of all men and all things that are excellent and therefore it is but duty that by all the acknowledgments of Religion that honour should be paid to your Royal Highness which so eminent vertues perpetually have deserved But because you have long dwelt in the more secret recesses of Religion and that for a long time your Devotion hath been eminent your obedience to the strictest rules of Religion hath been humble and diligent even up to a great example and that the service of God hath been your great Care and greatest Imployment your Name hath been dear and highly honourable amongst the Sons and Daughters of the Church of England and we no more envy to Hungary the great Name of St. Elizabeth to Scotland the glorious memory of St. Margaret to France the triumph of the piety of St. Genovese nor St. Katharine to Italy since in your Royal Person we have so great an example of our own one of the Family of Saints a Daughter to such a glorious Saint and Martyr a Sister to such a King in the arms of whose Justice and Wisdom we lie down in safety having now nothing to employ us but in holiness and comfort to serve God and in peace and mutual charity to enjoy the blessings of the Government under so great so good a King But Royal Madam I have yet some more personal ground for the confidence of this Address and because I have received the great honour of your reading and using of divers of my Books I was readily invited to hope that your Royal Highness would not reject it if one of them desired upon a special title to kiss your Princely hand and to pay thanks for the gracious reception of others of the same Cognation The stile of it is fit for Closets plain and useful the matter is of the greatest concernment a rule for the usage of the greatest solennity of Religion For as the Eucharist is by the venerable Fathers of the Church called the Queen of Mysteries so the worthy Communicating in this is the most Princely Conjugation of Graces in the whole Rosary of Christian Religion and therefore the more proportioned and fitted for the handling of so Princely a Person whom the beauty of the Body and the greatness of Birth and excellency of Religion do equally contend to represent excellent and illustrious in the eyes of all the world Madam it is necessary that you be all that to which these excellent graces and dispositions do design you and to this glorious end this Manual may if you please add some moments the effecting of which is all my design except only that it is intended and I humbly pray that it may be look'd upon as a testimony of that greatest Honour which is paid you by the hearts and voyces of all the Religious of this Church and particularly of MADAM Your Highness most humble and most devoted Servant Jeremy Dunensis The Contents of this Book THe Introduction Page 1 CHAP. I. OF the nature excellencies uses and intention of the holy Sacrament of the Lords Supper p. 10 Section 1. Of the several apprehensions of men concerning it Ibid. Sect. 2. What it is which we receive in the holy Sacrament p. 17 Sect. 3. That in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper there are represented and exhibited many great blessings upon the special account of that sacred ministry proved in General p. 33. Sect. 4. The blessings and graces of the holy Sacrament enumerated and proved particularly p. 46 Sect. 5. Practical conclusions from the preceding discourses p. 64 Sect. 6. Devotions preparatory to this mystery p. 77 CHAP. II. OF our general preparation to the worthy reception of the blessed Sacrament and the participation of the Mysteries p. 82 Section 1. Of Examination of our selves in order to the holy Communion p. 83 Sect. 2. Of the Examination of our desires p. 89 Sect. 3. Of our examination concerning remanent affections to sin p. 100 Sect. 4. Of examination of our selves in the matter of our Prayers in order to a holy Communion p. 114 Sect. 5. Of preparatory examination of our selves in some other instances p. 122 Sect. 6. Devotions to be used upon the daies of our Examination relative to that duty p. 133 CHAP. III. OF Faith as it is a necessary disposition to the blessed Sacrament p. 142 Sect. 1. Of Catechumens or unbaptized persons p. 143 Sect. 2. Of Communicating Infants p. 147 Sect. 3. Whether Innocents Fools and Mad men may be admitted to the holy Communion p. 156 Sect. 4. Of actual faith as
is past that we are to look upon our selves but as new beginners that by apprehending the same necessity we may have the same passion the same fervour and holy fires But in the matter of examining we must consider how much hath been pardoned that we may examine how thankful we have been and what returns we have made we must observe all our usual failings that we may now set our guards accordingly we must remember in what weak part we were smitten that we may still pray against it and we must renew our sad remembrances that we may continue our sad repentances and we must look upon our whole life that we may be truely humbled He that only examines how it is with him since the last Communion will think too well of himself if he spies his bills of accusation to be small but every man will find cause enough to hide his face in the dust and to come with fear and trembling when he views the sum total of his life which certainly will appear to be full of shame and of dishonour 3. We are not to limit our examinations to the interval since the last Communion because much of our present duty is relative to the first parts of our life For all the former vows of obedience though we have broken them a thousand times yet have still an obliging power and there are many contingencies of our life which require peculiar usages and treatments of our selves and there are many follies which we leave by degrees and many obligations which are of continual duty and it may be that our passion did once carry us to so extream to intollerable a violence perhaps twenty years ago that we are still to keep our fears and tremblings about us lest the same principle produce the same evil event When Horatius Cocles had won that glorious victory over the three Sabine Brothers and entring gloriously into Rome espied his sister wetting his Laurel with her unseasonable tears for the death of one of them whom she love with the honour of a wife and the passion of a lover and being mad with rage and pride because her sorrow allayd his joyes and glory kill'd her with that sword by which her servant died Sometimes passion makes a prodigious excursion and passes on to the greatest violence and the most prodigious follies and though it be usually so restrained by reason and Religion that such transvolations are not frequent yet one such act is an eternal testimony how weak we are and how mischievous a passion can be It is a miracle of providence that in the midst of all the rudenesses and accidents of the world a man preserves his eyes which every thing can extinguish and put out and it is no lesse a miracle of grace that in the midst so many dishonourable loves there are no more horrid tragoedies and so many brutish angers do not produce more cruel sudden murders and that so much envy does not oftener break out into open hostilities it is indeed a mighty grace that pares the nails of these wild beasts and makes them more innocent in their effects than they are in their nature but still the principle remains there is in us the same evil nature and the same unruly passion and therefore as there ought to be continual guards upon them so there must be continual inquiries made concerning them and every thing is to be examined lest all be lost upon a sudden 4. We must not limit our examination to the interval of the last Communion because our first repentances must still proceed and must never be at an end For no man was so pardoned at the last Communion but that he is still obliged to beg pardon for those sins he then repented of He must always repent always pray and never be at peace with the first sins of his youth and the sorrows of the first day must be the duty of every day and that examination must come into this account and when we inquire after our own state we must not view the little finger but the whole man For in all the forrest the ape is the handsomest beast so long as he shewes nothing but his hand but when the inquiring and envious beasts looked round about him they quickly espied a foul deformity There are in the state of a mans soul some good proportions and some well dayes and some fortunate periods but he that is contented with beholding them alone cares more to please himself than to please God and thinks him to be happy whom man not whom God approves By this way twenty deceptions and impostures may abuse a man See therefore what you are from head to foot from the beginning to the end from the first entry to your last progression and although it be not necessary that we always actually consider all yet it will be necessary that we alwayes truly know it all that our relative duties and our imperfect actions and our collateral obligations and the direct measures of the increase of grace may be justly discerned and understood 4. He that examines himself and would make right judgement of his state and of his duty must not do it by single actions but by states of life and habits of Religion If we can say truly that neither prosperity nor adversity neither crosse nor crown imployment nor retirement publick offices nor houshold-cares do disorder us in our duty to God and our relations that is if we safely and wisely passed through or converse in any one of these states of life it is very likely that things are well with us But the consideration of single actions will do but little Some acts of charity and many prayers and the doing one noble action or being once or twice very bountiful or the strugling with one danger and the speaking for God in one contestation these are excellent things and good significations of life but not alwayes of health and strength not of a state of grace Now because in the holy Communion we are growing up to the measures of the fulness of Christ we can no otherwise be fitted to it but by the progressions and increase of a man that is by habits of grace and states and permanencies of Religion and therefore our examinations must be accordingly SECT VI. Devotions to be used upon the days of our Examination relative to that duty The Hymne THe Lord is in his holy temple the Lords throne is in heaven his eyes behold his eye lids try the children of men The Lord tryeth the righteous but the wicked and him that loveth violence his soul hateth For the righteous Lord loveth righteousnesse his countenance doth behold the upright The words of the Lord are pure words as silver tried in a furnace of earth purified seven times Thou hast proved mine heart thou hast visited me in the night thou hast tried me and shalt find nothing I am purposed that my mouth shall not transgress Hold up my goings in
he goes on grows weary when he mingles with the world and by every conversation is polluted or allayed when by his very necessary affairs of life he is made secular and interested apt to tend his civil regards and to be remiss in the spiritual by often and long handling of money beginning too much to love it then we are interrupted in our declining piety we are called upon by Religion and by the sacrednesse of this holy duty are made to begin again not to go back but to be re-enkindled Every time we receive the holy Sacrament all our duties are summed up we make new vowes we chastise our negligence we mend our pace we actuate our holy purposes and make them stronger we enter upon Religion as if we had never done any thing before we bring again our first penitential heats and as when we pray and pray long our devotion slackens and our attention becomes trifling and by wandring thoughts we are gone very far from the observation of the offices the good man that ministers calls out to us Let us pray and then the wandring thoughts run home then we are troubled that we have lost so much of our ●rayers as we have not attended to then we begin ag●in and pray the more passionately by how much we observe our selves to have been more negligent before If God did not particularly call upon us by these religious necessities and stop us by the solemn return of the Sacrament and stir up our fires and remind us of our duty and make actual seasons and opportunities for actual and great attendencies on religion if God did not make some daies and some necessities and some opportunities for heaven the soul and her interest would not be at all regarded For this life is the day for the body and our needs do indeed require so much attendance and imploy so much of our affections and spend so much of our time that it is necessary some abstractions and separations of time and offices be made Receiving the holy Sacrament is like a Lock upon the waters which makes them rise higher and begin a fuller stream as from a new principle of emanation So that the repentance which is the duty of our life and dispersed over all the parts and periods of it like the waters in the first Creation upon the face of the whole earth is gathered together against the day of the Lords Communion as into a bosome and congregation of penitential waters * Then you are to mourn for your sins and to resolve against them then you are to remember what vowes you have already made and broken how often you have prevaricated in your duty and by what temptations you are used to fall then you are to renew the strength of your purposes to fortifie your tenderest part and to cut off all advantages from the enemy then you must prune your Vine and make the branches bleed then the Bridegroom comes and you must trim your Lamp and adorn it with the culture of Religion that is against the day of Communion you must sum up all the parts of your repentance for the Sacrament is a summary of all the mysteries and all the duty of the whole religion of a Christian. But Baptism and the holy Eucharist do nothing for us unless we do good works and perfect them with a conjugation of holy duties bringing forth fruits meet for repentance But our iniquity must be yet a little more particular There are some actions of repentance which must be finished and made perfect before we receive the holy Communion and there are some which will be finishing all our life Concerning the first the question is which they are and what must be done concerning them Concerning the second we are to inquire how far we must have proceeded in them before we may communicate Those parts of repentance which must be finished before we approach the blessed Sacrament are these 1. We must have renounced perfectly renounced all affections to sin and firmly purpose to amend all to sin no more to lead a new life in all solid and material practises of vertue This we learn from Origen We eat the bread which is made a holy thing and which sanctifies and makes holy all them who use it with holy and salutary purposes and designs of living holily not by a solemn and pompous profession only but with a real and hearty resolution resolving not to say so and be a fool but to say so because indeed we mean so not to profess it because it is the custome of Christians and the expectation of the solemnity but because we intend really to be quit of the sin for ever Now concerning our purposes of amendment these things are to be taken careof 1. That they be made prudently attentively sincerely and with intuition upon a credible possible and designed effect For there are some that make vowes purposes I cannot call them which they believe impossible to keep and no man can wisely purpose such things of which he hath such belief but they believe themselves inevitably engaged to commit a sin and yet as inevitably engaged to say they will not The Greeks tell of a famous fool among them her name was Acco who when she saw her self in a glasse would discourse as wisely as she could to the other woman and supposed her own shadow to be one of her neighbours with whom sometimes she had great business but alwaies huge civilities only she could never agree which of them should go away first or take the upper hand Such wise resolvers are some persons they take the shadow of it for a substance and please themselves by the entertainment of the images of things and think that the outside and the words of a promise are the only thing that God requires they and their promises do not know which shall go away first the resolution quickly dies and the man presently after but the sin lives and abides there still and will do so for ever Cast about and see you have promised what you are likely to perform and do you intend it in good earnest never to consent to a sin in no circumstance and for no argument and by no temptation For he that resolves never to commit that which he knows he shall commit is like him who resolves he will never die his vain resolution sets not his death back one hour It is hypocrisie and lying to say it before God and it is folly and madness to pretend that we will do it to our selves but of this I h●ve already spoken 2. He that in his preparation to the holy Communion purposes to live a holy life must not judge of the goodnesse of his purposes by the present intendment but by the consequent performance He must not think it is well yet because many good purposes are broken by temptations disordered by supervening accidents frustrate by impotency and laid aside by the purposes
seek for Christ we shall find him in the methods of Vertue and the paths of Gods Commandments in the houses of Prayer and the offices of Religion in the persons of the poor and the retirements of an afflicted soul we shall find him in holy reading and pious meditation in our penitential sorrows and in the time of trouble in Pulpits and upon Altars in the Word and in the Sacraments If we come hither as we ought we are sure to finde our Beloved him whom our soul longeth after Sure enough Christ is here but he is not here in every manner and therefore is not to be found by every inquirer nor touched by every hand nor received by all comers nor entertained by every guest He that means to take the air must not use his fingers but his mouth and he that receives Christ must have a proper that is a spiritual instrument a purified heart consecrated lips and a hallowed mouth a tongue that speaks no evil and a hand that ministers to no injustice and to no uncleanness For a disproportionate intrument is an undecency and makes the effect impossible both in nature and morality Can a man bind a thought with chains or carry imaginations in the palm of his hand Can the beauty of the Peacocks train or the Estrich plume be delicious to the palat and the throat Does the hand intermeddle with the joys of the heart or darkness that hides the naked make him warm Does the Body live as does the Spirit or can the Body of Christ be like to common food Indeed the Sun shines upon the good and bad and the Vines give Wine to the drunkard as well as to the sober man Pirates have fair winds and a calm Sea at the same time when the just and peaceful Merchant man hath them But although the things of this world are common to good and bad yet Sacraments and spiritual joys the food of the soul and the blessing of Christ are the peculiar right of Saints and the Rites of our Religion are to be handled by the measures of Religion and the things of God by the rules of the Spirit and the Sacraments are Mysteries and to be handled by Mystic persons and to be received by Saints and therefore whoever will partake of Gods secrets must first look into his own he must pare off whatsoever is amiss and not without holiness approach to the Holiest of all Holies nor eat of this Sacrifice with a defiled head nor come to this feast without a nuptial garment nor take this remedy without a just preparative For though in the first motions of our spiritual life Christ comes alone and offers his Grace and enlivens us by his Spirit and makes us begin to live because he is good not because we are yet this great mysterious Feast and magazine of Grace and glorious mercies is for those only that are worthy for such only who by their cooperation with the Grace of God are fellow-workers with God in the laboratories of salvation The Wrastler that Clemens of Alexandria tells us of addressing himself to his contention and espying the Statue of Jupiter Pisaeus prayed aloud If all things O Jupiter are rightly prepared on my part if I have done all that I could do then do me justice and give me the Victory And this is a breviate of our case He that runneth in races saith the Apostle he that contends for mastery is temperate in all things and this at least must he be that comes to find Christ in these Mysteries he must be prepared by the rules and method of the Sanctuary there is very much to be done on his part there is an heap of duties there is a state of excellency there are preparations solemn and less solemn ordinary and extraordinary which must be premised before we can receive the mysterious blessings which are here not only consign'd but collated and promoted confirmed and perfected The holy Communion or Supper of the Lord is the most sacred mysterious and useful conjugation of secret and holy things and duties in the Religion It is not easie to be understood it is not lightly to be received It is not much opened in the writings of the New Testament but still left in its mysterious Nature It is too much untwisted and nicely handled by the writings of the Doctors and by them made more mysterious and like a Doctrine of Phylosophy made intricate by explications and difficult by the aperture and dissolution of distinctions So we sometimes espie a bright cloud formed into an irregular figure when it is observed by unskilful and phantastick travellers looks like a Centaure to some and as a Castle to others some tell that they saw an Army with Banners and it signifies War but another wiser than his fellow says it looks for all the world like a flock of Sheep and foretels Plenty and all the while it is nothing but a shining cloud by its own mobility and the activity of a wind cast into a contingent and inartificial shape So it is in this great Mystery of our Religion in which some espie strange things which God intended not and others see not what God hath plainly told some call that part of it a Mystery which ●none and others think all of it nothing but a meer ceremony and a sign some say it signifies and some say it effects some say it is a Sacrifice and others call it a Sacrament some Schools of learning make it the Instrument of Grace in the hand of God others say that it is God himself in that Instrument of Grace some call it venerable and others say as the vain men in the Prophet that the Table of the Lord is contemptible some come to it with their sins on their head and others with their sins in their mouth some come to be cured some to be quickned some to be nourished and others to be made alive some out of fear and reverence take it but seldom others out of devotion take it frequently some receive it as a means to procure great graces and blessings others as an Eucharist and an office of thanksgiving for what they have received some call it an act of obedience meerly others account it an excellent devotion and the exercising of the virtue of Religion some take it to strengthen their Faith others to beget it and yet many affirm that it does neither but supposes Faith before-hand as a disposition Faith in all its degrees according to the degree of Grace whither the Communicant is arrived Some affirm the Elements are to be blessed by prayers of the Bishop or other Minister others say it is only by the mystical words the words of institution and when it is blessed some believe it to be the natural body of Christ others to be nothing of that but the blessings of Christ his Word and his Spirit his Passion in representment and his Grace in real exhibition And all these men have something of
reason for what they pretend and yet the words of Scripture from whence they pretend are not so many as are the several pretensions My purpose is not to dispute but to persuade not to confute any one but to instruct those that need not to make a noise but to excite devotion not to enter into curious but material inquiries and to gather together into an union all those several portions of truth and differing apprehensions of mysteriousness and various methods and rules of preparation and seemingly opposed Doctrines by which even good men stand at distance and are afraid of each other For since all societies of Christians pretend to the greatest esteem of this above all the Rites or external parts and ministries of Religion it cannot be otherwise but that they will all speak honourable things of it and suppose holy things to be in it and great blessings one way or other to come by it and it is contemptible only among the prophane and the Atheistical all the innumerable differences which are in the discourses and consequent practices relating to it proceed from some common truths and universal notions and mysterious or inexplicable words and tend all to reverential thoughts and pious treatment of these Rites and holy Offices and therefore it will not be impossible to find honey or wholsome dews upon all this variety of plants and the differing opinions and several understandings of this mystery which it may be no humane understanding can comprehend will serve to excellent purposes of the Spirit if like men of differing interest they can be reconciled in one Communion at least the ends and designs of them all can be conjoyned in the design and ligatures of the same reverence and piety and devotion My purpose therefore is to discourse of the nature excellencies uses and intention of the holy Sacrament of the Lords Supper the blessings and fruits of the Sacrament all the advantages of a worthy Communion the publick and the private the personal and the Ecclesiastical that we may understand what it is what we go about and how it is to be treated I shall account also concerning all the duties of preparation ordinary and extraordinary more and less solemn of the rules and manners of deportment in the receiving the gesture and the offering the measures and instances of our duty our comport and conversation in and after it together with the cases of conscience that shall occur under these titles respectively relating to the particular matters It matters not where we begin for if I describe the excellencies of this Sacrament I find it engages us upon matters of duty and inquiries practical If I describe our duty it plainly signifies the greatness and excellency of the Mystery the very notion is practical and the practice is information we cannot discourse of the secret but by describing our duty and we cannot draw all the lines of duty but so much duty must needs open a Cabinet of Mysteries If we understand what we are about we cannot chuse but be invested with fear and reverence and if we look in with fear and reverence it cannot be but we shall understand many secrets But because the natural order of Theology is by Faith to build up good life by a rectified Understanding to regulate the Will and the Affections I shall use no other method but first discourse of the excellent Mystery and then of the duty of the Communicant direct and collateral CHAP. I. Of the Nature Excellencies Vses and Intention of the Holy Sacrament of the Lords Supper SECT I. Of the several apprehensions of men concerning it WHen our Blessed Lord was to nail the hand writing of Ordinances to his Cross he was pleased to retain two Ceremonies Baptism and the Holy Supper that Christians may first wash add then eat first be made clean and then eat of the Supper of the Lamb and it cannot be imagined but that this so signal and peculiar retention of two Ceremonies is of great purpose and remarkable vertues The matter is evident in the instance of Baptism and as the Mystery is of the foundation of Religion so the vertue of it is inserted into our Creed and we all believe one Baptism for the remission of our sins and yet the action is external the very Mystery is by a Ceremony the allusion is bodily the Element is water the minister a sinful man and the effect is produced out of the Sacrament in many persons and in many instances as well as in it and yet that it is effected also by it and with it in the conjunction with due dispositions of him that is to be baptized we are plainly taught by Christs Apostles and the symbols of the Church But concerning the other Sacrament there are more divisions and thoughts of heart for it is never expressly joyned with a word of promise and where mention is made of it in the Gospels it is named only as a duty and a Commandment and not as a grace or treasure of holy blessings we are bidden to do it but promised nothing for a reward it is commanded to us but we are not invited to obedience by consideration of any consequent blessing and when we do it so many holy things are required of us which as they are fit to be done even when we do not receive the Blessed Sacrament so they effect salvation to us by vertue of their proper and proportioned promises in the vertue of Christs death however apprehended and understood Upon this account some say that we receive nothing in the B. Eucharist but we commemorate many blessed things which we have received that it is affirmed in no Scripture that in this mystery we are to call to minde the death of Christ but because we already have it in our minde we must also have it in our hearts and publish it in our confessions and Sacramental representment and therefore it is not the memory but the commemoration of Christs death that as the anniversary sacrifices in the law were a commemoration of sins every year not a calling them to minde but a confession of their guilt and of our deserved punishment so this Sacrament is a representation of Christs death by such symbolical actions as himself graciously hath appointed but then excepting that to do so is an act of obedience it exercises no other vertue it is an act of no other grace it is the instrument of no other good it is neither vertue nor gain grace nor profit And whereas it is said to confirm our faith this also is said to be unreasonable for this being our own work cannot be the means of a Divine grace not naturally because it is not of the same kind and faith is no more the natural effect of this obedience than chastity can be the product of Christian fortitude not by Divine appointment because we find no such order no promise no intimation of any such event and although the thing
that when our affections to sin are gone when our hearts are clean then we may freely partake of the feast of the supper of the Lamb. For as in natural forms the more noble they are the more noble dispositions are required to their production so it is in the spiritual for when Christ is to be efformed in us when we are to become the Sons of God flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone we must be washed in water and purified by faith and sanctified by the spirit and cleansed by an excellent repentance we must be confirmed by a holy hope and softned by charity So God hath ordered in the excellent fabrick of humane bodies First our meat is prepared by fire then macerated by the teeth then digested in the stomach where the first separation is made of the good from the bad the wholesom juyces from the more earthy parts these being sent down to earth the other are conveyed to the Liver where the matter is separated again and the good is turned into blood and the better into spirits and thence the body is supplied with blood and the spirits repair unto the heart and head that thence they may be sent on Embassies for the ministeries of the body and for the work of understanding So it is in the dispensation of the affairs of the soul The ear which is the mouth of the soul receives all meat and the senses entertain the fuel for all passions and all interests of vertue and vice But the understanding makes the first separation dividing the clean from the unclean But when the spirit of God comes and purifies even the separate matter making that which is morally good to be spiritual and holy first cleansing us from the sensualities of flesh and blood and then from spiritual iniquities that usually debauch the soul then the holy nourishment which we receive passes into divi●e excellencies But if sensuality be in the palate and intemperance in the stomach if lust be in the liver and anger in the heart it corrupts the holy food and makes that to be a savour of death which was intended for health and holy blessi●gs But therefore when we have lived in the corrupted air of evil company and have sucked in the vile juices of coloquintida and the deadly henbane when that is within the heart which defiles the man the soul must be purged by repentance it must be washed by tears and purified by penitential sorrow For he that comes to this holy Feast with an unrepenting heart is like the flies in the Temple upon the day of Sacrifice the little insect is very busie about the flesh of the slain beasts she flies to every corner of the Temple and she tastes the flesh before the portion is laid before the God but when the nidour and the delicacy hath called such an unwelcome guest she corrupts the Sacrifice and therefore dies at the Altar or is driven away by the officious Priest So is an unworthy Communicant he comes it may be with p●ssion and an earnest zeal he hopes to be fed and he hopes to be made immortal he thinks he does a holy action and shall receive a holy blessing but what is his portion It is a glorious thing to be feasted at the Table of God glorious to him that is invited and prepared but not to him that is unprepared hateful and impenitent But it is an easie thing to say that a man must repent before he communicates so he must before he prayes before he dies before he goes a journey the whole life of a man is to be a continual repentance but if so then what particular is that which is required before we receive the holy Communion For if it be an universal duty of infinit extent of unlimited comprehension then every Christian must alwayes be doing some of the offices of repentance but then which are the peculiar parts and offices of this grace which have any special and immediate relation to this solemnity for if there be none the Sermons of repent●nce are nothing but the general doctrine of good life but of no special efficacy in our preparation The answer to this will explicate the intricacy and establish the measures of our duty in this proper relation in order to this ministery SECT II. The necessity of repentance in order to the holy Sacrament 1. THe holy Sacrament of the Lords Supper does not produce it's intended effect upon an unprepared subject He that gives his body to that which is against the spirit his spirit to the affections of the body cannot receive the body of Christ in a spiritual maner He that receives Christ must in great truth be a servant of Christ. It is not lawful saith Justin Martyr for any one to receive the holy Eucharistical bread and to drink of the sacred Calice but to him that believes and to him that lives according to Christs Commandment For as St. Paul argues of the infinite undecency of fornication because it is a making the members of Christ to become the members of an harlot upon the same account it is infinitely impossible that any such polluted persons should become the members of Christ to the intents of blessing and the spirit How can Christs body be communicated to them who are one flesh with an harlot and so it is in all other sins we cannot partake of the Lords table and the table of Devils A wicked person and a Communicant are of contrary interests of differing relations designed to divers ends fitted with other dispositions they work not by the same principles are not weighed in the same ballance nor meted by like measures and therefore they that come must be innocent or return to innocence that is they must repent or be such persons as need no repentance and St. Ambrose gives this account of the practise of the Church in this affair This is the order of this mystery which is every where observed that first by the pardon of our sins our souls be healed and the wounds cured with the medicine of repentance and then that our souls be plentifully nourished by this holy Sacrament and to this purpose he expounds the parable of the prodigal son saying that no man ought to come to this Sacrament unless he have the wedding ring and the wedding garment unless he have receiv'd the seal of the spirit and is cloathed with white garments the righteousness and justification of the Saints And to the same purpose it is that St. Cyprian complains of some in his Church who not having repented not being put under discipline by the Bishop and the Clergy yet had the Sacrament ministred to them against whom he presses the severe words of St. Paul He that eats and drinks unworthily eats and drinks damnation to himself that is he that repents not of his sins before he comes to the Holy Sacrament comes before he is prepared and therefore
not curse the tree Thou didst never love the sin for it self without the profit and therefore if thou still dost love that thou lovest the sin as much as ever neither more nor less but thou art still the same man Question III. But can it in no case be lawful to put off our restitution or reconciliation with our brother Is it not sufficient to resolve to do it afterward and in the mean time to receive the Sacrament For if the heart be peaceful and the mind be just the outward work may follow in its due time and all be well enough I answer That a man is not tied in that Mathematical instant in which he remembers his injustice to go and make restitution He is not tied to go out of the Church or to rise at midnight or to leave his meat as Tobit did to go and bury the dead unless there ●e danger that if he do not do it then it shall never be done at all For in this case he must do it whether it be convenient or inconvenient whether it be seasonable or not But every man is bound to do it as soon as he morally can and he must go about it as he does about other actions in which he is mightily concerned If a man d●d diligently examine himself and yet thought not of the obligation though that can hardly be supposed yet if it be so and he did not think of it till he were kneeling before the holy Table then it were sufficient to resolve to do it speedily after because he cannot without scandal remove and go forth but without prejudice to his brother he can stay till next day If he inquired diligently and had a mind ready to do every thing which he could learn to be his duty there was no unworthiness in him to hinder him from coming and this cannot be prejudiced by a new and sudden discovery if it be entertained with the same justice and readiness of mind But else what you can learn in these cases ought to be done at all must be done before the Communion if we can that is there must be no let in the will no imperfect resolution no indifference of affections to it If it can be done before it must For so said our blessed Saviour If at the Altar thou remembrest go and be reconciled That is if thou art not reconciled if thou art not in charity or if thou beest in thy heart still injurious and hast not a just and a righteous soul go even from before the Altar but if thou hast a real charity and hast done the duties of these graces by a moral diligence you may come and a sudden remembrance of an undiscovered obligation need not to expose thee to the reproach of a sudden departure provided I say alwaies that thou wert indeed truly reconciled and truly charitable For by our Lords express command you must at no hand offer till thou beest in charity till thou hast forgiven or till thou doest cease to hate till thou beest reconciled that 's our Saviours word for it is the inward grace which thou art tied to in all circumstances and therefore in that but to the outward something else may be necessary and fit to be considered Nothing can hinder thee from charity in any circumstances whatsoever from present or actual restitution many things may and yet thou be innocent But if thou beest an angry person or an unjust or malice be upon thy heart or injustice upon thy hand let not thy hand be upon the Altar nor thy heart upon the Sacrament If thy Brother hath ought against thee I know not why thou shouldest make hast to receive the Sacrament make hast to be reconciled There is haste of this there is no such haste of the other but that thou mayest stay till thou hast done thy duty Only remember this Every deferring of it is some degree of unwillingness to do it and therefore it is not good to trust thy own word till thou hast served thy own end After thou hast received thou wilt think that there is less need than before and therefore thou wilt make less haste For what a religious man said in the case of a dying person is also in proportion true of him who is to Communicate He that will not restore presently if he can is not to be absolved is not to be communicated although he promise restitution Because it cannot be likely that he intends it heartily that puts it off longer than the day of its extreme or the day of its positive necessity Let us not deceive our selves of all the things in the world the holy Sacrament was never intended to give countenance to sinners or palliation to a sin warranty or colour excuse or perpetuity * There is a hard expression in the Prophet They have filled the Land with violence and have returned to provoke me to anger and lo they put the branch to their nose and behold they are as mockers So the LXX read it but make no mention of puting the branch to their nose Theodotion puts them both together they hold out the branch like mockers and to this Symmachus gives yet a little more light They lifted up the branch making a noise like them that mock with their noses But this interpretation is something hard there is yet an easier and that which makes these words pertinent to our present duty and a severe reproof to them who come to this holy service of God not with the love of sons and duty of servants but with the disaffect●on of enemies The carrying of branches in the superstition of the Gentiles and the custome of the Jews was a sign of honour Thus they carried the Pine-tree before the shepherds God they gave the Cypress to Sylvanus and the Abricot-tree to Isis and th● branches of Palmes the Jews did carry before our blessed Saviour and this is it that God complains of They carried branches as if they did him honour but they held them to their noses like mockers that is they mocked him secretly when they worshipped him publickly they came with fair pretences and foul hearts their ceremony was religious all over but their lives were not answerable The difficulty came from the homonymy of the Hebrew word which signified a Bran●h and a noise and it will be as difficult to distinguish an hypocrite from a Communicant unless we really purpose to live better and do so unless we leave the next occasions to sin and do justice and judgment and cease to do evil and cause that my brother shall no longer feel the evils of my injustice and of my foolish crimes SECT IV. How far we must have proceeded in our General repentance and emendation of our lives before we Communicate TO this I answer that No man is fit to Communicate but he that is fit to die that is he must be in the state of grace and he must have trimmed his
3. And that we pray for particular strength against our failings 3. He that would communicate with fruit must so have ordered his examinations that he must not alwaies be in the same method He must not alwaies be walking with a candle in his hands and prying into corners but they must be swept and garnished and be kept clean and adorned His examinations must be made full and throughly and be productive of inferiour resolutions and must pass on to rules and exercises of caution That is 1. We must consider where we fail oftenest 2. From what principle this default comes 3. What are the best remedies 4. We must pass on to the real and vigorous use of them and when the case is thus stated and drawn into rules and resolutions of acting them we are only to take care we do so and every day examine whether we have or no. But we must not at all dwell in this relative and preparatory and ministring duty But if we find that we have reason to do so let us be sure that something is amiss we have played the hypocrites and done the work of the Lord negligently or falsly 4. If any passion be the daily exercise or temp●ation of our life let us be careful to put the greatest distress upon that and therefore against a Communion-day do something in defiance and diminution of that chastise it if it hath prevailed reenforce thy resolutions against it examine all thy aids see what hath been prosperous and pursue that point and if thou hast not at all prevailed then know all is not well for he communicates without fruit who makes no progressions in his mortifications and conquest over his passions It may be we shall be long exercised with the remains of the Canaanites for it is in the matter of Passions as Seneca said of Vices We fight against them not to conquer them intirely but that they may not ●onquer us not to kill them but to bring them under command and unless we do that we cannot be sure that we are in the state of grace and therefore cannot tell if we do or do not worthily communicate For by all the exteriour actions of our life we cannot so well tell how it is with us as by the observation of our affections and passions our wills and our desires For I can command my foot and it must obey and my hand and it cannot resist but when I bid my appetite obey or my anger be still or my will not to desire I find it very often to rebell against my word and against Gods word Therefore let us be sure to take some effective course with the appetite and place our guards upon the inward man and upon our preparation daies do some violence to our lusts and secret desires by holy resolutions and severe purposes and rules of caution and by designing a course of spiritual arts and exercises for the reducing them to reason and obedience something that may be remembred and something that will be done * But to this let this caution be added that of all things in the world we be careful of relapses into our old follies or infirmities for if things do not succeed well afterwards they were not well ordered at first 5. Upon our communion daies and daies of prep●ration let us endeavour to stir up every grace which we are to exercise in our conversation and thrust our selves forward in zeal of those graces that we begin to amend our lukewarmness and repair our sins of omission For this is a day of sacrifice and every sacrifice must be consumed by fire and therefore now is the day of improvement and the proper season for the zeal of duty and if upon the solemn day of the soul we do not take care of omissions and repair the great and little forgetfulnesses and omissions of duty and pass from the infirmities of a man to the affections of a Saint we may all our life time abide in a state of lukewarmness disimprovement and indifference To this purpose 6 Compare day with day week with week Communion with Communion time with time duty with duty and see if you can observe any advantage any ground gotten of a passion any further degree of the spirit of mortificaton any new permanent fires of devotion for by volatile sudden and transient flames we can never guess steadily But be sure never to think you are at all improved unless you observe your defects to be 1. fewer 2. or lighter or 3. at least not to be the same but of another kind and ins●ance against which you had not made particular provisions formerly but now upon this new observation and experience you must 7. Upon or against a Communion day endeavour to put your soul into that order and state of good things as if that day you were to die and consider that unless you dare die upon that day if God should call you there is but little reason you should dare to receive the Sacrament of life or the ministry of death He that communicates worthily is justified from sins and to him death can have no sting to whom the Sacrament brings life and health and therefore let every one that is to communicate place himself by meditation in the gates of death and suppose himself seated before the Tribunal of Gods Judgment and see whether he can reasonably hope that his sins are pardoned and cured and extinguished And then if you judge righteous judgement you will soon find what pinches most what makes you most afraid what was most criminal or what is least mortified and so you will learn to make provisions accordingly 8. If you find any thing yet amiss or too suspicious or remaining to evill purposes the reliques of the scattered enemy after a war resolve to use some general instrument of piety or repentance that may by being useful in all the parts of your life and conversation meet with every stragling irregularity and by perpetuity and an assiduous force clear the coast 1. Resolve to have the presence of God frequently in your thought 2. Or endeavour and resolve to bring it to pass to have so great a dread and reverence of God that you may be more ashamed and really troubled and confounded to sin in the presence of God than in the sight and observation of the best and severest man 3. Or else resolve to punish thy self with some proportionable affliction of the body or spirit for every irregularity or return of undecency in that instance in which thou sets thy self to mortifie any one special passion or temptation Or 4. Firmly to purpose in every thing which is not well not to stay a minute but to repent instantly of it severely to condemn it and to do something at the first opportunity for amends Or 5. To resolve against an instance of infirmity for some short sure and conquerable periods of time as if you be given to prating resolve to be silent
appellations before the internal and they that deny efficacy to the external work and wholly attribute the blessing and grace to the moral cooperation make too open a way for despisers to neglect the divine Institution and to lay aside or lightly esteem the Sacraments of the Church It is in the Sacraments as it is in the Word preached in which not the sound or the letters and syllables that is not the material part but the formal the sense and the signification prepare the mind of the hearer to receive the impresses of the holy spirit of God without which all preaching and all Sacraments are ineffectual so does the internal and formal part the signification and sense of the Sacrament dispose the spirit of the receiver the rather to admit and entertain the grace of the spirit of God there consigned and there exhibited and there collated but neither the outward nor the inward part does effect it neither the Sacrament nor the moral disposition only the spirit operates by the Sacrament and the Communicant receives it by his moral dispositions by the hand of faith And what have we to do to inquire into the philosophy of Sacraments these things do not work by the methods of nature But here the effect is imputed to this cause and yet can be produced without this cause because this cause is but a s●gn in the hand of God by which he tells the soul when he is willing to work Thus Baptism was the instrument and sign in the hands of God to confer the holy Spirit upon believers but the holy Ghost sometimes comes like lightning and will not stay the period of usual expectation for when Cornelius had heard St. Peter preach he received the holy Ghost and as sometimes the holy Ghost was given because they had been baptized now he and his company were to be baptized because they had received the holy Ghost and it is no good argument to say The graces of God are given to believers out of the Sacrament ergo not by or in the Sacrament but rather thus If Gods grace overflows sometimes and goes without his own instruments much more shall he give it in the use of them If God gives pardon without the Sacrament then rather also with the Sacrament For supposing the Sacraments in their design and institution to be nothing but signs and ceremonies yet they cannot hinder the work of God and therefore holinesse in the reception of them will do more than holinesse alone for God does nothing in vain the Sacraments do something in the hand of God at least they are Gods proper and accustomed times of grace they are his seasons and our opportunity when the Angel stirs the pool when the Spirit moves upon the waters then there is a ministry of healing For consider we the nature of a Sacrament in general then pass on to a particular enumeration of the blessings of this the most excellent When God appointed the bow in the clouds to be a Sacrament and the memorial of a promise he made it our comfort but his own sign I will remember my Covenant between me and the earth and the waters shall be no more a flood to d●stroy all flesh This is but a token of the Covenant and yet at the appearing of it God had thoughts of truth and mercy to mankind The bow shall be in the cloud and I will look upon it that I may remember the everlasting Covenant between me and every creature Thus when Elisha threw the wood into the waters of Jordan Sacramentum ligni the Sacrament of the wood Tertullian calls it that chip made the iron swim not by any natural or any infused power but that was the Sacrament or sign at which the Divine power then passed on to effect and emanation When Elisha talked with the King of Israel about the war with Syria he commanded him to smite upon the ground and he smote thrice and stayed This was Sacramentum victoriae the Sacrament of his future victory For the man of God was wroth with him and said Thou shouldest have smitten five or six times then thou hadst smitten Syria until thou hadst consumed it whereas now thou shalt smite Syria but thrice In which it is remarkable that though it was not that smiting that beat the Syrians but the ground yet God would effect the beating of the Syrians by the proportion of that Sacramental smiting The Sacraments are Gods signs the opportunities of grace and act●on Be baptized and wash away thy sins said Ananias to Saul and therefore it is cal●'d the laver of regeneration and of the ren●wing of the holy Gh●st that is in that Sacrament and at that corporal ablution the work of the spirit is done for although it is not that washing of it self yet God does so do it at that ablution which is but the similitude of Christs death that is the Sacrament and symbolical representation of it that to that very similitude a very glorious effect is imputed for if we have been planted together in the LIKENESSE of his death we shall be also in the LIKENESS of his Resurrection For the mystery is this by immersion in Baptism and emersion we are configured to Christs Burial and to his Resurrection that 's the outward part to which if we add the inward which is there intended and is expressed by the Apostle in the following words knowing that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serve sin that 's our spiritual death which answers to our configuration with the death of Christ in Baptism that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father even so we also should walk in n●wness of life there 's the correspondent of our configuration to the resurrection of Christ that is if we do that duty of Baptism we shall receive that grace God offers us the mercy at that time when we promise the duty and do our present portion This St. Peter calls the stipulation of a good conscience the postulate and bargain which man then makes with God who promises us pardon and immortality resurrection from the dead and life eternal if we repent toward God and have faith in the Lord Jesus and if we promise we have and will so abide The same is the case in the other most glorious Sacrament it is the same thing in neerer representation only what is begun in Baptism proceeds on to perfection in the holy Communion Baptism is the antitype of the passion of Christ and the Lords Supper 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that also represents Christs passion Baptism is the union of the members of Christ and the admission of them under one head into one body as the Apostle affirms we are all baptized into one body and so it is in the Communion the bread which we break it is the communion
our General Preparation to the worthy Reception of the Blessed Sacrament and the participation of the Mysteries IN all the Scriptures of the New Testament there are no words of particular duty relating to the Blessed Sacrament and expressing the manner of our address to the Mysteries but those few words of St. Paul Let a man examine himself and so let him eat The Apostle expresses one duty and intimates another The duty of preparation is expressed but because this is a relative duty and is not for it self but for something beyond he implies the other to be the great duty to which this preparation does but minister 1. A man must examine himself 2. And a man must eat A man must not eat of these Mysteries till he be examined for that were dangerous and may prove fatal but when a man is examined he must eat for else that examinations were to no purpose SECT I. Of Examination of our selves in order to the Holy Communion THere is no duty in Christianity that is partly solemn and partly moral that hath in it more solemnity and more morality than this one duty and in the greatest declension of Religion still men have fear when they come to receive this holy Sacrament They that have no Religion will fear when they come to die and they who have but a little will fear when they come to communicate But although men who believe this to be the greatest secret and sacrednesse of our Religion do more in their addresses to this than to any thing else yet many of them that do come consider that they are only commanded to examine themselves and that according to the ordinary methods is easily done It is nothing but asking our selves a few questions Do I believe Do I repent and am I in charity To these the answers are ready enough I do believe that Christ gave his body and blood for me as for all mankind and that Christ is mystically present in the Sacrament I have been taught so all my life and I have no reason to doubt it 2. I do also repent according to the measures I am taught I am sorry I have sinned I wish I had not done it and I promise to do so no more and this I do constantly before every Communion and before the next comes I have reason enough to renew my vows I was never so good as my word yet but now I will 3. I am also in charity with all the World and against this good time I pray to God to forgive them for I do This is the usual examination of Consciences to which we add a fasting day and on that we may say more prayers than usual and read some good discourses of the Sacrament and then we are dressed like the friends of the Bridegroom and with confidence come to the Marriage Supper of the Lamb. But this examination hath it self need to be examined Noah laboured a hundred years together in making the Ark that he and a few more might be saved and can we think in an hour to prepare our souls for the entertainment of him that made all the World This will very hardly be done For although our duty of preparation is contained in this one word of Try or Examine it being after the manner of mysteries mysteriously and secretly described yet there is great reason to believe that there is in it very much duty and therefore we search into the secret of the word and to what purposes it is used in the New-Testament 1. It signifies to try and search to enter into the depths and secrets the varieties and separations and divisibilities of things The word is taken from the tryers of Gold which is tryed by the touch-stone and in great cases is tryed by the fire And in this sense St. Paul might relate to the present condition of the Christians who were often under a fiery t●yal For the holy Communion being used by the Primitive Christians according to its intention was indeed a great consolation to the Martyrs and Confessors as appears often in St. Cyprian and this blessing and design was mystically represented to the Church in the circumstance of the institution in being done immediately before the passion they who were to pass through this fiery tryal ought to examine themselves against this solemnity in order to that last tryal and see whether or no they were vessels of sanctification and honour for none else were fit to communicate but they also that were fit to die Christ would give himself to none but to them who are ready to give themselves for him according to that saying of Christ If any man hear my voice and open the door I will come into him and sup with him and he with me To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me c. That is those who are tryed by the experiments of a great love and a great patience that out of love are willing to suffer and with patience do suffer unto the end these are the guests at my heavenly Table for labour and affrightment put a price upon the Martyrs Crown while his vertue grows in danger and like the water-plants ever grow higher than the Floods Now the use that we can make of this sense of the word is that we also are to examine what we are likely to be or what we have been in the day of persecution how we have passed through the fire Did we contract the smel of fire or the pollution of smoak or are we improved by the purification of the discerning flames Did we do our duties then and then learn to do them better or did we then only like glasse bend in all the flexures and mobilities of the flame and then mingle with the ashes incorporating with the interests and foulest pollutions of the world or were we like Gold patient of the hammer and approved by the stone of tryal like Gold in the fire did we untwist our selves from all complications and mixtures with impurer drosse certain it is that by persecution and by mony men are in all capacities and relations best examined how they are in their Religion and their Justice Sometimes God tries his friends as we try one another by the infelicities of our lives when we are unhappy in our affliction if we be not unhappy in our friend too he is a right good one and God will esteem of us so if we can say with David though thou hast smitten us into the place of Dragons yet have we not forgotten thee and my soul is alway in my hand that is I am alwayes in danger and trouble and I bear death about me yet do I not forsake thy Commandments This indeed is Gods way of Examination of us but that 's all one for we must examine our selves here in order to our duty and state of being as God will examine us hereafter in order to what we have been and
which is intended to be signified by all the exterior passions but when he hath no sign he must be the more careful he have the thing signified and then all is right again But happy is that soul which comes to these springs of salvation as the Hart to the water brooks panting and thirsty longing and passionate weary of sin and hating vanity and reaching out the heart and hands to Christ and this we are taught by the same Mystery represented under other Sacraments the waters of the spiritual Rock of which our fathers drank in the wilderness the Rock was Christ and those waters were his blood in Sacrament and with the same appetite they drank those Sacramental waters withal we are to receive these divine Mysteries Evangelical Now let us by the aids of memory and fancy consider the children of Israel in the wildernesse in a barren and dry land where no water was marching in dust and fire not wet with the dew of heaven wholly without moisture save only what dropt from their own brows the air was fire and the vermin was fire the flying serpents were of the same cognation with the firmament their sting was a flame their venome was a fever and the fever a calenture and their whole state of abode and travel was a little image of the day of judgment when the elements shall melt with fervent heat These men like Salamanders walking in fire dry with heat and scorched with thirst and made yet more thirsty by calling upon God for water suppose I say these thirsty souls hearing Moses to promise that he will smite the Rock and that a River should break forth from thence observe how presently they ran to the foot of the springing stone thrusting forth their heads and tongues to meet the water impatient of delay crying out that the water did not move like light all at once and then suppose the pleasure of their drink the unsatiableness of their desire the immensity of their appetite they took in as much as they could and they desired much more This was their Sacrament of the same Mystery and this was their manner of receiving it and this teaches us to come to the same Christ with the same desires For if that water was a type of our Sacrament or a Sacrament of the same secret blessing then that thirst is a signification of our duty that we come to receive Christ in all the ways of reception with longing appetites preferring him before all the interests in the world as birds do corn above jewels or hungry men meat before long orations For it is worth observing that there being in the Old Testament thirteen Types and Umbrages of this holy Sacrament eleven of them are of meat and drink such are * the tree of life in the midst of Paradice * the bread and wine of Melchisedeck * the fine meal that Sarah kneaded for the Angels entertainment * the Manna * and the roasted paschal Lamb * the springing Rock * and the bread of proposition to be eaten by the Priests * the barley cake in the host of Midian * Sampsons Fathers oblation upon the rock * the honey-comb that opened the eyes of Jonathan * and the bread which the Angel brought to Elijah in the strength of which he was to live fourty days all this to shew that the Sacrament is the life of the spiritual man and the food of his soul the light of his eyes and the streng●h of his heart and not only all this and very much more of this nature but to represent our duty also and the great principle of preparation Meat is the object and hunger is the address The wine is the wine of Angels but if you desire it not what should you do with it for the wine that is not to satisfie your need can do nothing but first minister to vanity and then to vice first to wantonness and then to drunkenness St. Austin expressing the affections of his Mother Monica to the Blessed Sacrament says that her soul was by the ligatures of faith united so firmly to the Sacrifice which is dispensed in the Lords Supper that a Lion or a Dragon could not drag her away from thence and it was said of St. Katherine that she went to the Sacraments as a sucking infant to his mothers breasts and this similitude St. Chrisostom presses elegantly See you not with what pretty earnestnesse and alacrity infants match their nurses breast how they thrust their lips into the flesh like the sting of a Bee Let us approach to this Table with no lesse desire and with no lesse suck the nipple of the holy Calice yet with greater desire let us suck the grace of the holy Spirit And it is reported that our Blessed Lord taught St. Mechtildis When you are to receive the holy Communion desire and wish to the praise of my Name to have all desire and all love that ever was kindled in any heart towards me and so come to me for so will I inflame and so will I accept thy love not as it is but as thou desirest it should be in thee Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden saith Christ that is they that groan under the burden of their sins and feel the load of their infirmities and desire pardon and remedy they that love the instruments of grace as they are channels of Salvation they that come to the Sacrament out of earnest desires to receive the blessings of Christ's death and of his intercession these are the welcome guests for so saith God Open thy mouth wide and I will fill it for he hath filled the hungry with good things said the holy Virgin Mother for Christ is food and refreshment to none else for the full he hath sent empty away If therefore you understand your danger and deeply resent the evil of your infirmities and sinful state if you confesse your selves miserable and have all corresponding apprehensions if ye long for remedy and would have it upon any termes if you be hungry at your very heart and would fain have food and Phys●ck health and spiritual advantages if you understand what you need and desire what you understand if these desires be as great as they are reasonable and as lasting as they are great if they be as inquisitive as they are lasting and as operative as they are inquisitive that is if they be just and reasonable pursuances of the means of grace if they carry you by fresh and active appetites to the communion and that this may be to purpose if they fix you upon such methods as will make the Communion effect that which God designed and which we need then we shall perceive the blessings and fruits of our holy desires according to those words of David as it is rendered in the vulgar Latin the Lord hath heard the desire of the poor and his ear hath hearkned to the preparation of their heart An earnest
must follow Gods example for in this alone he else will follow ours In imitating him it is certain we are innocent and if in this he follows us though we be wicked yet he is holy because revenge is his and he alone is to pay it If therefore we will forgive he will if we will not neither will he for he makes his spear as long and his angers as lasting as we do ours But this duty and the great reasonableness and necessity I shall represent in the excellent words of the Talmudists recorded also by the famous Bensirach He that revengeth shall find vengeance of the Lord and he will surely keep his sins in remembrance Forgive thy neighbour the hurt that he hath done unto thee so shall thy sins also be forgiven when thou prayest One man keepeth anger against another and doth he seek healing from the Lord He sheweth no mercy to a man that is like himself and doth he ask forgiveness for his own sins If he that is but flesh nourish hatred who will intreat for pardon of his sins The duty is plain and the reason urgent and the Commandment express and the threatning terrible and the promise excellent There is in this no more to be said but that we consider concerning the manner of reducing it to practice in order to our preparation to a worthy Communion and consider the special cases of conscience relating to this great duty 1. Therefore we are bound to forgive every man that offends us For concerning every one of our Brethren it is equally true that he is an excellent creation that he is thy brother that he is heir of the same hopes born to the same inheritance descended of the same Father nursed by the Church which is his Mother and thine that there is in him Gods Image drawn by the same hand described in the same lines that there are in him many good things for which he can be loved and many reasons in him for which he ought to be pardoned God hath made many decrees for him and the Angels minister to him and Christ died for him and his soul is very precious in the eyes of God and in Heaven it self the man whom thou hatest is very considerable and there there are great desires for his temporal and eternal happiness and why shouldest thou despise and why shouldest thou stand out against all this 2. Not only every man but every offence must be forgiven The Wise man saies That for some things there will be no returning again a blow indeed or an evil word may be pardoned but for upbraiding and pride and disclosing secrets and a treacherous wound every friend will depart and never return again But he only tells how it will be not what ought to be what it is likely to be in matter of fact not how it should be in case of conscience and he means this of societies and civil friendships but in Religion we go higher and even these also and greater than these must be pardoned unless we would prescribe a limit to Gods mercy in the remission of our sins He will pardon every sin of ours for the pardon of which we can rightly pray but yet we must pray for it and hope it upon no measures but those of our forgiveness O Jupiter said the distressed Prince hear our prayers according to our piety look upon us and as we do so give us help and there is no instance that can be considerable to the lessening or excusing of this duty We must forgive not only injuries in the matter of money but in all errours and crimes whatsoever in which any man can sin and thou canst be offended 3. Although in these things there is no difficulty yet in the intention and expressions of this duty there is some For if it be inquired what is meant by forgiving many men suppose it is nothing but saying I forgive him with all my heart and I pray God forgive him But this is but words and we must have more material significations of it then so because nothing can commute for the omission of the necessary parts of this duty It is therefore necessary that we observe these measures 1. Every man that hath received injuries be they never so great must have a mind perfectly free from all intentions of revenge in any instance whatsoever For when the question is concerning forgiving him that did the wrong every man can best answer his question by placing himself in the seat of him that did the offence and considering to what purposes and by what significations and in what degrees and to what event of things himself would fain be pardoned if he were in his case and did repent the injury and did desire pardon That 's the measure and the rule and we learn it from Chrysologus Thou art a sinful man and thou wouldst that God and man should alwaies forgive thee Do thou forgive alwaies so much so often so intirely as thou wouldest be pardoned thy self so much so often and so intirely give pardon to thy enemy and this together with the reason of it is well expressed in the Gospel of the Nazarens If thy Brother sins against thee in words and offers thee satisfaction seven times in a day receive him Simon his Disciple saith unto him seven times in a day The Lord answers yea I say unto you seventy times seven times For even amongst the Prophets also after they were annointed with the Holy Ghost there was found the word of sin that is they also offended in their tongues Against this there is no objection but what is made by the foolish discourses of young men fighters and malicious who by the evil manners of the world are taught to call revenge gallantry and the pardoning of injuries to be pusillanimity and cowardice for this Devil that dwells in tombs and and cannot be bound with chains prevailes infinitly upon this account amongst the more glorious part of mankind but as all other things are which oppose the wisdom of God is infinitely unreasonable there being nothing in the world a greater testimony of impotency and effiminacy of spirit than a desire of revenge Who are so cruel as Cowards and who so revengeful as the weakest and the most passionate women Wise Crysippus and gentle Thales and the good old man who being to drink his poyson refused to give any of it to his persecutor these men did not think revenge a pleasure or a worthy satisfaction Fot what man is so barbarous as to recover his leprosie by sucking the life blood from dying infants a good man would rather endure ten leprosies than one such remedie Such a thing is revenge it pretends to cure a wound but does it with an intolerable remedy It was the song of Cyclops to his sheep feed you upon the tender herbs I mean to feed upon the flesh and drink the blood of the Greeks this is a
There are some significations of repentance which charity never can refuse but must accept the offending person as a convert and a penitent 1. Such is open and plain confession of the fault with the circumstances of shame and dishonour for he that does so much rudeness to himself as to endure the shame of his sin rather than not to return to duty gives great testimony that he returns in earnest And this can no waies be abated unless he have done so before and that his confession is but formal and his shame is passed into shamelesness In this case we may expect some more real argument 2. Whatsoever are the great usual signs and expresses of repentance before God those also are to be accepted by us when they are done before men and though we may be deceived in these things and God cannot yet they are the best we can get and something we must rely upon And because like God we cannot discern the hearts of men yet we rightly follow his example when we do that which is the next best and expound the action to the best and most favourable sense of charity 3. An oath if it be not taken lightly is a great presumption of an innocent a sincere and a repenting soul. It is the sign of an ill mind not to trust him that swears seldom and alwaies solemnly and for ought we know justly said Amphides For a solemn sacred oath is a double hedge and it is guarded by a double fear lest I abuse my friend and lest I provoke my God and the blessed Apostle saith That an oath is the end of all strife meaning amongst persons who can cease to strive and can cease to be injurious It is so among them who have Religion and who can be fit for society For there is no man whose oath it can be fit to take but it is also fit that having sworn he should be trusted But it is seldom that our charity can be put to such extremities and in no conversation can it happen that a man shall do an injury and repent and do it again twenty times and a hundred times in the revolution of a few daies If such things could be those men are intolerable upon other accounts and though charity must refuse no man and forgiveness must alway stand at your door ready to let in all that knock yet the accidents of the world caution and prudence and innocent fears will dispose of our affairs in other channels of security and cut off the occasions of such disputes so certain is that observation of St. Heirom which I men●ioned before that we are tied to forgive oftner than our Brother can sin but then also so safe are we whose charity must be bigger than the greatest temptation and yet no temptation is like to happen but what is less than an ordinary charity Question V. Whether the injured person be bound to offer peace Or may he let it alone and worthily communicate if the offending party does not seek it To the Question whether of the parties must begin the peace I answer that both are bound For although he that did the injury is bound in conscience and justice to go to him whom he hath injured and he is not a true penitent if he does not and he must not for his part be accepted to the Communion of which I am to give account in the Chapter of repentance yet because we are now upon the title of Charity I am to add that if the Criminal does not come the offended person must offer peace he must go or send to him If others begin the quarrel do thou begin the peace said Seneca For sometimes the offender desires pardon but dares not ask it he begs it by interpretation and tacite desire consult therefore with his modesty his infirmity and his shame He is more bound to do it than thou art yet thou canst better do it than he can It is not alwaies safe for him it is never unsafe for thee It may be an extream shame to him it is ever honourable to thee it may be sometimes to his loss it is alwaies thy gain for this was the resolution of Hesiod's Riddle Half is more than the whole A dinner of herbs with peace is better than a stalled Oxe with contention and therefore upon all accounts it is for thy advantage to make the offer I add also it is thy duty I do not say that in justice thou art bound but in charity thou art and in obedience to thy Lord. If thy Brother offend thee go and tell him Go thou saies Christ. For by so doing we imitate God whom though we have so often so infinitely offended yet he thought thoughts of peace and sent to us Embassadors of peace and Ministers of reconciliation When Pompey and Marcus Crassus were to quit their Consulships Cueius Aurelius I know not upon what account ran into the Forum and cried out that Jupiter appearing to him in his dream commanded that they should be reconciled before they were discharged by the people which when the people also required Pompey stirred not but Crassus did he reached out his hand to his Collegue saying I do nothing unworthy of my self O Romans If I first offer peace to Pomp●y whom you honoured with the title of Great before he was a Man and with a Triumph before he was a Senator We cannot want better arguments of peacefulness It is no shame to thee to offer peace to thy offending Brother when thy God did so to thee who was greatly provoked by thee and could as greatly have been revenged and it is no disparagement that thou shouldest desire the reconcilement with him for whom Christ became a Sacrifice and to whom he offers as he does to thee the Communion of his body and bloud * Thou art I say bound in charity to thy Brothers soul whose repentance thou canst easily invite by thy kind offer and thou makest his return easie thou takest away his objection and temptation thou securest thy own right better and art invested in the greatest glory of mankind thou doest the work of God and the work of thy own soul thou carriest pardon and ease and mercy with thee and who would not run and strive to be first in carrying a pardon and bringing messages of peace and joyfulness Consider therefore that death divides with you every minute you quarrel in the morning and it may be you shall dye at night run quickly and be reconciled for fear you anger last longer than your life It was a pretty victory which Euclid got of his angry Brother who being highly displeased cried out Let me perish if I be not revenged But he answered And let me perish if I do no not make you kind and quickly to forget your anger That gentle answer did it and they were friends presently and for ever after It is a shame if we be out done by
reprove him not presently to hale him up to the Judge or deliver him up to the Law but to use meanes and charitable instruments not for his vexation but his conversion And he little regards his brothers soul who by suits of Law and arts of affliction provokes him to more anger or hardens him in his sin or hinders his repentance or vexes him into impatience But to return to the particular case The preventing of every evil is not a sufficient pretence though it were true to commence a suit at Law For when our blessed Saviour commands us to reprove our offending brother he speaks of such a one as is still in wrong and the state of injustice a person from whom we are not sure but we may receive another injury and yet even to this person we are commanded to be charitable in our reproof and private admonition but are not permitted to be quick and fierce in our complaints at Law For it is not dishonourable if a wise man be railed at be smitten be cheated be derided by fools and evil persons but to do any thing of this again that is inhumane and inglorious But this case is fully determined even by a heathen you must not return evil to your enemy although we be in danger to suffer a greater mischief and therefore not vex him at Law For that is the defence of beasts who cannot keep themselves harmless but by doing a greater mischief a tooth or a claw a horn or a heel these defend the beast who that he may not receive a wound defends himself so that he will kill his enemy And yet this amongst evil men is called prudent It is not by this discourse intended that we may not take securities of him against future mischiefs if we can do it without doing him a mischief but under the colour of securing our selves for the future we must not be revenged for what is past neither must our revenge in small matters be used at all as an instrument of our security If we can be secured without his affliction we must take that way to be secured but if by revenges and direct inflictions of evil or procurations of punishment we attempt it we are not charitable And this is the perfect meaning of our blessed Saviour If thine enemy take thy cloak let him take thy coat also and if he strike thee on thy right cheek tu●n thy left to him and let him strike thee again These words are not to be understood literally and precisely not so as to forbid all securities or avoiding of future evils for Christ himself did not do so when an evil servant smote him and St. Paul did not so when the High Priest commanded him to be smitten on the face they neither of them received it silently nor turned the other cheek And what if he that smote one cheek will smite no more or will smite the same How if we are not able to bear a second blow Or how if the offering the other cheek provoke thy enemy to scorn thee and tempt or provoke him to strike thee who intended no such second blow And were it not evidently better to withdraw from him that smites or to sweeten him with gentle language It is therefore certain these words are to be understood in the sense of prudence equity and charity that is when you are injured you may use all that is for your innocent defence and unmingled guards you may without all peradventure pray him to be quiet you may give him reasons and arguments to let you alone you may give good words you may give blessing for cursing that 's certainly permitted or you may run away you may flee from City to City or you may complain to him you may reprove him and expostulate the injury with him as Christ did and as did St. Paul But what is then meant by turning the other cheek Our blessed Saviour using an idiotism of his own language and a phrase used by the Prophet in the prediction of Christs meeknesse and passion he turned his che●ks to tht nippers means that we must not resist with doing violence or affliction to him that smites any innocent guard but nothing violent any thing that is harmless but nothing vexations but rather than do another evil suffer another and this evidently demonstrates that the preventing of every injury is no sufficient warrant to legitimate the bringing of our enemy to be punished at Law for what is past The sum is this No man is forbidden to lock his doors to bar his windows or to run from evil or to divert it or to reprove it But 1. In this question we speak of evil already done and against revenges not against defences for that which is done cannot be undone and therefore revenge is foolish and malicious but that which is not done may be prevented by all arts of gentleness and innocence and therefore defences are prudent and they are lawful 2. We speak here of little dangers and tolerable evils and a man must not go to Law because the Musician keeps false time with his foot it is not for a small matter that a man must disquiet his Brother he must rather suffer two than do one evil 4. But if the evil we fear be intolerable and yet c●rtain or very probable to happen we may appeal to the Law for sanctuary or defence though this appeal do procure affliction to our enemy always provided that this evil be not directly intended nor desired secretly nor delighted in when it happens and be made as little as it can prosecuted with as easie circumstances without vexatious measures but not without necessity For in all ent●rcourses with our enemy there are but two things to be considered by us how we may do him good how we may keep our selves from evil The latter the Law of Charity and collateral duties do permit or enjoyn respectively but of the former our Blessed Saviour hath made special provision For when our blessed Lord commanded us first to reprove secretly our offending Brother and then before witnesse if there be need the reason he gives is only that we may bring him to repentance that you may gain him by rescuing his soul from guiltinesse and his actions from injuriousnesse If this course will not prevail then tell it to the Church complain of him publickly bring him before the Christian Judicatories but still that he may repent for if he repents he must be thy brother still lov'd as dearly treated as friendly caressed as sweetly handled as tenderly conversed with as obligingly But if none of all this will prevail for his good then look you only to the other part of the permission that is that you be secured from his evil you have done all that you are tied to do for his repentance in this method but you have not yet done all ●hat you are tied to do in charity for still you must afford him all those
who did not communicate should be driven from the Churches And Palladius tells that when St. Macarius had by his prayers cured a poor miserable woman that was bewitched and fancied her self to be a horse he advised her Never to depart from the Church of God or to abstain from the Communion of the Sacraments of Christ. For this misfortune hath pr●vailed upon you because for these five weeks you have not communicated Now this was but a relative crime and because their custome was such which is alwaies to be understood according to their acknowledged measures viz. that only pious persons were to be meant and required in that expectation this will not conclude that of it self and abstracting from the scandal it was in all cases unlawful to recede from the mysteries at sometimes ●or sometimes a man may be called off by the necessities of his calling or the duties of charity or piety A General of an Army a Prince a Privy Counsellor a Judge a Merchant may be very fit to communicate even then when they cannot or it may be ought not to stay But if he can stay and be a good man and rightly disposed by the habits of a good life he ought to stay and communicate and so much the rather if it be in any degree scandalous to go away The reason is because if he be a good man he can no more be surprised by an unexpected Communion than by a sudden death which although it may find him in better circumstances yet can never find him Unprovided But in this case St. Austins moderate determination of the case is very useful Let every one do as he is perswaded in his mind for a man may with a laudable fear and reverence abstain if he shall be perswaded that he ought not to communicate unless besides his habitual grace he hath kindled the fires of an actual devotion and preparation special and so much the rather because he may communicate very frequently and to great purposes and degrees of a spiritual life though he omit that single opportunity in which he is surpris'd and though it be very useful for a good man to communicate often yet it is not necessary that he communicate alwaies only let every pious soul consider that it is argument of the Divine love to us that these fountains are alwaies open that the Angel frequently moves these waters and that Christ saies to every prepared heart as to the multitudes that followed him into the wilderness I will not send them away fasting lest they faint in the way And if ●hrist be ever ready offering his holy body and bloud it were very fit we should entertain him for he never comes but he brings a blessing Question III. But how often is it advisable that a good man should Communicate Once in a year or thrice or every month or every fortnigbt every sunday or every day This question hath troubled very many but to little purpose For it is all one as if it were asked How often should a healthful man eat or he that hath infirmities take Physick And if any man should say that a good man should do well to pray three times a day he said true and yet it were better to pray five times and better yet to pray seven times but if he does yet he must leave spaces for other duties But his best measures for publick and solemn prayer is the custom of the Church in which he lives and for private he can take no measures but his own needs and his own leisure and his own desires and the examples of the best and devoutest persons in the same circumstances And so it is in the frequenting the holy Communion The laws of the Church must be his least measure The custome of the Church may be his usual measure But if he be a devout person the spirit of devotion will be his certain measure and although that will consult with prudence and reasonable opportunities yet it consults with nothing else but communicates by its own heights and degrees of excellency St. Hierom advises Eustochium a noble Virgin and other religious persons to communicate twice every month some did every Sunday and this was so general a custome in the Ancient Church that the Sunday was called The day of bread as we find in St. Chrysostome and in consonancy to this the Church of England commands that the Priests resident in Collegiate or Cathedral Churches should do so and they whose work and daily imployment is to Minister to religion cannot in such circumstances pretend a reasonable excuse to the contrary But I desire these things may be observed 1. That when the Fathers make a question concerning a frequent Communion they do not dispute whether it be adviseable that good people should communicate every month or every fortnight or whether the more devout and less imploy'd may communicate every week for of this they make no question but whether every days Communion be fit to be advised that they question and I find that as they are not earnest in that so they indefinitely give answer that a frequent Communion is not to be neglected at any hand if persons be worthily prepared 2. The frequency of Communion is to be estimated by the measures of devout people in every Church respectively And although in the Apostolical Ages they who Communicated but once a fortnight were not esteemed to do it frequently yet now they who communicate every month and upon the great Festivals of the year besides and upon other solemn or contingent occasions and at marriages and at visitations of the sick may be said to communicate frequently in such Churches where the Laws enjoyn but three or four times every year as in the Church of England and the Lutheran Churches But this way of estimating the frequency of Communion is only when the causes of inquiry are for the avoiding of scandal or the preventing of scruples but else the inward hunger and thirst and the spirit of devotion married to opportunity can give the truest measures 3. They that communicate frequently if they do it worthily are charitable and spiritual persons and therefore cannot judge or undervalue others that do not For no man knows concerning others by what secret principles and imperfect propositions they are guided For although these measures we meet with in Antiquity are very reasonable yet few do know them and all of them do not rely upon them and their own customs or the private word of their own guides or their fears or the usages of the Church in which they live or some leading example or some secret impediment which ought not but is thought sufficient any of these or many other things may retard even good persons from such a frequency as may please others and that which one calls opportunity others do not but however no man ought to be prejudiced in the opinion of others For besides all this now reckoned The
for preparation to this holy Feast they do not mean that any man who on the Thursday is unfit and unworthy should be fitted to communicate on Sunday but that he should on those days try whether he be or no and pass from one degree of perfection to a greater from the less perfect to the more for let us think of it as we please there is no other preparation and it might otherwise seem a wonder to us why St. Paul who particularly speaks of it and indeed the whole New Testament should say nothing of any particular preparation to this holy ●east but only gives us caution that we do not receive it unworthily but gives us no particular rule or precept but this one that a man should examine himself and so let him eat I say this might seem very strange but that we find there is and there can be no worthy preparation to it but a life of holiness and that every one who names the Lord Jesus should depart from iniquity and therefore that against the day of Communion there is nothing peculiarly and signally required but to examine our selves to see if all be right in the whole and what is wanting towards our proportion of perfection and ornament to supply it So that the immediate preparation to the holy Communion can have in it but three parts and conjugations of duty 1. An examination of our conscience 2. An actual supply of such actions as are wanting 3. Actual devotion and the exercise of special graces by way of prayer so to adorn our present state and dispositions SECT II. Rules for Examination of our Consciences against the day of our Communion HOw we are to examine our selves concerning such states of life and conjugations of duty as are properly relative to the great and essential preparation and worthiness to communicate I have already largely consider'd Now I shall add such practical advices which may with advantage minister to the actual reception such which concern the immediate preparatory and ornamental address that we may reduce the former Doctrine to action and exercise against that time and this will serve as an appendix and for the compleating the former measures 1. In the days of your address consider the greatness of the work you go about that it is the highest mystery of the whole Religion you handle that it is no less than Christ himself in Sacrament that you take that as sure as any Christian does ever receive the Spirit of God so sure every good man receives Christ in the Sacrament that to receive Christ in Sacrament is not a diminution or lessening of the blessing it is a real communion with him to all material events of blessing and holiness that now every Communicant does an act that will contribute very much to an happy or unhappy eternity that by this act and its appendages a man may live or die for ever that a man cannot at all be supposed in any state that this thing will be indifferent to him in that state but will set him forward to some very great event that this is the greatest thing that God gives us in the world and if we do it well it is the greatest thing we can do in the world and therefore when we have considered these things in general let us examine whether we be persons in any sense fitted to such glorious communications and prepar'd by such dispositions which the greatnesse of the Mystery may in its appearance seem to require Some may perceive their disproportion at the first sight and need to examine no farther It is as if a Jew in Rome with his basket and bottle of hay should be advised to stand Candidate for the Consulship you mock him if you speak of it and therefore if you find your case like this start back and come not neer It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there 's Divinity in it and to the wicked it brings brimstone and fire 2. Next to this general consideration examine your self concerning those things in which you are or may be offensive to others For although every man is to begin at home yet that which is first to be chang'd is that which is not only evil in it self but afflictive to others that which is sin and shame that which offends God and my neighbour too that is it is criminal and it is scandalous Examine therefore thy self about injuriousness robbery detraction obloquy scolding much prating peevish conversation ungentle nature ap●ness to quarrel and the like For thus if like Zachary and Elizabeth we walk unblameably and unreprovable before all the world certain it is the Church will not reject us from the Communion and we have purchas'd a good deg●ee in the faith and shall think our condition worth preserving and worth improving 3. Examine thy self concerning all entercourses in the matter of men whether any unhandsome contract was made any fraudulent bargain any surprise or out-witting of thy weaker thy confident or unwary Brother and whatever you do place that right For money is a snare and in contracts we are of all things soonest deceived and are very often wrong and yet never think so and we do every thing before we part with this But when every thing is set right here we may better hope of other things for either they are right or will with less difficulty be made so 4. Like to this for the matter of the inquiry is that we examine our selves in the matter of our debts whether we detain them otherwise than in justice we are oblig'd Here we must examine whether we be able to pay them If so whether presently or afterwards By what we are disabled Whether we can and ought to alter the state of our expences What probability we have to pay them at all How we can secure that they shall be paid and if they cannot how much can we do towards it And what amends can we make to our Creditors And how we mean to end that entercourse For this ought to be so far at least stated that we may be sure we do no injustice and do no injury that we can avoid This is a material consideration and of great effect unto the peace of conscience and a worthy dispo●ition to the holy Communion 5. Let us examine our selves how we spend our time Is it imployed in an honest calling in worthy studies in useful business in affairs of government in something that is charitable in any thing that is useful But if we throw away great portions of it of which we can give no sober account although the Laws chastise us not and appoint no guardians to conduct our estates as it does to fools and mad men yet we are like to fall into severer hands and God will be angry But they are very unfit to entertain Christ who when they have received his Sacrament resolve to dwell in idleness and foolish divertisements and have no business but recreation At the best
do thou relieve him and never communicate but be sure to give thy alms for one part of thy offering St. Cyprian does with some vehemency upbraid some wealthy persons in his time who came to the celebration of the Lords Supper and neglected the Corban or the ministring to the Saints Remember that by mercy to the poor the sentence of dooms-day shall be declared because what we do to them we do to Christ and who would not relieve Christ who hath made himself poor to make us rich And what time is so seasonable to feed the members of Christ as that when he gives his body to feed us and that when his members are met together to confess to celebrate to remember and to be joyned to their head and to one another In short The Church alwaies hath used at that time to be liberal to her poor and that being so seasonable and blessed an opportunity and of it self also a proper act of worship and sacrifice of religion and homage of thankfulness and charity it ought not to be omitted and it can have no measure but that of your love and of your power and the other accidents of your life and your religion 12. As soon as ever you have taken the holy Elements into your mouth and stomach remember that you have taken Christ into you after a manner indeed which you do not understand but to all purposes of blessing and holiness if you have taken him at all And now consider that he who hath given you his Son with him will give you all things else therefore represent to God through Jesus Christ all your needs and the needs of your relatives signifie to him the condition of your soul complain of your infirmities pray for help against your enemies tell him of your griefs represent your fears your hopes and your desires But it is also the great sacrifice of the world which you have then assisted in and represented and now you being joyned to Christ are admitted to intercede for others even for all mankind in all necessities and in all capacities pray therefore for all for whom Christ d●ed especially for all that communicate that day for all that desire it that their prayers and yours being united to the intercession of your Lord may be holy and prevail 13. After you have given thanks and finished your private and the publick devotions go home but do not presently forget the solemnity and sink from the sublimity of devotion and mystery into a secular conversation like a falling star from brightness into dirt The Ethiopians would not spit that day they had communicated thinking they might d●shonour the Sacrament if before the consumption of the Symbols they should spit but although they meant reverence yet they express'd it ill It was better which is reported of St. Margaret a daughter of the King of Hungary that the day before she was to communicate she fasted with bread and water and after the Communion she retired her self till the evening spending the day in meditations prayers and thanksgiving and at night she eat her meal Her imployment was very well sitted to the day but for her meal it is all one when she eat it so that by eating or abstaining she did advantage to her spiritual imployment But they that as soon as the office is finished part wi●h Christ and carry their mind away to other interests have a suspicious indifferency to the things of God They have brought their Lord into the house and themselves slip out at the back-door Otherwise does the Spouse entertain her beloved Lord I found him whom my soul loveth I held him and would not let him go He that considers the advantages of prayer which every faithful soul hath upon a Communion day will not easily let them sl●p but tell all his said stories to his Lord and make all his wants known and as Jacob to the A●gel will not let him go till he hath given a blessing Upon a communion-Communion-day Christ who is the beloved of the soul is gone to rest and every secular imployment that is not necessary and part of duty and every earthly thought does waken our Beloved before he please let us take heed of that 14. But what we do by devotion and solemn religion that day we must do every day by the material practice of vertues we must verifie all our holy vows and promises we must keep our hearts curiously restrain our passions powerfully every day proceed in the mortification of our angers and desires in the love of God and of our neigh●●urs and in the patient toleration of all injuries which men offer and all the evil by which God will try us Let not drunkenness enter or evil words go forth of that mouth through which our Lord himself hath passed The Heathens used to be drunk at their Sacrifices but by this sacrifice Eucharistical it is intended we should be filled with the Spirit If we have communicated worthily we have given our selves to Christ we have given him all our liberty and our life our bodies and our souls our actions and our passions our affections and our faculties what we are and what we have and in exchange have received him and we may say with St. Paul I live but not I But Christ liveth in me So that we must live no more unto the world but unto God and having fed upon Manna let us not long to return to Aegypt to feed on Garlick For as when men have drank wine largely the mind is free and the heart at liberty from care so when we have drank ●he bloud of Christ the cup of our salvation the chains of the old man are untied and we must forget our secular conversation So St. Cyprian But the same precept is better given by Saint Paul But the love of Christ constraineth u● becuase we thus judge that he died for all that th●y which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him which died for them and rose again Therefore if any man be in Christ he is a new creature old things are past away b●hold all things are become new He that hath communicated and does not afterwards live by the measures of that daies duty hath but acted a scene of Religion but himself shall dearly pay the p●ice of the pompous and solemn hypocrisie Remember that he is sick who is not the better for the bread he eats and if thou dost not by the aids of Christ whom thou hast received subdue thy passion and thy sin thou hast eaten the bread of idleness for so saith St Hierom does every one who when he hath taken of the Sacrific● of the Lords body does not persevere in good works imitating that in deed which he hath celebrated in mystery Let us take heed for the Angels are present in these mysteries to wait upon their Lord and ours and it is a matter of great caution