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A52184 The liturgical-discourse of the holy sacrifice of the masse by omission of controversial questions; abridged and accommodated to the pious use of devout Christians in hearing masse, by A.F. the authour of the same at the instance of some devout friends. Angelus à Sancto Francisco, 1601-1678. 1675 (1675) Wing M938; ESTC R217659 145,436 447

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the Church praying for St. Peter and it has been the common custome of the Church even from the Apostles time Pope Pelagius 2. affirms it to be manifest that those are separated and divided from the whole World who through dissention do not remember the Apostolical Bishop in the Mystery that is in the Masse according to the received Custome Alcuinus gives this reason for it to wit that the Vnion of Charity and Faith of the members with the visible head of the visible Church may be presented to God Thirdly For the Bishop of the place if there be any for so St. Paul commands us to remember our Prelates Fourthly For all true believers in general and especially for those who labour for the advancement of the Catholick Faith for all Ecclesiastical Orders and Ministers and Preachers of God's Word For all who labour for the Conversion of Souls for all those who out of their liberality and charity do contribute to the maintenance of the Clergy and Mission and principally for the Conversion of our Countrey Q. Does he not pray for the King A. He may and ought to pray for the Emperours Kings Princes or States under whose Dominion he lives So St. Paul bids us to pray for all Men for Kings and all that are in preeminence yea although they be not true Members of the Church for there were no Christian Kings in St. Paul's time St. Chrysostome gives reasons in the First to follow Christ's command pray for them that persecute you Secondly That such Princes may become more favourable to Catholicks Thirdly That God would direct them in their Government that in Peace and Justice they may rule their Subjects Our Saviour commends this manner of praying by the prayer which a little before his passion he made Jesus lifting up his eyes to Heaven said Father glorifie thy Son that thy Son may glorifie thee that is that his passion might take effect for the Redemption of mankind and be made glorious before the whole World which would redound to the glory of God the Father Secondly He prayes for his Apostles and Disciples saying Holy Father keep them in my name that is conserve them in Faith Grace and Concord by thy omnipotent Power and Wisdome that they may be consenting in one Will and Spirit and Union of charity He prayes also that his Father would preserve them from all evil that is from Sin or what might draw to Sin from the Assaults and Temptations of the Devil and from all their Enemies both Spiritual and Temporal Then continuing his Prayer he said Holy Father Sanctifie them in truth that is Sanctifie and make them holy in their Dignity and calling to the Ministery of the Word according to truth and verity Thirdly He said and not only for them do I pray but also or those who by their word shall believe in me that they be all one in the Union of Faith and Charity agreeing in one Church and making one Flock or united as Members of the same Body in Christ Jesus Loe here Christ going to his passion prayes for the whole Church for the Prelates and Pastours thereof and generally for all Believers as here in imitation of Him the Priest does And it is our duty to pray for all here specified for we ought to pray for the Church which uncessantly prayes for us we ought also to pray for our Pastours who are vigilant over us duty requires it at all times and particularly in this palce our holy Mother the Church challenges it We are also to pray for our King according to that of Esdras let us offer Oblations to the God of Heaven and pray for the life of the King and of his Children or that of Baruch pray ye for the life of Nebuchadnezzar the King of Babylon and for the life of Balthasur his Son that their dayes may be as the dayes of Heaven upon the Earth and that the Lord give us strength and illuminate our eyes that we may live under the shadow of Nabuchadonozor the King of Babylon and under the shadow of Balthasar his Son and may serve them many dayes and may find grace in their sight If the Jews did so devoutly pray for the Kings under whose subjection they then lived by much more reason ought we Christians to pray for the lives of our natural King Queen and their Children or that they may have Children that their lives may be long on the Earth and that God would so inspire them that we may live securely under their shadow and protection serving them according to the duty of Loyal Subjects Thirdly We ought to pray for our Kingdom or Countrey for if the Prophet Jeremy advised the Israelites to seek the peace of the City to which God had transported them and to pray for it to our Lord giving a reason because in the peace thereof there shall be peace to you With more reason we Christians ought to pray for our native Countrey City or place of abode because the peace thereof is our peace their good is our good whence we pray for it in times of Necessity Wars Famine Sickness and such like Lastly We ought to pray for all as true Christians as they pray for us St. James advises us to pray one for another which is here to be done in a more particular manner according to the intention of the Church by vertue of the Communion of Saints St. Ambrose assures us that whilst each particular prayes for all all also pray for every one the benefit which arises thereby is that the prayer of each one acquires the suffrages of all and each one of the whole Catholick Church 3. Of the first Memento Q. What means this Memento A. The Priest having made mention of the general things or Persons and for whom he ought alwayes to pray descends now into particulars and First Prayes for those whose names he specifies Secondly For all who are present at his Masse Thirdly For those who do offer this Sacrifice with him Fourthly For their Friends Fifthly For their Intentions Q. Who be those he specifies A. Ordinarily he specifies by name or intention those for whom in particular he applyes his Masse or those to whom he has a particular Obligation as for his Parents Patrons or such like on whom he has some special dependence or from whom he receives some spiritual benefit or temporal sustenance maintenance or charity which is or ought to be observed by Missioners who for the most part live upon such Charity and Almes Q. Why does he pray for all present A The Church requires this of him as a part of his Function for it is his office to pray for the People for God ordained in the Law that the Priest at the Altar should pray for himself and for the People and therefore here the Priest prayes for all that are present at Masse It was the office of Aaron's Priests to pray for the multitude and by their prayers God was
Symbole of Charity for as Charity covers a multitude of sins and contains all the Commandements of the Law So this Chasule covers all the other Vestments and hanging in Two parts before and behind may fitly represent the Two Tables of the Law or the Two Laws the part behind the old Law and the part before the new Law The Two sides open signifie Christian liberty or the open execution of the Law St. German and others commonly do say that this Chasule represents unto us the Purple Garment which the Souldiers did put on Christ the Priest therefore in Imitation of Christ puts on this Garment which for the most part on the back hath a Cross and before the form of a Pillar as if the Priest were between the Pillar and the Cross for the Pillar before represents the Pillar whereto Christ was bound and Scourged and the Cross behind represents our Saviour carrying the Cross and that very properly that the People beholding it may have the Cross and Passion before their eyes and continue in the contemplation thereof I will conclude with the Animadversion which Bishop Ivo gives saying These Vestments are not vertues but marks or signs of vertues whereby the users or beholders are admonished as by written Books what they ought to desire and what to shun and to whom they ought to direct their Actions Pope Innocent will give another Let the Priest attend diligently that he bears not the sign without what is signified and that he carry not the Vestment without vertue lest he be like to a Sepulcher outwardly whitened and inwardly full of uncleaness 3. Of Priest's Function Q. What do you mean by Priests A. I will not stand about the word Priest which comes from the word Presbyter But his office according to the custome of the Church is principally to offer Sacrifice as all Ages and Laws do declare for as in the Law of Nature and in the written Law their duty was to offer Sacrifice for themselves and others So in the new Law Priests had charge to offer the Sacrifice of the Masse for as the Altar and Sacrifice are correlatives so Sacrifice and Priest who in his Ordination is Consecrated by this form Receive power of offering Sacrifice in the Church for the Living and Dead St. Clement in his Constitutions puts this form O Almighty God give unto him by Christ the participation of the Holy Ghost that he may have power to remit sins according to thy command and loose all bonds according to the power which thou hast given to the Apostles and of pleasing thee in meekness and purity of heart by alwayes offering to thee without spot or stain the pure and unbloody Sacrifice which by Christ thou hast established as the Mystery of the New Testament The Canons of the Apostles suppose it to be the office of Priests as also the First General Council of Nice Can. 18. So most of the Councels and Fathers Q. Are Priests to be Honoured A. For many reasons they are but principally for Four to wit their Dignity Vtility Mediation and Power First for their Dignity for they are God's Vicars on Earth to feed cure and keep his People whence St. Augustine saith There is no greater under Heaven than God's Priests Consecrated to deliver the Heavenly Sacraments and humble St. Francis tells us that we ought to honour and reverence God's Priests who are higher and worthyer than all Men and he would sooner give reverence to a Priest than to an Angel St. Athanasius relates That the great Abbot Anthony as often as he met with a Priest would fall on his knees and would not rise from the ground until he had kissed his hand and obtained his Benediction Secondly For Vtility for by Priests the faithful are received into the Church and by their Function many spiritual graces are communicated unto them besides the benefits they receive by the Priests Preaching Instruction and Ministration of the Sacraments the Holy Scripture bids us to honour the Physitian for our necessity for the Highest hath created him how much more ought we to honour Priests who are Spiritual Physitians of our Souls for as they by their Office do make us Members of the Church so they cure us of all the Diseases of our Souls and preserve our spiritual lives and bring us to Eternal Life Thirdly For their Mediation for they are Mediatours between us and God for it is his charge to pray for the People and he obtains blessings for them Num. 6. Our Lord speaking to Moises and Aaron of Priests said They shall invocate my Name upon the Children of Israel and I the Lord will bless them The wise Man therefore advises us saying In all thy Soul fear our Lord and Sanctifie his Priests with all thy strength love him that made thee and forsake not his Ministers honour God with all thy Soul and honour the Priests and purge thy self with the arms of Grace to wit the grace that God communicates unto us by the Ministery of the Priest Lastly In consideration of the power which God hath given to them especially in Remission of sins and Consecrating of the Holy Eucharist for brevity sake I will cite One or Two of the Holy Fathers and so conclude for the first Let us hear the words of St. Chrysostome To those who live on Earth and are Conversant therein it is committed to dispose of those things which are in Heaven To them it is given to have that power which our Lord would not give to Angels nor Arch-Angels for it was not said to them whatsoever thou shalt bind upon Earth it shall be bound in Heaven Indeed the Princes on Earth have also power of binding but the bodies only but the bonds which I speak of in Priests concerns the Soul and reaches even to the Heavens in so much that what the Priest doth beneath the self-same God ratifies and our Lord confirms the sentence of his Servants what therefore other thing can you say but that all power of Celestial things is granted to them by God for he sayes whose sins ye retain are retained what power can be greater than this The Father gave all power to the Son and I see this power given to Priests by God the Son For the other let us hear what St. Augustine sayes At this so honourable a priviledge Heaven is amazed the Earth admires Man is terrified Hell dreads the Devils tremble and the Angels worship St. Bernard admires it saying O excellent and honourable power of Priests to which nothing in Heaven nothing on Earth can be compared in fine St. Francis gives us an Admonition saying We Catholicks ought to Worship and Reverence Priests for their Office and Administration of the most Holy Body and Blood of Christ which they Consecrate and receive and Administer to others The end of the First Part. The Second Part Containing a Brief Explication of the Masse SECT I. Of the First Part of the Masse from the beginning to
joyn together that this may be done meetly and justly to receive the Eucharist And doest thou wonder that the people speak with the Priest when they sound out these Holy Hymns in common consent with the Cherubins and supernatural powers Finally St. Augustine thus explicates it This follows that for this so great a good of raised hearts we should not attribute the glory to our selves as of our own Forces but give thanks to our Lord for of this we are forthwith admonished because it is meet and just Which is the answer we are then to give to the Priest Dignum justum est It is meet and just meet because he is our Lord just because we are his people meet and just together that we his Servants together with the Priest give thanks to God from whom we have received all things Meet in respect of his manifold benefits Just in respect of our obliged gratitude for that we are partakers of the Treasures of his mercy in this holy Sacrifice I wish that each one for the comfort of their Souls would consider these words and learn them either in Latin or English that with heart and mouth they might answer to the Priest for if they did I am confident great Comfort and Devotion would arise thereby The words are short but full of Energie and Vertue 7. Of the Preface Q. What say you of the Preface A. Those who understand Latin may do well to attend to the Preface which savours of much Piety and yields abundant matter of Devotion for those who are ignorant thereof I will draw the most considerable motives for their Devotion and for this end I shall divide it into Five Considerations The First Consideration is that the Priest confirms the answer which we make concerning our giving thanks to God telling us verily it is Meet and Just Right and wholesome to do so Meet for the benefits here propounded and Just for God made Man by this Eucharist here communicates his goodness and mercy Right for its weight and merit wholesome as the cause of our Salvation or Meet because he is good Just because he is beneficient Right because he is merciful wholesome because he is our Souls Medicine Again Meet because out of his mercy and pleasure he has created us Just because out of pure goodness he has Redeemed us Right because he has freely and gratis justified us Wholesome because he has predestinated us to glory and he invites us alwayes to praise God by declaring that he is our Holy Lord Omnipotent Father and Eternal God for all Sanctity comes from him and by his power alone this Sacrifice was instituted whose fruit is Eternity and then tells the means to do it effectually by our Lord Jesus Christ The Second Consideration is that the Angels and all the whole Court of Heaven do adore and with mutual concord and consent by inflamed layes of Charity do celebrate God's praise and glory this the Church propounds unto us for imitation for if these Heavenly Spirits do continually praise God because they are alwayes in his presence The Church insinuates thereby the great Reverence Adoration and Honour we ought to give to our God in the Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist which if we do all these supernal Spirits will help us in this action that as they perpetually rejoyce in God by inflaming Love so we ought to rejoyce and exult with ardent love of him who has manifested his infinite love to us in this Holy Sacrament Thirdly We may consider that the Church Militant desires to joyn with the Church Triumphant to make one Quire and the faithful people present knowing their own frailty and indignity make humble supplication that God would give them Grace to make them worthy to make a part with the Heavenly Quire in this holy Sacrifice for as Florus sayes The Holy Church is to be associated to the Quires of Angels and with the Angels persist in the praises of God for ever and ever And now in this holy Sacrifice as St. Chrysostome teaches The Angels are ready to joyn with us at that time sayes he The Angels accompany the Priest and the whole Orders of Celestial powers cry out the whole place near the Altar in his honour who is there immolated is full of Angelical Quires Fourthly We may devoutly consider how the Church here specifies the Song or Canticle which the Angels continually sing in Heaven declared by the Prophet Isay and St. John Evangelist by the Greeks called Teisagion a thrice holy Canticle that is Holy holy holy Lord God of Hosts all the Earth is full of thy glory St. Ambrose affirms that we cannot give to God a more precious Title or more sutable to his Glory than to call him Holy for it is to say in one word all the substantial and incomprehensible perfections of his Deity and by this term holy in this place we understand God to be the Abiss of Sanctity from whence Angels and Men participate all their Sanctity as the Sun beams receive light from the Sun As therefore the Seraphins and Angels do thrice repeat this Holy so ought we in this place for as St. Damascene sayes The Deity is thrice declared Holy and Glorified when Sanctus or Holy is said three times whence Procopius tells us that the Seraphins do not only once sing the praises of God but reiterate them often yea infinite times For by the number of three we may understand a multitude so that by saying that they sing holy three times we may take it all times for this is their continual song whereto we hope to add our parts with them in Heaven as they joyn with us in this holy Sacrifice wherefore it is added Lord God of Sabaoth which is one of the names the Israelites did give to God and is not Translated in the Latin Church for that the word Sabaoth is an exceeding expression in any other Language but by many it is interpreted Lord God of Hosts or Armies which is fitly said here for in these words both Angels and Men do make Homage to their God acknowledging him for their Lord with this Canticle wherein the Host or Army of the Celestial Spirits and the Host or Army of Christ's Church at this time made one makeing an Army of a Camp set in array do joyntly and in due order Praise Magnifie and adore God whence consequently it is said all the Earth is full of his Glory the Heavens are full of it already now it is fitting that the Earth also should be full of the same all Men on Earth ought to sing his Glory even as the Angels do in Heaven The Fifth consideration may be of the Hymn which St. Mathew relates when the multitude that went before and followed cryed saying Hosanna to the Son of David blessed is he that comes in the name of our Lord Hosanna in the Highest which are the same words the Priest sayes here now since Heaven and Earth are to be
full of Gods Glory it is convenient that both Angels and Men should sing the praises of God as therefore in conjunction with the Angels we did sing Holy holy holy so in this Hymn we invite them to assist us or rather following their example we sing another Hymn or Canticle of praise Hosanna which signifies Triumph and has a certain kind of exultation and joy Blessed or praised be he that comes in the name of our Lord Blessed be he who by his infinite goodness came into the World to Redeem us by his passion in which sense the Priest signs himself with the sign of the Cross praised and blessed be he who comes to feed us in this holy Sacrament and Blessed be he who out of his infinite love is coming to us in this holy Sacrifice Hosanna all praise honour and glory be to God not only amongst us on Earth but also in the highest Heaven amongst the Celestial Spirits or in the highest manner we can give it Moved by all these Titles and Reasons let us bless and praise our Lord with Thanksgiving imitating the Prophet David who said I will bless our Lord at all times his praises are alwayes in my mouth Secondly Let us devoutly joyn with the Angels and all the Celestial Spirits in praising and adoring our God but then we ought to take good heed lest any thing be dissonant on our parts for if the strings of the heart be out of Tune or not sutable to them our voice will also be untunable one jar spoils the whole Consort we may also reflect that as David sayes we are here to sing to our Lord in the sight of Angels and that not only in their sight but we are to unite our hearts and voyces with them and that in the presence of God and withall we take their own words for as St. Gregory sayes We now praise God on Earth with the same voices or words wherewith the Holy Angels do praise him in Heaven not by pride of presumption but by humble Confession Thirdly Hearing the Seraphical and Cherubical Hymn Holy holy holy we ought to raise our minds to praise the blessed Trinity and with all Reverence adore and tremble before so great a Majesty Fourthly We may reflect on the Jews and their Children who praised our Lord as he was coming to Hierusalem where afterward he suffered his passion and Death And think with our selves that with greater reason we ought to rejoyce and praise our Saviour who now comes to apply unto us his passion as completed and here in the Masse presented unto us The Jews strew their Garments in the ways and cut boughs from the Trees and strew them in the way and shall not we with all submissive Reverence expect and attend the coming of our Saviour though in an invisible manner shall we not cast our Vestments that is our Bodies with all external Reverence possible and above all carry the boughs and branches of interiour Devotion and Piety that in true faith lively hope and inflamed charity in Tranquillity of Spirit we may be prepared for the coming of our Lord or to meet our God coming unto us Q. But why is there a litte Bell rung at this time A. It is and has been a custome among Catholicks to ring a little Bell and in Catholick Countryes to ring out the great Bell when the Priest sayes Sanctus or to make some other sign as by Mallets or Wooden Hammers as on Good-Fryday or by cryes or by singing Alleluja whereof Baronius makes mention to give warning to the faithful of this Solemn action to the end that in a special manner they may raise their hearts to more fervent Devotion and Reverence We have a figure of this in the Law where God ordained little Bells in the Hem of the Priest's Tunick to the end as the Text sayes That the Sound may be heard when he goes in and comes out of the Sanctuary in the sight of our Lord which was to move both Priest and People to a due Reverence to the Priest's Function and to an humble Adoration of Gods Majesty in that Holy place The Church does use here these little Bells for the same ends which here in England we call Sanctus Bel. SECT III. Of the Third part of the Masse which is from the Preface unto the Pater Noster 1. Of the Canon Q. WHat means the Canon A. Canon is a Greek word properly signifying a Rule or Order to be observed in any thing we are to do applyed by St. Gregory to this part of the Masse because it is constantly observed in all Masses according to the Churches Order whence St. Ambrose calls it the Ecclesiastical Rule and Optatus a Law or Ordinance established by the Church In the Missal it is called Action which name comes from St. Denis and is so called by way of Excellency for it contains the Consecration and Conversion of Bread and Wine into the Body and Blood of our Saviour and for the same reason it is called Sacrifice for in it the Sacrifice of the Masse is principally accomplished St. Basil calls it Secretum a secret or private mystery belonging only to the Priest and St. Irenaeus sayes that it is called Canon because the Priest therein follows the prescript and Rule of Christ in the Consecration and performs his Sacrifice and Sacrament in memory of Christs passion which in a more particular manner is therein presented and expressed in signs and actions It is true that before the Consecration there are other prayers and dispositions or preparations thereto and what follows are but applications of it to our comfort and consolation ordained for the better representation of the passion as in each particular shall be declared And here we may note that although the Masse be principally ordained as a representation of Christ's passion in whose memory it was first instituted yet there is in the Canon a Renovation of Christ's last Supper whence Durand notes with Pope Innocent 3. That in the Canon the Words signifie one thing and the Signs or Ceremonies another for the words principally belong to the Consecration of the Eucharist but the signs principally appertain to the remembrance of Christ's passion The words are in order to the Conversion of the Bread and Wine but the signs here before the Elevation in regard of what happened before his Crucifying and after in regard of what he suffered on the Cross which Pope Alexander the 1. confirms saying In the Sacramental Oblations which are offered amidst the Solemnity of the Masse to our Lord our Lords passion is to be mingled that the passion of him whose body and blood is made may be Celebrated or Remembered Now because this part of the Masse which solely belongs to the Priest is said all in silence I shall content my self to give a general notion of what the Priest is then doing that Christians may apply their Devotion to what occurs in the Canon and explicate the Signs or
grounds thereof Now as there is one Lord one Faith and one Baptism so there is one Church and one Sacrifice and this one Church in as much as may be speaks the same Tongue that as our hearts are united in the same Faith so our devotions to the same Sacrifice ought to agree in those Tongues which are not subject to alterations and changes as vulgar Languages are wherefore the Church hath thought fit to have this divine Sacrifice to be celebrated in Latin which uncorruptedly and without alteration passes throughout the Western parts as common to all the Nations thereof So that in diversity of Countreys still there remains the same form of Masse equally intelligible to all and thereby any Catholick in all Countreys finds the same Sacrifice and understands it as well in one Countrey as in another and certainly there is no exteriour thing that so much agrees to the Unity of the Church and Conformity to the divine Service and the Priests in all Countreys wheresoever they go may serve God in this Sacrifice agreeably to those of every place where he comes Moreover we must know that the Masse is a Sacrifice as hath been declared before and none are to offer this Sacrifice but Priests it is their Office and Function only to celebrate Masse for the faithful the Church even from the Apostles times has ordained Six other Orders for the Priest's assistance therein and none by Office is to intervene therein all Seculars in the primitive times were excluded from the Quire and have nothing to do therein but silently to offer up their prayers votes affections and desires with the Priest in the same manner as in the old Law The High Priest only did enter into the Sancta Sanctorum and none but Priests and Levites did enter into the places for Sacrifice which St. Luke Chap. 1. testifies saying That when Zacharias entred the Temple of our Lord all the multitude of the People was praying without at the hour of Incense loe here the People were praying without which is described by the wise man Eccl. 50. where having declared the Office of the Priests and their Oblation he sayes Then all the People together made hast and fel on their faces upon the Earth to adore our Lord their God and to make prayers to God omnipotent the Highest It was then the Office of Priests to offer Sacrifice and the duty of the People was to pray and adore their God it sufficed them to see the smoak of the Incense whereby they knew that the Priests was offering Sacrifice for them and with prostrations and genuflections they joyned their prayers with the Priest believing by a lively Faith and firm Hope that the Sacrifice was acceptable to God and profitable to themselves All which did prefigurate the holy Sacrifice of the Altar wherein Christians regard not so much the words as the action nor the voice but the vow Here all are or ought to be employed in fervent affections and contemplation of the divine Mysteries and by their vows of heart or in their prayers unite themselves to the Priest in his actions of the Sacrifice In fine the People come not for Instruction they come not to Sacrifice which is not their Office they come not precisely to pray for that they may do at home or in the Church at all times but they come here to be partakers of the Priest's prayers and oblation of the Sacrifice it nothing imports them whether it be done in this or that Language no more then it imports to a Countreyman to have his Petition offered to his Prince in this or that Language the only thing he requires is the grant of his Petition and I believe he is as earnest for his Suit as if it were done in his own Language It suffices then for the People that they believe the Priest according to his Function and exteriour actions in offering the Sacrifice for them and endeavour to concur with him as I said before besides the understanding of the words avails little unless the affection of the mind second it the words serve but to move the senses and by them the understandieg if then the understanding be well informed and instructed as all good Christians are or ought to be in the knowledge of the Mysteries nothing more is required but a correspondency of the will to that Dictamen Q. Are there not certain means to help the attention at Masse A. Love or fear would easily produce motives of attention a man that hath a Suit in any Court of Justice is very attentive although his cause be pleaded in another Language for during his Plea he is anxious of the success sometimes fears his cause may fall sometimes hopes he may obtain what he desires now regards his Advocate then beholds the Judges if by any sign he may note their Inclinations in fine he thinks of nothing else during the whole time In like manner the devout Soul who hath made his Intentions to hear Masse for something which he desires is attentive to what the Priest offers for him and with correspondent affections does follow him in the whole course of the Masse If any one will trust to experience let him go to Catholick Assemblies and he shall plainly see that Pater Noster did build Churches and our Father pull'd them down So the Devotion of the Catholick People in their Latin Masse will in all respects surpass that of those who frequent the new invented vulgar Service and that with a great deal of reason for that they serve God in a more noble way to wit in a Sacrifice Instituted by Christ Jesus Moreover the Church ordains many Ceremonies in the whole course of the Masse to move and continue our Attention as in the second part shall be more particularly declared in general She invites us in the beginning with a mutual confession and frequently with an Oremus let us pray in like manner with a Dominus vobiscum our Lord be with you it is convenient that you attend to him Finally all along the Masse by the Ceremonies she puts us in mind of Christ in his Nativity last Supper Passion Resurrection and Ascension which if we observe it will be hard to find any other thoughts SECT III. Of Ceremonies in General and Particular 1. Of Ceremonies in General Q. WHat is that you call Ceremonies A. By Ceremonies nothing else is understood but external Religious signs or actions testifying or moving the internal Worship Service or Duty which we give or ought to give to God and imports no more then the manner of God's exteriour Worship or what may conduce thereto either by external actions signs sutable object and motives which serve for encrease of Devotion Reverence and respect in our minds to God and to the things which belong to him which ought to be accompanied with affection of the mind and therefore are called signs in as much as they signifie or manifest that which is Holy in order to
kind of sins before expressed many do say that this number of Three carries with it a certain kind of Universality So this Triple Repetition imports a confession of a multitude of Sins as if he should say I have sinned innumerable wayes each time he knocks his breast imitating therein the Publican who as the Sacred Text sayes stood afar off and would not so much as lift up his eyes towards Heaven but knocked his breast saying Lord be merciful to me a sinner All which is to be seen in the Priest's action for as is said before he stands afar off from the Altar and in saying his Confiteor he stands bowing his head towards the Earth as not daring to lift up his eyes to Heaven and knocks his breast esteeming as Theodoret sayes of the Publican himself altogether unworthy to behold the Heavens who had placed his affections on the Earth and Earthly things and in holding his hands joyned before his breast and saying Mea culpa my fault my fault my most grievous fault he tacitly cryes out our Lord be merciful to me a Sinner Q. What means the knocking of the Breast A. It hath been and is the custome of all God's Servants nay it seems to be a natural propension to express the grief or sorrow of the mind by striking the breast which St. Augustine declares what is it sayes he to knock or strike the breast but to declare what lyes hid in the breast and by an evident or manifest stroke to chastise the hidden Sin Or as he sayes in another place to chastise our flesh because we have offended God and again he sayes The striking of the breast is the contrition of the heart that is it is a sign or manifestation of the hearts contrition St. Cyprian sayes We strike our breast as declaring the sins enclosed inwardly in our hearts St. Hierome as if we would expel our evil thoughts from the heart Pope Nicholas 1. In striking the breast we signifie that we strike our selves before God strikes us or that we confess our selves to be worthy of stripes or punishment St. Chrysostome we take revenge of our selves to pacifie our Judge In fine we strike or knock our breast as if we would do it to our heart or will which has been the Original cause of our sins or as if we would open our hearts to give vent to our sorrow and grief for that we have offended so good a God and we do it thrice in correspondence to the Triple kind of sin wherein we have offended God in thought word and deed or to express the multitude of our sins What is said in Confession may proportionably be applyed to the Hearers who I suppose have learnt the Confiteor either in Latin or in English that besides the use of it in other occasions they may joyn themselves with the Priest in this Confession for he beggs it of them in acknowledging his sin before them and desiring them to pray for him sure it is as necessary for them they stand in as much need at least as he and I know not how they can be better employed in order to a preparation to the more beneficial hearing of Masse 5. Of what follows in the Masse until the Priest goes to the Altar Q. What follows the Confiteor A. The Clark or he that serves at Masse prayes for the Priest that God would shew his mercy to him pardon his sins to the end that he may worthily celebrate the Holy Sacrifice and by it come to life everlasting whose prayers are as we may piously believe accompanied with the intercession of the Angels and Saints whose help he has also invocated It is a pious action in the standers by to add their Votes which the Priest also requires to all which the Priest sayes Amen When all as the Priest supposes have said the Confiteor the Priest makes the same prayer for them who saying Amen do attend for the general Absolution which the Priest gives saying Indulgentiam Absolutionem c. in saying whereof the Priest makes the sign of the Cross on himself thereby tacitly professes that he gives this Absolution and Remission by vertue of Christ's Cross and Passion which Communicated by the Church the Assistants may also with Devotion sign themselves with the same sign and devoutly say Amen Q. What Absolution is this here given A. I said before that the Confession here made was not properly Sacramental as in the Sacrament of Pennance in like manner this Absolution is no other but Sacerdotal and has its effects by way of deprecation or prayer which is more available because it is done by a Priest of whom St. Chrysostome sayes His Throne is placed in Heaven and he has Authority to pronounce and declare Celestial things and whom as St. Paul teaches we are to esteem as the Ministers of Christ and the dispensers of the Mysteries of God and therefore all present ought with Humility bow their heads to receive it signing themselves with the sign of the Cross as before is said Q. What follows the Absolution A. The Priest after this makes some Jaculatory prayers reciting some verses of the Psalms expressing his confidence in God's mercy and goodness by which he presumes to go to the Altar and that his prayer will be heard which he assures us by Dominus vobiscum our Lord is with you and therefore let us proceed to the performance of this Sacrifice for having before declared that God is turned unto us he beggs his mercy in this his action and makes his humble petition that his prayer which he is to make therein may be heard It is very convenient that those who understand Latin should answer to the Priest with correspondent affections those who do not may consider God's goodness in giving such power to Priests and with Devotion expect the grace and benefit of the Absolution and seriously attending to the Admonition that the Priest gives them in saying Dominus vobiscum our Lord is with you I am now going to the Altar to offer Sacrifice for you and our Lord will be with us in correspondence thereto they may devoutly say Et cum spiritu tuo and with thy spirit which because it occurs frequently in the Masse every one ought to learn that they may shew their minds to be attentive to what the Priest does all along in this Sacrifice After that the Priest sayes Oremus let us pray as if he should say since our Lord is with us and that he hath shewen his mercy and goodness in pardoning our sins let us now settle our hearts to prayer with confidence believing that whatsoever we shall ask by vertue of this Sacrifice we shall obtain Now because this Dominus vobiscum and Oremus do frequently occur in the Masse I shall speak of them in the next Paragraph 6. Of the Dominus vobiscum and Oremus Q. Why is Dominus vobiscum so often used in the Masse A. The Church uses this