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A49602 Conformity of the ecclesiastical discipline of the Reformed churches of France with that of the primitive Christians written by M. La Rocque ... ; render'd into English by Jos. Walker.; Conformité de la discipline ecclésiastique des Protestans de France avec celle des anciennes Chrêtiens. English Larroque, Matthieu de, 1619-1684.; Walker, Joseph. 1691 (1691) Wing L453; ESTC R2267 211,783 388

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through all the Churches These are the ardent Prayers that are made for you all by Gentlemen and Honoured Brethren Your most humble Servant and Brother in Christ Jesus M. LA ROCQUE Rouen 24o. June 1678. THE AUTHOR'S PREFACE WHat Laws are in a State the same things are Canons in the Church All Societies of Men as well Civil as Sacred have always stood in need of some Rules for the conduct of those whereof it is composed and under their direction to attain the designed end which is pleasure of life with the repose of Conscience and tranquility of Mind Man ought of his own free will be inclined to the obedience of these in the main prospect of the pleasure there is in doing his Duty and in the delight which is to be found in the practise of Vertue besides that in so doing depends the happiness all men seek after but which few do find because they seek amiss Nevertheless according to the manner we are made it 's necessary we should be excited by other motives and be set a work by other principles these Motives are Fear of punishment and Hope of rewards the two great springs that give motion if it may be so said to the whole world and which do powerfully ingage men to eschew evil and do good Legislators have also employ'd it in the world the Apostles and their Successors in the Church and God himself made use of it in regard of Adam promising him Life and Immortality if he continued faithful and obedient to him and on the contrary threatning him with death if he were so foolish as to neglect the keeping his Commands and violate the purity of his Laws In the day thou eatest the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil thou shalt die the death Man being a reasonable Creature it was suitable to God's wisdom to give him Laws to serve as a Rule and direction through the whole course of his life therefore he had no sooner created him but he imprinted in his heart those instructions which we call the Law of Nature the Exercise whereof was to constitute his joy and felicity so that had he always persever'd in his innocence he would not have stood in need of Judges nor of their Tribunals his conscience would have been sufficient for him its counsels would ever have been safe its decisions just and right and all its Ordinances would have tended to the practise of this important maxim of the Son of God which he drew from the very spring of Nature it self not to do to others but what we would they should do to us But sin having interrupted this Oeconomy and darkned the Lights which attended it all these directions of Nature have been ineffectual and these Instructions of no value Nevertheless 't is certain God preserved in Man after his fall or at least he stirred up in him anew by the efficacy of his Providence some little remains of that clear and pure light wherewith the understanding had been illuminated when 't was immediately made by his hand and thence it is that all men have the common and general Notions That there is one God That he governs all things That he punishes the wicked and rewards the good That to honour him is a Law that 's allowed amongst all men And that he must not only be thought to be immortal and blessed but also to be a Lover of Mankind of whose preservation he takes particular care in daily doing them good it was thereby that the Inhabitants of the Isle of Maltha concluded St. Paul was a Murderer Act. 28.3 they said when they saw a Viper on his hand Divine Vengeance followed him and would suffer him to live no longer It is also from this principle proceeded the knowledg the Apostle attributed to the Gentiles when he saith For when the Gentiles which have not the Law Rom. 2.14 15. do by nature the things contain'd in the law these having not the law are a law unto themselves which shew the work of the law written in their hearts their conscience also bearing witness and their thoughts in the mean while accusing or else excusing one another But at length Sin having almost extinguished the light of Nature and made all its instructions unprofitable God was obliged to renew the knowledg of it by publishing his Law which in substance contains the same precepts as those did which God had writ at first in the heart of Men and seeing the greater corruption is so much the more need there is to multiply Laws to restrain its impetuosity and violence and so hinder its spreading and excess God who knew very well the inclination of the people of the Jews which were a people of a stiff neck and uncircumcised heart as the Scripture speaks a people inclined to disobedience and rebellion God I say not content to divulge the Moral Law he thereunto joyned the Ceremonial and Political Laws to the end the Israelites should the easier be retain'd in their duty under the heavy yoke of this severe Discipline Thence it followed by the Rule of contraries That the more Sanctification is advanced the less need there is of Laws which made St. Paul say That the Law is not made for the just but for the Sinners and wicked The first Christians had but very few Decisions and Decrees in their Discipline because being full of Piety and Zeal and that labouring with unspeakable diligence in the work of their Sanctification they disposed themselves voluntarily according to the nature of the Gospel and intention of Jesus Christ and conscionably practising the Maxim of the Apostle That all things should be done decently and in order in the Church of God they with ease were guided by the Divine motions of Grace and the inspirations of that holy Spirit which God had so plentifully and in great measure poured forth on his Church in the first Establishing of Christian Religion for as to the Canons attributed to the Apostles and the Constitutions which also go in their name they are things forged in the following Ages and after this new people had began to degenerate from the first heat of their zeal and that they had given some check to the innocence of their life and to the purity of their Manners and as corruption insensibly got ground so also was seen to increase the number of Canons and Ordinances for it commonly happens that ill actions do multiply good Laws without which it would be impossible to make head against the many Scandals that licentiousness does introduce where it predominates and where sins are not repressed and punished Something of this kind hapned in our Reformation which had a great resemblance with the first Establishment of Christian Religion for it may truly be said that by a particular blessing of Heaven the first Reformers were so holy in their life so pure in their conversation so wise in their conduct so modest in their words and so humble
of time t was left to the Liberty of the Bishop to suffer it provided that the consent of his Clergy also interven'd It is what may be seen in the Decree of Gratian cap. 16.9 1. c. 35. Moreover these Baptizing Churches which were otherwise named Plebes and Oracula were in so great consideration above others that Charlemain in his Capitulary in the year 793 chap. 2. will not have them possessed by Lay-Men to whom he forbids to grant them under the Title of Bennifice although that was not alwayes observ'd And it may be the Names of Plebes and Oracula was given to these Churches because all the People were wont there to resort to hear the Oracles of God that is to say the Word of his Gospel Inasmuch as our Discipline suffers Ministers to baptise out of the Assemblies when it is impossible to have them it agrees very well with the Seventh Cannon of the Council apud Vernum which I cited above where 't is permitted in case of Necessity to Baptize out of the places where publick Fonts were erected Moreover Vernum Palatium was one of the Kings Pallaces betwixt St. Dennis and Compeigne at least many do think so VII Seeing we have no command of Christ to take Godfathers and Godmothers to present our Children at Baptisme there cannot an express Law be impos'd on Persons to do so Nevertheless because it is an Antient Custom and introduced for a good end to with to testifie the belief of the Godfathers and the Baptisme of the Infant and also to maintain the Society of Believers in Friendship and Amity those which desire not to follow it but would present their Children themselves shall be earnestly exhorted not to be contentious but to conform to the Ancient Custom which is good and profitable CONFORMITY The Custom of Godfathers and Godmothers to present Children at Baptisme is very Ancient seeing Tertullian makes mention of it in his Book of Baptisme chap. 18. St. Austin in his Twenty Third Epistle saith they are presented by their Father or Mother or by others Tom. 2. cap. 2. 7. p. 215 216. 217 361. Paris 1644. the pretended Dennis the Areopagite in his Ecclesiastical Hierarchy speaks but of Godfathers which should be faithful and chosen by those which are to be Christned if they are Adults or by the Fathers and Mothers if they are young Children and he would also make the Reader believe that 't was instituted by the Apostles Gregory the First in his Book of Sacraments doth not also forget those which present Children at Baptisme As for Cesarius of Arles he declares in the Twelfth of his Homilies given us by Monsieur Baluze that the Father and Mother are to be answerable the VI. Cannon of the Council of Metz in the year 888 Tom. 3. Conc. Gall. p. 526. ordains that the Father or Mother of the Child receives it when it comes out of the Baptismal Fountain so great Liberty has been us'd by the Church in these things Read the Three last Testimonies I have mentioned on the Twelfth Article VIII Women shall not be admitted to present Children to Baptisme unless accompanied with a Godfather and after having made profession of the Christian Religion CONFORMITY In all Antiquity there is few or no Examples to be found of a Woman that presented a Child to be Baptized without a Godfather and much less of an unbelieving Woman in effect we have seen on the Seventh Article That those which presented Children should be believers What I alleadged of the Council of Metz on the same Seventh Article not destroying what I say on this if one reads all the Cannon besides that it has sometimes been suffer'd amongst us upon some Considerations as appears by the National Synod of Poictiers in the Year 1560 that 's to be understood in regard of believing Women though this sufferance is not at present in use IX No Godfather coming from another Church shall be suffer'd to present a Child to Baptisme without bringing a Certificate from his Church CONFORMITY Anciently no Stranger was received without a Testimony from his Church it is the Order of the Seventh Cannon of the Council of Antioch in the year 341. Let no Stranger be received without Pacifick Letters It is what appears also by the Fifty Eighth chap. of the Second Book of Apostolical Constitutions where we read that neither Brother nor Sister of another Church was to be received without Letters of Recommendation X. Those which present Children to be baptized must be of competent Age as of Fourteen years old having received the Sacrament Or if they are more advanc'd in Years and have not received the Lords Supper promise faithfully to do it and are duly catechised CONFORMITY Herraud Bishop of Touers in his Capitulary of the Year 858 makes this Ordnance Tom. 3. Conc. Gall. cap. 55. pag. 113. That none shall receive any at the Baptismal Fountain unless he knows by heart in his own Language and understands the Lords Prayer and the Apostles Creed and that all know the Covenant they have made with God Ibid. pag. 526. The Sixth Cannon of the Council of Metz prescribes the same in substance in the Year 888 Tom. 9. Conc. pag. 548. and 615. Cardinal Borrome Arch-Bishop of Millan in the Fourth and Fifth Councils which he there caused to be held in the Year 1573 and 1579 orders the very same marking also as well as our Discipline the Age of Fourteen Years and to observe the exactness of our Discipline with that of the Antients it is to be known that we admit none to participate of the Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist till after he has given sufficient proof of his being well-instructed and of his knowledge in the Misteries of Salvation The Sixth Council of Paris precedent to all the Testimonies I have hitherto cited seeing it was assembled in the Year of our Lord 829 This Council complains in the Seventh Cannon Book the First That those which present others to Baptisme Tom. 2. Conc. Gall. pag. 487. and 521. have not knowledge sufficient to instruct them which he attributes to the negligence of Conducters and in the Fifty Fourth Cannon he will by all means have them taught to be able to answer for the Instruction of those which they present even serving themselves in the Seventh Cannon of some words of a Sermon of St. Austins to confirm what he sayes 163 de Temp. XI Those which are suspended from the Lords Supper cannot as Godfathers present Children to be baptized whilst their suspension holds CONFORMITY This same Council of Paris which I but now cited prohibits in the last of its Cannons that is to say the Fifty Fourth it forbids those which for some Crime is under Pennance and by consequence excluded from the Sacrament not to present any Body at Baptisme until such time as they are reconcil'd to the Church Cardinal Borrome in his First Council of Millan Tom. 9. Conc.
the Creed proportionable to the Capacity of those whom he instructed to put them into a state fit to receive Baptism and to be plung'd in the Mystical Waters of this Sacrament of our Regeneration But to ascend higher than St. Cyril Euseb Hist l. 5. c. 10. l. 6. c. 6. Can. 3. c. 26. Can. 15 29. from the very first beginning of Christian Religion there were publick Schools at Alexandria and places appointed for this Exercise and where the rudiments of Faith was taught or as the Apostle speaks The rudiments of the first beginning of the word of God In the 2d Century Pantenus an Eminent Philopher kept this School and then exercis'd the Office of Catechist Clement of Alexandria succeeded him and he had Origen for his Successor aged but 18. years Origen left the Conduct of this School to Heraclas and Heraclas to Dennis and these two last were successively Bishops of Alexandria The Authors of our Discipline had therefore good reason to exhort the Churches to have frequent Catechising which is of great benefit and singular edification XIV Ministers with their Families shall actually reside in their Churches or Parishes under pain of being depos'd from their Office CONFORMITY In the first Ages Pastors were so full of zeal for the Glory of God and so industrious for the Edification of their Flock that 't was superfluous to exhort them to Residence seeing they had no other thoughts but to do it in the places assigned to their care and where the Families lived which were committed to their conduct neither do we find in those times any Canons which enjoyn them to this Residence because they themselves of their own free will were inclin'd to do it and that 't was not heard of that a Pastor did not dwell in the midst of the Flock to whom he owed his care and presence De Lapsis St. Cyprian complained of certain Bishops which incumbring themselves with secular affairs abandoned their Churches and the care of that holy administration whereof they were to render an account to our Saviour And in his 56 Epistle to those of Thibari he sheweth that in the present conjuncture he could not safely leave his Church and the People God had committed to his Charge St. Ambrose sufficiently testifies that he was really persuaded of the necessity of Residence when he wrote to the Emperor Theodosius that if the dread he had of the Tyrant Eugenius had oblig'd him to quit Millan for a little time yet he returned thither as soon as the storm was past over Lib. 7. Ep. 58. To. 5. p. 322. P●r. 1632. I hastned saith he to return as soon as ever I heard that him whose presence I thought I was bound to shun was gone for I forsook not the Church of Millan which the Providence of God committed to my care but I desir'd not to see him that made himself guilty of Sacriledg He speaks of Eugenius who usurped the Empire after having cruelly put to death the Emperor Valentinian the younger This holy Doctor elsewhere represents the damages occasioned to the Church by the absence of its Pastor especially when he observes the People omit frequenting the Holy Exercises and not only the People but also the Clergy themselves become more remiss in things of Piety and Religion St. Austin declares plainly in the 138 and 227 Epistles that he never forsook his Church but upon indispensible necessity In a request presented by some Friers to the Emperors Theodosius the Younger and Valentinian the Third against Nestorius they accuse him amongst other things That for the executing his outrages he employed foreign Clerks which he made come from other parts that is to say other Clergy besides his own Tom. 2. Conc. pag. 222. Altho according to the Ecclesiastical Canons say they they are not permitted to live in another Diocess or in another Church but only in those places and Cities where they received Ordination by the Imposition of hands there to reside peaceably It is not easie to affirm with certainty if the Canons whereof they speak were reduced into writing or rather if they were not customs and uses setled in the Churches by long practice for this term of Canon or Rule has sometimes this signification in the writings of the Ancients and what induces me to think so is That till the Fifth Century when this request was presented it was not very needful to make Canons to oblige Pastors to reside in their Churches if it be not that one may apply to this Residence the Canons which prohibit the Translation of Bishops from one place to another whereof we shall treat hereafter I know very well that the Council of Sardis had in the year 347 made some Decrees which in some fort regarded Residence but besides that these Canons were not much known in the East they were not properly made for establishing of Residence nor precisely to oblige Bishops thereunto but only to inform them in presupposing it as an indispensible Obligation in what occasions and for what time they were permitted lawfully to be absent from their Churches in effect in the eighth Canon the Fathers of Sardis allow Bishops may go to Court if the Emperor send for them or if the protection and defence of the Poor of Widows and Orphans oblige them to it It is true that in the ninth and tenth Canons they restrain the permission granted in the former and do not permit Bishops to go themselves to Court but when they are called by the Prince nevertheless they agree they may send one of their Deacons to obtain some favour in behalf of distressed persons but they consent to it upon prudent and judicious reasons and which are to be lookt upon as necessary precautions against the ambition of Bishops to whom the same Council positively forbid Can. 14 15. To be absent from their Churches above three Weeks unless some pressing necessity constrain them to it When under the second Branch of our Kings the Prince cast his eye on any Bishop to make him his Arch-Chaplain he was forced to demand leave of the Synod and Pope Con. Fran. cap. 55. Tom. 2. Conc. Gall. p. 217. the Bishops of Rome having already got great power in France I say he was forced in some sort to desire their leave to get him away from his Church to have him near his person because every body was then perswaded that Pastors were bound in Conscience to make their Residence in the midst of their Flocks I believe Plurality of Livings as is spoken at this time has given a mortal blow to the case of Residency and has by this means introduced ignorance into the Church and together with Ignorance Superstition which is the Daughter of Ignorance this wicked custom was a long while unknown amongst Christians seeing the first Canon which formally condemns it is if my memory fail not the fifth of the sixteen Council of Toledo assembled the year
Volume of his Works and in the 25th upon St. Matthew in the 2d Edition at Paris An. 1514. St. Basil lays down several Rules in his Morals for the Conduct of Pastors whom as he saith should be an Example unto others and do in the first place what they desire others should do Preach the Gospel with a holy freedom and bear witness to it although there might be some which forbid so doing and persecute to Death those which do it He will have them render God thanks for those which are converted and that they should pray to God for them to the end they may grow in grace dayly That they should have care not only of those which are present but also of the absent and that they should omit nothing which may tend to their Edification and Salvation desiring they would therein Exercise themselves constantly as well in publick as private He saith moreover That the Minister should be tender and full of compassion especially towards those whose Souls are mortally sick That he should charitably contribute to their bodily necessities without abusing his power to the prejudice of those under his Conduct and without exalting himself over them but rather take occasion to exercise humility towards them He adds in conclusion That he which is establish'd in the Church to be a Guide to others should neither say nor do any thing but with a great deal of prudence and circumspection to render himself acceptable in the sight of God as if he were to be approv'd by their judgment and testimony I could alledge several other Doctors of the Church to confirm the same thing but because what I have said is sufficient for establishing this Truth I proceed to the consideration of what follows in the Article which we Examine That it belongs to the Magistrate to have an Eye over Ministers and to take care they walk orderly in their Vocation c. The good Kings of Israel did so under the old Discipline obliging the Ministers of the Sanctuary to do their Offices and Religiously to perform all things which pertain'd to the Service of God under the Oeconomy of Grace the Examples of Constantius of Theodosius of Marcien's of Leo's and sundry others which have assembled several Councils for the benefit of Christian Religion and to preserve the Church from the Poison of Heresies and Schisms I say all these Examples do not in the least suffer us to doubt but that Princes and Sovereigns have right to supervise over Bishops and Pastors and are bound in Conscience to endeavour the advancement of the Glory of God and the preservation of his Worship in all purity And not to go farther than our France Who is there at this time but does know the diligence of our Kings on a great many occasions the many Councils they have Assembled and to many of them have prescribed the subject and matter of their deliberations which is an authentick proof and the Capitularies which we have still in our hands of Charlemaine of Lewis le Debonnaire and of Charles the Bald are also so many Authentick Evidences It was hereupon that Constantine saith in Eusebius ●●b 4. de Vit. Const ● 24. l. 1. c. 44. That God had Established him Bishop that he should take care of things which passed out of the Church and in the same Treatise he is called The Common Bishop establish'd by God In the 6th Action of the Council of Chalcedon there is given to Marcien the Title of Sacerdos St. Remy calls Clovis the Bishop of the Country Tom. 1. Conc. Gall. p. 204. The Fathers of the Council of Mayence in the Year 819. calls Charlemaine The Director of the True Religion and the Defender of the Holy Church Which the 6th Synod of Paris in the Year 829. saith also of Lewis le Debonnaire and of Lothaire his Son It is also in all likelihood by the same motive that in the 98th Letter of Loup Abbot of Ferriers where there is mention of the promotion of Aeneas to the Bishoprick of Paris in the 9th Century The gift of the Prince is joyn'd to that of God As if one had been fully persuaded in France that the King was in God's stead in Establishing of Bishops Thence it is also that whereas Loup in the 29th Letter writes that Aldrich was made Bishop of Sens by the Command of Caesar the Frier Clarius in his Chronicle of St. Peter vif of Sens saith That it hapned by the Will of God To intimate that the Power whereof Princes were in possession was given them from Heaven it is the reason wherefore in the 2d Council of Thionville in the Year 844. it is said That Bishops are given of God regularly design'd by Princes they mean the Children of Lewis le Debonnaire and Consecrated by the Grace of the Holy Spirit In the Life of Nicetas who was Bishop of Lyons in the 6th Century it is observ'd That the good will of the Prince gave him by the Will of God to be Bishop to this Church XLVII Ministers that teach bad Doctrine shall be depos'd if they persist after having been several times warn'd also those which do not obey holy Admonitions given them by the Consistory taken out of the Word of God those also which shall lead Scandalous Lives those which shall be convinc'd of Heresies Schisms Rebellion against Ecclesiastical Order and manifest Blasphemies worthy of Secular punishment Simony and all corruption by Presents endeavours to have another's place forsaking their Flock without due leave and just occasion Falshood Perjury Adultery Theft Drunkenness Fighting worthy of being punish'd by the Laws Vsury Sports forbid by Laws and scandalous Dancing and other like dissolutions any crime having the mark of Infamy any Crime which should in another deserve separation from the Church and those which are insufficient to discharge their Office CONFORMITY The Truth of the Holy Trust committed to the Apostles and after them to their Successors has ever been so dear and precious to those amongst them which have been Followers of the Zeal and Piety of those first Ministers of the Son of God that they could not suffer it should be alter'd without severely punishing those which sowed Tares amongst this good Corn and especially Pastors whom they depos'd from their Office at the very instant that they taught Doctrines contrary to this Heavenly Truth When Paul of Samosatia Bishop of Antioch stir'd up by the Evil Spirit had the impudence in the 3d Century to teach That Jesus Christ was but meer Man the Ministers of the Gospel came flocking from all parts as against the Enemy and Destroyer of the Flock and Fold of the Lord but this Heretick having avoided the Sentence of his Condemnation in the first Synod held at Antioch against him in the 12th year of the Emperor Gallien and about the Year of our Lord 266. because he promis'd to change his Opinion he was at length depos'd in the Year 170. in another Assembly in the
of time and place CONFORMITY In the Christian Church there has ever been persons appointed to take care of the conduct of those which were Members of it and to watch over their Flocks to the end no scandalous actions should be committed therein nothing that should be unbecoming the profession of the Gospel Origen at least tells us that in his time which was the third Century it was so practised for he declares in his answer to Celsus that there was in the Churches Lib. 3. pag. 142. of Cambridge Edit 1658 Persons established to take notice of the life and conversation of those which imbraced the Christian Religion that when they committed any evil actions to expel them out of the Congregations and on the contrary to receive with great affection all those which lived orderly and well to the end to improve and make them better from day to day Tertullian before Origen Apolog. c. 39. had sufficiently intimated this same practice speaking in his Apologetick of Censures inflicted on sinners in Christian Assemblies which banished from their Communion those which were convicted of heinous offences for example of Idolatry Murder and of Fornication which proceeding shews there was in each Church persons intrusted to keep watch over the life and manners of the People and these persons were the same which we call Elders which also is the name St. Austin gives them in the nineteenth Sermon on the words of our Lord and which at this time is the third in the Appendix of the tenth Tome In this Sermon which others attribute to Maximus Bishop of Turin and which is the 66th amongst those of St. Ambrose there is to be seen the Name and the Office of Elders the same in effect as they are amongst us for the Author whoever he be having observed that Soldiers and those in any Office could not bear to be reprov'd and to be told of their Duty he speaks after this manner When the Elders reprove them for any misdemeanor and that any of them are asked why they are drunk wherefore they took away other folks goods wherefore they committed murder They presently answered What would you have me do being one of the World and a Soldier Do I profess to be a Frier or a Clergy-man IV. The office of Deacons is to collect and distribute by direction of the Consistory the Money belonging to the Poor to Prisoners and to sick folks to visit and have care of them CONFORMITY It appears by Chap. 6. of the Acts of the Apostles that the Office of Deacons is what our Discipline does represent because they were first of all appointed to serve at Tables that is to say to take care of the Poor Oecumenius in his Commentaries on this Chapter of the Acts I now mentioned observes expresly that they were appointed to distribute to Widows and Orphans with care the things necessary for their subsistence According to which the Enemies of Cecilian Bishop of Carthage laid it to his charge as a great crime That being Deacon he hindered people from giving meat to the Martyrs whereas he ought to have carried them some himself Fascicul rer Expet fug fol. 32. vers Coloniae 1535. Cardinal Julian who presided at the Council of Basle remonstrates to Pope Eugenius the Fourth That there are several things he ought to do himself and others which he may refer to the care of those which are under him after the example of the Apostles who to attend the more freely to the Preaching of the Word instituted seven Deacons which served Tables and the administration of things of less weight It is nevertheless true Apolog. 2. pag. 99. that in the time of Justin Martyr it was the Pastor that distributed the Money to the Poor which was appointed for their Maintenance which was given by Peoples Charity But this Distribution in all likelihood was made by the Ministry of Deacons Cap. 39. Tertullian indeed in his Apologetick declares one had care of the Poor of Orphans of Old Folks of those which had lost their Goods by Shipwrack of those which laboured in Mines who were banished into Islands or detained in Prisons for the Gospel sake but he don't mention by whom it was done The Church of Rome in the time of Cornelius its Bishop that is about the middle of the third Century Apud Euseb Hist lib 6. c. 43. p. 244. maintained above 1500 poor as well Widows as others who were reduced to poverty or afflicted with sickness or infirmities The charity of that of Antioch was no less conspicuous than that of the Church of Rome as we find by some of St. Chrysostom's Homilies on St. Matthew particularly the 67 and 86th It is true we are not certain that the Deacons were charged with the care of these two Churches in the days of Cornelius and of St. Chrysostom but we know very well the Deacons amongst us attend on the things for which they were established by the Apostles that is that they should take care of the Poor and Necessitous according to their Primitive institution It was on this account that Fabian Bishop of Rome divided amongst seven Deacons in the third Century the fourteen Quarters of the City of Rome that is to say to the end they should take care of the Poor which were in each of these Quarters as is to be seen in the Roman Breviary on the 20th day of January and as Binnius observes in the Life of Fabian Tom. Conc. pag. 114. But what the Deacons did at first was in time performed by the Ministry of Oeconoms and others of which the ancient Canons make so frequent mention in such a way nevertheless that the Bishop had the chief power in the distribution which however was not done without the knowledg of these Deputies when they had taken the place and office of those first Deacons and that it is so I explain what Zozomen says of St. Epiphanius Lib. 7. Chap. 27. Read what shall be said on the second Art of the 4th Chap. V. The office of Deacons is not to Preach the Word of God and administer the Sacraments Nevertheless if necessity require the Consistory may chuse certain Elders and Deacons to Cacechise in Families as also it is permitted to Elders in absence of the Pastor to read Publick Prayers on working-days being chose by the Consistory for that purpose and that they follow the usual form in Reading the Canonical Books of the Old and New Testament As for the Deacons who are wont to Catechise publickly in some Provinces the inconveniences which have already or may hereafter ensue being heard and considered the Churches where this custom is not yet introduced are desired to forbear and the others where it is to continue and to order that the said Deacons if they are found capable would enter into the Ministry of the Gospel as soon as they can possible CONFORMITY What I have said of the Office of Deacons doth highly
we Examine That of Charanton I say in the year 1623. enjoins Exactly to Examine as well the Attestations as those which have them to have from their own mouth testimony of their Religion and Instruction As for the Order our Discipline prescribes to give and renew from Church to Church the Recommendatory Letters it is the same in substance of that establish'd by the Synod of Sardis An. Dom. 347. in the 8 9 10 and 11. Canons and particularly in the last where it appoints Bishops which are on the way to Examine these Letters of Recommendation and to ask of those which have them the Cause and Reason of their Travelling or to subscribe their Letters if they are just and to refuse them Communion if they have fraudulently got them CHAP. V. Of CONSISTORIES ARTICLE I. IN each Church there shall be a Consistory compos'd of persons which shall have the conduct of it to wit of Pastors and Elders and the Ministers in this company are to preside as also in all other Ecclesiastical Assemblies CONFORMITY From the very first Establishing of Christian Churches there was in each of them a certain number of Persons to whom the Government of it was committed and who were distinguish'd from the rest of the People by the Offices which they Exercis'd and by the choice which had been made of them for supervising the whole Flock and 't is what we call Consistory Origen calls it the Ecclesiastical Senate and makes it parallel with the Politick Senate of each City to shew that the Ecclesiastical Senate very much surpasses the other being compos'd of Persons of more virtue and knowledg than those which are Members of Politick Senates in Cities The Ecclesiastical Senate or Consistory is compos'd amongst us of Ministers and Elders and it ought not to be thought strange that we joyn Elders with the Ministers after all we have said on the 3d Chapter particularly on the 1st Article where we have at large prov'd that the Elders have had share for several Centuries in the Government of the Churches and that they in all likelihood would have still continued if the ambition of Bishops and their Clergy had not insensibly abolish'd this laudable practise The Deacon Hillary as has been shewn complained of it in his time But altho' the Elders partake with the Ministers in Governing the Flocks yet the right of precedency appertains to the Ministers therefore in these testimonies we have alledged to prove that the Church has had great advantage in the first Ages of Lay-Elders like ours they are for the most part named after the Clergy II. As for Deacons seeing the Churches for the necessity of the times hath to this day happily employed them in Governing the Church as Exercising also the Office of Elders those which hereafter shall chuse such or continue them they shall with the Pastors and Elders bear a part in the Governing the Church and therefore shall frequently be with them in the Consistory yea even at the Colloques and Synods if they are thither sent by the Consistories CONFORMITY The care of the Poor making one of the most considerable parts of the Church-Government it is with great reason we therein admit the Deacons because they were properly instituted to attend on this thing as has been above proved at large III. In places where the Exercise of Religion is not setled Christians shall be exhorted by the Colloques to have Elders and Deacons and to follow the Ecclesiastical Discipline and at the said Colloques they shall be inform'd to what Church to joyn themselves for their convenience and exercise of their Ministry from whence also they may not depart without communicating it also to the said Colloques CONFORMITY In the places where there is no publick exercise of our Religion although there are a considerable number of Families which profess it care must be taken they do not live without Discipline and to this purpose there must be Establish'd amongst them Deacons and Elders to take care of the Poor and to watch over the Life and Conversation of private persons whereof they shall give account at the Church-Consistory to the which they shall be joyn'd for the publick Exercises of Piety and the Service of God and there 's no question to be made but something of this Nature was done in the Primitive Church Apolog. p. 98. for instance in the days of St. Justin Martyr that they Assembled from the Country and Cities unto one place which sheweth plainly these Assemblies were not made every where although according to all appearance there was in all places one and the same Order for the conduct of Christians to the end they should do nothing unworthy the holiness of their Profession IV. There shall be but one Consistory in each Church and it shall not be permitted to Establish other Council for any Church-business whatever If in any Church there shall any other Council be established different from the Consistory it shall forthwith be suppress'd Nevertheless the Consistory can sometimes call to its aid such of the Church as shall be thought convenient when occasion requires and that Ecclesiastical matters be treated of only in the place where the Consistory doth Assemble CONFORMITY There was not anciently in each Christian Church any more than one Ecclesiastical Senate as we have heard by Origen and this Senate was not properly any thing else but what we call Consistory which is a company of Persons which the Church does invest with her Rights and Power to Govern the Flock V. It is in the Power of the Consistory to admit of Father and Son or of two Brothers in the same Consistory unless there was some other reason to the contrary of which the Colloque or Provincial Synod shall take cognizance CONFORMITY The Church being the Spouse of Jesus Christ and by consequence the Mistress of all the Power and of all the Ecclesiastical Authority which resides in Her as in its Fountain and in the Consistories as in Societies which she establishes for the use and exercise of this Power She may then have authoris'd the Ecclesiastical Senate and the Consistory to admit into its Body the Father and Son or two Brothers provided they are agreeable to the Church which has in general given this Power to the Consistory VI. It is also refer'd to the discretion of Consistories to call unto them young Students although they have no Office in the Church but not without weighty causes and considerations and when their Wisdom is known the said Students shall be there present not to have any voice in what Affairs shall be debated but that by their presence there they may the sooner become fit and proper to Govern the Church when it shall please God lawfully to call them thereunto Nevertheless it shall be at the Pastor's free choice to demand their Judgment to make tryal of their abilities which shall be done with great prudence and caution and promise not to make
Fasts an order which we exactly follow and which is grounded in that Jesus Christ nor his Apostles have not prescrib'd in any place of the New Testament on what dayes one should or should not fast as St. Austin has observ'd in his 86 Epistle to Casulanus IV. Those Churches which have been accustom'd to make publick Prayers on certain dayes may keep the order they have for a long time happily used and others may conform thereunto according to the means which God shall please hereafter to give them and as their Edification shall require CONFORMITY This Article has no other Scope but to establish an intire Conformity in the Churches as to what regards the Exercises of Piety and Religion can 27. Tom. 1. conc Gal. p. 199. near hand as when the Council of Epaume in the year 517. ordain'd that in the out Provinces for celebration of Divine Offices the same Order should be observ'd as is by the Metropolitan the same thing was concluded the same year in Spain in the 1 Council of the Synod of Gironda can 55. To. 3. conc pag. 806 and Anno 633 in the 2 Cannon of the 4 of Tolledo To. 4. conc pag. 582. and in the year 465 a Council of Vannes had appointed that throughout the whole Province the same Order and Rule for Divine Offices and for singing of Psalms should be observ'd V. There shall no Prayer or Sermon nor publick Alms be given at Burials to shun Superstitions and those which accompany the Corps shall be exhorted to behave themselves with modesty during the time meditating according to the object before their Eyes as well the miseries and shortness of this life as the happiness of the life to come CONFORMITY All pretence towards superstition whereunto Men are too apt to incline is in this Article endeavour'd to be avoided VI. Because Mourning don 't consist in Apparel but in the Heart Believers shall be warned to demean them therein with all Modesty rejecting all Ambition Hypocrisie Vanity and Superstition CONFORMITY This last Article prescribes Modesty and excludes Hycoprisie and Ambition which were generously opposed by the Primitive Christians CHAP. XI Of BAPTISME ARTICLE I. BAptism administred by one that has no Vocation is absolutely Void CONFORMITY The Author of Apostolical Constitutions contents not himself to forbid Women to Baptise he also prohibits all Lay Persons because they are not called to it in effect having employ'd the Ninth Chapter of the Third Book to shew that Women should not Baptise he thus begins the Tenth Neither do we suffer a Lay Person to Exercise any Priestly Function as to offer Sacrifice that is to say to celebrate the Sacrament or to Baptise or impose hands or to give the Benediction whether more or less for none takes to him this honor but he enjoys it which is called of God St. Basil was of no other Mind as the Jesuit Petau confesses in his Notes upon St. Epiphanius where he says St. Basil seems to have believed that Baptism conferr'd by Lay persons was Null and to speak the Truth this Holy Doctor speaking of the Opinion of St. Cyprian of Firmilian Pag. 351. and others which taught that all those ought to be Re-Baptis'd which had been Baptis'd by Hereticks he saith Epist ad Ampluit can 1. To. 3. p. 21. That they had appointed they should be purisied anew by the true Baptism of the Church no more nor less then if they had been Baptis'd by Lay Persons St. Basil would not have spoke after this Manner had he not been perswaded that Baptism administred by Lay Men is not true Baptism As for Baptism administred by a Woman cap. 17. p. 231. Tertullian had before condemn'd it in his time in his Treatise of Baptism and had shewn that they were not permitted to teach nor to Baptise St. Epiphanius in the Heresie of the Collyridians which is the 79 in order inlarges much in proving the same thing to stop the rashness of Women who would undertake to Baptise pag. 1059 1060. observing also that the Holy Virgin had not this power for if she had it Jesus Christ might have been Baptis'd by her rather than by John Baptist The fourth Council of Carthage made this Decree Anno 398 That a Woman should not presume to Baptise It is not then to be wonder'd that St. Epiphanius in the forty two Heresie observes as a thing blameable Tom. 1. conc can 〈…〉 That the Arch-Heretick Marcion permitted Women to Baptise II. A Doctor in the Church cannot Preach nor administer the Sacraments unless he be both Doctor and Minister CONFORMITY This Article is but a continuance of the former for seeing a Doctor in quality of a meer Doctor hath no vocation to Preach the Word nor to administer the Sacraments it is unquestionable the Baptism which he shall confer shall be no other than that which shall be administred by a Meer Lay Man to do it Lawfully he must not only be a Doctor but also a Minister III. A Jew or Pagan of what Age soever he be ought not to be Baptised before being well Instructed in the Christian Religion and that it appears they are so by their Confession CONFORMITY There 's nothing in this Establishment but what was practis'd in the Antient Church St. Justin Martyr testifies in his second or rather his first Apology that the Christians of those times would not Baptise those who would turn to their Communion until after they had believed and were throughly perswaded of the Truth of their Doctrine and moreover promised to live conformable to the holiness of their Laws and profession Pope Victor the 1 ordain'd towards the end of the second Century as the Pontifical Book saith in his Life that in case of Necessity one may Baptise all those that turn from Paganism to Christianity either in a River or in the Sea or in a Fountain or in a Lake upon condition nevertheless that in the first place they should give an Account of the Christian Faith and make an open Confession of it The Ten Books of Recognitions falsly attributed to St Clement Disciple of the Apostles are very ancient but forged and writ before Origen who liv'd in the third Century in the VI of these Books at the end we read St. Peter Baptised near the Sea Those which had fully received the Faith of our Lord and Saviour that is to say those which believed in him and which had been Instructed in the knowledge of his Gospel St. Jerom expounding these words of our Saviour to his Apostles Math. 28.19 Go teach all Nations baptising them in the name of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost St. Jerom observes In cap. 28. Mat. Tom. 6. pag. 66. the Apostles taught them first and that after having instructed them they baptised them with Water for saith he It cannot be that the Body should receive the Sacrament of Baptism unless the Soul has first received
the truth of Faith Tom. 5. Spirit pag. 203. which the forty six Cannon of Laodicea also prescribes St. Owen writes in the VIII Chap. of the 2d Book of the Life of St. Eloy Bishop of Noyon That he baptised every year at Easter those which in the compass of the year he could Convert that is to say those he could turn from the darkness of Paganism to the Light of the Gospel Paulinus Arch-bishop of York did the like in the same Century that is in the 7th as is related by Beda in his Ecclesiastical History of England Theodulph Bishop of Orleans follows the same method in his 1 chap. of his Treatise of Baptism Epist 104 105. Aleuin who approved not the Saxons should be constrained to be baptised by force alledged for a Reason that they ought first of all to be Instructed But to descend to the last Century Cardinal Borrome in the Fifth Council of M●llan of which place he was Arch Bishop An 1579 Tom. 9. Conc. pag. 6.6 requires two things of Adults which are to be baptized First that they know the Rudiments of the Christian Religion Secondly That they repent of their Sins past I will add to all I have hitherto observ'd the practice of the Primitive Church which instructed the Catecumeny a long while before they Honour'd them with Holy Baptisme There is in our Discipline at the end of the Chapter we examine a Form of Baptisme of those which shall be converted to the Christian Faith And in the Thirteenth Century Nicetas Choniates composed one for Mahometans which desired to embrace Christianity Tom. 12. Bibl. Pat. p. 527. cum 531 532. The VI. Council of Paris Authorizes the Decree which it makes in the Year 829. Cannon the Sixth Book the First by the Practice of the Primitive Church To. 2. Conc. Gall. pag. 846. IV. The Children of Fathers and Mothers of the Romish Church and of Excommunicate Persons cannot be admittisme in the Reformed Churches though they were presented by believing Godfathers unless their Father and Mother consent to it and desire it and resign their Authority in quitting and yielding up to the Godfathers their right as to Instructing them with promises their Children shall be Educated in the true Religion CONFORMITY This Article is grounded on that Children depend of their Father and Mother without whose consent they cannot be disposed of nor christned against their Will into a Communion whereof they are not Members otherwise it were a Forcing People to be Baptized which the Church has ever condemn'd Hist lib. 6. cap. 17 King Chilperick as is related by Gregory of Touers commanded to Baptise the Jews that is to say he constrain'd several to be Baptiz'd which Pope Gregory the First did not approve as appears by the Letter he wrote to Virgilius and Theodorus the former being Bishop of Arles the other of Marsellia and is the Forty Fifth of the First Book So also when King Sisibute had done in Spain after the same manner as Chilperick had done in France Tom. 4. Conc. pag. 593. the Fourth Council of Toledo in the year 633 changed their violent practice in its 56 Cannon the Decree is contained in these terms As for Jews the Synod has Ordain'd that henceforwards no body shall be forced to believe for God has compassion on whom he will and harden whom he pleases and such should not be saved by force but voluntarily to the end to preserve intirely the way of Justice for as Man was ruin'd by voluntarily obeying the Serpent he is also saved by believing and converting to God when he calls him by his Grace let perswasion there be used and not violence to incline them to be converted truly and without any constraint Ib. p. 603 And 't is to be observ'd that the Ordinance of this Prince comprehended Children Hist Gothor in si se buto and Domesticks therefore St. Isidore Bishop of Sevil wrote of him having regard to this Edict That he had a Zeal for God but not according to Knowledge And we have already seen on the precedent Article that Alcuin Tutor to Charlemain did by no ways approve the force was put on the Saxons in those times Read his Letters in 104 and 105 and you 'l see the truth hereof insomuch as he deplored at the beginning of the former the misfortune of that People which as he saith often lost the Sacrament of Baptisme because they never had in their hearts the Sacrament of Faith Thence it is he teacheth in both of them that one must begin by Instruction that Faith is a thing voluntary and not forced that a Man cannot be forced to believe that which he does not believe But that it may not be thought the Subject I examin is of little importance and that it might be put amongst things indifferent to be done or left undone at pleasure it must be shewn there is nothing more contrary to the tenour of the Gospel than to constrain Men to imbrace the profession of it Jesus Christ the Author of this Heavenly Doctrine and the Soveraign Doctor of this Truth never imployed force nor violence to have it received he was content in Exhortations and Instructions which he accompanied with a hidden and secret vertue in regard of those he intended to call to his Communion and which he drew with efficacy but also at the same time with Sweetness with Cords of Love and Bands of Humanity and Charity The Apostles exactly followed his Example Exhorting Men to repent and believe the Gospel and praying them in the Name of Jesus Christ to be reconciled to God The Christians which succeeded the Apostles did just after the same manner cap. 24.28 Tertullian in his Appollogetick declares positively that the Liberty of Religion cannot be taken away nor deny Men the choice of the Divinity which they adore without rendring themselves guilty of the crime of Impiety and Irreligion because he pretends the Service of God ought to have a willing mind for its first principle And in his Book to Scapula he saith That 't is no Act of Religion to force the Religion which one should imbrace of free will and not by constraint Lactantius in the 20th chap. of the Fifth Book of his Divine Institutions saith There is nothing so voluntary as Religion which ceases to be p. 82. G. Par. 1544 at the very moment one has any aversion or hatred to it St. Hilary of Poictiers in his First Book to the Emperour Constantius Pag. 82. G Paris 1544. writes That God has taught the Knowledge Men have of him before he required it Authorising his Commandments by his Miracles not desiring a forced Obedience nor an unwilling Confession And in his Book against Auxentius Ib. p. 84. he reproaches the Arrians to have imployed Prisons and banishment to constrain Men to be of their side and to enter into their Communion St. Athanasius was of the same Opinion as he shews
in several parts of his Works particularly in his Epistle to the Solitaries Tom. 1. p 855. where he saith That the Nature of Piety and Religion is not to constrain but to perswade after the Example of our Saviour who forced no body but left it at every bodies choice to follow him saying to all the World If any one will come after me and to his Disciples and you will not you also go After which he extreamly blames the Conduct of the Emperour Constantius who at the desire of the Arrians tormented the Catholicks and used great violence to make them declare in his favour violence which he exaggerates with comparisons too strong the which I forbear to write I might alleage other Testimonies of the Fathers but I would not be too tedious Therefore it shall suffice to observe pag. 388. that there is mention in Mr. Justels African Code of a Law that was published by the which it was left to every bodies free choice to imbrace the Christian Religion The Emperour Jovian which succeeded Julian the Apostate Hist lib. 3. cap. 25. 〈◊〉 is praised in Socrates in that he had suffer'd every body to make profession of what Religion he pleas'd Ammianus Marcellinus has not failed to praise for the same thing the Great Valentinian who succeeded Jovian in the Empire Lib. 9. tit 16. de Males Ma●●em in his Thirtieth Book which the Prince testifies of himself in the Theodocian Code where he declares that as soon as he began to Reign he made Laws whereby every body had liberty to profess the Religion wherein he had been instructed and train'd up I can't tell if I should mention Constantine Pagonat or the hairy who in the Letter he writ to the Bishop of Rome on occasion of the Sixth Universal Council he assembled at Constantinople Tom. 5. Conc. pag. 11. he speaks to him in this manner We may excite and exhort all the World to amend and to joyn with the Christians but we will not constrain any body But I know I ought not and examining this matter without speaking of the Emperour Mar●i●n by whose Authority the Council of Chalcedon was assembled in the Year of our Lord 451 for in the Letter he writes to the Archimandrites and to the Friers of Jerusalem and the parts thereabouts he saith speaking of this Council That no body was constrained by his Order to subscribe and consent to it and see here the reason he gives For saith he Tom. 3. Gonc p. 488. we will not force or hale any body into the way of truth by threats nor violence Words becoming that wise Prince and which deserves to be graven in the mind of all Soveraigns And it is to be wished for the Honour of Charlemain Collect. part 2. pag. 179. cap. 7. that he had so acted in regard of the Saxons and not to have threatned with Death those amongst them as refused to be baptiz'd V. The Children of those also which are called Sarazins may be received to Baptisme in the Reformed Churches on the conditions above-mention'd provided also they may be void of all presumption on account of any former Baptisme received and after serious remonstrances made to Godfathers to consult how they may best discharge the promise and obligation they make to the Church and moreover that Godfathers and Godmothers charge themselves with the maintenance and instruction of the Child CONFORMITY This Article being much like the former it needs no other explication than that I have made on the Fourth where I have observed several things VI. Baptisme shall not be administred but in Church Assemblies where there is a Church publickly setled and where there is not a publick Church and the Fathers and Mothers by reason of sickness fear to have their Children christned at Church the Ministers shall prudently advise what to do in the matter however that there be the form of a Church together with Exhortations and Prayers But if there be no Church and that an Assembly is not to be had the Minister shall make no scruple to baptize the Infant of a Believer presented to him with Prayer and Exhortation CONFORMITY The Fifty Ninth Cannon of the VI. Oecumenical Council in the year 692 forbids administring Baptisme in Oratories in private Houses it requires it should be perform'd in the Catholick Churches Tom. 5. Conc. pag. 339. threatning to depose the Church-Men which obey not this Decree and to Excommunicate the Laity which shall violate it Nevertheless the same Council permits to do it by advice of the Bishop of the place Cannon Thirty First although the Fifty Eighth of that of Laodicea had absolutely prohibited to Bishops and Priests in the Fourth Century to celebrate the Eucharist in private Houses But the difficulty is to know what the Council means by the Catholick Churches Tom 5. Conc. p. 517. when it forbids christning any where else an Expression which I also find in the Preliminaries of the Second Council of Nice where it is said the Bishops went ad Luteram of the Holy Catholick Church The term Luter which comes from the Greek 〈◊〉 signifies a Basin or Vessel to wash the feet and I can't tell if in the words I examine it may not be put for the Baptismal Fountain After all I am inclin'd to think that by the Catholick Churches here spoke of is to be understood the Churches appointed for all the People in general and where there was publick Fonts according to which there is mention in the Capitularies of our Kings Tom. 2. Conc. Gal. p. 152. Ibid. pag. 30. of Baptismal Churches so called because there was a Publick Font or Christning Place as appears by the Seventh Cannon of the Synod which Pepin the Father of Charlemain caus'd to be held apud vernum Anno Dom. 750 There must not be a publick Font in any Parish but there where the Bishop whose the Parish is doth appoint Tom. 16. Bibl. Pal. pag. 674. Flodoard in his Second Book of his History of the Church of Reims chap. 19. calls these Churches Baptismal Titles which distinguished them from others which had not Fonts And it is very probable that there was in each City but one Baptismal Church where all the People were Christen'd which was also observ'd in Villages in the Country so it must be understood the Decree of the Council of Meaux in the Year 845 Tom. 3. Conc. Gal. Can. 48. p. 45 Tom. 1. Conc. Gal. c. 1● pag. 566. That no Priest presume to Baptize but in the Baptismal Churches which are in the Villages As for Oratories it was not permitted there to build Fonts as we find by the Ninth Epistle of the Second Book of Gregory I. of the 71 and 83 of the 7th of the Third of the 8th of this practice continued also in Pope Zacharies time who also wrote so to Pepin in the year 747 in using the very terms of Gregory I. But in process
pag 453. which he held Anno 1565 forbids the same thing to all that are Excommunicated XII Ministers shall diligently warn Godfathers and Godmothers to weigh and consider the promises they make at the Celebration of Baptisme and Fathers and Mothers also to choose Godfathers and Godmothers well instructed in Religion and of good Life and Conversation and that may be of their Acquaintance as near as may be and that by their means there may be appearance in case of need the Children may be well Educated CONFORMITY The Author of the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy Tom. 2. cap. 7. p. 361 362. under the name of Dennis the Areopagite prescribes just what is appointed by our Discipline Jonas Bishop of Orleans follows the same Steps in the Ninth Century and Establishes by the words of St. Austin the Duties wherein Godfathers and Godmothers stand bound to those which they present to be Baptized it is to what he imploys the Sixth Chapter of the First Book of Instruction of the Layity and the words of St. Austin he makes use of Tom. 1. Spicil pag. 19. are taken out of the Sermon 133 of Time which is in the Tenth Tome of his works Tom. 9. Conc. pag 453. Cardinal Borrome in his first Council of Millan Anno 1565 follows the same steps with the Antients ordering to warn Godfathers of their Duty towards their Neophytes Tom. 5. Spicil pag. 212. both as to Doctrine and Manners where Fathers and Mothers are wanting A long while before this Council of Millan St. Eloy had recommended the same thing to Godfathers and in the Second Book of Capitularies chap. 46. Godfathers are enjoyn'd to apply themselves to teaching Children they have presented in Baptism because they have answer'd for them It is also the subject of a Cannon of a Council of Reims in Reginon Lib. 1. cap. 272. XIII Those which by Trustees shall present Children to be Baptized in the Churches of Rome shall be severely sensur'd as consenting to Idolatry CONFORMITY In the Antient Church those which lived in a Communion separate from others never presented their Children to be baptized in those Societies whereof they were not Members and with whom they held no fellowship nor correspondence in matters relating to Religion and the service of God XIV As for Names given to Children Ministers shall reject as much as in them lies and as shall be expedient those that savour of Antient Paganisme and shall impose on the said Infants the Names attributed to God in the Church as Emanuel and the like and moreover shall admonish Fathers and Godfathers to choose Names approv'd in the Holy Scripture as much as may be possible If they have a desire to some other they may be admitted those abovesaid only excepted and such as may tend to indecency CONFORMITY Dennis Bishop of Alexandria observes in Eusebius That the Antient Christians were wont to give their Children the Names of Peter Paul and other Holy Men as well to shew the Love and Respect they bore those Holy Persons as to render their Children as dear in the sight of God as those Holy Men were St. Chrysostom writes that the Antiochians loved Miletius their Pastor so tenderly that they call'd their Children by his Name for this end forgetting that of their Ancestors And in the Twenty First Homily on Genesis which is in the Second Volumne he Exhorts his Auditors not too lightly to impose all sorts of Names no not even those of their Grandfathers and Great Grandfathers and those which have been illustrious by Birth on their Children but rather the Names of these Holy Men which have been celebrated for their Vertues and in favour with God and elsewhere he complains of those which do otherwise according to which Eusebius speaks in his Book of the Martyrs of Pallestine chap. 11. of Five Martyrs that having quitted the Names they received from their Fathers because saith he they were it may be some Idol Names they took the Names of Elias of Jeremiah of Esaiah of Samuel and Daniel The Fourth Council of Millan whereof we spake on the Tenth Article requires this Custom to be followed I think therefore our Discipline does very well in keeping the medium betwixt too great a Severity and too great Indulgence whereunto the Establishments of our National Synods agree very well on this Article XV. Ministers shall warn their Flocks to behave them with all due Reverence when the Sacrament of Baptism is administred And to avoid the contempt most People make of Baptism either going out of the Assembly or behaving themselves in it irreverently when it is administred it has been thought good that for the future it be administred before singing the last Psalm or at least before the last Prayer and the People shall be warned to bear the same Reverence in the Administration of Baptism as of the Lords Supper seeing Jesus Christ with his benefits is offered us in the one as well as the other Sacrament CONFORMITY In the Fifth Action of the Council of Constantinople under Memma Tom. 4. Conc. pag. 109. which was its Bishop about the Year of our Lord 536 there is a request of the Church of Apamia where is shewn the profound respect one ought to have in the time of administring Baptism thence it is the Antient Doctors do call it a Mistery or terrible Misteries There is in the Euchology or Ritual of the Greek Church an excellent Oration to the Catecumeny which are on the point of receiving Baptisme Pag. 340. Par. 1647 in the which is represented in a touching and Pathetical manner the dignity of this August Sacrament with the reverence and holy fear one should have when one celebrates it Cardinal Borrome in his Fifth Council of Millan assembled Anno Dom. 1579. Appoints all Curates To warn frequently all those which assist at the Celebration of Holy Baptisme Tom. 9. Conc. pag. 616. to bring all manner of Piety Devotion and attention meditating secretly and with care the promises they have made to God when they were Baptized It is not therefore to be wonder'd if St. Chrysostom speaks of the Baptismal Fountain as of a redoubtable and desirable Pool both together In illud fi●●● 〈◊〉 reg Caesor Patrisam Tom. 6. p. ●●0 and if he Exhorts those which are going to be baptized to prostrate themselves as Captives before their King to cast themselves on their knees lifting up their hands to Heaven where the King of us all saith he is sitting on a Royal Throne because in effect we owe this respect and veneration to his Sacraments at all times that we are present when they are Celebrated XVI The Consistory shall have an Eye over those which without great Considerations keep their Children long from being Baptized CONFORMITY St. Cyprian Ep. 59. pag. 95. or rather a Synod of 66 Bishops of which he was Chief appointed that Infants newly born should be Baptised without deferring too long Baptising them and
the Church-book if the Children are begotten in lawful Wedlock A Form of Baptism of those which shall be Converted to the Christian Faith as well Pagans Jews Mahometans and Anabaptists which have not been Baptised made at the National Synod of the Reformed Churches of France held at Charanton in the year 1644. the 26 of December and the following Days AFter that the Catechumeny has been sufficiently instructed and Catechis'd to give an account of his Faith and that the Church shall by good Testimonies have taken cognisance of the Integrity of the Persons Life and Learning they shall by the said Persons be presented to the whole assembly of believers to be baptised in their presence And the Minister shall say The first Demand Do you not confess that you are a Child of Wrath deserving death and everlasting damnation Answer Yes Demand Are you not displeased and grieved for all the the sins you have committed ever since you were born and don 't you promise for ever to forsake them Answer Yes Dem. Do you not with all your heart forsake the seducements and temptations of the Devil and his Angels of all the Pomps and Vanities of the World and of all the Affections and Lusts of the Flesh Answ Yes If it be a Pagan the Minister shall say to him Dem. Do you not believe there is one only God which made Heaven and Earth who supports all things by his powerful Word and in whom we live move and have our being Answ Yes Then the following demand shall be made which is common to all and which are to be offer'd to all Dem. Do you not believe this great God which has created Heaven and Earth is one in Fssence and distinguished into three Persons Equal and Coeternal the Father the Son begotten of the Father from all Eternity and the Holy Ghost proceeding Eternal from the Father and the Son Answ Yes If it be a Pagan the three following Questions shall be propos'd Dem. Do you not believe this great God never leaving himself without Witness has manifested himself to Men not only by his Works which from their first production continually publish his Praise and Glory but also by revealing his Will for the Salvation of Mankind contained in the Holy Scriptures called the Old and New Testament Answ Yes Dem. Do you not believe that all these Holy Scriptures are divinely inspired and continue the perfect Rule of our Faith and good Living Answ Yes Dem. Do you not protest to resist the Devil to the last minute of your Life whom you have hitherto adored serving sdols made with hands or the host of Heaven or to conclude those which by Nature are no Gods Answ Yes If it be a Jew these sive Questions shall be made omiting the four above expressed they belonging to Pagans Dem. Do you not detest the Rebellion and Obstinacy of the Jews and do not you beg pardon for having been so long time ingaged therein Answ Yes Dem. Do you not believe that what God has been pleas'd to reveal to us of his Will is contain'd not only in the Books of the Old but also in those of the New Testament Answ Yes Dem. Do you not believe that Jesus the Son of the Blessed Virgin Mary conceived in her by the ineffable Power of the Holy Ghost and after condemned to dye on the Cross through the false Accusation of the Jews by the wicked Sentence of Pontius Pilate raised from the dead the third day and now sitting in Glory is God manifest in the Flesh the Eternal Word of the Father by which he created and maintains the whole Vniverse the blessed Seed promised to Adam presently after his Fall by vertue of whom the Serpents head is broken whose coming all the Patriarchs expected with Hope and the great Prophet and true Messias foretold as well by Moses as by the other Prophets which lived after him Answ Yes Dem. Do you not believe that the Lord Jesus is the fulfilling of the Law in Righteousness to all which believe the truth of his Types and Figures the true Lamb of God which taketh away the Sins of the World and that in him dwells the fulness of the Godhead bodily Answ Yes Dem. Do you not believe that now the observation of Legal Ceremonies is not only superfluous but also wholly prejudicial to a good Conscience Answ Yes If the Catecumeny be a Mahometan the Minister shall ask these following Questions omitting the former which particularly refer to Pagans or Jews Dem. Do you not believe that the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament are inspir'd of God and conttain his whole Will for the Salvation of Mankind and the only perfect Rule of Faith and good Living Answ Yes Dem. Do you not believe that Jesus the Son of the Blessed Virgin Mary conceived in her by vertue of the Holy Ghost and made after the Flesh of her substance is God and Man blessed for ever perfect God and perfect Man Man made of a Woman in the fulness of time and God ingender'd of God the Father before all Eternity Answ Yes Dem. Do you not believe that the Lord Jesus from his first conception after the Flesh was Holy Innocent without Spot separate from Sinners and that he suffer'd not Death for his Sins but for ours¿ Answ Yes Dem. Do you not believe that his Death is the propitiation of our sins yea for the sins of the whole World and that this propitiation is of infinite Merit whereby Eternal Glory and Salvation has been acquir'd for us Answ Yes Dem. Do you not believe Mahomet was a Deceiver and that his Alcoran is a Sacrilegious heap of Dreams full of absurdities and broached a purpose to set up a false and abominable Religion Answ Yes Dem. Do you not believe that the Gospel of our Lord Jesus is the power of God to Salvation in all them which believe That the only Christian Religion is the power of God to Salvation in all them which believe that the only Christian Religion is that alone whereby God the Father has revealed his good pleasure for the Salvation of Mankind until the end of the World that since the manifestation thereof there is no other to be expected that the Lord Jesus Christ only is the great Prophet promis'd to the Believers of the Old Testament and that God having formerly spoken in divers manners to Men before and under the Law has spoke to the Church of the New Testament by the Mouth of his only Son Jesus Answ Yes Quest Repeat the summary of your Faith Answ I believe in God the Father Almighty Maker of Heaven and Earth c. If the Catecumene be an Annabaptist the Minister shall say Quest Do you not believe that the Lord Jesus is and shall be true God and Man in both Natures Eternally that he was according to his Manhood like to us in all things sin only excepted so that he was the true Son of Abraham of David of the Blessed
Name for the favour thy good hand has vouchsafed to shed abroad on this thy Servant who was in the most profound darkness of the shadows of Death when thou didst illuminate him causing to shine on him the saving and quickning Light of the Day Star from on high drawing him from a deplorable hardness to soften his heart and freeing him from the bands of Death to restore him to Life as Lord thou hast taken away the vail which was on his heart calling him to confess the only true God and him whom thou hast sent Jesus Christ and hast at this time inspired him with courage to make publick Confession of thy most Holy Faith and of the hope thou hast caused to spring in his Soul enabling him to present himself in thy sight to receive Holy Baptisme the Seal of thy Covenant pledge of the remission of sins and Symbole of our entrance into thy House by Spiritual Regeneration Look Lord more and more on him with the eye of thy favour forgiving all his sins sprinkling his Soul with the precious Blood of the Lamb without spot which taketh away the sins of the Woold and making him feel the powerful vertue of its propitiation let thy Spirit sanctifie and make him a new Creature to the end that dying to sin he may live unto Righteousness and laying aside the Old Man with its Lusts he may put on the New Man which is renewed in Righteousness and true Holiness And as we are about to pour on his head the water of thy Sacrament shed forth on him the Gifts and Graces of thy Holy Spirit receiving him into the number of thy Servants and honouring him with the Adoption of thy Children Enable him to offer unto thee during the whole course of his Life the Obedience and Religious Service which is due unto thee and for ever to persevere in thy Holy Covenant to the end that as now in thy Name we receive him into the Communion of thy Church Militant thou wilt vouchsafe one day to receive him into thy Church Triumphant and gather him for ever into the Assembly of the First born whose Names are written in Heaven Hear us O Father of all Mercies to the end the Baptisme we confer upon him according to thine Ordinance may produce its Fruit and Vertue as 't is revealed to us in thy Holy Gospel in thy Son our Saviour Jesus Christ who has commanded us to pray unto thee and say Our Father which art in Heaven c. Speaking to those who present the Catecuminy the Minister shall say to them Quest As you have been charitably imployed in the Teaching and Instructing our Brother and are Witnesses of the Baptisme he is to receive at this present by our Ministry Do you not promise in the presence of God and this Holy Assembly to continue more and more to strengthen him in the Faith and exhort him to good Works Answ Yes This being done speaking to the Catecumeny which waits kneeling to receive Baptisme powing the Water on his head the Minister shall say Having seen the Testimonies of your Faith N. I Baptise you in the Name of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Amen CONFORMITY There is nothing in all this formulary as large as it is which is not found in substance in what we have remaining of the Catechisms of the Antient Doctors of the Church and in what was practis'd towards those to whom Baptisme was to be conferr'd and because most part of those which converted themselves to the Christian Faith turn'd from Paganisme where they had learn'd to believe and serve several Gods the first step they were made go in the way of Salvation was to make them renounce this Diabolical Doctrine afterwards to believe and be throughly perswaded that there is but one True God which has made Heaven and Earth that supports all things by his Almighty Word who gives us our Life Being and Motion who never left himself without Witness and has manifested himself to Men not only by his Works but also by Revelation of his Will contained in the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testament Tom. 1. pag. 93. The first act of Faith of the Catecumeny's saith St. Cyril of Alexandria in the third Book of Adoring in Spirit and Truth is to depart from the belief and opinion touching the plurality of Gods and to imbrace him who is the only true God by Nature Theodolphus Bishop of Orleans in a Treatise he made of the Order which is to be observ'd in the administration of Baptism establishes near hand the same practise when he writes in chap. 2. that the first instruction which is given to Catechumenies is that there is one true God to the end that leaving the worship of the creature they should Consecrate themselves to the Worship of God the Creator It 's true that when 't was a Jewish Proselite he was obliged before Baptisme to renounce particularly all legal Ceremonies to the Ancient Material and Typical Worship to the Jewish Washings and Purifications to their Feasts their New Moons and Sabbaths and generally to all that pertained to the Synagogue especially to the false Messias they yet expect and will never come Moreover they were to make open profession to believe in God the Father Son and Holy Ghost Holy Consubstantial and individual Trinity that they should admit of the Incarnation of the Eternal Word Jesus Christ our Saviour in confessing he is come into the World and that he is made Man but not ceasing to be God the Holy Virgin having brought him forth after the Flesh and by this means being become the Mother of God It is after this manner they proceeded with the Jewish Proselites Pag. 344. Par. 1647 as we find by a Catechism in the Ritual of the Greeks which in substance answers to what 's prescrib'd in our Discipline But if it was a Mahumetan that imbraced the Christian Religion the first thing that was requir'd of him was to Anathematise Mahomet his Sectators his Successors his lying Alcoran full of Impostures and Dreams especially in what regards our Saviour Jesus Christ in a Word all the impieties which depend of the Carnal Religion of this infamous Impostor of the East which being done this Proselite made this Declaration I now adhere to Jesus Christ the only true God I believe in the Father the Son and the holy Ghost holy indivisible and consubstantial Trinity I believe the Mistery of the Incarnation and the coming into the World of one of the holy Trinity that is of the Word and only begotten Son of God who was begotten of the Father before the World began by whom all things were made and I am perswaded he is true Man without being divested of his Divinity for he is true God and true Man without confusion without conversion and without alteration with two Natures in one sole Person I confess also he suffered all things voluntarily that he was crucified
matters that those which were to be baptised were bound to recite the Symbol of their Faith to renounce the Devil to his Power and his Angels to acknowledge that they were by Nature Children of Wrath and to shew Repentance and Sorrow for their Sins committed during the time of their Ignorance and if they were instructed in the knowledge of Heavenly things they were also taught to live well that is to say holily and in a way answerable to their Vocation The Nature and Fruits of Baptism was explain'd to them They had also some Light of the Eucharist shewed them because they did communicate presently after being baptised and all these things were accompanied with Ardent Prayers to God as well to render him thanks for calling them to his blessed Communion as to implore his Grace and Benediction on them at the very instant that he honour'd them with the seal of his Covenant and Sacrament of our Salvation After all I have said the perfect resemblance may easily be seen which is found in the Matter I Examin betwixt our practice and that of the Ancient Church if you except what regards Anabaptists which appearing but in the last Century could be neither the Subject nor Matter of any of the Decrees of the Cannon Law CHAP. XII Of the LORDS SUPPER ARTICLE I. WHere there is not a settled Church it is not permitted to celebrate the Lords Supper CONFORMITY The reason of this First Article is because the Lords Supper is so called by reason of the Communion of those which participate thereof it is the Opinion of St. Chrysostom which he has thus Expressed Hom. 21. Tom. 5. pag. 312. The Apostle calls it the Lords Supper because all those which are invited take it in common with concord The Author of the Commentaries on St. Pauls Epistles in St. Jerom's Works saith That the Lords Supper ought to be common to all In 4 Cor. 11. The Lords Supper saith St. Isidore of Sevil is so called from the Communion of those which Eat of it and the Communicants from their assembling in Common Orig. l. 20. pag. 132. thence it is that Justin Martyr writes in his first Apology that they assembled on Sundays from the Cities and from the Country round about to hear the Word of God pag. 93. cum 97. and to partake of the Holy Sacrament and he also observes they sent some to the absent to shew doubtless the Communion they had together and I can't tell but 't was with respect hereunto that the Council of Laodicea conceived in these Terms the 58th Cannon Bishops nor Priest must not make Oblations in private Houses that is to say that they should not there Celebrate the Eucharist which was not begun to be celebrated without Communicants till about the 12th Century Part. 1. c. 11. as I have sufficiently proved in the History of the Sacrament II. Children under twelve years of Age shall not be admitted to the Lords Supper but above this Age it shall be at the discretion of the Ministers to Judge of those which shall be fit to be admitted or not CONFORMITY It may seem to be collected from the place in St. Justin Martyr which I cited on the other Article that only persons of Age and not little Children were admitted to the Holy Sacrament and it is very probable that Tertullian was of this Opinion because he thought fit to defer the Baptising of Children for some years as well as Gregory Nazianzen as I shewed on the foregoing Chapter It 's true that since the time of St. Cyprian until about the 12th Century Children were received to the Communion but this Custom is justly rejected by those also of the Church of Rome as well as Protestants In effect young Children are incapable of the Examination St. Paul requires of those which approach to the Holy Table III. Priests Friers and other Ecclesiastical Persons of the Church of Rome shall not be admitted to the Lords Supper until they have first made confession in publick of their past life and profession CONFORMITY This practice is wholly conformable to that of the first Christians It is not permitted unto any one whatsoever saith St. Justin Martyr to partake with us of the Sacrament unless he be fully perswaded of the truth of our Doctrine that he has been Baptized to obtain Remission of his Sins with a new Birth Apol. 1. p. 97 98. and that he lives according to the Laws of Jesus Christ IV. Dignitaries which bear the Name and Title of their benefices and those which therewith mingle Idolatry Directly or Indirectly whether they enjoy their Benefices by their own hands or by the hands of others shall not be admitted to the Lords Supper CONFORMITY Those here described not being in the State nor Disposition desired by Justin Martyr they cannot be received to the Holy Communion in a Christian Society whose Doctrine they do not believe or that don't gather themselves within the Laws and under the Discipline observed in the midst of them V. Ministers shall be warned not to receive to the Lords Supper Persons of other Churches unless they have sufficient testimony from its Minister or in default thereof from an Elder if it possible may be CONFORMITY The Church has observed this Order from the First Ages for the Council of Antioch in the Year 341 forbids in the Seventh Cannon to admit of any Stranger without having Pacifick Letters The Seventh Cannon of the First Council of Carthage Assembled under Gratus about the Year 348 speaks also more clearly forbidding plainly both Clergy and Layity to communicate in any other Church without their Bishops Letter Lib. 2. c. 51. The Author of Apostolical Constitutions prescribes almost the same thing Pag. 601 602. In the Third Volumne of the French Councils there is a Synod of Nants the time it held is somewhat uncertain the Two First Cannons whereof are imployed to confirm this same practice VI. A Man that 's Deaf and Dumb which by evident Signs Tokens and Gestures shewing his Piety and Religion what he can may be admitted to the Holy Sacrament when by a long Experience of the Holiness of his Life the Church shall perceive he has Faith and shall be truly taught of God CONFORMITY The Church never required of Communicants more than a Holy Mind and Disposition wherefore if it is found in a Deaf and Dumb Man and that he gives signs of it he ought to be admitted to the Sacrament and when I speak of the Church I mean that of the Primitive Christians for in process of time they imposed on Communicants an Obligation of Auricular Confession especially since the days of Innocent the Third who made the first Decree for it in his Latteran Council in the Year of Christ 1215. VII The Bread of the Sacrament ought to be administred to those which cannot drink Wine in making protestation that 't is not through contempt and doing what they can possible
shall be Incestuous and though the Magistrate should suffer it yet shall it not be celebrated in the Church to which the Pastors shall take great heed And by the same reason is prohibited to marry the Neece of his deceased Wife CONFORMITY Our Discipline looking upon the marriage of a man with his Wifes Aunt to be Incestuous it hath reason not to suffer it to be celebrated in the midst of us whatever permission the Magistrate may give for the same because the Authority of the Magistrate cannot render a marriage lawful which of it self is Incestuous The Ancient Cannons have not fully explained themselves on this matter nevertheless they have so well understood the nature of Incestuous marriages that I make no doubt but they would have included in the number that which we Examine at least it appears to me it may be so gather'd from their conduct in such like Occasions However it be Ep. 1. ad Bonifac. Tom. 5. Conc. pag. 497. I can't tell but Pope Zachary who condemn'd the marriage with the Widow of his Uncle would also have condemned it with the Aunt of his Wife deceased The Authors of our Discipline treat after the same manner Marriage with the Neece and second Neece of ones Wife deceased the reason is because the Husband and Wife by Marriage become one Flesh and as it may be said one Person and so by reason of this strait and intimate Union the Aunts and Neeces of one are the Aunts and Neeces of the other now marrying with the Aunt and Neece or second Neece is forbidden not only by the Word of God but also by the Discipline of Ancient Christians as may easily be proved by a great number of Cannons if it were necessary but because the thing is without difficulty To. 5. p. 306 307. I 'le content my self to shew that St. Ambrose highly condemns marriage with the Neece in his 48 Letter Book 6. Gregory I. Collect. Rom. p. 2. pag. 46. 94. does Anathematize it in a Roman Synod The Popes Eugenius XI and Leo IV. in the 9th Century does the same as Gregory I. did in the 6th having each of them held a Synod at Rome where Anathema is pronounced in the 38th Cannon against those that marry with their Neeces Nevertheless Popes at this time are not so scrupulous nor so observant of the Decrees of their Predecessors but that they have sometimes dispensed an Uncle to marry his own Neece we have seen examples of it in our Days altho' the Holy Scriptures expresly forbid it and as for marrying with an Aunt Tom. 2. Conc. Gall. p. 5. it is also reckoned amongst Incestuous Marriages by the first Cannon of the Synod of Mètz in the Year 753. XII As for Marrying ones Wifes Brothers Widow Civility nor Decency will not permit it CONFORMITY All the Cannons of the Councils of France which I cited on the 9th Article and many others which I have not alledged do absolutely forbid marrying ones Brothers Widow but I have not met with one that has spoke of marrying ones Wifes Brothers Widow Our Discipline also says no more of such a Conjunction but only that it is contrary to the Laws of Decency and Gentility nevertheless because the Magistrate in these occasions has power to overpass these Considerations of Civility and Decency the National Synod whereof I spake but now and whose direction I cited on the 10th Article does absolutely refer the decision of the Case to the Civil Magistrate in these terms The Churches shall make no difficulty to confirm such Marriages if it appears that the contracts has been before duely authorised by the Magistrate XIII No man may after the death of his Wife marry her with whom he committed Adultery in his Wifes life time unless such marriage was authoriz'd by the Magistrate CONFORMITY St. Basil in his 2d Cannonical Epistle to Amphilochius teaches the same thing Can. 39. Tom. 3. in Pandect Graec. according to Balsamon's Explication The Frier Blastares in his Alphabetical Collection of Cannons is of the same mind Tom. 2. pag. 97. as he explains himself in the 8th Chap. of the Letter B. However our Discipline that condemns such a marriage nevertheless suffers it to be celebrated if the Magistrate appoints it The Council of Tribur Tom. 7. Conc. c. 71. p. 157 which was formerly one of the Kings Houses not far off of Mayance this Council assembled Anno Dom. 895 under the Emperor Arnulphus made this Decree which agrees very well with that I now Examin We appoint and publish by one consent according to the difinitions of Cannons that if any one has committed Adultery with another Woman during her Husbands Life and that this Husband comes to die this unlawful access shall be forbidden him by Judgment of the Synod to the end he should not marry her with whom he had before committed Adultery for we will not and 't is not sutable to the Christian Religion that any one should take to wife her whom he had before defiled with Adultery and as for the Caution given by our Discipline in regard of the Magistrate the Fathers of Tribur have not passed it in silence for in the manner they speak to King Arnulphus in the preface they give plainly to understand that they were perswaded that it was a civil case wherein the Prince might Exercise his Power XIV It being so that the principal occasion of Marriage is to have Issue and propagate and to avoid Fornication and Adultery the Marriage of a Man known to be an Eunuch cannot be allow'd of nor solemnized in the Reformed Church CONFORMITY The Council of Verbery in Vallois requires Marriage should be Dissolved for insufficiency of the Husband Tom. 2. conc Gall. c. 17. pag. 4. being complained of by the Wife and duely proved to whom the Synod permitts to do what she will that is to say Ibid. c. 2. pag. 14. to re-marry Pope Stephen the second however two years after prohibits separation for cause of insufficiency nevertheless he orders dissolution if one of the parties be tormented with the Devil or infected with Leprosie wherein he followed not the sentiment of Gregory the second his Predecessor Ep. 9. ad Bonif. c. 2. l. 1. conc Gall. pag. 519. who about 30 years before suffered a man to separate from a woman who was insufficient and to re-marry with another The 55th chap. of the 6th Book of Capitularies of Charlemain gives the same liberty to the woman if the man be insufficient which Isaac Bishop of Langres repeats in the 13th chap. of the second Treatise of his Cannons Tom. 3. conc Gall. pag. 673. Photius a Writer of the 9th Cenury and Patriarch of Constantinople speakes no otherwse in the 13th Title chap. 4th of his Nomocanon It s true he requires this separation be made after having suffer'd three years her Husbands insufficiency and in the first of his Letters taken out of an
Ancient Eastern Manuscript he sets down insufficiency as a lawful cause of separation with free liberty to the other party whither the Man or Woman to re-marry XV. Marriages shall be proposed in the Consistory with sufficient attestations of promises CONFORMITY This Establishment is to prevent Clandestin Marriages I will shew on the 19th Article that it is conformable to the Ancient Discipline XVI Baines shall be asked in places where the Parties do reside and are known and if they will be Married in some other place than where their Banes have been called they shall take sufficient attestation that they have been published three several times CONFORMITY Pope Innocent the third making Answer to the Bishop of Beavais in the 4th Book of Decretals Tit. 1 de Sponsal cap. 27. makes mention of a publication of Banes and in the Council of Latran which he assembled in the year 1215 he appointed that the Custom of publishing Banes of Marriage in Churches observed in some places should be generally observed in all places Tom. 7. conc cap. 51. p. 818 accordingly we Read in the second volume of Dom. Luke D' Achery a Benedictine Friers Spirilegium that Nicholas Bishop of Anger 's prohibited in the year 1270 pag. 217 221 222. to confirm or celebrate any marriage whatsoever until publication was first made of it in the Church he also mentions the same practise in another Synod in the year 1274 Ib. p. 255. Tom. 9. conc pag. 411. Decret de refor Matrim cap. 1. which William his successor also renewed in the year 1304. The Council of Trent in the 24th Session the 11th of November 1563. the 8th under Pius the IV prescribes also the same thing Cardinal Borrome failed not to confirm this custom and to recomend the observing of it in his Councils at Millan and 't is to be observed the testimonies I have alledged require that publication shall be made in the Churches of the parties contracting XVII Banes shall be published three several Sundays in places when there is Sermons and in other places when publick prayers may be said However the Publication ought to continue the space of 15 dayes after which time the Marriage may be Solemniz'd in the Assembly and even on the third Sunday CONFORMITY The same Testimonies I alledged on the foregoing Article do prescribe in substance the same thing as our Discipline doth for some will have it that the publication now spoke of should be made in a certain time which should give leisure to those who would oppose a Marriage to prepare their Reasons others that Banes should be asked several times on Holy-daies others to the Number of three several times XVIII Those which live in places where the usual Exercise of Religion is not Established may cause their Banes to be published in Romish Churches inasmuch as 't is a matter partly political CONFORMITY The publishing of Banes being a thing meerly political our Discipline had reason when it suffer'd those of our Religion in the case hinted at to have them done in Temples of the Romish perswasion XIX The Churches shall not Marry any body without having ful knowledge and approbation CONFORMITY Besides what I have said on the second Article it appears by the first Cannon of the Council of Laodicea that Clandestin Marriages were condemned even in that time There is in the third Volume of Councils a Decree of Pope Hormisdas taken out of Gratian and is conceived in these Terms Can. 2. pag. 801. That no Believer of what quality soever do not Marry clandestinely and in secret but let him Marry publickly in our Lord Tom. 3. conc Gal. pag. 116. Tom. 7. conc pag. 818. in receiving the Priests Benediction This Hormisdas was Pope in the beginning of the 6th Century Herrald Bishop of Tours makes the same prohibition in the 130 chap. of his Capitulary Anno Dom. 858. and the 15th Can. of those which Pope Innocent the third proposed and caused to pass at the Council of Latteran in the year 1215 contain the very like constitution It is therefore that in our Churches no Stranger is Married without having a good attestation from the Church whereof he is member to know if the Banes have there been published three several Lords dayes without any opposition Cardinal Borrome in his second Council of Millan Anno Dom. 1569 Decree 26 will have it so practis'd Tom. 9. conc pag. 590. according to the Ordinance of the Council of Trent XX. When one of the parties is of a contrary Religion the promises of Marriage shall not be received nor published in the Church until the party of contrary Religion be sufficiently instructed doth protest publickly in the Church of the place where the said party is known that with full resolution he renounces all Idolatry and Superstition particularly the Mass and will by Gods assistance persevere therest of his life in his true worship and service of which instruction the Consistory shall take account And it shall not be lawful for any Pastor or Consistory to do otherwise under pain of being suspended and even of being turn'd out of their office CONFORMITY Even from the first Ages of Christianity the Orthodox were forbidden to Marry with Persons which were not of their Communion but of some other Sect which was looked on as Heretical and contrary Tom. 1. conc pag. 234. The Council of Elebori or Eluira in Spain in the year 305 imploys to this purpose the 6th of its Cannons The 10th and 31st of Laodicea about the year 360 treat of the same thing But the 14th of Calcedon is more full for it prohibits those kind of Marriages unless him that intends to Marry an Orthodox Maid Let. G. c. 12. doth promise to be converted to the true Faith The Frier Blastares in his Pandects printed at Oxford of whom I have spoke already explaining this Cannon of Chalcedon makes two considerable remarks first that the Consummation of Marriage now spoke of ought to be deferr'd until the Heterodox party has accomplish'd his promise the second that the same thing is to be required of Latins that is to say of those of the Church of Rome when they desire to marry Women that are Orthodox an evident proof that the Latin Church was esteemed a Hetorodox Church by the Greeks in Blastares's time which was in the XIV Century I may alledge several other Cannons against the Marriages now spoke of Tom. 1. conc Gall. pag. 231. 242. as the 72 of the 6th Oecumenical Council at the end of the 7th Century The 19th of the 2d Council of Orleans in the year 533. the 6th of that of Auvergne assembled 2 years after and the 25 and 26 Decrees of the 1 Title of the 2d Council of Millan which I cited on the foregoing Article If from Councils we pass to Ecclesiastical Writers Tom. 1 p 239 240. we shall find several which have explained themselves after the same manner
in their actions that all their study and care tended only to Piety and Virtue without being needful to incline them to it by any great number of Rules so also their Discipline at first consisted in forty little Articles which were composed by the first National Synod held at Paris in the year 1559 whereas that we have at this time contain'd in 14. Chapters 222. Articles much more large and ample than the first The Reason of this difference proceeds from the change which in time hapned to those that liv'd in our Communion and that were Members of our Churches had they always followed the steps of their Ancestors and that they had been faithful Representatives of their Innocence and of their purity they would have stood in need but of very few Rules because the only love of Virtue would have seasoned all their actions animated all their motions mortified their passions and desires and lighted in their Souls a Divine flame which would have raised their thoughts from Earth to Heaven and the which in snatching them by a holy violence from the love of the Creatures would inseparably have fastned them to the love of the Creator But because there is always some remains of Man in Man and that the flesh too often prevails over the spirit they by little and little degenerated from the zeal of their Fathers and their piety insensibly falling into extream coldness they suffered themselves to fall into many defects which dishonoured the Holiness of their Profession and which obliged their Guides to increase from time to time the number of Laws to restrain by the authority of those Ordinances the course of their disorders and to stop the spring of those abuses wherein they wisely followed the conduct of the Primitive Fathers who seeing a great negligence in the lives of Christians added to their Constitutions new Decrees proportionable as the Sins of Men gave them matter and occasion knowing well that 't was the only means to preserve in its purity a Religion which had been cemented by the blood of Jesus Christ and consecrated by his Spirit In conclusion How large soever our Discipline at this time may be and how much soever is increased the number of its Canons I dare boldly say That never was a better Discipline and that there was never seen an Ecclesiastical Policy more judiciously composed than it is if one take the pains to read it without prejudice one shall agree to this truth and unless one be extreamly prepossest with prejudice against it it must be granted that the Constitutions are just that the Rules are holy and that all the Decrees have no other aim but the glory of God and the holiness of those which submit themselves to the keeping of his Laws all the parts of this body answer one the other they march an equal pace and agree all to the same end the form of Government which it prescribes is indeed very simple but it is Evangelical the order it will have one follow is full of exactness and if the Government it establishes is far from splendor and pomp it is wholly bedew'd in justice and equity In a word All that 's contain'd in it was setled with a spirit of love and sweetness After all this what is there can be blam'd in this Discipline Is it the Establishment of its Ministers But there must be such to instruct the people Is it the manner of their Establishment But it is conformable to that which was observed in the Primitive Church Is it the qualities which is desired to be in them But they are the very same which St. Paul requires in those which consecrate themselves to the holy Ministry Is it the Duties whereunto they are obliged But in this also is followed the precepts of the same Apostle seeing they are obliged to preach the Word of God to administer the Sacraments which he has instituted to live unblameably to be an Example to their Flock in word and actions to edifie them by their Sermons and by their Example under pain of great Censures to those which do not discharge themselves as they ought of these just Duties even to the suspending and deposing those which commit Scandalous offences and such as deserve suspension and deposition Shall our Schools be condemn'd But the use of them is too ancient and too necessary for 't is convenient to instruct youth and teach them with care that they may one day be fit instruments in the hand of God for the propagating his truth and for establishing the Kingdom of his Son If any carp at our Consistories it shall be made appear that from the beginning there was in every Church an Ecclesiastical Senate which informed themselves of all which concerned the good and edification of the Flock If any quarrel at our Lay Church Elders we will make appear that their Institution is almost as ancient as the setling of Christianity and that the Primitive Church having used it successfully several Ages we also make use of it with much utility according to its example As for Deacons all the world knows they were instituted by the Apostles and amongst us they answer very well to the design of their Institution for they take care of the Poor and distribute to them the gifts and charity of good people as their true Patrimony As to the Union of the Churches St. Paul declares sufficiently of what importance it is when he exhorts us to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace and to be one body and one spirit as being called to the hope of one and the same vocation The ancient Doctors have recommended nothing with more care than this holy union nor censur'd any thing with more ardor and zeal than the Divisions and Schisms which divide the Church and tear to pieces the seamless Coat of our Lord Jesus Our Colloquies are nothing else in effect but Assemblies of Ministers and Elders of some certain Association or part of a Country deputed by their Churches to deliberate all together of Affairs which offer and do concern the quiet and comfort of those which sent them so that they cannot be condemned without censuring at the same time the Synods which are called Diocesan to which they have no little resemblance Who can find any fault with our Provincial and National Synods seeing they are grounded on the practice of the Primitive Church and on the authority of the Canons which so frequently recommend the holding and calling of them One must be very ill humoured to blame what we do in our Assemblies all the holy Exercises whereof consist in Invocating the Name of God in Singing of Psalms in Preaching his Word and in the administring the Sacraments These Sacraments being the Seals of his Covenant and Symbols of our Redemption they cannot be Celebrated with too great respect nor too much reverence cannot be shewn when they are administer'd and 't is this respect and reverence which has been