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A63673 Chrisis teleiōtikē, A discourse of confirmation for the use of the clergy and instruction of the people of Ireland / by Jeremy, Lord Bishop of Down ; and dedicated to His Grace James, Duke ... and General Governor of His Majesties kingdom of Ireland. Taylor, Jeremy, 1613-1667. 1663 (1663) Wing T293; ESTC R11419 62,959 104

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of what side soever My first argument from Scripture is what I learn from Optatus and S. Cyril Optatus writing against the Donatists hath these words Christ descended into the water not that in him who is God was any thing that could be made cleaner but that the water was to precede the future Vnction for the initiating and ordaining and fulfilling the mysteries of Baptism He was wash'd when he was in the hands of John then followed the order of the mystery and the Father finish'd what the Son did ask and what the Holy Ghost declar'd The Heavens were open'd God the Father anointed him the spiritual Vnction presently descended in the likeness of a Dove and sate upon his head and was spread all over him and he was called the Christ when he was the anointed of the Father To whom also least imposition of hands should seem to be wanting the voice of God was heard from the could saying This is my Son in whom I am well pleased hear ye him That which Optatus sayes is this that upon and in Christs person Baptism Confirmation and Ordination were consecrated and first appointed He was baptized by S. John he was confirm'd by the Holy Spirit and anointed with spiritual Unction in order to that great work of obedience to his Fathers will and he was Consecrated by the voice of God from Heaven In all things Christ is the head and the first fruits and in these things was the Fountain of the Sacraments and spiritual grace and the great exemplar of the Oeconomy of the Church For Christ was nullius poenitentiae debitor Baptism of Repentance was not necessary to him who never sinn'd but so it became him to fulfil all righteousness and to be a pattern to us all But we have need of these things though he had not and in the same way in which Salvation was wrought by him for himself and for us all in the same way he intended we should walk He was baptized because his Father appointed it so we must be baptized because Christ hath appointed it and we have need of it too He was Consecrated to be the great Prophet and the great Priest because no man takes on him this honour but he that was called of God as was Aaron and all they who are to minister in his prophetical office under him must be consecrated and solemnly set apart for that ministration and after his glorious example He was anointed with a spiritual Unction from above after his baptisme for after Jesus was baptized he ascended up from the waters and then the Holy Ghost descended upon him it is true he receiv'd the fulness of the spirit but we receive him by measure but of his fulness we all receive grace for grace that is all that he receiv'd in order to his great work all that in kind one for another grace for grace we are to receive according to our measures and our necessities And as all these he receiv'd by external ministrations so must we God the Father appointed his way and he by his example first hath appointed the same to us that we also may follow him in the regeneration and work out our salvation by the same graces in the like solemnities For if he needed them for himself then we need them much more If he did not need them for himself he needed them for us and for our example that we might follow his steps who by receiving these exteriour solemnities and inward graces became the Author and finisher of our Salvation and the great example of his Church I shall not need to make use of the fancy of the Murcosians and Colabarsians who turning all mysteries into numbers reckoned the numeral letters of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and made them co-incident to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but they intended to say that Christ receiving the Holy Dove after his Baptism became all in all to us the beginning and the perfection of our Salvation here he was confirm'd and receiv'd the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the consummation to his initiation the completion of his baptism and of his headship in the Gospel But that which I shall rather and is what S. Cyril from hence argues When he truly was baptized in the River of Jordan he ascended out of the waters and the Holy Ghost substantially descended upon him like resting upon like And to you also in like manner after ye have ascended from the waters of baptisme the Vnction is given which bears the image or similitude of him by whom Christ was anointed that as Christ after baptism and the coming of the Holy Spirit upon him went forth to battle in the Wilderness and overcame the adversary so ye also after holy baptism and the mystical Vnction or confirmation being vested with the Armour of the holy Spirit are enabled to stand against the opposite powers Here then is the first great ground of our solemne receiving the Holy spirit or the Unction from above after Baptism which we understand and represent by the word Confirmation denoting the principle effect of this Unction spiritual strength Christ who is the head of the Church entred this way upon his duty and work and he who was the first of all the Church the head and great example is the measure of all the rest for we can go to Heaven no way but in that way in which he went before us There are some who from this story would infer the descent of the Holy Ghost after Christs Baptism not to signifie that Confirmation was to be a distinct rite from baptism but a part of it yet such a part as gives fulness and consummation to it S. Hierom Chrysostom Euthymius and Theophylact go not so far but would have us by this to understand that the Holy Ghost is given to them that are baptized But reason and the context are both against it 1. Because the Holy Ghost was not given by Johns baptism that was reserv'd to be one of Christ's glories who also when by his Disciples he baptiz'd many did not give them the Holy Ghost and when he commanded his Apostles to baptize all Nations did not at that time so much as promise the Holy Ghost he was promis'd distinctly and given by another ministration 2. The descent of the Holy Spirit was a distinct ministery from the baptism it was not only after Jesus ascended from the waters of baptism but there was something intervening and by a new office or ministration For there was prayer joyn'd in the ministery So S. Iuke observes while Jesus was praying the Heavens were open'd and the Holy spirit descended for so Jesus was pleas'd to consign the whole office and ritual of Confirmation prayer for invocating the Holy Spirit and giving him by personal application which as the Father did immediately so the Bishops doe by imposition of hands 3. S. Austin observes that the apparition
Bohemian Churches do observe it carefully and it is recommended and establish'd in the harmony of the Protestant Confessions And now may it please Your Grace to give me leave to implore Your Aid and Countenance for the propagating this so religious and useful a Ministery which as it is a peculiar of the Bishops office is also a great enlarger of Gods gifts to the People it is a great instrument of Vnion of hearts and will prove an effective deletory to Schism and an endearment to the other parts of Religion it is the consummation of Baptism and a preparation to the Lords Supper it is the vertue from on high and the solemnity of our spiritual adoption But there will be no need to use many arguments to enflame Your zeal in this affair when Your Grace shall find that to promote it will be a great service to God that this alone will conclude Your Grace who are so ready by Laws and Executions by word and by example to promote the Religion of Christ as it is taught in these Churches I am not confident enough to desire Your Grace for the reading this Discourse to lay aside any one hour of Your greater Employments which consume so much of Your Dayes and Nights But I say that the Subject is greatly Worthy of Consideration Nihil enim inter manus habui cui majorem sollicitudinem praestare deberem and for the book it self I can only say what Secundus did to the wise Lupercus Quoties ad fastidium legentium deliciasque respicio intelligo nobis commendationem ex ipsâ mediocritate libri petendam I can Commend it because it is little and so not very troublesome and if it could have been writen according to the worthiness of the thing Treated in it it would deserve so great a Patronage but because it is not it will therefore greatly need it but it can hope for it on no other account but because it is laid at the feet of a Princely Person who is Great and Good and one who not only is bound by Duty but by choice hath Obliged Himself to do advantages to any Worthy instrument of Religion But I have detain'd Your Grace so long in my address that Your Pardon will be all the Favour which ought to be hop'd for by Your Grace's most Humble and Obliged Servant Jer. Dunensis A DISCOURSE OF CONFIRMATION The Introduction NExt to the Incarnation of the Son of God and the whole Oeconomy of our Redemption wrought by him in an admirable order and Conjugation of glorious mercies the greatest thing that ever God did to the World is the giving to us the Holy Ghost and possibly this is the consummation and perfection of the other For in the work of Redemption Christ indeed made a new World we are wholly a new Creation and we must be so and therefore when S. John began the Narrative of the Gospel he began in a manner and stile very like to Moses in his History of the first Creation In the beginning was the word c. All things were made by him and without him was not any thing made that was made But as in the Creation the matter was first there were indeed Heavens and Earth and Waters but all this was rude and without form till the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters So it is in the new Creation We are a new Mass redeem'd with the blood of Christ rescued from an evil portion and made Candidates of Heaven and Immortality but we are but an Embryo in the regeneration until the Spirit of God enlivens us and moves again upon the waters and then every subsequent motion and operation is from the Spirit of God We cannot say that Jesus is the Lord but by the Holy Ghost By him we live in him we walke by his aids we pray by his emotions we desire we breath and sigh and groan by him he helps us in all our infirmities and he gives us all our strengths he reveals mysteries to us and teaches us all our duties he stirs us up to holy desires and he actuates those desires he makes us to will and to do of his good pleasure For the Spirit of God is that in our spiritual life that a Mans soul is in his Natural without it we are but a dead and liveless trunke But then as a Mans soul in proportion to the several operations of life obtains several appellatives it is Vegetative and Nutritive Sensitive and Intellective according as it operates So is the Spirit of God He is the spirit of Regeneration in Baptism of renovation in Repentance the spirit of love and the spirit of holy fear the searcher of the hearts and the spirit of discerning the spirit of wisdom and the spirit of prayer In one mystery he illuminates and in another he feeds us he begins in one and finishes and perfects in another It is the same spirit working divers operations For he is all this now reckoned and he is every thing else that is the principle of good unto us he is the beginning and the progression the consummation and perfection of us all and yet every work of his is perfect in it's kind and in order to his own designation and from the beginning to the end is perfection all the way Justifying and sanctifying grace is the proper Entitative product in all but it hath divers appellatives and connotations in the several rites and yet even then also because of the identity of the principle the similitude and general consonancy in the effect the same appellative is given and the same effect imputed to more that one and yet none of them can be omitted when the great Master of the family hath blessed it and given it institution Thus S. Dionys calls Baptism 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the perfection of the Divine birth and yet the baptized person must receive other mysteries which are more signally perfective 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Confirmation is yet more perfective and is properly the perfection of Baptism By Baptism we are Heirs and are adopted to the inheritance of sons admitted to the Covenant of repentance and engag'd to live a good life yet this is but the solemnity of the Covenant which must pass into after-acts by other influences of the same Divine principle Until we receive the spirit of obsignation or Confirmation we are but babes in Christ in the meanest sense Infants that can do nothing that cannot speak that cannot resist any violence expos'd to every rudeness and perishing by every temptation But therefore as God at first appointed us a ministery of a new birth so also hath he given to his Church the consequent Ministry of a new strength The spirit moov'd a little upon the waters of Baptism and gave us the principles of life but in Confirmation he makes us able to move our selves In the first he is the spirit of life but in this he is the spirit of strength and motion
Novatians and the Donatists Novatiani poenitentiam à suo conventu arcent penitùs iis qui ab ipsis tinguntur sacrum Chrisma non praebent Quocircà qui ex hâc Haeresi corpori Ecclesiae conjunguntur benedicti Patres ungi jusserunt So Thedoret For that reason onely the Novatians were to be confirmed upon their conversion because they had it not before I finde also they did confirm the converted Arrians but the reason is given in the first Council of Arles quia propriâ lege utuntur They had a way of their own that is as the Gloss saith upon the Canon de Arrianis consecrat dist 4. their baptism was not in the name of the holy Trinity and so their baptism being null or at least suspected to make all as sure as they could they confirmed them The same also is the case of the Bonasiaci in the second council of Arles though they were as some of the Arrians also were baptized in the name of the most holy Trinity but it was a suspected matter and therefore they confirmed them But to such persons who had been rightly baptized and confirmed they never did repeat it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the gift of the Spirit is an indelible seal saith St. Cyril 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 St. Basil calls it it is inviolable They who did re-baptize did also reconfirm But as it was an error in St. Cyprian and the Africans to do the first so was the second also in case they had done it for I find no mention expresly that they did the latter but upon the fore-mentioned accounts and either upon supposition of the invalidity of their first pretended baptism or their not using at all of confirmation in their Heretical conventicles But the repetition of confirmation is expresly forbidden by the council of Tarracon cap. 6. and by P. Gregory the second and sanctum Chrisma collatum altaris honor propter consecrationem quae per Episcopos tantùm exercenda conferenda sunt evelli non queunt said the Fathers in a council at Toledo Confirmation and holy Orders which are to be given by Bishops alone can never be anulled and therefore they can never be repeated and this relies 〈◊〉 those severe words of St. Paul having spoken of 〈◊〉 ●oundation of the Doctrine of Baptisms and laying on of hands he sayes if they fall away they can never be renewed that is the ministery of baptism and confirmation can never be repeated To Christians that sin after these ministrations there is onely left a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Expergiscimini that they arise from slumber and stir up the Graces of the Holy Ghost Every man ought to be careful that he do not grieve the holy Spirit but if he does yet let him not quench him for that is a desperate case 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The holy Spirit is the great conservative of the new Life onely keep the Keeper take care that the spirit of God do not depart from you for the great ministery of the spirit is but once for as baptism is so is confirmation I end this discourse with a plain exhortation out of S. Ambrose upon those words of S. Paul He that confirmeth us with you in Christ is God Repete quia accepisti signaculum spirituale spiritum sapientiae intellectus spiritum consilii atque virtutis spiritum cognitionis atque pietatis Spiritum Sancti timoris serva quod accepisti Signavit te Deus Pater confirmavit te Christus Dominus Remember that thou who hast been confirmed hast receiv'd the spiritual signature the spirit of wisdom and understanding the spirit of council and strength the spirit of knowledge and godliness the spirit of holy fear keep what thou hast receiv'd The Father hath seal'd thee and Christ thy Lord hath confirmed thee by his Divine Spirit and he will never depart from thee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unless by evil works we estrange him from us The same advice is given by Prudentius Cultor Dei memento Te fontis lavacri Rorem subiisse Sanctum Et Chrismate innotatum Remember how great things ye have received and what God hath done for you ye are of his flock and his Militia ye are now to fight his battles and therefore to put on his armour and to implore his auxiliaries and to make use of his strengths and alwayes to be on his side against all his and all our Enemies But he that desires grace must not despise to make use of all the instruments of grace For though God communicates his invisible spirit to you yet that he is pleas'd to do it by visible instruments is more than he needs but not more than we do need And therefore since God descends to our infirmities let us carefully and lovingly address our selves to his ordinances that as we receive remission of sins by the washing of water and the body and blood of Christ by the ministery of consecrated Symbols so we may receive the Holy Ghost sub Ducibus Christianae militiae by the prayer and imposition of the Bishops hands whom our Lord Jesus hath separated to this ministery For if you corroborate your self by baptism they are the words of S. Gregory Nazianzen and then take heed for the future by the most excellent and firmest aids consigning your mind and body with the Vnction from above viz. in the Holy Rite of Confirmation with the Holy Ghost as the Children of Israel did with the aspersion on the door-posts in the night of the death of the first-born of Egypt what evil shall happen to you Meaning that no evil can invade you and what aid shall you get If you sit down you shall be without fear and if you rest your sleep shall be sweet unto you But if when ye have received the Holy spirit you live not according to his Divine principles you will lose him again that is you will lose all the blessing though the impression does still remain till ye turn quite Apostates in pessimis hominibus manebit licèt ad judicium saith S. Austin the Holy Ghost will remain either as a testimony of your Vnthankfulness unto condemnation or else as a seal of grace and an earnest of your inheritance of Eternal glory FINIS Books Printed at the Kings Printing-house and are to be sold by Samuel Dancer Bookseller in Castle-street Dublin DR Jeremy Taylors Lord Bishop of Down and Connor three Sermons Preached at Christ-Church Dublin viz. The Righteousness Evangelical described The Christians Conquest over the body of Sin and Faith working by Love Octav. His Funeral Sermon at the Funeral of the Lord Primate 40. This present Treatise of Confirmation 40. There will shortly be published his Treatise against Popery of the necessity of which no man can be ignorant Dr. Lightburne's Sermon at Christ-Church on 23. of October 40. A perfect Collection of Acts of the late Parliament to be sold