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A39281 S. Austin imitated, or, Retractions and repentings in reference unto the late civil and ecclesiastical changes in this nation by John Ellis. Ellis, John, 1606?-1681. 1662 (1662) Wing E590; ESTC R24312 304,032 419

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renunciatis renunciamus confitemini consitemur Do you believe We believe Do you renounce We renounce Do you confess We confess Vultis volumus As in our own Liturgy in private Baptism ' Doest thou in the name of this child c. Will you We will Afterward Pastor Dominus vobiscum Populus cum spiritu tuo ' The Lord be with you The People answer And with thy Spirit c. and this several times Then in the celebration of the Communion Sacerdos sursum corda Populus Habemus ad Dominum Sacerdos Gratias agamus Domino Deo nostro Populus Dignum justum est The Priest note Priest ' Lift up your hearts The People ' We lift them up unto the Lord the very words we use The Priest ' Let us give thanks unto our Lord God The People ' It is meet and right so to do Again in the Lent and on Wednesdays and Fridays in the use of the Letany The People are appointed to answer the same that ours are O God the Father of Heaven The Litany have mercy upon us Spare us O Lord. O Lord deliver us Hear us O Lord and the rest Minister O Lord deal not with us after our sins People Neither reward us after our iniquities Minister Call upon me in the day of trouble People And I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me Minister Assist us O God of our salvation People And for the glory of thy Name sake deliver us and be mercifull to our sins for thy Name sake Minister Lord shew thy mercy upon us Chorus And shew us thy salvation Minister And enter not into judgement with thy servants Chorus For in thy sight shall no man living be justified Then for the other parts of the Service Repetitions of the People Ecclesia tota canat symbolum fidei Let the whole Congregation sing or repeat the Confession of the Faith And for the Psalms and Hymns Hîc Sanctus subjiciatur quòd ubi erunt clerici ab eis canatur Latinè à populo verò Germanicè Alternatim ter utrinque Id verò quod addi solet Dominus Deus Zebaoth Benedictus â Tota Ecclesia communiter canatur ac ideo Germanicè Here let the Hymn Sanctus be added which if there be Clerks they may sing it in Latine but by the People in Dutch their natural Tongue Repeating by course But let it be sung by course three times by both sides And that which is wont to be added namely Lord God of Sabbath and Benedictus let it be repeated or sung by the whole Congregation together in their own Tongue You see by the Premisses not onely that the Peoples bearing a part in the Service is more antient than the Mass-book but also that our very Answers are so and used in other Liturgies than the Mass-book so that we might justly let our Brethren hear how the lye and meer tale would sound in their own ear Psal 12. but their tongues are their own ' and who is Lord over them To the fourth That they would make these Responds and Anthemes to contradict the Preface of the Book Preface Com. Prayer book where 't is said For the preventing the interrupting of the reading of Scripture be cut off Antiphonies Responds Invitatories and such like things as did break the continual course of reading the Scripture It is to be noted that they do not say Interrupting the reading that all Responds c. do interrupt the reading or that they did cut off all but such as did Answ some by their change and pertinency of matter do help the reading To the fifth 5. No warrant That such answering hath no warrant from the Word and so cannot be done in faith but is will-worship First in general If their meaning be that we must have Answ 1 for every thing in Religion an express word they fall in with the Arrians of old as was shewed above and with the Anabaptists now who urge that argument But do thereby condemn the way of reasoning used by our Lord Jesus Christ by his Apostles and by all men who have ever taken it a lawful way from general grounds to collect particular conclusions And indeed to speak properly without this there can be no reasoning at all for that is nothing else Secondly It condemns all the Answ 2 Liturgies and forms or Directories of Gods worship that ever have been in the world in none of which every particular can be found in rule or example in the Word Thirdly It overthrows the very foundation of Answ 3 those that should be drawn out of the Word for seeing there is not there set down any form of publick worship in all the parts of it and in each particular how is it possible that from thence any Liturgy can be drawn if this ground be good that every several must in particular be warranted thence Our Saviour thought otherwise Mar. 9.40 viz. ' That what was not against him was on his part But in particular That there are responds in the publick Answ 2 worship mention'd in Scripture First In particular it would be known by what rule of consequence those who are allowed in Scripture to sing confess and pray altogether for their songs do contain all these may not do it also by parts and turns as the * Neh. 12.24.38 Levites also did both for ease and for solemnity to praise and to give thanks saith the Text ward over against ward And Ezr. 3.11 They sung together by course praising c. Again 1 Pet. 2. 1 Sam. 18.7 The women answer by course by what rule may not the Spouse of Christ the Church and his People who in some sense are called Priests and who are bound to worship him publickly in spirit be permitted orderly to express themselves unto God with their mouthes Next let us come to Examples First in general Examples And for ground we must lay this That solemn and publick thanksgiving is not onely a part of worship but the choicest also of it for He that offereth me praise Psal 50. he honoreth me saith the Lord that is he honoreth me in a special manner Now then Nehemiah set two great companies not of the Priests onely Neh. 12.31 38. but of the Princes and of the People The one went on the right hand c. And vers 38. the other company of them that gave thanks went over against them and I after them and the half of the people upon the wall Namely those that went on the right hand mentioned vers 31. as Tremellius expounds it And in particular to take off the scruple 't is said ' vers 43. That the wives also and children rejoyced so that the joy of Jerusalem was heard even afar off Now is it to be imagined that these companies of the people appointed to praise God the women and children who helped that the joy was heard afar off that these I say spake nothing
certain words there is offered up a real sacrifice expiatory for the sins of the living and the dead Non solum pro sidelium vivorum peccatis poenis satisfactionibus aliis necessitatibus sed pro defunctis in Christo nondum ad plenum purgatis ritè offertur And again Can. 1. Si quis dixerit in Missa non offerri Deo verum proprium sacrificum Anathema sit That is In the Mass is offered rightly not only for the sins punishments satisfactions and other necessities of the living but for the dead in Christ also And if any man shall say that in the Mass there is not a true and proper sacrifice let him be accursed Contrary to this idolatry blasphemy and superstition In the publick form of Administring the Sacrament in the Prayer Consecratory in our Liturgy whereby the Bread and Wine is set apart for that holy use Prayer before the distribution of the Sacrament The entrance is this Almighty God our Heavenly Father which of thy tender mercy didst give thine only Son Jesus Christ to suffer death upon the Cross for our Redemption who made THERE BY HIS ONE OBLATION OF HIMSELF ONCE FOR ALL a full perfect and sufficient sacrifice oblation and satisfaction for the sins of the whole world and did institute and in his holy Gospel command us to continue a perpetual MEMORY of that his precious death until his coming again Transsubstantiation Artolatria Communion in one kind Concil Constant Sess 13. What should I speak of Transsubstantiation and of the worshipping of the Host whereas the Prayer-Book teacheth us to believe it is Bread and Wine still and to lift up our hearts to worship Christ in the Heavens The defrauding of the people of one half of the Sacrament the Cup licèt Christus post coenam instituerit suis discipulis administraverit sub utraque specie panis vini hoc venerabile sacramentum tamen hoc non obstante c. that is though Christ instituted this after Supper and administred it unto his Disciples under both kinds of Bread and Wine yet this notwithstanding They forbid the Priest to give it so under the penalty of Excommunication 7. Sacram. Corruption of Bapt. c. 5. Prayer for the dead Concil Trid. Sess 9. sub p. 4. Decret 1. The multiplying of the Sacraments the vitiating of Baptisme by superstitious ceremonies of exorcising with Cream Spittle c. All which foul Spirits are cast out by the Liturgy from our worship with multitude of others I shall but name one more that you may tell them on your fingers And that is prayer for the dead Whereas the Church of Rome it self doth teach that there is no use of Prayer for the damned because Purgatorium pro eis tantum esse qui cum venialibus culpis moriuntur Bell. de purgat lib. 2. cap. 1. ad fin A wise distinct●on rursum pro illis qui discedunt cum reatu poenae culpis jam remissis Purgatory is for those only that dye in smaller sins or in guilt of punishment the offence being pardoned Now our Church excludeth the use of Prayer for any deceased For those who dye excommunicate they have no solemn Burial And for others who dye in the Faith and Fellowship of the Church it prayeth not Form of Burial whilst the earth is cast upon the body but first professeth its Faith of their happy Resurrection Forasmuch as it hath pleased Almighty God to take unto himself the soul of our dear Brother here departed we therefore commit his body to the ground in sure and certain hope of resurrection to eternal life c. Then professing against Purgatory it saith Almighty God The Thanksgiving before the last Collect at Burial with whom do live the spirits of them that depart hence in the Lord and in whom the souls of them that be elected after they be delivered from the burden of the flesh be in joy and felicity Lastly it giveth therefore thanks We give thee hearty thanks for that it hath pleased thee to deliver this our Brother out of the miseries of this sinful world c. Where by the way let it not offend that this form is applyed to all Why the same form is applyed to all that are buried For first it useth the word hope not knowledge Secondly it is applyed only to those who dye visible members of the Church and not excommunicated So that charity doth not interpose its private judgment where the Church hath not pronounced hers To conclude the Br. must consider that the Liturgy was directed on purpose to oppose Popery as was noted above His Majesty remembring with what doctrine the Church of England in her first and most happy reformation did drive out the one and keep out the other namely Popery and Separation saith his Grace of Cant. And thus much in answer to the fifth general Exception viz. Popery Superstition and the Mass-Book SECT VI. Of the Non-establishment of the premises by law COme we to the sixt viz. That the doctrine the worship the discipline and government are not established by law in this Church and Nation This I shall reply unto in reference unto them all in general first and then descend unto the severals 1. The Authors of the Book intituled Reasons shewing the necessity of Reformation c. And here before I come to the matter it self I must take leave to speak a word unto these objectors And it shall be in their own Language namely that they are like to give a sad account unto God or in a more Authentick one that they must look unto it for this their writing As they will answer before God for such evils and plagues wherewith Almighty God may justly punish his people for neglecting this good and wholesome Law Act for uniformity of Common-Prayer vîz the Act 1 Eliz. 1. establishing the form of Gods worship The obedience unto which and other tending to the setling of Religion among us hath been so much shaken by the form and appearance of truth and godliness which their Treatise hath without the power thereof seemed to have This to their persons 2. Their scope Next for their scope they express it not to be a reformation of the things they except at but a plain abolition of them Z●nch Epist ad Cardin. Letharing ib. 2. whereas our Lord Christ saith the Cardinal approved by a chief man of our own did not destroy the Temple but only purge it Christus non destruxit Templum sed repurgavit ita ecclesiae in quas irrepserunt aliquot errores abusus superstitiones non sunt convellendae sed repurgandae So the Churches saith he into which some errors abuses and superstitions are crept are not to be plucked up but purged But it seems ubi dolor ibi digitus the Kitchin of the chief supposed Author of that Treatise is like to be cooler for the late restitution having
under the degree and calling of a Bishop or Dean of a Cathedral or Collegiat Church and they upon the Kings days and Festival days do take occasion by the expounding of any Text of Scripture whatsoever to fall into any set discourse or common place otherwise than by opening the coherence and division of his Text which shall not be comprehended and warranted in essence substance effect and natural inference within some one of the Articles of Religion set forth 1562. or in some of the Homilies Note set forth by authority in the Church of England not onely for a help for the non-preaching but withal for a pattern and boundary as it were for the preaching Ministers And for their further instruction for the performance hereof that they forthwith read over and peruse diligently the said Book of Articles and the two books of Homilies This I say had they observed the sound godly and comfortable doctrine therein contained might perhaps have so endeared them as not to be traduced by them so reproachfully that I say not their peoples edification the Kingdoms quiet and their own peace might have been more then now it is or like to be As to particulars the instances they give are few in number but two and weak in strength to bear up so heavy a charge as false doctrine The first is out of the Homily of the time and place of prayer part 1. Particular exception against the Homilies 2. 't is said that therefore plurality of wives was by special prerogative suffered to the Fathers of the old Testament because every one hoped and prayed that the blessed seed that should break the Serpents head might come of his stock The Brethren except As if every one did not know out of what Tribe Christ was to issue I answer No for these words may refer unto the Fathers more antient before any distinction of Tribes were Secondly After the distinction of Tribes it was long before this truth was made known and not till the latter Prophets if even by them understood of the people The next place is out of the Homil. of Alms-deeds part 2. pag. 160. The same lesson doth the Holy Ghost teach us in sundry places of Scripture saying Mercifulness and alms-giving purgeth from all sins and delivereth from death and suffereth not the soul to come into darkness The wise Preacher the son of Sirach confirmeth the same when he saith That as water quencheth burning fire even so mercy and alms resisteth and reconcileth sins Two particular places excepted against Against this passage they have three Exceptions 1. Against the expression reconcileth sins excellent sense say they Well we shall see how good theirs will be anon 2. Against the matter 3. Against the proof of it first for the matter they say that a charitable construction of them may be wyar-drawn implying they are not simply justifiable But why did not the Brethren retain so much ingenuity I say not honesty as to give the Homilies own explication of them which in that very page and the next saith But ye shall understand How good works do away sins dearly beloved that neither those places of Scripture before alledged neither the doctrine of the blessed Martyr Cyprian neither any other godly and learned man when they in extolling the dignity profit fruit and effect of vertuous and liberal alms do say that it washeth away sins and bringeth us to the favour of God do mean that our works and charitable deeds is the original cause of our acceptation before God or that for the dignity or worthiness thereof our sins may be washed away and we purged and cleansed of all the spots of our iniquity for that were indeed to deface Christ Note and to defraud him of his glory But they mean this and this is the understanding of those and such like sayings That God of his mercy and special favour towards them whom he hath appointed to everlasting salvation hath so offered his grace especially and they have so received it fruitfully that although by reason of their sinful living outwardly they seemed before to have been the children of wrath and perdition yet now the Spirit of God mightily working in them unto obedience unto Gods will and commandments they declare by their outward deeds and life in the shewing of mercy and charity which cannot come but of the spirit of God and his especial grace that they are the undoubted children of God appointed to everlasting life And a little after The meaning then of these sayings in the Scriptures and other holy Writings How to understand the Script and Fathers concerning good works Alms-deeds do wash away our sins and mercy to the poor doth blot out our offences is That we doing these things according to Gods will and our duty have our sins indeed washed away and our offences blotted out not for the worthiness of them but by the grace of God Note which worketh all in all And that for the promise that God hath made to them that are obedient to his commandement that he which is the truth might be justified in performing the truth due to his promise Alms-deeds do wash away our sins because God doth vouchsafe then to repute us as clean and pure when we do them for his sake and not because they deserve or merit our purging Note or for that they have any such strength or merit in themselves In which words a double account is given of those expressions in Scripture which seem to attribute justification and salvation unto good works First Because they declare a man to be the child of God and to be endued with his Spirit and so do evidence that his sins are pardoned Secondly Because God hath unto believers promised a reward unto his own graces and especially that of Love and that which is prima charitatis deificantis filia eleemosyna as Theophylact calls it the eldest daughter of divine Charity Almes-giving Then which what could be spoken more Orthodox or more comfortable I know not But secondly Lest they should say these Answers are invented to salve Apocryphal and other human expressions they are to remember that the same doctrine for substance is delivered by our Saviour Christ and his Apostles Matth. 5.7 Chap. 6.14 As where he saith Blessed are the merciful for they shall obtain mercy Again If ye forgive your Heavenly Father will forgive you which proceeds upon the same ground Luke 11.41 Also Give almes of such things as yee have and behold all things are clean unto you Calvan Harm Which Calvin expounds in this sense And in the next Chapt. Sell that ye have and give Almes Provide your selves bags which wax not old Luke 12.33 A treasure in the Heavens that faileth not c. And that expression Love covers a multitude of sins is used by the Apostle Peter 1 Pet. 4.8 Gal. 5.6 as well as James to the same effect And the
fell in with Novatus in the former by seeming to deny forgiveness whensoever a man repents from the bottom of his heart so in the latter with Pelagius in concluding Austin Tom. 7. part 2. from a suposition if we do that therefore we may do it Though indeed he went rather upon the command than supposition Object Secondly where they say it occasions men to delay their repentance Have they not read Answ Rom. 2. That the goodness of God and especially that held out in the promise of forgiveness does lead unto repentance Artic. Relig. 17. Is not despair of mercy truly concluded to be a most dangerous downfall whereby the devill doth thrust men either into desperation or into wrethchlesness of most unclean living no lesse perilous than desperation But God may in mercy let these Brethren one day feel in their own consciences the pretious use of this sentence What time soever c. And indeed there is age enough in some of them before and sin enough I fear to make them need it In Psal 31. In te Domine speravi Savanarola to be sure that learned and constant Martyr having acknowledged in the person of sadness and despair objecting to him when he was very near his end Te scientiâ scripturarum ornavit sermonem praedicationis in ore tuo posuit quasi unum de magnis viris in medio populi te constituit That God had endued him with the knowledge of the Scriptures and put the word of preaching also into his mouth and made him as one of the great men of his time as * En Monachus solers rerum scrutator acutus Martyrio ornatus Savanarola pius Chr. Pflug ad Icon. Savanar Ante compend s Philosoph excellentiss he was indeed yet was glad to make use of this sentence even in the words of the Common-prayer though not out of it to refresh his conscience in the sore conflict under the sense of sin wherein he was Annon audivisti Dominum dicentem in quacunque die ingemuerit peccator omnium iniquitatum ejus non recordabor ampliùs Hast thou not heard the Lord saying In what day soever a sinner repenteth I will remember none of his sins any more But these perhaps are but the prefaces may not so much latent evil be within as that their true quarrel with this Scripture should be the same that theirs was in the Gospel with the good-man of the house Matth. 20. for making those that came in at the eleventh hour and had wrought but one equal to them that had undergone the burden and heat of the day And take it ill that a poor sinner at the last repenting from the bottom of his heart should be as the Thief crucified was with Christ in Paradise as well as they who conceive they have done God so so much good service This for the first General the reply to the Brethren SECT IV. A Vindication of the compilers of the Liturgy A Word now of vindication of the Compilers of the Liturgy and first in general Script Angl. Censur Liturg. cap. 1. and it shall be in the words of Bucer censuring the whole order of the Service till the Communion In descriptione communionis quotidianarum praecum nihil video in libro esse descriptum quod non sit ex divinis literis desumptum si non ad verbum ut Psalmi Lectiones tamen sensu ut sunt collectae Modus quoque harum lectionum ac precum tempora sunt admodum congruenter cum verbo Dei observatione priscarum Ecclesiarum constituta Religione igitur summa retinenda erit vindicanda haec ceremonia In the description saith he of the Communion he meaneth here communion in prayer for of the Lords Supper he speaketh next and in the description of the daily prayers in the Common-prayer-book I see nothing set down but what is taken out of the holy Scriptures if not verbatim as the Psalms and Lessons yet in sense and meaning as are the Collects And the manner or measure and order of these Lessons and Prayers and the times are very convenient and appointed according to the Word of God and the practise of the most antient Churches Therefore this Service is to be retained and defended in a most religious manner Note How weak were Bucers eyes that could not see that beam which our Brethren stumble upon at the very threshold nay he could see nothing in all that part of the Service amiss even as it was then But in particular touching this sentence The wisdom and piety of the Composers did appear therein forasmuch as they prudently considered that there is nothing more necessary than the publishing of the Gospel The wisdom of the Composers of the Liturgy as being the power of God to salvation And that this is nothing else but the offer of mercy to the penitent through faith in Jesus Christ They considered that there is nothing draws to repentance more effectually than the goodness of God and hope of pardon Therefore being to propound the form of Confession and of Repentance they propose this and other sentences to excite them thereunto And because they would have the people to retain in their minds these special places of Scripture for that purpose and the words of Ezekiel being somewhat long they contracted the substance of them into this sentence Except 2 The second Exception in the body of the Book is against that clause in the general Confession No health in us There is no health in us May we not reply There is no Except 3 soundness in them Let the one help the other A third is TE DEUM Benedicite i. e. We praise thee O God All thy works praise thee Answ the TE DEUM and BENEDICITE which are said to be Apocryphals and interrupt the reading of the Scripture So do also the Prayers and Exhortations in the Liturgy If there must be no interruption of reading of the Scripture it must be all reading and no Liturgy That falshood that they would fix upon the Preface of the Book which they say would bear us in hand Scripture that it is provided against that the continual reading of Scripture shall not be interrupted lies in the falseness of their conception for the Preface takes the word Scripture in the sense that sometimes the Fathers do in a larger one namely and as was in use in the time when the Liturgy was compiled as comprehending those antient Religious writings which when properly distinguished from those that are Canonical as they are by the Articles which are the rule to measure particular expressions by that are found in the Offices of the Church then when they are so distinguished they are called Apocryphals but largely often Scripture and holy Scripture As Austin saith the books of Wisdom and Ecclesiasticus are called Solomons de quadam similitudine Retract l. 2. c. 4. for some