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

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need be and never desert his interest either for cost or peril which Prayer we must not only make with respect to our temporal felicity but as duly considering that the Almighty and invisible Governour of the World doth not Rule us immediately by himself but by Kings to whom he hath delegated his Authority So that they bear his Name and act by his Power g Exod. 22.28 Psal 82.1.6 Dii i. e. Judices qui potestatem Dei exercent Ab. Ez. And such as Rebell h Quicunque obfirmat faciem suaem contra Regem perinde est ac si obfirmaret faciem contra Divinam Majestatem Midr. Cohel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Const do fight against God Act. 5.39 oppose his word and resist his Ordinance Rom. 13.2 Wherefore we desire grace to obey not only for fear of wrath but for the Lords sake 1 Pet. 11.13 that is for Conscience sake Rom. 13.5 And this will produce the firmest and readiest obedience to all the Commands of our Governours when we observe them as subordinate to the Laws of God Eph. 6.1 in the Lord i Sed intra limites Disciplinae Tertul. Quia poterant aliquid imperare perversum ideo adjunxit in Domino Hieron in Eph. 6. Superiorum imperia Dura Declinanda sensim relinquenda magis sunt quam Respuenda Aul. Gell. Noct. At. l. 2. c. 7. as far as they do not contradict the plain will of the Almighty and for the Lord Rom. 13.1 that is because of his Authority vested in them And thus the best Christian will be the best Subject Let us therefore most fervently beg that we may all be conscientiously obedient and if we desire that heartily we shall not only obtain grace from God to be so but this Petition is an evidence we are already loyal And were it sincerely put up by all there could be no Treason nor Rebellion harboured in our Breasts but we should live in peace and please God adorn the Gospel Tit. 11.10 oblige the King and declare to all the World that it is not only the Duty but the Interest of Princes to defend the Religion of this Church which makes the best men and loyallest Subjects in the World § 6. Through Iesus Christ our Lord who with thee and the Holy Ghost liveth and reigneth ever one God World without end Amen It was a false and malicious calumny of the Jews that the Kingdom of Iesus was inconsistent with the Empire of Caesar for Obedience to Kings was never so enjoined and asserted before as it was by Christ and his Apostles And he himself hath told us that he is a King but no Rival to the Monarchs of this Earth For his Throne is in Heaven And his proper Subjects Saints and Angels k John 18.36 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euseb He reigns but it is with the Father and the Holy Ghost for ever For his sake therefore we may pray for the welfare of Temporal Kingdoms who hath power both to dispense them on Earth Math. 28.18 and to command blessings from Heaven on them especially on such Princes who are the Guardians of his beloved Church who own his Supremacy and daily confess and praise Him that liveth and Reigneth for ever The Paraphrase of the first Collect. § 7. Almighty God who art always ready to help us since thou art that King whose Kingdom is Everlasting and All sufficient to relieve us since thou art in Power infinite We beg not single or small Mercies of so great a Majesty but beseech thee to Have mercy upon all the Members of thy whole Church And especially that part thereof planted in these Nations which will be truly happy if it may please thee so graciously to direct the Counsels and so constantly to rule the heart of thy chosen and anointed Servant CHARLES by thy Providence and his undoubted right our King and Governour That He always remembring his Authority to flow from thee and knowing whose Minister and Vicegerent he is even the Deputy of thy Heavenly Majesty may above and before all things seek by defending Religion executing Justice and shewing mercy to advance thy honour and glory for he in so doing will ingage us all to praise thee for setting so wise and gracious a Prince over us And to compleat his and our happiness Grant that we and all others whom thou hast placed in the condition of his Subjects seriously and duly considering that for thy sake whose Authority he hath we owe him all duty and Allegiance may faithfully serve him with our Prayers Lives and Fortunes and also honour him in his person with our hearts and humbly obey him in his Laws by our whole Conversation so far as is possible in thee by the help of thy grace and for thee and for thy sake by a conscientious and exact Obedience according to the Commands of thy blessed word the appointment and Ordinance of thy Supream Providence O Lord let us be so happy to obtain this through the Merits of our great High Priest Iesus Christ who hath enjoined this Obedience and is our Lord who sets up Christian Princes on Earth to rule under him who with thee the Father and the Holy Ghost most gloriously liveth and reigneth in Heaven ever one God in that World which is without end and yet not forgetting us that are his Members in this changeable and uncertain World for his sake be it so Amen Of the second Collect for the King § 8. This Prayer is only added to help our Devotion with a greater variety but being as to the main so little different from the former it shall suffice to remark that the Petitions are here grounded on a never failing l Matth. 24.35 Foundation the word of God viz. Prov. 21.1 The Kings heart is in the hand of the Lord as the Rivers of Waters he turneth it whithersoever he will Although the Kings heart be unsearchable to men Prov. 25.3 and his purposes seldom to be alter'd by any of his Inferiors Yet Almighty God hath shewed many instances m Ezra 1.1 7.28 9.9 Neh. 1.11 Dan. 3.28 Rev. 17.17 that he can change the Decrees of the greatest Monarchs and as the Gardener n See Hammond on Psal 1.3 by opening certain Sluces can direct the streams of his Water-courses to which part of his Plantation he pleaseth So can the King of Kings direct the Counsels and turn the designs of all mortal Princes to his own glory and the prosperity of his Church To increase our wealth at home to secure us against foreign Enemies and defend us in the Exercise of the true Religion is the care of our gracious King the Prayer of all good Subjects and the end of government it self o See 1 Tim. 2.2 Vt placidam quietam vitam degamus cum omni pietate honestate Quid enim aliud est imperium nisi cura salutis alienae Ammian Mercellin and therefore let us rejoice that we have
For is it not as sure as God is true that if I persist in them I shall lose all my interest in my only Saviour forfeit all my hopes of Heaven and sell my title to the glorious Kingdom which is full of ravishing and endless pleasures and all abundance of whatsoever heart can wish And besides this insupportable loss shall not my Soul be condemned in the last dreadful judgment and cast into the Region of horror and darkness anguish and torments that have no abatement nor no end Why then Oh my Soul wilt thou buy these vanities so dear and be so abused by thy Enemies so ungrateful to thy dying Redeemer and so mischievous and cruel to thy self Wilt thou ever be so foolish and so desperate to commit the like again Say then O my Soul I abhor and renounce these accursed delusions being almost enraged at my self that I have been cheated with them so long My reason is convinced and my will perswaded that thy ways are the Right Therefore O Lord encline c. § 10. Secondly To engage our minds to all the Duties of Religion and Piety Justice and Charity that we may unalterably chuse them Let every one of us meditate First Why should I be backward to vow my obedience to the Laws of God Are they any thing else but a method of living well and wisely free from fears and injury Do they not teach me to bear my self so that I may win the favour of God and good men and be safe in the best and happy in the worst condition Can I wish my dearest Friend or my own Soul a greater felicity than to be meek and patient grateful and contented temperate and industrious just and bountiful to converse with God rejoice with Angels to imitate the Saints follow the blessed Jesus and to seek Everlasting Joy Secondly Doth God require any thing impossible unjust or unreasonable Am I to bind my self to any more than that which my Judgment and my Conscience when I am serious tell me it is fit and expedient for me to do although it had never been commanded Is it any more than that which all the wisest and best men the friends of God and the Darlings of Heaven have done with the greatest delight and pleasure and therefore it is the only proof of a generous and noble Spirit Thirdly Is not my God the best of all Masters who covers the infirmities and strengthens the weaknesses of his Servants Can I fail to please him who begets the desire and enables for the performance and makes the way familiar and easie pleasant and inviting and yet where there is a hearty endeavour doth make many abatements and accept the will for the deed d Quia voluit etiamsi non valuit adimplere 2 Cor. 8.12 and who begins his assistances early and continues them till he hath perfected this excellent work Fourthly Finally shall I not be rewarded with a glorious Crown in Heaven for being so wise as to chuse to be happy on Earth Is not this the sure way to the enjoyment of God the Society of Jesus and the Fellowship of glorified Saints and blessed Souls to Eternal Peace never-ceasing Joy to the most perfect and compleat felicity which shall last for ever though the trouble of gaining it be but short and transitory Be wise therefore Oh my Soul and easily perswaded to chuse thine own happiness And say I desire and long to be acquainted with these paths of pleasantness I chuse and love them all O Lord encline our hearts to keep these Laws And now I hope it may be time to bend your knees again and with a fresh bewailing of your transgressions and many acknowledgments of your Conviction to renounce and protest against all iniquity especially that by which you have been most apt to fall and also to vow and engage that you will lead a holy life which you must do most seriously as in the presence of God And finally looking unto Jesus the purchaser of Pardon and the giver of all Grace most humbly beg the holy Spirit that you may be enabled to keep this pious resolution since it is your wisdom and happiness never to break it more to which purpose say Lord write all these thy Laws in our hearts we beseech thee That is in our memories and on our affections that we might not offend against them Psal 119.11 For if his Spirit ingrave them on our Souls we shall with ease and pleasure keep and do them Ezek. 36.26 Wherefore let us beg this favour most earnestly and let us not doubt of being heard For this is the first and greatest part of the new Covenant God hath ingaged He will put his laws in our minds and on our hearts will he write them Jerem. 31.33 Heb. 8.10 And further if we so sincerely pray for this grace of Obedience it will ingage our Heavenly Father still more effectually to grant the last clause viz. that our Sins and iniquities he will remember no more SECT IV. Of the two Collects for the King § 1. THE Kings Majesty is fitly prayed for after the Commandments because he is Custos utriusque Tabulae and his Example is a great encouragement to the good and his Power a terror to the evil and so may be a great furtherance to the Observation of the Laws of God And it doth as conveniently precede the daily Collect for therein we beg all inward grace and herein all outward prosperity for the Church which is always prosperous under good and happy Princes And although we had prayed for the King before a Comp. to the Temple yet we are enjoined to do it here again for these Reasons First Because the welfare of the Kings Majesty is of so great and universal concernment to Religion and the Laws to Ministers and People that no one Earthly blessing is so necessary to be asked or so advantageous when obtained Secondly Because this is a distinct Office anciently used some hours after Morning Prayer b Vid. Spar. Rational p. 239. and S. Paul seems to Command that we should pray for Kings in all our Prayers and that first of all 1 Tim. 11.1 2. as we in this Service do Thirdly Because it was ever the Custom not only of the Jews c Ezra 6.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joseph lib. 12. cap 17. in the time of the Oblation but also of the Christians d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. in 1 Tim. 2. Oratio pramittitur pro populo pro Regibus pro caeteris Ambr. de Sacr. l. 4. c. 4. Vid. Aug. Epist 59. ad Paulin. Chrys in 1 Tim. 2. in the time of the Celebration of these Mysteries to supplicate for their Princes as all Ancient Liturgies do attest With unbloody Sacrifices and Mystical Rites saith Eusebius we endeavour to obtain the Divine mercy in order to the common peace offering up then to God supplications for the Church of God and his Vicegerent the King for
doth acknowledge himself to be thy Servant even CHARLES our King and Soveraign Liege Help him so to defend Religion execute Justice and subdue his Enemies that under him we and all his Subjects may be religiously and godly peaceably and quietly Governed and accordingly be obedient unto as well as happy in so gracious a Prince And that his excellent Laws may not be perverted in their Administration O Lord Grant such grace unto his whole Council with whom he adviseth in making Laws and to all Magistrates and Officers that are put in Authority to execute them under him That they may deliberately weigh every cause and truly and indifferently determine it so as to make it appear they do minister Iustice and imploy their Power To the punishment of wickedness and greater Crimes the correction of lesser enormities and Vice And the maintenanc● and defence of the Profession of thy true Religion together with the Practice of all Equity and Vertue which is the endeavour of all Righteous Magistrates But that Piety and Justice may be taught by the Ministers as well as outwardly incouraged ●i●e grace O Heavenly Father for the same thy Son Jesus Christs sake to all whom thou hast made Bishops and Governours or Pastors and Curates over thy Flock Assist them so in those sacred offices that they may both by the holiness of their life and the purity of their Doctrine declare and set forth the excellencies of thy true quickening and lively W●rd so that many may be won to live according to it And grant that they may also orderly and rightly frequently and duly Administer both Baptism and the Lords Supper which are thy Holy Sacraments And let them be particularly assisted in the Celebration of the present mystery And that all their labours be not in vain Do thou to all thy People throughout the Christian World ●ive thy Heavenly Grace to dispose their hearts rightly to receive divine things Especially grant to this Congregation and every person here present before thee that with meek hearts from a sense of their own ignorance and due reverence from the apprehension of thy Authority they may hear attentively and receive by Faith the directions of thy Holy Word O Lord let them be converted by it and become real Christians truly serving thee in all the duties of Piety and Holiness Charity and Righteousness and continue in this Obedience all the days of their life especially after this solemn renewing of their Covenant with thee And further reflecting upon thy pitty towards all afflicted persons for the sufferings-sake of thy dear Son We that yet are spared do most humbly beseech thee that though we and our Brethren deserve to suffer yet of thy goodness thou wilt be pleased O Lord effectually at present to comfort and speedily to deliver and succour not those distressed Creatures alone which we particularly love or know but all them who are capable of the benefit of our Prayers even all who in this transitory life the Scene of sorrows are in trouble and fear of some approaching Evil or in sorrow for some Calamity already sustained All that are in need and want as to their outward Estate or in pain and sickness as to their body Or who are visited with some or all of these or any other Adversity Oh pitty and relieve them all And Finally as we praise thee for all the Mercies which thou minglest with the Miseries of this life so we also bless and chiefly praise thy holy Name for those who have no mixtures of sin or sorrow in their Cup of pure and perfect joy even for all thy Saints and holy Servants who were once as frail as we but by thy grace are now departed out of this life but who did live in thy Faith and die in thy fear never forsaking Religion nor a good Conscience We rejoice in their happiness and though we need not pray for them yet we cannot forbear beseeching thee for our selves who are yet upon the Waves that thou wilt please to give us also the same grace which thou gavest them That we may be able so to follow their good Examples in all Piety and Charity while we live that with them and in that glorious Society we may when we die be Partakers by the like Mercy of thy Heavenly Kingdom and its unspeakable felicities Hear us we beseech thee and Grant this and all the rest O Father to thy poor Children who make not our Requests in our own Name or trusting in our own merits but for Iesus Christ his sake and through the most prevailing Sacrifice of his Death here Commemorated Nor do we need or desire to use any other name since he is Our only Mediator to make our peace and Advocate to plead our cause who also joins with us in these Petitions and therefore we hope thou wilt say to him and to us Amen and then it shall be so SECT VIII Of the warning before the Communion § 1. IT is fit that great Mysteries should be ushered in with the solemnities of a great preparation for which cause God gave the Israelites three days warning of his design to publish the Law Exod. 19.15 and ordered their Festivals to be proclaimed by the sound of a Trumpet some time before Levit. 25.9 Numb 10.2 The Paschal Lamb the Type of Christ in this Sacrament was to be chosen and kept by them four days to mind them to prepare for the Celebration of the Passover Exod. 12.3.6 And Christians having more and higher duties in order to this Holy Feast must not have less time or shorter warning whereupon as good Hezekiah published by particular expresses his intended Passover long before 2 Chron. 30. so hath our Church prudently ordered this timely notice to be given that none might pretend to stay away out of ignorance of the time or unfitness for the duty but that all might come and come prepared also It is needless to expect a President for this in the antient Church their daily or Weekly Communions made it known that there was then no solemn Assembly of Christians without it and every one not under censure was expected to Communicate But now when the time is somewhat uncertain and our long omissions have made some of us ignorant and others forgetful of this duty most of us unwilling and all of us more or less indisposed for it it was both prudent and necessary to provide these large Warnings and Exhortations Cautions and Instructions For the Composures themselves they are exact and rarely fitted to be the Harbingers to this blessed Sac●ament and if we duly weigh and carefully improve them they will exceedingly help towards our Preparation as will be evident enough without a Paraphrase in the succeeding Analysis and Discourse The Analysis of the Warning before the Communion § 2. This Warning consisteth of three principal Parts 1. Information concerning 1. The Time Dearly beloved on next I purpose c. 2. The Persons to administer to all
blessed the Gods that he was a Man not a Beast a Grecian not a Barbarian and an Athenian amongst the Grecians the Jews are wont to Praise the Lord every Day that they are born of the stock of Israel and are within the Covenant of Abraham Buxt synag cap. 5. But we have much more reason to give Thanks to our Heavenly Father who hath acquainted us with the Grace of his Gospel and taught us the true Catholick Faith and when we make this confession of his Mercy to us and to this now to be admitted Christian it is very fit we should pray both for our selves that we may make a good progress in this true Religion whereinto we are already entred and for this Infant that it may be effectually sealed for a Christian and so prepared to enjoy the Kingdom with those that have gone before in this Faith this is the most common and obvious sense But we may confine this Thanksgiving to the present occasion Namely That whereas God hath in the Gospel foregoing made known unto us his grace and good will towards Infants and thereby begot in us a lively hope and Faith in him so that we are perswaded he will receive this present Infant First We give him most humble thanks for it And secondly We beseech him to let us know him more fully and make us believe more firmly this his merciful purpose toward this present Child by Giving his Holy Spirit unto it as a new and further testimony of his Grace For by so fresh an Experiment of his Goodness not only our knowledge will be encreased and our Faith confirmed but this poor Infant also shall thereby be regenerated and made an Heir of Glory Wherefore we entreat him to fulfil his Promises unto it and unto us and to answer all our expectations through Jesus Christ who though he liveth and reigneth on high yet despiseth not one of these little ones but admits their Angels daily to behold the Face of his Heavenly Father §. 7. The Preface to the Covenant Dearly Beloved ye have brought this Child here to be baptized c. The Persons spoken to in this Admonition are the Godfathers and Godmothers the use of which in the Church of Christ was derived from the Jews as well as the Initiation of Infants it self was for it is certain that the Rector of the House of Judgment was to take care to baptize the Infants of Proselytes and accordingly was to be called their Father c Gemara tit Chetub c. 1. and there was one appointed to hold the Child in Circumcision called the Master of the Covenant d Elias Thisb Rad. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and by the modern Jews who use it to this Day he is called the Surety e Tum puelli circumcidendi sive sponsor sive susceptor accedit Buxt Synag Cap. 2. Who is to Answer also as appears by that Relation of Rabbi Juda sirnamed Pious who being Surety for the Child of a rich Jew of Germany stood mute in the midst of the Office discerning as they say by a Prophetick Spirit the Child would afterward turn Christian wherefore he refused to answer his Part. And very learned Men do believe this Custom to have been as Antient among the Jews as the times of Isaiah f Ex hoc ritu profectum esse illum nostrum constat quo certi homines speciatim adhibentur testes accessus ad Christum ad Ecclesiam per baptismum c. Jun. Tremel in Jesai 8.2 it being highly probable that those Witnesses Chap. 8.2 at the naming of his Son were of the same nature with those we call Godfathers and Godmothers In the Primitive Church the use of them was so early that it is not easie to fix the time of their beginning only the most antient Fathers who speak of Baptism do mention them g 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Just Mart. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dionys Areop Sponsores Tertulliano Fidei jussores Augustino vocantur Out of whom we might have abundant Testimonies but that they will come in more seasonably in their several places where we speak of their Duty afterwards Only it may be remembred Platina affirmeth that Hyginus Decreed Baptism should not be Administred without one such Surety at least in vit Pontif. R. But besides the very nature of the Ordinance especially as it is Administred to Infants seems to require some such Persons in the solemnizing thereof For as Circumcision was a Covenant of old h Gen. 17.13 1 Reg. 19.10 Foedus tuum deseruerunt Vid. Gal. 5.4 whereby the Jews were bound to keep the whole Law Galat. 5.4 So is Baptism a Covenant i 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nazianzen de Baptism Sed nunc nos paciscimur in Baptismo ut abrenunciemus Diabolo operibus ejus Hieron in Psal 128. also wherein we Promise to obey the Gospel Now because Infants cannot promise for themselves the Laws of all Nations have allowed them Guardians to contract for them in secular matters which contracts if they be fair and beneficial the Minor must make good when he comes to Age. And in like manner the Church hath given them spiritual Guardians to promise those things in their Name without which neither old or young can obtain Salvation if they stay out of this Covenant they are liable to perish and they can enter into it no other way but by having some to engage that they shall stand to Gods terms They need the grace of Baptism and yet they cannot express that Faith and Repentance which are the necessary conditions of it wherefore the Church hath found out this Suppletory appointing some to undertake in their Name And thus Infants may receive the good things of Baptism by the Faith of those who represent them k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Responsor ad Orthod quaes 56. even as the Antients note l Cyril Hierosol Catech 5. Theophylac Math. 9. the Centurions servant was restored by his Masters Faith the Man in the Palsie by the Faith of those who brought him and Lazarus though Dead was raised by his Sisters Believing But fully to this purpose Rabanus Maurus In the Church of our Saviour the Salvation of Infants which by their tender age are uncapable of renouncing the Devil or believing in God is compleated by the hearts and mouths of those that bring them For it is manifest that as Children drew those sins from others which are remitted to them in Baptism so also by others they may believe unto Salvation And thus also if any dumb or deaf Persons who could neither hear nor profess their Faith should by any Christians be presented to Baptism they are believed to be saved by the Faith of the Offerers for the infirmity of humane Nature cannot hinder the grace of Almighty God de instit Cler. l. 1. c. 26. So that we ought to believe till the Child be capable the Faith of its Sureties is so far accepted
who were Baptized which is also the meaning of those in St. Cyprian l Ea parte corporis notatur Ozia sc offenso Domino ubi signantur qui Dominum promerentur Cypr. de unit Ecc. Vide Chrys hom 54. in Mat who were signed when they were admitted to Christ but most clearly St. Augustine * Credit Catechumenus in cruce Christi quâ ipse signatur August in Gal. 6.14 who tells us expresly that the Catechumens were signed with the Cross of Christ in which they had believed There is it may be some difference in the time of making the sign of the Cross for the Antients seem to have used it before the Act of Baptizing whereas we use it afterwards the better to content our scrupulous Brethren who cannot justly charge us with making it essential to Baptism because the Rite as to the substance of it is finished before we make the Cross and we esteem Baptism in Cases of haste no worse as to the effects where it is celebrated without it If it be alledged that it is a signifying sign of humane institution and so ought not to be annexed to a Sacrament of divine appointment I desire it may be remembred that the putting white Garments upon the Baptized and the Receiving the Infant into the Church with a kiss m Cyprian l. 3. epist 8. as now become one of our Brethren n 1 Thessal 5.26 with many others were signifying Signs and instituted and used by the best Christians and yet never any offence was taken at them and a good Mythologist will make every action and gesture to be significant But I am now beside my purpose wherefore I will return to consider with how innocent intentions the Church doth use the Cross in this Office When we receive any into the Society of our Religion it is certainly as lawful to declare it by a o In nullum nomen Religionis seu verum seu falsum coagulari homines possunt nisi aliquo signaculorum vel sacramentorum visibilium consortio colligentur Aug. in Faust l. 19. c. 11. sign as by words And surely there is no Character or signature so universally known to be the mark of a Christian as the sign of the Cross which makes St. Paul to put the Cross for Christianity it self 1 Corinth 1.17 18. Galat. 5.11 Philip. 3.18 because the belief of a Crucifyed Saviour is the proper Article of this Faith distinguishing the Christians from Jews Turks and all kinds of Religion in the World Wherefore when the Emperour was Converted immediately the Cross became the most usual badge p Vexilla militum crucis infignia sunt Regum purpuras ardentes diadematum gemmas patibuli salutaris pictura condecorat Hieron ep 7. ad Lat. and of publick use as a testimony of his being a Christian Hence it is called the Sign of the Faithful the Seal to make us known by our Master and the Seal of Christ q 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Catech. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 idem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epiphan haeres 30. signum Dei Cypr. ep 56. Wherefore to sign with the sign of the Cross is to declare the party to be Christian and as the Custom was of old for Servants to have their Masters name in their Forhead Caelius Rhodig l. 5. c. 31. so we set the mark of Christ there to shew they have taken Christ Jesus for their Lord or if as the Church directs we like the military application better St. Chrysostome tells us that the Roman Souldiers would sometimes in love to their General burn his Name upon their Skin and Procopius affirms that the devotion of some Christians made them in like manner imprint the sign of the Cross upon their Arms Com. in Jesai 44. but we by an easier Rite do sufficiently publish to what General they belong Baptism is the solemn Oath which we take r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril praef ad Catech Vocati sumus ad militiam Dei vivi jam tunc cum in Sacramenti verba spospondimus Tertul. ad Mart. Sacramentum verae religionis accipere Lact. Instit l. 1. when we are entred Souldiers of Jesus Christ and then we first put on his Badge which is like the Ring that the Aegyptians gave unto their new listed Souldiers ſ Aelian histor animalium l. 10. cap. 15. with a device to mind them to fight manfully And what more auspicious sign could we chuse than the Trophy of the Cross since our Victorious Redeemer did triumph over those Enemies which we have renounced by it yea upon it Coloss 2.15 t Ver. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ver. 14. so that it is a terrour to the Devils u 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Cateches 13. and a great encouragement to the Christian to remember he fights under that Triumphant Banner which hath been so successful it is a shame to follow such a Leader x Malus miles est qui imperatorem gemens sequitur Senec. ep 107. with a faint heart or to fly from these happy Colours when we have so good assurance that if we keep close unto them In this Sign we shall overcome the Cross doth shew our Captain died for us and therefore it doth incite us to follow him unto the Death striving against Sin and if we die in this service that Death shall be to us as it was to him the way to a glorious and everlasting life Let the World deride a Crucified Lord and Atheism mock at the Cross of Jesus we are so far from being ashamed of our Faith that we glory in nothing more than in the Cross of Christ and therefore we print it upon the proper seat of blushing y 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril catech 4. Nec nos pudet crucifixi sed ubi pudoris signum est crucis ejus signum habemus August in Gal. 6.14 To conclude the Ceremony is exceeding proper and very innocent used by most Christians approved by all the Antients and by some of the most eminent Reformed Divines expresly z Bucer Zanchy and condemned by no Church so that if this Ceremony be rejected by any they ought to consider that the fault is in a Scandalum ni fallor non bonae rei sed malae Exemplum est aedificans ad delictum bonae res neminem scandalizant nisi mulam mentem Tertul. de veland Virgin cap. 3. themselves not in the thing at which offence is taken but none justly given if the Church be but rightly understood so that it will be much more profitable for us all to join against real Idolatry and Superstition than to contend about the shadows of it and we shall do better to live like him whose seal is set upon us and to fight against our spiritual Enemies than for so small an occasion to fall out with an excellent Church and be at enmity with our
attended with miraculous effects which have been ceased above twelve hundred years though it impart no gifts yet it communicates Graces which are much more desireable if hereby we gain the Defence of Gods peculiar protecting hand and the influence of his Spirit that we may understand our duty and practise it so as to go on safely to the possession of Eternal Life we shall have cause to rejoice that we came to it and be obliged to give glory to Jesus who with the Father and the Holy Ghost liveth and reigneth ever one God World without end Amen §. 9. The general Collect and final Blessing Both these Parts of this Office are expounded in the end of the Communion Service The Collect is added here because the Antients believed that Confirmation was a Preservative to both Body and Soul a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 · Cyril Catech. mystag 3. so that after it we may fitly pray That God may direct sanctifie and govern both our Souls and Bodies so that we may not stray from his Commandments and we make it a new Prayer if we say it with a new Devotion and apply it to this Occasion The Blessing concludes all Offices and particularly ought to end this in regard it is the Epitome of the whole Administration which is only a more solemn Benediction and therefore we must most humbly receive it and most firmly believe it that it may be made good unto us Amen The Conclusion Thus we have represented a Rite in it self Primitive and Pious in its Administration pure and separate from all that Superstition had added to it in its End so excellent that it is commended by Christians of all perswasions and yet alas however it comes to pass too much neglected to the grief of all good Men the scandal of the Church and the great detriment of Religion Wherefore we cannot leave it till we have pressed the constant observation thereof The Romanists indeed pretend to prefer it before Baptism b Hoc sacramentum perfectivum esse Baptismi asserit Aquin. sum 3. p. qu. 72. art 9. majori veneratione venerandum tenendum quam Baptismus Dist 5. de consec can de his but must we give it no honour because they give it too much It is not in our Church set to vye with Baptism but as of old appointed to pursue the same design and ordered to make the Baptismal Vow more solemn and more regarded We do not absolutely deny Salvation to all that want it but we judge it a great sin to despise it or wilfully to neglect it And we think it highly concerns the Church and every particular Person to be careful it be not omitted and that for these Reasons I. Because it tends very much to advance the knowledge of Christian People who are more obliged to teach and to learn when so solemn an Account is to be given II. It conduceth to the encrease of Piety also and lays fresh engagements upon every one to avoid Evil and to do good obtaining withal the Spirit for their assistance therein III. It is an excellent means to preserve the Churches Peace and may prevent many from falling into Schism and Heresie by laying a good foundation at first and by rescuing the younger from the dire misfortune of Evil guides IV. It doth effectually confute the clamours of Anabaptists against our custom of baptizing Children before they can understand for if this be added we have the benefit of Baptism against the danger of Death and yet the same security they pretend to who defer it till riper years V. Hereby we shall agree with the Apostles with the Catholick Church in all Ages with all those wise and holy Men who have enjoined and practised this Rite and believed great benefits were received thereby Which Considerations I hope will have their due effect upon all that are concerned And I. That the Reverend Fathers of the Church will imitate the Piety of the Primitive Bishops and not esteem it a trouble to go into the Country to confirm c Non quidem abnuo hanc esse Ecclesiarum consuetudinem ut ad eos qui longe in minoribus urbibus per Presbyteros Diaconos baptizati sunt Episcopus ad invocationem Sancti Spiritûs manum impositurus excurrat Hieron since they will thereby bring so much good to the Church beget in the minds of the People a singular affection to their Persons and a great Veneration of their Office II. That Parents and Godfathers who stand obliged by the Baptismal Vow will be careful to obtain a discharge from the Bonds they have entred and when they have done their Duty in fitting their Charge for Confirmation I hope they will not repine at a little trouble and charge but rather go to the Bishop than want so great a benefit to themselves and to the Child III. I hope that Ministers will be ready to promote it considering that when they have fitted their Catechumens for this Office and brought them to it they are excellently prepared to receive the benefit of all their after labours and may well hope to give a good account to God of them Finally I wish this serious Advice may encourage all persons who want Confirmation of what Age or condition soever to desire it and wait for an opportunity of it and that it may direct those who come to it to perform their part acceptably and so as to gain the benefits of it And also that it may warn all who have been Confirmed To keep the grace thereof as St. Cyril speaks intire and without spot in their heart daily encreasing in good works and walking in all well-pleasing to the Author of their Salvation Christ Jesus to whom be glory for ever and ever d Cyril Catech. mystag 3. For nothing can more adorn this excellent Rite than the holy Conversation of those who have been partakers thereof FINIS A TABLE Of the chief Heads in the Communion Office Of the Communion Office in general the Analysis of the whole Office PART I.   SECT Parag. Page Of the more general Preparation to the Holy Communion       Of the Lords Prayer I. § 1. 1 the Paraphrase   2 2 Of the Collect for Purity II. 1 3 the Analysis   2 4 the Practical Discourse   3 c. 4 c. the Paraphrase   6 8 Of the Ten Commandments III. 1 9 the Analysis   2   the Practical Discourse containing directions and heads of Self-Examination   3 c. 11 Of the two Collects for the King IV. 1 32 the Analysis of the first   2 34 the Practical Discourse   3 c. 35 the Paraphrase   7 39 the Analysis of the second   9 42 the Paraphrase   10 ib. Of the Epistle and Gospel V. 1 43 and of the Nicene Creed   2 46 the Paraphrase of it   4 50 Of the Offertory and Sentences VI. 1 53 the Analysis of the Sentences   3 58 Discourses