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A34049 A companion to the altar, or, An help to the worthy receiving of the Lords Supper by discourses and meditations upon the whole communion office to which is added an essay upon the offices of baptism and confirmation / by Tho. Comber ... Comber, Thomas, 1645-1699. 1675 (1675) Wing C5450; ESTC R6280 319,234 511

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there is no impediment we may then very justly receive them into our Communion and sign them with the cognizance of Christs Religion as we do in this present Form 1. By Words 2. By a Sign concluding Thirdly with a practical Application 1. The Words are a solemn Proclamation made by a Sacred Herald according to the Custom in humane Creations Investitures and Admissions to Honourable Orders declaring the party is now and ought to be reputed a Christian and this ought to be spoken with a loud voice that all the Congregation may rejoice in beholding one more listed under Jesus Christ Now if we seek any Precedent for this in Scripture methinks it may very well be deduced from that solemn Proclamation made by God the Father immediately after the Baptism of Jesus Christ Math. 3.17 This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased As he by the Master so we by the Servant are declared to belong to God He as his own only-begotten Son we as adopted by him into the Family of our Heavenly Father Again St. Paul speaking of the Ephesians who were baptized which is meant by their being raised up together in Christ c Ephes 3.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophylac in loc he declareth that whereas they were before Aliens from the Commonwealth of Israel and Strangers to the Covenant of Promise ver 12. they were now become fellow Citizens with the Saints and of the Houshold of God ver 19. Our Lord Jesus hath rescued this poor Soul from the Bondage of Satan he hath found this strange and straying Sheep and hath sent it home wherefore let us joyfully receive it The Church on Earth is compared to the Moon daily diminishing and encreasing we see many of our Brethren do die and are parted from us but God hath now filled the vacant places and by these continual accessions the visible Church shall be continued to the end of the World Our Saviour himself is the great Shepheard but under him the Pastors of the flock of Christ are to admit the Sheep into his Fold and accordingly the Priest here saith We receive c. and withal sets the mark of Christ upon the new Baptized Person declaring by Actions as well as Words the self-same thing Even that this Person is of the Religion of Jesus Christ and one of the Society that do profess the same But because this Signing with the sign of the Cross hath been scrupled by some and reviled by others as abominable superstition c. I will endeavour somewhat more fully to vindicate the Church in this particular and to give satisfaction to those whose prejudice hath not made them inflexible 2. The Sign which is Ordered to be annexed to the foregoing Words is the Sign of the Cross which seems designed from the beginning to some great mystery for not to mention that it is the figure of Mans Body when the Arms are Extended we find that God did chuse it to be the mark which should be set upon those who should be saved from a common Destruction Ezek. 9. ver 4. And though the Rabbins the sworn Enemies of the Cross do expound the Hebrew word Tau there to signifie a mark I see no reason why the Christians should follow them having Translators d Omnem autem super quem videris Thau non occidetur Vulg. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aquil. Theod. ita Explicat Tertul. in Marcion l. 3. c. 22. Origen Homil. de Epiphan Hieronym in loc c. and the most learned Fathers against them particularly St. Jerome affirming that it signifies the letter Thau which in the old Samaritan Alphabet had the form of a Cross even as Τ among the Greeks which it may be from thence was the mark of the Living and Τ was set in the Muster-roll after a Battel against the names of the living e Sixt. Senens bibliothec l. 2. Thau as θ was against the names of the slain And further it is very remarkable what is related in the Church History f Ruffin Eccl. Histor l. 11. cap. 29. Socr. l. 5. cap. 17. Sozom. l. 7. cap. 15. Niceph. l. 21. c. 16. Isidore l. 1. Orig c. 3. and observed by others g Hor. Apollo Hieroglyph cum notis Nicolai Caussini That one straight line upright and another transverse was an Eminent Hieroglyphick among the Aegyptians and signified sometimes the one upholder of all things sometimes Eternal Life which was so well known to the Worshipers of Serapis at Alexandria that when they saw this Figure of the Cross so often used by the Christians they did many of them believe by remembring the Antient signification of the Cross among them supposing it was a mysterious prediction that the Christians were the Servants of the one true God and were in the right way to Eternal Life But to come nearer when our Blessed Redeemer had expiated the Sins of the World upon the Cross the Primitive Disciples of his Religion who as Minutius Foelix affirms did not worship the Cross yet they did assume that figure as the Badge of Christianity and long before material Crosses were in use they did with their finger make this sign either in the Air or upon their Foreheads or Breasts in their rising up and lying down going out and coming in in washing eating c. as might abundantly be proved out of Tertullian St. Basil Cyril and many others but only that it is too evident to be denied wherefore we must condemn the purest Ages of the Church if we shall censure the making this sign to be idolatrous or superstitious and it may be become injurious to the Spirit of God who did work many Miracles in the first Centuries by the sign of the Cross as is apparent to all that are versed in the History of those Times All this is confessed by many who yet pretend that it was not used in Baptism although they alledge no sufficient reason why they might not have used it there as well as upon all other occasions But as to the matter of fact it seems to me very plain that the sign of the Cross was used in Baptism also for Lactantius speaking of the Converted Heathens saith They came under the Wings of Jesus and did receive his great and noble sign upon their Foreheads which like the blood on the Lintel causeth the destroying Angel to pass over h Lactant. Instit l. 4. c. 27. yea he calls a Christian one with a signed forehead And Tertullian i Mithra signat illic in frontibus milites suos Tertul. de praeser adv haer c. 40. saith that Satan not only imitated the Christians in the washing but the signing his Souldiers in the forehead which shews it to have been then a known rite of Christianity St. Basil also affirms it to be an antient tradition to sign those with the sign of the Cross who had placed their hope in Christ k Basil de Sp. S. c. 27. that is
and the compliance of our affections being not only confident of their truth because God hath revealed them but delighted with their excellency because they tend to make us holy and happy and then we shall believe them with a perswasion stronger than can be built upon the Scholastical Demonstration we shall adhere to them closely and for ever because they are amiable and lead us to God and immortality Let us not think our Faith sufficient till we so believe in Jesus as our Lord and Saviour that we are moved thereby to repent of our sins and cast our Souls on him for Pardon and then we have spiritually communicated already we have obtained the benefits and perfected the designs of this Sacrament and done that internally and nakedly by Faith which is more solemnly effected in the Mysteries themselves To which there is no better preparation than such a repetition of our Holy Faith The Paraphrase of this Creed Sect. 4. I confess with my mouth and believe with my heart in one God a pure and infinite Spirit distinguished into three Persons the first of which is God the Father declared to be Almighty as he is the Maker of Heaven and Earth Creator of the whole World and all things contained in any part thereof both visible as all bodily substances on Earth and invisible as spiritual beings and Angels in Heaven And I also believe firmly in one Lord Iesus Christ the second Person of the glorious Trinity who is not as Angels or Men the adopted but the only begotten Son of God not created in time but begotten of his Father from all Eternity before all Ages of the Coelestial or Terrestrial Worlds Of the same nature with his Father God begotten of God after a mysterious and spiritual manner as Light is kindled of Light not diminishing his Fathers substance and yet being very God of very God derived not as the Creatures for he was begotten and not made and is equal to God being of one nature and substance with the Father and of the same dignity and power for he is that Eternal Word by whom all things were made out of nothing I believe also it was this very Son of God who passing by the fallen Angels for us Men and for the effecting of our Salvation and deliverance out of the state of sin and death in which we miserably lay came down unto this Earth from Heaven and left his glory for he took our nature and was incarnate by assuming a body of flesh like ours only without sin because it was conceived by the overshadowing of the Holy Ghost in the Womb of the Virgin Mary so though he was still very God yet he took the form of a servant And was made Man living holily and working Miracles till at last he was unjustly condemned and was crucified also with intolerable torments to satisfie Gods justice for us and all Mankind who were become liable to Damnation which cruel Death he endured under Pontius Pilate the Roman President by whose unjust sentence he suffered till he was really dead and was buried and yet when he had paid the full price of our Redemption The third day after his Crucifixion by his divine power he rose again to life according to all those Prophecies and Types of him before recorded in the Scriptures After which he conversed with his Disciples fourty days and ascended in their sight into Heaven where he is restored to all his glory and sitteth at the right hand of God the Father interceeding for us And he shall come again at the end of the World with glory and Millions of Saints and Angels to judge all men according to their works both the quick then living and the dead who departed never so long since whereupon the wicked shall be condemned to endless Torments and the righteous received to immortal joy by the same Jesus whose Kingdom shall then fully begin but shall have no end but remain for ever and ever And I believe most firmly in the Holy Ghost the third person of the glorious Trinity who is also very God the Lord and giver of grace and all spiritual Life who is not made nor begotten but proceedeth from the Father and the Son yet is not less in dignity as who with the Father and the Son in all Offices of the Church together and in the same manner is worshipped and glorified being the inditer of holy Scriptures and he who spake by the Prophets in the Old Testament and by the Apostles in the New And finally I believe that the whole body of Christian people holding the right Faith do make one Catholick and Universal True and Apostolick Church in which Society I acknowledge there are great priviledges viz. One Baptis● instituted by Christ not only as a sign of but a means for the remission of all those sins which we are guilty of when we enter into this Covenant Wherefore being my self baptized I hope for pardon and grace in this life And I look for and expect that my body though after Death corrupted and turned to dust shall be restored to life in the Resurrection of the Dead at the last day and I hope then for a Portion in glory and the life Everlasting and that I shall Reign in the blissful Kingdom of the World which is to come after this is utterly dissolved Amen Lord be it unto me according to my Faith Amen § 4. The Sermon which is here to follow comes not within the Method we have proposed so that we shall only note that it was appointed by Antiquity there should be Sermons i Concil 6. Constant can 19. Concil Mogunt can 25. or Homilies k Concil Vasense can 4. an Christi 460. every Lords Day especially when the Lords Supper was Administred l Acts 20.7 Post lectionem legis prophetarum Epistolarum c. Ordinatus-alloquatur populum verbis Exhortatoriis Const Apost c. 4. Leo. 1. Serm. 2. de Pasch Aug. confes l. 3. cap. 3. and surely this is the fittest place since the Sermon is either an explication of some Article of the Creed preceeding or an exhortation to the following duty of Charity But I do earnestly wish that when there is a Communion the Minister would sute his Discourse to that occasion for to treat of another subject then although otherwise never so good will too much divert the minds of those whose careful preparation hath composed their thoughts for this Ordinance whereas if the Sermon be chiefly tending to raise them still into a higher strain of Devotion for their communicating it will be a word spoken in due season Prov. 15.23 and rarely improve their Souls then made tender by Repentance and much more apt to receive impressions from all representations of the love of Christ and the means of our Union with him Yet withal the people must now hear with extraordinary attention and receive with great affection these holy Instructions and Exhortations drawn from the Word of
thy mercy These are thy words O Christ for thou hast spoken them and they are mine because thou hast spoken them for my Salvation O sweet and amiable words in the Ears of a poor Sinner by which thou invitest an indigent starved wretch to partake of thy holy body But who am I O Lord that I should dare to come the Angels and Archangels reverence thee thy Saints and holy ones fear before thee and yet thou sayst unto me Come c. unless thou hadst said it who could have believed it to be true unless thou hadst commanded it who durst have attempted this approach T. à Kempis de imitat Chris l. 4. c. 1. The Paraphrase O ye of contrite hearts Hear with joy and wonder what comfortable words he whose love you so much long for even our Saviour Christ himself saith to all such as you that truly grieving for your sins do turn to him to find mercy Lo he pities you and most affectionately calls upon you saying Come unto me with a perswasion that I am able and desirous to help you O all ye that travel with much grief and pains for your sins and are heavy laden with the apprehensions of my anger against you for them be not discouraged for I will bear this burden my self and I will by my sufferings make your peace with my Father and so refresh you according to your hearts desire § 3. So God loved the World that he gave his only-begotten Son to the end that all that believe in him should not perish but have Everlasting Life S. John 3.16 The second Assertion in the Absolution is confirmed by this Sentence viz. that Almighty God will forgive all that with true Faith turn unto him If he were willing to grant pardon on easier terms yet a man void of Faith could not receive it It was an absurd practice in some places of old to give the Sacrament to the Dead who had been surprized by mortal sickness and prevented to receive it living but an antient Council condemned this h Placuit ut corporibus defunctorum Eucharistia non detur Dictum est enim à Domino Accipite c. Conc. 3. Carthag Can. 6. because the Dead could not as Christ commands Take and eat it And for the same reason a Man without Faith cannot receive Absolution because he is dead i Vnde mors in animâ quia non est fides unde mors in corpore quia non est anima ergo animae tuae anima fides est Aug. in Johan void of all spiritual life and power to apprehend the benefit thereof Therefore if our sins and sorrows have wrapt us in such mists that we can scarce discern the light of Gods countenance let us throughly meditate of this one Sentence and the glories of it will dispel them all For here it doth appear that he first loved us and gave the noblest testimony of the biggest affection to us for he gave not a Creature nor a Servant a Prophet nor an Angel for us but he gave up his Son his only Son to a cruel Death for the World his Enemies and liable to his justice and all this for no other end but that we and the rest of this miserable World might be freed from the Damnation which we had deserved and be advanced to that glory which we could never have expected And do we still question his willingness to save us Did he give such a price to purchase our Salvation when we were Enemies and shall we think he will cast us into those flames out of which we were so dearly rescued now when we beg his mercy Did he send his Son on purpose to preserve us and will he lose his end in so glorious a work Away ye misgiving thoughts dishonour not the incomparable goodness of God hath he not given more when he gave his own Son for all than to grant life to a few for his sake Oh do not question that Love which is sealed with such an Evidence but believe admire embrace it and be thankful The Paraphrase Dost thou fear O my Soul that God will not have mercy on thee behold he that best knew his Fathers mind affirms that So wonderfully God loved his miserable Enemies even all the Sinners in the World that he when none else could help them freely gave up not some of his noblest Servants but his only-begotten and intirely beloved Son to die for them And this he did to the end that we and such like poor Sinners even all that believe this Jesus is able and willing to save them and so trust in him might be delivered from the wrath to come for all this was done on purpose that we should not perish in endless Torments but have everlasting life in his Heavenly Kingdom Doubt not then but this design shall be accomplished in thy Salvation § 4. This is a true saying and worthy of all men to be received that Iesus Christ came into the World to save Sinners 1 Timoth. 1.15 Although there needs nothing to confirm what Jesus saith yet since he himself was pleased to take his Apostles for his Witnesses we have here brought in two of the principal of them to avouch this excellent truth viz. That there is mercy for Penitent Sinners And first the certainty thereof is averred by Saint Paul who had found the experience of it and was himself so great an instance thereof that he thinks ver 16. no sinner will ever despair that can but consider how great an offender he was and yet that he found mercy whereupon he doth with great confidence assert this as a tried and infallible Maxim and because all men have sinned he propounds it as a Truth which every man is concerned to receive as unquestionably and believe as firmly as the Cabala l Cabala fig. receptam doctrinam qui docet enim apud Judaeos tradere dicitur qui discit recipere Vid. Ham. annot in 1 Tim. 1. Drus praeterit l. 8. was amongst the Scholars of Jewish Rabbins And he urgeth this the more vigorously because we are so apt to object what such as we shall we ever partake of such a happiness Yes such as you for our Lord Jesus had no other errand into this World no other design in putting on our nature no other end in dying than to save Sinners He came not to call the Righteous Math. 9.13 but to seek and save those which were lost Chap. 18.11 and he assures us there is more joy in Heaven at the difficult and unexpected Salvation of a Sinner than at the more likely and more looked for glorification of many righteous Luke 15.7 But you say you are grievous Sinners Are not all the World so if there had been no Sinners there had needed no Saviour if Sinners cannot be saved no man did ever enter Heaven if sin be unpardonable Jesus hath died in vain Do not argue against your own felicity but be assured if you
ever since by Jews or Christians or both with the greatest solemnity See how those blinded Jews rejoice over their Paschal Lamb in the midst of all their Calamities for the deliverance of their Fathers But we have a nobler Passover for a greater deliverance Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us therefore let us keep the Feast and that upon the precious Body and Blood of the Lamb of God who was slain but is alive again and behold he lives for evermore Wherefore I will go to thy Altar with joy and tell out thy works with gladness O most mighty Saviour who hast not only died for my sins but risen again for my Justification and indeed what comfort could I have found in this memorial of thy Death if it had not been for thy Resurrection this Sacrament would have only remembred thy sufferings and renewed my sorrow to think that so excellent a Person had perished in the attempt of my deliverance but now it is become a Feast of joy because it is an assurance of thy Resurrection as well as a Commemoration of thy Passion And since thou livest sweetest Jesus we live also thy Resurrection raiseth our hearts from sad despair it gives a new life to our hopes it makes our sorrows light our labours easie our lives chearful and our death advantage because it hath lost its sting and is become the gate into immortality We can charm all our fears and troubles with this one word The Lord is risen yea the Lord is risen indeed For thou hast washed us in thy own blood and made us Kings and Priests to God to offer up at this thy Altar never-ceasing Praises Therefore with Angels c. A Meditation for the Communion on Ascension-Day § 11. I see O merciful Jesus thou art content for our sakes to stay here upon Earth when Heaven longs for thy return thou hast these fourty days denied thy self the full fruition of thy glories to dispel the sorrow and confirm the Faith of thy Disciples and yet at last their tears and embraces shew how loth they are to depart from thee But behold the day of thy Triumph is come and the holy Myriads are sent to wait upon thee the Heavenly Singers that go before cry Open your selves ye everlasting doors that the King of Glory may come in to whom the Angels which come out to meet him answer in extasies of amazement Who is the King of Glory and all the Chorus that follow after reply Even the Lord of Hosts he is the King of Glory and thus with hymns and joyful acclamations is Jesus welcomed to his antient and most glorious Throne And now O my soul why standest thou gazing into Heaven he is too high to be discerned too bright to be seen with mortal Eyes since Cherubins are dazled at his splendor He is gone to his proper place and ascended thither whither thy desires carry thee and where ere long thou shalt see him face to face Thou standest like Elisha looking after him and lamenting thy Masters departure but he hath left his Mantle behind him even the mysteries of this holy Sacrament which to thy Faith is the flesh which he was cloathed with all and is designed to convey a double portion of his spirit unto thee so that it appears he hath left his Love with us when his Person was taken from us Away then with these sighs and tears lament no longer the absence of thy Lord for he is in this Blessed Feast he is here in his comforts and graces here in his merits and his love and his spirit can Minister the same benefits hereby which his personal presence would have given thee Go then with all possible speed and taste of this Heavenly Provision delight in it above all the sweetnesses in the World because it contains so many pledges and emblems of thy glorious Redeemers love when thou beholdest him that is thy head so advanced make haste to unite thy self nearer to him by partaking of his Body and Blood that thou maist finally reign with him in the mean time raise up thy thoughts above this lower World declare thy desire to be with Jesus send thy heart before and protest if he had not left thee some little tastes of his sweetness in the repast of this holy Table by the way thou couldst not have endured so long without him There is nothing which he loves comparable with his Throne in Heaven unless it be an humble and thankful heart into which I am about to receive him and as the Coelestial Quire welcomed him thither so will I receive him with joy into my poor Soul Therefore with Angels c. A Meditation for the Communion on Whit-Sunday § 12. I will go to thy Altar O Lord with a New-Sacrifice of Praise because thou hast given me a fresh instance of thy Love this day thou art slow to punish thy Enemies but speedy to comfort thy servants for no sooner was thy misery changed into glory but we received the greatest demonstration of thy affections no sooner didst thou put on thy Crown in Heaven but the Earth felt the bounty of thy Dispensations for it was not possible for thee sweetest Jesus to let thy promise remain long unperformed or the sad expectations of thy Disciples unsatisfied Being assembled therefore this Day with one heart in one place they are suddenly surprized with wonder and inspired with a Heavenly Power such as they had never felt before vigorous as a mighty wind chearing as the morning light inflaming their hearts with zeal and filling their mouths with Anthems indited in the languages of all the World Oh wonderful change their ignorance is turned into learning their mistakes into infallibility their fear into courage their weakness into strength their sorrow into joy and they in a moment made able to confound the Arts and conquer the oppositions of the Heathen World and maugre all the devices of Satan to set up the Kingdom of the Lord Christ And shall not we praise thee for these miraculous dispensations by which the Gospel was made known even to us in these utmost corners and last of times Yes holy Jesus we will also meet with one accord at thy Table not doubting but thou wouldst give us the same measures of thy spirit there if our duty or our necessity did require it it is enough to us that thou knowest our needs more than will supply them we dare not ask less thou wilt not give Thou hast given us thy self wherefore we believe thou wilt not deny us thy spirit without which we can have no interest in thee nor benefit from thee We come not gracious Lord with the carnal Jews to devour thy flesh but to partake of thy spirit which only giveth life the flesh profiteth nothing Behold thy Spirit hath converted Millions let me therefore together with thy precious Body receive here such proportions of thy holy spirit as may suppress my evil affections revive my dead heart comfort
thy dreadful Passion were in view thy Soul was so calm as to be at leisure to institute this feast of joy and gladness surely I will entertain this Festival with the dearest regard I can express since it was one of the last ſ Plerique mortales postrema meminêre Caesar ap Salust Debetur maximo operi haec veneratio quod novissimum sit Authorque ejus statim consecrandus Plin. Panegyr and greatest Testimonies of the love of a dying friend this blessed Legacy this parting remembrance shall be in my heart for ever Secondly from the time we pass to the subject matter out of which this Ordinance was instituted and that is Bread such as we behold on the holy Altar which may when we behold it occasion such thoughts as these Blessed Jesus how lovely is thy humility thou hast chosen to be represented by Bread and though some curious or costly preparation had been more agreeable to thy Dignity yet this doth best express thy condescension Bread is the poor mans food yet necessary also for the rich the most antient constant universal and necessary sustenance of mankind and therefore a lively Emblem of thy all-sufficient and unconfined Love it springs from the Earth yet it is the staff of our life and given to strengthen mans heart t stomacho fultura ruenti Horat. Jud. 9.5 Heb. Fulci cor tuum buocellâ panis Vid. loc Psal 104.15 and so it signifies that Body which thou didst take from the Earth and gavest for the life of the World being contented it should be beaten and bruised winnowed and ground yea and prepared by all the varieties of suffering that it might become food for our Souls O that I may receive thee by Faith and then I know I shall draw the most salutary nourishment from thee and thou wilt as effectually be united to my Soul as the Bread which is eaten is to my Body u 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Galen Let me eat this holy Bread in Charity that as the many grains are compacted into one Loaf x Panes Hebraeorum ita magni sunt ut unus omnibus convivis sufficeret Grot. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diog. Laert. Pythag. so we being many fellow Christians may all be united into that one body of which thou art the Head The meanness y Simplicitas Sacramenti quibusdam derogat effectûs fidem Tertul of the outward part is not to me any disparagement to this blessed mystery but I rejoice that thou hast chosen that which is so easie for all to procure in all places and at all times because it is so necessary for all persons Lord do thou make it thy Body and it shall be the Bread of Life to my Soul I see O merciful Jesus thou hast taken Bread into thy bountiful hands and behold I faint for hunger my strength is gone my sight is failed I languish for this spiritual food happy am I who am once again come so nigh thee on this blessed day of distribution I beseech thee do not pass me by As thou takest this Bread so didst thou take thy Body only to be broken in Sacrifice for us and in Sacrament to us let me not therefore want my part § 8. And when he had given thanks he brake it and gave it to his Disciples St. Cyril adviseth that we should carefully receive the consecrated Elements and beware that we lose not the least part thereof for the very filings of gold are precious But we should be much more solicitous to fix our minds so that we do not miss the least circumstance in this Holy Rite because there is none without a mystery Thirdly Therefore let us observe the Preparation which was by Giving thanks for Jesus did not enter upon the Administration till he had first as the Hellenists speak Blessed the Bread and Blessed God for it and it is very probable he did add some peculiar Praises for the Redemption to be wrought by his Death as also for this opportunity to commemorate it and convey the benefits thereof unto us which may furnish us with some such Meditations And dost thou O my Lord give thanks for my Redemption which cost thee so much pain and agony how much more then should I do so to whom all the advantage doth redound thou hadst the bitter but I the sweet thou the misery but I the benefit thereof and yet thou enterest upon it with thanksgiving to shew how freely thou didst suffer for our good and to teach us chearfully to suffer for thy sake if thou dressest thy self for death by praising God in this holy Institution shall I not compose my self for this blessed Feast by giving thanks also especially since by blessing God for it I shall bring down a blessing on it to make it become the Bread of Life wherefore I do here join my Eucharist to thine holy Jesus and do bless the Lord with all my Soul for this Heavenly repast O shew thy acceptance of my Praises by hallowing these Elements to the purposes for which they are designed Fourthly The distribution follows viz. The breaking of the Bread and giving it to his Disciples for although the breaking of the Bread do well set forth the Torments of our Saviours Body broken and wounded on the Cross yet there will be a fuller opportunity to remember this in the Administration § 8. 11. and for the present it may suffice to observe that among the Jews to break ones bread to any is as much as to distribute it to them and make them partakers thereof Isai 63.7 Lam. 4.4 Mark 8.19 And since the Lord doth this to thee he doth thereby own thee to be a servant of his Family and a Disciple of his School and therefore thou mayst thus consider O my fainting Soul make hast behold thy gracious Master is dealing his Bread to those that hunger and thi●st after Righteousness and if thy desires be as great as thy necessities they will make thee fly to partake of his bounty be not discouraged with thy unworthiness for he giveth to all men liberally and upbraids no man It is a mighty honour to receive the meanest Token from the Hands of a King but here the very gift it self is both excellent in it self and a pledge of the Givers love z 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Rhet. l. 1. c. 5. who is the King of Kings and Lord of Glory The gift is most profitable and the Giver most honourable Dear Jesus give me a share thereof and I will ever value the Gift and love the Giver Declare me to be thine by feeding me at thy Table thou who wert content to be bruised and broken to satisfie my offended God oh be pleased to give thy self and the merits of this thy Passion unto me to satisfie my earnest longings and it shall be so welcome that I shall cry Lord give me evermore this Bread § 9. Saying Take Eat this is my Body which
gave it to his Disciples to declare he would freely pour out his blood for them saying Drink ye all who desire a part in me of this Cup and apply to your selves the benefits of my blood-shedding For this is the Communion of my Blood which sealeth the New Covenant and is the Confirmation of the New-Testament with the promises thereof And it shall give you a right unto them for this is it which is shed to make Attonement for you in particular and for as many as believe it to be sufficient for the Remission of Sins Wherefore I charge you Do this as oft as may be and whensoever ye shall drink it let it be with great devotion in remembrance of me and of my love in laying down my life for you Amen It is finished according to thy will So be it and let all the people say Amen SECT III. Of the form of Administration § 1. WHen the time of distribution is come the Guests must not rudely and disorderly take every one his own part 1 Cor. 11.14 because God is the Master of the Feast and according to the Eastern Custom he hath provided Officers to divide to every one their portion a Gen. 42.34 1 Sam. 9.24 Heb. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Esth 2.9 fercula singulis apposita secundum morem Orientalem Vide Ham. Annot. Luke 8. a. Wherefore the people are to receive this from the Minister as from the hands of God himself and accordingly they ought to kneel in the most lowly manner as those do who are to receive a favour even from an Earthly Prince For it is now the Custom of the Eastern and Greek Churches of the Latine Church and Lutherans also yea of all the World saith Erasmus to receive kneeling and which is most considerable to us our own Church which hath power to determine these circumstances hath prescribed this posture and withal declared it is only for order and comeliness and to express our humility to God not to give any worship to the Elements * Non enim inclinaverunt carni sanguini sed tibi terribili domino Lit. S. Chrysos and it is a wonder any should refuse to receive kneeling meerly because the Church enjoins it since every considering and humble Christian would chuse that way if it were left indifferent The whole time of Communicating is spent in Prayers and Praises and therefore sure we ought to be upon our b Nemo carnem illam manducat nisi prius adoraverit August in Psal 98. knees if it were only that we might be ready to offer up our Prayers to God It is highly probable that this gesture hath obtained in the Western Church at least 1200. years and although of Old in the East they did stand c Stemus benè stemus in timore Lit. Basil yet it was with fear and trembling with silence and down-cast eyes for they groaned in spirit and kept their joy within saith St. d Chrysost homil de encoeniis Chrysost They came near saith St. Cyril c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Catech. Mystag 5. versus finem bowing themselves in the posture of Worship and Adoration As for the Words of Administration some think they contain a double form Both the Old Roman form and that which Calvin did prescribe both united by the Revisors of the Liturgy under Queen Elizabeth It is most certain that the Antient Church did use the first words The Body of our Lord Iesus Christ in the Administration To which the people answered Amen f Dicit tibi Sacerdos Corpus Christi tu dicis Amen h. e. verum quod confitetur Lingua teneat affectus Ambros de Sacram l. 4. c. 5. Vniversa Ecclesia accepto Christi sanguine dicit Amen Aug. Resp ad Oros qu. 49 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Catech. myst 5. both to express their desire it might be Christs Body unto them and their firm belief that it was so The next words Preserve thy Body and Soul unto everlasting life as we are told by Durantus de Rit Eccles Cathol l. 2. c. 55. were added in St. Gregory lib. de Sacram. although the modern Missals have altered this now The other part Take and Eat c. have for their Author Christ himself who did Administer in these words and if we should leave them out as the Roman Church doth we should have but half his form And if we do well consider the whole frame it appears to be nothing else but a necessary Paraphrase upon our Saviours Words which doth expound and sit them for every ones private Meditation for therefore the Church appoints all these words to be repeated to each partaker that every one may have time and subject matter afforded for his own particular Meditations yet because all are not able themselves to fix and to enlarge their thoughts so as to deduce suitable Soliloquies and Devotions to entertain themselves within the time of Administration we judge the most practical handling of this rare Composure will be to draw proper Meditations from all the parts thereof when we have first discovered the method in this Analysis The Analysis of the form of Administration Sect. 2. The form of Administration hath three parts 1. A Commemoration declaring what it is The Body Blood of our Lord Iesus Christ Which was given shed for thee 2. A Petition that we may partake of the benefits th●●eof Preserve thy Body and Soul unto Everlasting Life 3. A direction how to receive it 1. Externally Take and Eat this Drink this 2. Internally 1. In remembrance that Christ died Christs blood was shed for thee 2. And feed on him in thy heart by Faith with thanksgiving Be thankful Discourses and Meditations upon the Administration § 3. We must now lay by all other thoughts and diligently compose our Souls for the Acts of holy Communion remembring that we must feast with God by silence and Heavenly Contemplation Let us now therefore consider how great a work we are about to perform let us think what benefits we shall lose and what evil we shall fall into if we do it unworthily what Comforts and advantages we shall receive if we do it acceptably let us call to mind what need we have of the divine assistance and pray with Sampson Strengthen us O Lord only this once Jud. 16.28 Let us remember our sins afresh to humble us and review our wants Both that we may have them ready to spread before our Lord and that we may thereby stir up in our selves most fervent desires after his Grace and Mercy And let nothing divert us from these thoughts unless our Charity to our Brethren For when we hear the Minister use these words to the rest of the Congregation we shall do well most heartily to wish this holy Communion may be life to every Soul so that all who sit together at this blessed Feast may also meet in life everlasting And as the Minister is drawing near
not sustained your fury ye had delivered me over to Everlasting Burnings I do abhor and detest ye all how dear soever you have been to me the sight of my bleeding Saviour hath stirred up my indignation against you and I will revenge his blood upon you by sacrificing you all at this Altar How can my Eyes but drop down tears of Contrition when they behold thee pouring forth Rivers of thy Blood but while I grieve to see thy bleeding wounds I must not forget for whom thou didst sustain them thy Blood was shed for me because my life was forfeited why art thou then so cast down O my Soul wilt thou dishonour that price by thy doubts and fears which God hath accepted for all the World cannot that Sacrifice which appeaseth the divine wrath satisfie thy Faith Be not afraid only believe and be assured he will not cast away those whom he hath bought at so dear a rate for thee it was shed for thee it is prepared open thy mouth wide and he will fill it §. 12. Preserve thy Body and Soul unto Everlasting Life An Act of Supplication O Lord I tremble at the apprehension of all those Evils that stand between me and thy glory behold the Grave gapeth for my Body the Infernal Pit threatens to swallow my Soul and Satan is ready were he permitted every moment to devour me wherefore I beseech thee sprinkle me with thy all-saving blood that the destroying Angel may pass over me let me drink of this Cup of Life and so shall my Body be free from Corruption and my Soul from Condemnation Death shall be defeated the Grave dismantled and Satan disappointed Let me drink of thy precious Blood that I may receive thereby abundance of thy Spirit so shall my Body be hallowed into a sacred Temple and my Soul shall be replenished with such Graces that I can never perish Sweetest Jesus how desireable are thy Provisions oh let us not always languish without them but pitty our dry and parched Souls and water them we intreat thee with these living streams for behold we thirst and long with a mighty Passion to drink of this Fountain of Life that we may not faint in our journey to those Rivers of pleasures which are at thy right hand Oh give us this divine Cordial at present and make it to us a Preservative for Body and Soul to everlasting life Amen A Meditation in the receiving of the Cup. §. 13. Drink this in remembrance that Christs blood was shed for thee An Act of Commemoration How chearing is this Cup to me Blessed Jesus which was so dreadful unto thee it was thy Agonies and thy Wounds which afforded me this Wine of Joy Thou didst find how bitter it was when thou wert appeasing an offended God but I tast how sweet it is now that thou hast made him a tender and reconciled Father I receive this Cup O my Saviour as a new pl●dge of thy dearest love for from those pits whence these Rivulets did flow I can discern thy heart bleeding in pity to my misery and sick of Love And since thou dost here give me a right to that great expiation which thou hast made I do most humbly commemorate the same before the Father of Heaven as the full satisfaction for my innumerable debts and I will remember the dolours of thy Cross with a brisker sense than ever because thou hast made me drink of thy blood and given me thy Soul thy Life and thy Spirit so that now I will live no more but thou shalt live in me because we have mingled Souls and thou hast joined me to thy self by the Communications of thy Spirit O let nothing separate that which thou hast so graciously joined together A Meditation after the receiving of the Cup. §. 14. And be thankful An Act of Thankfulness and Resolution Praise the Lord O my Soul and all that is within me bless his holy name for now I find the Mercy and the Peace the Comfort and the Grace which flows from the Death of Christ let all the World know what he hath done for my Soul he hath rescued me and many of my poor Brethren round about me from the nethermost Hell wherefore I will love thee holy Jesus more than I can express and I will love them for thy sake And since thou hast given thy self thy merits and graces to me and sealed a New Covenant with me in thy own blood I do here bind my self by this sacred Cup to be sincerely thine m Mos est regibus quoties in societatem coeant implicare dextras pollicesque inter se vincire M●x levi ictu cruorem eliciunt atque invicem lambunt id foedus arcanum habetur quasi mutuo cruore sancitum Tacit. Annal. lib. 12. I will spend my time and strength in thy service yea and Sacrifice my blood to bear witness to thy truth if ever thou callest me thereunto I will never betray nor forsake thee but live and die with thee for I have sworn and am stedfastly purposed to keep thy righteous judgments Oh let me never unhallow that body nor defile that Soul in which the Lord Jesus delights to dwell let no Oaths or lying prophane those lips no Obscenity or Intemperance pollute that mouth by which those holy Symbols have passed And methinks I feel new desires and new hopes my nature seems r●newed my blood refined my Soul full of holy vigour blessed be thy name for it let thy mercy keep me in this happy temper till I have accomplished all my resolutions Amen § 15. By these and such like contemplations you must keep your minds imployed all the time that the Heavenly Banquet doth continue and if the Congregation be numerous and there be further opportunity the devout Soul will easily find more fuel to nourish these flames viz. by considering the necessities of all Mankind the Calamities of the Church the Miseries of the Sick the wants of the Poor the condition of our Relations Friends and Acquaintance and recommending them all with an effectual Charity to Almighty God through Christ Jesus As also by lamenting its own unworthiness and indispositions by recollecting all its present wants both spiritual and temporal by surveying the difficulties and dangers of that pious course now undertaken and by calling upon the Father of Mercies for grace and relief for courage and strength for support and protection in order to each of these So likewise by doing Acts of mental Charity to be put in Execution afterwards viz. Resolving for the sake of Jesus to forgive and do good to our Enemies to reprove Sinners instruct the ignorant help those that are in need And finally by contemplating of the wisdom and advantage of a holy Life the comfort and peace of a happy Death the joys and felicities of the life of Glory with the pleasures of those Souls that behold Jesus face to face these and many more which the good Spirit will offer we must improve
Pelagians denied it but they are therefore condemned by the Milevitan Council Can. 2. and confuted by St. Augustine ad Bonif. l. 3. It is confest they can shew no visible signs of spiritual life in the operations thereof no more can they of their having a rational Soul for some time and yet we know they have the power of reason within them and since all Infants are alike either all do here receive a Principle of New Life or none receive it wherefore I see no reason why we may not believe as the Antients did that Gods Grace which is dispensed according to the Capacity of the Suscipient is here given to Infants to heal their nature and that he bestoweth on them such measures of his Spirit as they can receive for the malignant effects of the first Adams sin are not larger than the free gift obtained by the second Adams righteousness Rom. 5.15.18 And if it be asked how it comes to pass then that so many Children do afterwards fall off to all impurity I answer so do too many grown Persons also and neither Infants nor Men are so regenerated in this life as absolutely to extinguish the concupiscence for the flesh still will lust against the Spirit g Baptizatus caret quidem omni peccato sed non omni malo remanet siquidem concupiscentia Aug. advers Julian Dimittitur concupiscentia carnis non ut non sit sed ut in peccatum non imputetur id de Bapt. Concup l. 1. c. 5. ad agonèm manet non consentientibus nihil omnino nocitura idem de remiss l. 2. c. 4. but then God gives the Spirit also to lust against the flesh Gal. 5. He leaves the Corruption to try and exercise us but so that he engageth to enable us to get the better through this new nature planted in us if we will improve it and follow the Dictates of his holy Spirit but by neglect or wilful complying with the flesh we may lose this grace again Our Gracious Father hath already done his part and will do it more and more as the Child shall be capable and willing to receive it and if this seem strange to any whose Opinions are taken up from later Definitions of Regeneration let them dispute with holy Cyprian not with me who saith h Eadem gratia spiritualis quae aequalitèr in Baptismo à credentibus sumitur in conversatione atque actu nostro postmodum vel minuitur vel augetur Cypr. ep 76. ad Magnum The Grace of God is equally distributed in Baptism but it may either be diminished or encreased afterward by our Acts and Conversation The sum is That Baptism doth seal a Pardon to us for all former Transgression and begets us again to the hope of Eternal Life that it restores us to the favour of God and gives us a new Relation to him and finally it heals our nature by the Spirit hereby conveyed to us and though all this be upon condition of our keeping our part of the Covenant yet that makes not Gods mercy less nor ought it to diminish any of our Praises but only it must make our Prayers at present more earnest and the Childs care hereafter more strict to make this its calling and Election sure This is I hope the sense of our Church as well as of the Primitive and if so it will not be material to a judicious Christian for any to say it doth not agree to some modern Systems The other Parts of this Exhortation we shall not need further to explain here because we mentioned them in the begining and there are no objections against them and they are all repeated in the ensuing Collect where we will speak more practically of them §. 2. Of the Lords Prayer Our Father which art in Heaven c. Whensoever we pray we are Commanded to say Our Father Luke 11.2 because whatsoever we need is comprized in that divine form and when this leads the way it prepares God to hear all the rest giving efficacy to them and supplying the defects of them But still we must apply it to the present occasion And now let us consider we could never say Our Father with respect to this Infant before whereas the whole Congregation being about to Petition for this new Member of their Society and lately adopted Child of God may fitly now say Our Father which art in Heaven and since he hath given to it and to us the Holy Name of Christian we ought to pray that this his Name may be Hallowed in our lives and that his Kingdom of Grace may be compleated by these daily accessions till the coming of his Kingdom of Glory in the mean time that all we his Earthly Children may do his will and submit to his Providence as those in Heaven ever do We must pray that God will henceforth take a Fatherly care of this Infant among the rest of his Children Giving both to it and to us our daily bread And that he will please to forgive to it its Original and to us our Actual Sin even as we are engaged in a Covenant of Charity and promised to forgive all the World as one of his prime commands Finally we must beseech him to defend both it and us from the Temptations which we have renounced that so we may not fall into the Evil of Sin or Punishment nor fall off from the Grace in which we stand All which for this new Brother of our Society which yet cannot pray for it self and also upon our own Account we must conclude with a hearty Amen §. 3. Of the last Collect. We yield thee hearty thanks most merciful Father for that it hath pleased thee c. As the foregoing Exhortation did perswade us to conclude this Office with Praises and Prayer so here the Church hath prepared an excellent form to express both and according to the method there prescribed here is First most hearty Thanksgivings for the benefits of Baptism 2. Most humble Petitions that the Party which hath received them may walk answerably 1. We begin with Acknowledgments and Praises in imitation of the Jews who when the Child is Circumcised do use to say Blessed be the Lord our God who hath sanctified us with his Precepts and commanded us to bring this Child into the Covenant of Abraham i Fagius in Deuter. 10.6 Buxtorf Synagog cap. 2. But this Child enters into a better Covenant established upon better promises so that we have more cause to bless God than they nor ought we to Question whether the Grace of the Sacrament be received or no since the Church of old did ever suppose it even in Adult Persons because they knew the Lord was ever ready on his part and had promised to be with his Church to the end of the World in this very Administration Math. 28. ult Hence in the East they sung after Baptism the 32. Psalm Blessed is he whose iniquity is forgiven c. and St.