'T_^LH«¥]Ml_¥lEI^Sflir¥» From the estate of H. C. von Post, 1913 TH_ DOUBLE WITNESS OE THE CIIMCII. BY TEE RT. REV. WM. INGRAHAM KIP, D.D., iUTHOR OV "THE LKNTEll TAST," "THE CHRISTMAS TIOL YD AYS IN SOME," " THE [_A1.LV JCSUIT UIDBIOICB IM NORTH AMERICA," KIC, ETC. It rnny ho un well, (hen, old and trite aa tbe ".abject is, to say a few wordR on Rome of < '.(.fii. n u ure; of our Church, which bear at once _l doujilk witness against Rome ou lh_ one Jidiiil, nr mere r rot cm ant congregation! on the other. — Rev. F. W. Faulk. NINETEENTH EDITION. PHILADELPHIA: RICHARD McCAULEY, J3J4 CIJEaTNTJT STREET. Entered according to Act of Congress, in tho year 1S49, by STANFORD AND SWORDS, In tlie Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern Pishict cf Nptv Y.-ik. COPYRIGHT RENEWED. According to an Act of ComrreHs. in the yearlRfiS. hy TUCM MID McOAULEY, Executor of II. Hooker's Estate, in tho Chn-k's Office *.f the Distiict Court of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. TO THE CONGREGATION OI ST. PAUL'S CHIRCH, IN THE CITY OF ALBAN». 5T.es. Slectiires _E I _ ; « i L L T WRITTEN FOR THEIR [ » 8T BldtlO* »«_¦ Kl/tV i-UBLISHED AT THEIR REQUEST ARE INSCRIBED, .1 iriClR Af'ri'CTlONATE RECTflff, »«_ AOTHQ> . One oi ly wav to life ; Oue Faith, delivered once for all ; One holy. Band, endow'd with Heaven ntJjrfa cii One earnest, endless strife;— This is the Church ih' Eternal fram'd of old. Smooth open ways, good store ; A creed for every clime and age, By Mammon's touch new moulded o'er and iS- No Cross, no war to wage ; This is the Ctiurch our earth-dimmed eye.* bnfi_»wi But ways must have an end, Creeds undergo the trial-flame, Jtjr with th' impure the saints for ever blend. *# *¦*¦*¦_ v*)n*_i glory with our shame : Think on teat home, ir.il choose "twist soft ani n*i -i Lyra 4/ a_r|_»{___" CONTENTS i. Introductory No-eat V for dtovviug Ihe Reasons wt y we are Ck __:¦«__ IS a Episcopacy proved from Scripture " * •.«._.__ ILL Episcopacy proved from History -.__*_- 34 IV. Antiquity of Forms of Prayer ..»¦•____ {5 V. History of our Liturgy --.--. _ _ _ ||j VI Tbe Church's View of lufaut Buptisn ->•«_. . |5_ va The Moral Trailillis; of the Church --.--•- 181 VIII, Popular Objections ugaiu.ft the Church ..._•._ joi IX. The Churcl in all ages the Keeper of the Truth - • • ¦ • 231 X. *vo_c!uflio_. Tha True, Catholic Churchman • - 851 Ma$ is a creature of extra* a eg. Tu« n_.Jd c path is generally the wise paib but there arc few wise enough to find it. Because Papists have made too muck of nomo things, Protestants have made loo little of them. The Papists treat mat ag all sense : and, therefore, some Protestants would treat hira as all spirit. Because one party lias exalted the Virgin Mary to a Divinity, the other can scarcely think of that "mo.it highly favored among women " with common respect. The Papist puts the Apocrypha into his Canon; the Protestant will .scarcely regard it as an ancient record. The Popish Heresy, human merit tu justification, drove Luther on the other side into the most unwarrantahle and unscriptural statements of that doctrine. The Papists consider Grace as inseparable from the participation ot the _? tcraments — the Protestants too ofteu lose sight of them as instituted me *_.*&_ •»/ conveying Grace. Otcila IvVf-raia* PREFACE TO THE F OUBTE EDITION. If- revising this fourth Edition for the press, the autho would express his thankfulness for the many assurances he has received that this work has proved useful in spreading the knowledge of the Apostolic Church. Written during a time of excitement, and to meet a peculiar crisis in the state of religion around, he had no idea that at the end of five years it would be found with an increasing circulation. To the kindness of his brethren in the ministry much of this is owing ; and now, the author may truly say, that with the added study of years and the wider experience he has gained from himself witnessing the workings of mere Protestantism in Germany and Romanism in Italy, he sees no necessity for changing" any views which he formerly expressed in these pages. The last five years have been those of trial to the Church, when her principles were fully tested both in this country and in that from which she came, yet to his mind the result has proved her Catholic character, and increased his confidence in the truths he has endeavcred to unfold in this volume. Once more then he sends it forth on its way, with the earnest prayer that it may not only strengthen the Churchman in his faith, but also prove userul to some among those, who in an age of doubt and skepticism, are " sounding _n their dim and perilous way." April, 1848. PREFACE! Tha circumstances under which this Volume was wi it- tun, are briefly these. The last winter, it is well known, was a season of strange excitement among the different de nominations throughout our land. At such a time — as the best safeguard against this injurious influence — the writer thought it well to deliver to the people of his charge, a course of Lectures, plainly setting forth the distinctive prin ciples of the Church. They were continued through ten successive Sunday evenings ; and he had reason to believe that the effect produced was beneficial. The Lectures were originally prepared without the most distant idea of publication. Having, however, been request ed by the' Vestry, as well as by others in whose judgment he is accustomed to rely, to furnish the series for the Press, the writer did not feel at liberty to decline. He has, therefore, availed himself of what hours of leisure he could find amidst the engrossing cares of Parish duty, to expand gome parts of the course and to add the necessary references The result of his attemf t is seen in this volume. 1* i fREFAC_l. He believes that this work will be found to differ some- ivhat in its plan, from most of those on the claims of oui Church, which are intended for popular reading. They aie generally written with reference merely to the- Protest ant denominations around us. The public mind, however. has lately taken a new direction, and the doctrines of the Church of Rome have agaiu become a subject of discussion. The writer has therefore endeavored to draw the line be tween these two extremes — showing that the Church bears ner double witness against them both — and points out a middle path as the one of truth and safety. And the prin ciple by whioh he has been guided in all cases, is that laid down by Tertullian, " Whatever is first, is true ; whatever is more recent, is spurious."* To account for the tone in which some parts are written — for instance, the close of the Leo. are on " The moral training of the Church" — he must ask the reader to bear in mind, the high state of religious excitement which was at that time prevailing on every side, and the strange excesses to which it naturally gave birth. These passages havo been suffered to remain, because another winter may again produce the same delusions in the denominations around us. On the solemn subject of his religious interests, man seems determined not to profit by the experience of the past, ** Pcrreque adveraus universaa hoereses jam hinc prajudicatum sit id esse verum, quodcunque primum ; id esse adulterum quodcunque Oostcrius." — Ta •ult. ,.di>. Prix., § ii. Oper. p. 406. ¦*•«*¦ _FAC_". _?" tut year after year courts the fever, forgetful of the chill Dy which it is invariably followed. The prevalence in this country of a peculiar form of error, also occasioned the delivery of a sep-irate Lecture, devoted to an exposition of "the Church's View of Bap tism." In the fourth century, Pelagius, after travelling over the greater part of Christendom, could record as the result of his observations that " he had never heard even any impious heretic, who asserted, that infants are not to be baptized." Such, however, is unfortunately not the case in our day. A numerous body of those " who profess and call themselves Christians," have fallen into this heresy, and it has become necessary to show plainly, how untenable are their doctrines when tested by Scripture and the voice of Catholic antiquity. The writer cannot expect, in bringing forward so many disputed points, but that his readers will take exception to some of his statements. He trusts, however, that the views advanced will be found to be in accordance with the teach ing of the great body of divines of the Church of England. In the old path which they marked out, we should all en deavor to walk. And the caution at this time is particu larly necessary. The revival of an attention to Church principles which has lately taken place, will in some cases drive the unstable and the imaginative to an extreme border ing on Romanism. This danger, therefore, we must shun , seeking -with care thi- well defined line which separates *tt __"_<«*_.. Cathohc trutia from Roman fallacies. And! If tfese ___&• tii'res shall aid any inquirer in forming his opinion:, mid avoiding the errors, by which we are surrounded, *.he writer wfll feel that his labor lias not been hi vain. Ftstiis&l af PL James, i_dcc___.ii_, _. NECESSITY FOR KN3WING THE REASONS tt_i_ WE AR* CHURCHMEN. Mother 1 I am sometimes told, By the wanderers in the dark, Flee*!)? from thine ancient fold, I must seek some newer ;trk. * w * * # » Rather those who turn away Let rae seek with love to win, Till Christ's scattered sheep astray To thy fold are gathered in. Rev. B. D. Winslow, 'To the Church.' In all the varied history of the Church, the most beautiful picture is that which is presented by the unity of her early days. The watchwords of a party were then unheard over the earth. No discordant tones arose, to break the delight ful harmony which prevailed. No warring sects distracted the attention of the inquirer after the Truth, or pointed to an hundred different paths in which he was invited to walk. With one. voice all declared themselves heirs of the same hopes, and alike numbered with the faithful. " By the operation of the Holy Ghost, all Christians were so joined together, in unity of spirit, and in the bond of peace, that with one heart they desired the prosperity of the Holy Apostolic Church, and, with one mouth professed the faith once delivered to he saints."* The Church then stood before our race, 'he sole mes senger of glad tidings to the world — the only city of refuge, beyond whose shelter there was no salvation for mankind. On widely distant shores, and in many a strange tongue, ¦he voce ot prayer was uplifted, yet always its spirit was * From a prayer in the office of Institution. t_ NECESSITY FOR ICNOWING TH* fhe same. "From the rising of the sun even unto th_ going clown of the same," — every where over the wide earth —there was "one Lord, one faith, one baptism."" All "continued steadfastly in the Apostles' doctrine and fellow ship, and in breaking of bread, and in prayers." There was, therefore, nothing else in this world to which the peni tent could turn, but the one Catholic, Apostolic Church: Centuries have gone by sn ice these bright days of the Church passed away ; yet, still the hope of their return sustains her children amid the toils and self-denial of the way. For this their souls are waiting " more than they that watch for the morning." For this they labor. Foi this they strive to make her principles known in the world — to reclaim the wanderers from her fold — and to convince them, that there indeed they will find rest for their souls. And it is in the attempt to do my humble share in this work, and to mingle my exertions also with that tide of influence which is put forth on every side of us, that I have met you this evening, to commence a course of lectures on the distinctive principles of the Church. The field which opens before us is a wide one, but the remarks " which 1 shall offer, on the present occasion, will be merely intro ductory. You will naturally ask the question — why I have chosen this way to advance the interests of our faith, and aid the final coming of the reign of peace ? Why — with so many topics opening before us on the pages of God's word, which ultimately concern man's eternal safety — I pass them by, to dwell upon forms of Church government? Why — when the apostate and the lost are perishing on the right hand and on the left — instead of sounding forth to them the solemn warning, to turn unto the Lord and live — instead of preach ing that great Atonement which must be their only hope — I take up subjects which to many would appear only of secondary interest ? In answer to these inquiries I can only say, that I am fully aware of the unsr-eakable importance of these themes. You, too, I trust, can bear me witness, that when I have .stood before you, week after week, for nearly six years, in the ministrations of this sanctuary, it has ever been mv object to lead you through the sr frows of a broken an' JtiUsdNS W_t_ WJ8 ARE CHtJRC_.l_iIN. 15 contrite heart, to that peace and joy which are to be found oniy at the Cross of our Lord. It has been my. earnest priyer, that never might I lose sight of that maxim of the Apostle which regulated his preaching, and which he declared so explicitly in the words: "For I determined not to know any thing among you, save Jesus Christ, and him srucified." But every truth which God has revealed must be important, and should hold its proper place in the instruc tions of the pulpit. Under the Jewish law, no commands which he had given were thought too inconsiderable to receive their strict attention. Even the "paying tithes of nint, anise, and cummin," our Saviour declared they "ought not to leave undone." Who, then, can say, that the question, Whaf form of government did our Lord prescribe for His Church ? is one which does not deserve our earnest investi ¦ gation ? There is indeed "a time to speak," as well as " a time to be silent" — a time to warn the sinner that he flee from the wrath to come, or to call the Christian to press onward in his course — and a time to proclaim to those around us, the rules of outward order which characterize our Church. There must indeed be a symmetry in our leaching. '-He," says Bishop Mcllvaine, "isa poor hus bandman, who spends so much time upon the tilling of the ground, that his enclosures are forgotten ; or who thinks that because the fence is not the grain, therefore it may take care of itself. So would that be a very defective ministry, and would prove at last, should it be generally prevalent, a ruinous ministry to all abiding fruits of righteousness, which, for the sake of more attention to inward and spiritual religion, should despise or neglect the careful maintenance, in their right claim of reverence and obedience, of those outward things of Church ordinance and order, which are just as necessary to the abiding of spiritual religion in the world, as the human body is to the abiding of the humiin ¦loul." Neithe.r, indeed, are these single and isolated facts, standing by themselves. They have their influence on the whole circle of our rehgious duties. And sir.-;e all truths ire linked together, -the reception of any one may be the means of pouring light into the mind, and inducing us to go on step by step, until "the Truth shall make us free." While, therefo-e, " thf time is short " in wliich our warfan? _£ NECESSITY FOR KNOWING T._E is to oe waged, it is surely well for us at once to decide, iii what arena the conflict must be fought. To this duty then I am called, by the very vows which bound me to the altar. Among the earliest charges incul cated upon the ministry, even by an Apostle, was the duty of declaring to their people "all the counsel of God," because thus only could they be "pure from the blood of all men." Yes, brethren ! " all the counsel of God " — not merely a few great and cardinal doctrines — those of repent ance and faith — but every thing which forms a part of our common Christianity. How, then, can he be fulfilling this requisition, who omits any truth which can exert an influence upon the Christian life and conduct ? Would the ancient Jewish priest have discharged his duty to the people, if, when commanded to instruct them in the law, he had spent all his time in directing their attention to that coming Messiah, who was then revealed in prophecy ? No. his business was to teach them also the rites of tho cere monial law — to show why they were severed from the surrounding nations — and to recall the history and explain the object of that splendid ritual with which they worshipped And this is the wide duty ofthe Christian priest in our day. He must also unfold before you the government and polity of that Church which his Master founded, when, as the earliest Herald of the faith, He preached among the villages of Judea, and which He then constituted to be in all ages " the pillar and ground of the truth."* Again — in our ordination service, the question put by tfe Bishop to one about to be admitted to the holy order of Priests is—" Will you be ready, with all faithful diligence, to banish and drive away from the Church all erroneous and strange doctrines contrary to God's word?" — to which he replies— "I will, the Lord being my helper." And the exhortation also is given — '¦' See that ye never cease your labor, your care and diligence, until ye have, done all that lieth in you, according tc your bounden duty, to bring all such as are or shall be committed to your charge, unto that agreement in the faith and knowledge of God, and that lipe- ne_s and perfecti :a of age in Christ, that there be no place lef* among you, either for error in religion, or for viciousnesi * 1 Tim. iii. IE. tlEAgONS WHY WIS AftJ! OMPBCMMliK. 1? in life." flow then can he be innocent, w'.io beholds what lie regards as errors rife around him, and yet warns not the people of his charge against their influence— who suffers them to live on year after year, attending the services of the Church, yet liable to be " tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine," because they are without any definite knowledge of the reasons why they should be Churchmen ? Such, then, are the motives which have iudueed me to address you on these subjects. They are points which for the last three centuries have exercised the intellect and pens of some of the most gifted in each generation. There is no room therefore for any attempts at originality, but all that We can now do is to go forth, and reap here and there, with What judgment we may, in the wide fields which the learned of former days have cultivated. " Other men labored, and we have entered into their labors." In the elucidation, too, of each single topic which I can bring before you in the harrow compass of these lectures, volumes have been writ ten. But how few comparatively will turn to the hoarded wisdom of the past — 'the works of those who were giants in the intellectual warfare of older days — and search for them- sevles in the rich mines which have been thus bequeathed to us? The very magnitude of the materials which are offered to their view, causes them often to turn away in despair, while to a simple statement of the argument they Will listen readily. Many too need to have their attention first awakened, and their interest excited, before they will commence the examination. My endeavor therefore shall be, merely to open this subject before you, in the hope that afterwards, from the hints and suggestions given, you will feel inclined yourselves to prosecute the study of this im portant argument. And now, brethren, a few words with regard to the spirit in which I propose to conduct this inquiry It is with no feeling of unkindness or opposition to those who differ from Us on these topics. Born and educated in a denomination whicli discards the distinctive features of the Church, the recollections of youth are not easily forgotten, nor the ties cf relationship which bind me to those who reject, as a corruption of the dark ages, tle claims of our ancient Aoos- 18 NECESSITY tOll KNOWtNO T1*E tolic ministsy, and almost regard as heresy the way in which we worship cur God. But if compelled from principle to decline uniting with their communion, and to differ from them on doctrines which the Church holds to be most im pertain, I would still speak of them only in the spirit of love. In setting before you, therefore, most distinctly the points ,o_ which we are at variance, and protesting against what we believe to be a departure from the Scriptural standard, ii shall still be done with no other feeling than that of dee j egret that thus the followers ofthe same Lord can disagree. Remembering, with the excellent Hooker, that " there will come a time, when three words uttered with charity ana meekness shall receive a far more blessed reward, than three thousand volumes written with disdainful sharpness of wit,"* he who now addresses you would desire in this, as in all other things, not to record a single line, " which, dying, he would wish to blot." In that fearful conflict which is waging against " the Prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience," we may hail with gladness of heart the success of any who are winning souls from sin to holiness, even though they " follow not with us." Though error may be mingled with the truth they inculcate, still if they can thus lead the lost and perishing to their Goil, our Bpirits may well be lifted up with gratitude, that thus the faith is advanced, ''if by any means we might save some." When, therefore, we learn that through the efforts of those who disclaim our ministry, new triumphs are won to the cross among the snows of Greenland, or on "the palmy plains" of Ceylon — when we read how the Jesuits, Caval- lero and Anchieta, taugh' their creed among the mighty foiests of our own Southern continent, and for the first time the wild tribes of Brazil bowed to the emblefli of our com mon Master, we thanK God our hearts can respond to the announcement of their success,! and our faith is streiifrhe.jeti * Preface to Eccies. Polity, Sect. 2 . f " It was a land of priestcraft, but the Priest Believed himself the fables that he taught . Corrupt their forma, and yet those forms at least REASON'S WHY WK AftB CHURCHMEN. 1ft _s we journey on amid the gloom and .rials of this te vei world. We can adopt, we trust, alike the feelir.ga and lw language of the Apostle and say, — " What then ? notwith standing, every way, whether in pretence or in truth, Christ is preached ; and I therein do rejoice, yea, and will rejoice." Yet still, we may be clearly sensible of the errors of those, who thus in a greater or less degree have departed from that standard which our Lord left for his followers. Let our motto then be expressed in the words of an ancient writer — " Unity, in things that are necessary — libertyj in things that are unnecessary — charity, in all things." * Again — it shall be my endeavor lo speak plainly. The trumpet should never utter an uncertain sound. There is no use on this point, or on any other, of that smooth and equivocal preaching which leaves the hearer in doubt as to the practical conclusion. The pulpit is no place from which to utter dark sayings, or to address you in the language of parables. I shall endeavor, therefore, fully and faithfully to lay before you the distinctive principles of the Church — showing that she is now, in her form and ministry, as founded by Christ and his Apostles eighteen centuries ago. and that this view is confirmed alike by the voice of Scrip ture and of History. And if the conclusions to which we come should strike at the very foundations of the claims of those who surround us, we are not responsible for the result, We must interpret the word of God in accordance with the light we have — deliver faithfully the message with which He has charged us — and then leave consequences to Him. ft was not always w th'pleasant minstrelsy that the prophets of old approached those to whGm they were sent. Often they were charged with a sterner message, as they rebuked (heir infatuated countrymen for abandoning the Holy Temple Preserved a salutary faith that wrought, Maugre the alloy, the saving end it sought. Benevolence Lad gaiii'd such empire there, That even superstition had been brought An aspect of humanity to wear, And make the weal of man its first and only care Southey's Tale of Paraguay, Cant. IV 10. * ' In necessariis, unitas — in non necessariis, liOertas — in omnibus, charitas." Wits-ius ap Turretin, de Fum. ,p. 45 tUfCiESSt _ 1T FOR KNOWIM"* THB Jerusalem, and worshipping in groves and high placet which their own hands had made. WHY THEN SHOULD YOU SEEK TO UNDERSTAND THE REASOKI FOB BEING CHUB.HMEN? The first I shall mention is— because our Divine Master when on earth certainly founded and established a Church. Had He not done so — Had he merely inculcated the general principles of His faith, and left each body of believers to regulate their own ecclesiastical government — the obligations resting on us would be widely different. Then, we might justly consider every self-constituted society, and every assembly professing itself to be Christian, as a regular and duly organized Church of Christ. Then every individual who imagined himself moved to preach the Gospel, or who was asked to do so by any number who had chosen thus to unite together as a congregation, would be fully entitled to ministerial authority, and as much qualified to administer the sacraments, as if he had received a. direct commission from heaven. You perceive, then, that there must have been some visible Church established by our Lord, and some regularly constituted ministry, or every thing has been left entirely unsettled, subject to the caprices of man. And you will readily see, to what fluctuations and changes the want of this established system would necessarily give rise. If at .ny particular time — take that of the Reformation in the uxteenth century for example — a body of men, for some reason which seemed sufiicient to themselves, had a right to abandon that ministry which was derived in uninterrupted succession from the Apostles, and without any new com mission from our Lord, to constitute another ministry of their own, then any individuals have at any time a right to do the same. Either the ministry of the Church must have been handed down from our Lord and his apostles, through the long line of those who succeeded them — and it is from this fact that I stani before you your authorized tea_her— or else there is no law at all on this subject, and each one who occupies these pews has as much right as I have — should his fancy lead him to do so — to stand at this altar, and minister to you in holy rMngs. There ia therefore no middle gound in this matter. REASONS WHY WE APE CHURCHMEN. 21 But our Lord did not, we believe, thus abandon the pre vious truth He came to communicate, to be, through all thi? following ages, swept about upon the surging, changing sea of popular will. He formed also the casket, and left it to contain and guard the precious treasure, until His coming again. He constituted His Church to be, iu the Apostle's words, " the pillar and ground of the truth." He fourd His disriiples living under the Mosaic ritual — under a well defined, strictly organized plan of government, and is it to be sup posed that He released them from this, and yet substituted nothing in its place ? While the Christian faith was but ths continuation, the perfection of the Jewish, was it to have no restrictions — no form of polity whatever ? Our reason would dictate to us, that this cannot, be. Our Lord knew too well what was in man, thus to abandon him to his own idle eaprices. It was after our Master had burst the bonds of death and triumphed over the grave — while for a time He was still lingering on the earth to cheer His disciples, and fit them for the trials and labors which were at hand — that He gave them the high commission to go forth and lay the founda tions of that spiritual kingdom which was to embrace within its fold, "all nations, and kindreds, and tongues." His clear and unequivocal language was : " Peace be unto you ; as my Father hath sent me, even so send I you. And when He said this, He breathed on them, and saith unto them, Receive ye the Holy Ghost. Whose soever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them; and whose soever sins ye retain, they are retained." "And Jesus came and spake unto them, saying, All power is given unto me in Heaven • and in earth. Go ye, therefore, and teach all nations, bap tizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost : teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you; and lo I am with you always, even unto the end of the world."* The general belief has been, that during the forty days which intervened between our Lord's resurrection and ascension, while He instructed His disciples in "the things pertaining, to the Kingdom of God," He also inculcated the organization of 'he Church He had founded. It is evident that vihei" * John xx. 21, 22, 23. Mfitt xxviii. 18, 19, 20. 22 NECESSITY FOI KNOWING THE imneaiately afterwards they commenced their ministry there was no doubt, no hesitation on their part. They a once proceeded to develope this plan — to fill the vacancy in the number of the Apostles—" to ordain them elders in every Church"* — and to constitute the order of Deacons. \ This then was the three-fold ministry of the Church. * Acts xiv. 23. \ Bishop H, IT. Onderdonk argues, (Epis. Examined, p. 234,) that tins was not the first appointment of Deacons, but that they existed " in l e," at least, long before. He derives this conclusion from the following arguments — 1. Tlie Apostles, even before this time, could not have attended personally, as is generally supposed, to the dis tribution of alms. The work was too extensive from the first, and they would have had to " leave the word " altogether, had they discharged this lower office. 2. Had this work been in the hands cf the Apostles, they would hardly, have shown partiality. It must, therefore, have been previously committed to other agents. 3. If this was the beginning of the order of the Diaconate, seven would have been hardly enough for the converts, daily increasing by thousands. There must, therefore, have been others also. 4. The Jewish converts were of course much the most numerous. They did not, however complain of any neglect. The murmuring came from the foreign converts. There does not, however, appear to have been one native Hebrew among " the seven ; " an omission which, without the con struction before us, would have invited a " murmur " from the party before favored. The probability therefore is, that this was no new order at that time in the Church, but that additional deacons, selected from foreigners, were then ordained to minister to the foreign converts who had begun to increase. They were added to provide for a special emergency. Such also is the view of Mosheim. He says — " The first deacons of the Church, being chosen from among Jews who were born in Pales tine, were suspected by the foreign Jews of partiality in distributing the offerings which were presented for the support of the poor. To remedy, therefore, this disorder, seven other deacons were chosen by order ofthe Apostles, and employed in the service oi that part ofthe Church, at Jerusalem, which was composed of the foreign Jew 3 con verted to Christianity. Of these new ministers, six were foreigners, us aprears by their names; the seventh was chosen out of the prose lytes, of whom there were a certain number among the first Christians at Jerusalem, and to whom it was reasonable that some regard should be shown in the elections of the De icons as well as to the foreign Jews. — Comm. de Raits Christ, p. 1 8. REASONS WHY WE ARE CHURCHMEN. 23 If, therefore, a Church was founded with its valid min tstry, is it not our duty to seek out this fold and unite with lt ? Christ — the Apostle tells us — " is Head over all things to the Church, which is His body."* Now the Body can no more be divided than the Head. Again, he says — " There is one Body, and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your calling; one Lord, one faith, one baptisr_."t It is indeed a common opinion, and one which we often hear announced, that " as long as an individual is truly religious, it is a matter of no importance to what body of Christians he belongs." But if this be of no consequence, why was a Church established at all ? And — to go a step farther — if a Church has been established, and that Church is the body of Christ, unless we are members of her fold, how can we be members of Christ ? Divisions certainly were not regarded by the Apostles, as matters of but little moment. The declaration of St. Paul is — " That there should be no schism in the body,":": and when the Corinthian converts, in their dissensions, began to arrange themselves under the party names of Paul and Apol los, aii_' Cephas, they were most sternly rebuked by the great Apostle of the Gentiles. His indignant inquiry was — "Is Christ divided ? " and the exhortation which he wrote them was— "Now I beseech 5-ou, brethren, by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that ye all speak the same thing, and that there be no divisions (g-%is-hcct») among you ; but that ye .2 perfectly joined together in the same mind, and in the same judgment."'' So fearful did he regard this sin of schism, that the authors of it were not fo be treated as Christians. His instructions on this head were — "Now I beseech you, brethren, mark them which cause divisions and offences, contrary to the doctrine which ye have learned ; and avoid .hem, for "they that are such s.erve not our Lord Jesus Christ."\\ And so St. Jude speaks of those "who separate themselves, '•" as "having not the Spirit." Is it not, then, a matter of importance to belong to thav Church which our Lord found ed? And if you are now numbered with her members * Eph i 22, 23. f EPU- iv- 4- t l Cor- ™- 26* g 1 Cor. i. 12 1 E>m. xvi. 17. 24 NECESSITY FOR SNOW1NU THE shou.d yiu not understand the ground of your belief— the reasons why you are Churchmen ' * * The early Fathers always wrote on the subject of schism, in the same strain with the Apostles. Ignatius says — "As children of light and truth, avoid the division of unity." Epist. ad Philad. Ircneus says — "The spiritual man will also judge those who work divisions ; vain men, devoid of the love of God, seeking their cwn advantage more than the unity of the Church ; who for trifling, nay, for any causes, rend and divide the great and glorious body of Christ, ind as far as in them lies, slay it ; who speak peace, and work war fare; who truly strain at the gnat, and swallow the camel; for no improvement can be made by tlienn so great as is the evil of schism" Adv. Hares, iv. c. 33. The martyr Cyprian wrote a treatise — "De Unitate Ecclesias Catholica;" — especially upon this subject. He says: "Heresy and schism are his [Satan's] invention, for the subversion of faith, the corruption of truth, the division of unity. Those whom he can no longer retain in the blindness of the former way, he circumvents by betraying them into deviation from their new progress. He tears men away from the Church ; and while they imagine themselves to have come unto the light, and to have escaped the night of this world, he secretly infuses a second accession of darkness ; so that they con tinue to call themselves Christians, while they stand not by the Gospel of Christ, and never heed or obey him." In the same work he speaks also of Episcopacy as a witness for Jnity. " He who holds not this unity of the Church, does he think that he holds the faith? When a man struggles against the Church, and resists it, does he suppose that he continues to belong to it i " In the same way St. Augustine writes against the Donatists, and his testimony is particularly valuable, because this was a sect whose only error was schism, while in other points — as Mosheim states-— " their doctrine was conformable to that of the Church, as even their adversaries confess." (Cent, iv.part ii. ch. 5. sec. 8.) But mark with what severity he reproves their sin. He supposes the Churdi thus to -ddress them — " My children, why do you complain of your Mother . 1 wish to hear why you have deserted me. You accuse your brethren, and I am rent asunder by you. When the Gentiles persecuted me, I suffered much ; many left me, but they left me through fear No one forced you thus to rebel against me. You say that you are with me, but you must perceive that. this is false! I am called Catholic; you are on the side of Donatus." (Contra Donat. ix. 8.) And again, be Bays : " The question between us and the Donatists is. Where i" REAS0.NS WHY WE ARE CHURCHMEN. 25 Again— -a second reason for acquiring this knowledge ia —because if we are members of that Church which our Lord iouivled, we must be free from many errors on various subjects which mingle with the faith of those who dissent from her. Our object of course must be, to receive the truth as pure aa possible. How should we have acted, therefore, had we lived in the days of our Lord's personal ministry on the earth ? There would then have been no doubts on this sub ject. We should, of course, have attached ourselves to Him. as members of His own household of faith — the little Church of which He was the Visible Head. But the Church did not end with our Lord, for when He ascended up, He left others as His appointed successors, saying unto them; "As my Father hath sent me, even" so send f you." Of course, then, at this time we should have thought it safest to unite with them in visible fellowship, esteeming ourselves in this way more certain of spiritual blessings, than by belonging to any self-constituted societies in G.ililee or Antioch, (had such things existed,) which had ¦nerely received some of the prominent" doctrines of our Lord, yet without submitting to the rule of His chosen Apostles. Vet these Apostles also appointed their successors, to whom this samo authority, was thus transmitted, and they again consecrated others, and so the chain was kept up through the second century, and the third, and the fourth, until it 'eaehes down even to our day. Is not, then, the obligation o belong to this Church as imperative upon us, in the nihe- .eenth century, as it was upon thuse who lived in the first ? And if we now find the Christian- world divided into contending beds, which have strayed off from her fold — disclaimed some of her doctrines — and renounced her Apostolic ministry — l i.ubmit to you the question, Which is the part of prudence? fa it not to find out this Church, which has come down from Ilia earliest age, and to unite v~\th her? Let your reason decide. But we are told that each one who loves the Lord Jesus in sincerity and truth, shall be saved at last through His the Church of God ? With us, or with them ? This Church is ono ___ominated by our ancestors, Catholic; to denote, by the very name, that it is pvery where diffused." Ep. ad Cath. ii. 338. ? 20 NECESSITY TOR KNOWING THE atonement, even though he "follow not with us." *U e d.jn, it not, for sorrowful indeed would be our view of h" .man. life could we believe otherwise. When the voice of strife is loud around us, and the truth is defaced by passion or obscured by prejudice, we can look forward with joy to the hour when ihe end of all these things shall be. Then, we trust that Ihose mighty spirits who now display so much intellectual power while they have "fallen out by the way," will meet in penne before their Father's throne, and as they rejoice together in the light of His countenance, will forget the differences which divided them on their journey thither. "The spirit of Christianity is a spirit of love, and it often dwells among those who, in this world of corruption and folly, are most widely severed. It is cheering to think, that when the films which obscure our earthly vision are removed, we may all be found prostrate in adoration before the Lamb who died to redeem all by His most precious blood."* Yet still, those who have abandoned the Church, must necessarily be mingling some errors with the truths they receive ; may they not therefore be depriving themselves of advantages, and cutting themselves off from spiritual blessings, whicli otherwise they would enjoy, on their way to heaven ? This 's a point which we shall not fully know until the last day. Admit, however, the principle on which this objection to our claims is founded, and you may as well assert that, since we believe the heathen who lives up to the light he has will be saved. i therefore there is no use in his ever hearing of Christianity, because he can reach heaven without it. This view indeed confounds all principle 'of belief — renders truth utterly unimportant — and ' inculcates the notion, that God may impart directions to us, yet if we in our wisdom believe them to be of secondary importance, we may entirely disre gard them.J * Dr. Jarvis's Sermon on Church Tnity, in 1836, p. 26, n. f Rom. ii. 14. X There is probably no body of Clu istians more inclined to narrow down salvation than the Romanists, and yet they do not confine it to tliose within the pale of their own Church. They extend it aL-o to others who from conscientious motives have remained separated _•< t_ it. Thus, their great writer Dr. Milner says — " Catholic divines and tho holy fathers, at the same time that they strictly insist _n the REASONS WBT WE ARE CHURCHMEN. 27 In examining this principle, indeed, I know n )t how nettei to explain it, than by bringing before you the striking illustration employed by the Bishop of Vermont. He thus shows its absurdity. " The respectable society of Friends, frequently called Quakers, are well known as prcfessiny Christianity, and as being on some points remarkably zealous .followers of the precepts of the Gospel. Theii love of peace — their order — their patient endurance of per secution — what more lovely exhibition of practical religion have modern days to boast, than this remarkable people have displayed in these particulars? But they have adopted the erroneous idea, that a purer dispensation of the Gospel was committed to George Fox, the founder of this sect, which superseded in some respects the directions of Apos tolic rule, and hence they have no order of the ministry, no water baptism, no administration of the communion. Their women are allowed to teach in public equally with men, and they are strong opponents in all these points of the Church established by the Apostles. Now is it competent for us to necessity of adhering to the doctrine and communion »f the Catholic Church, make an express exception in favor of what is termed invin cible ignorance ; which occurs when persons out of the true Church are sincerely and firmly resolved, in spite of all worldly allurements on one hand, and all opposition to the contrary on the other, to enter into it, if they could find it out, and when they use their best endeavors for this purpose. This exception in favor of the invincibly ignorant is made by the same St. Augustine who so strictly insists on tlie general rule our great controvertist, Bellarmine, assertt that snch Cliristians, ' in virtue of the disposition of their hearts, belong to the Catholic Church.'" End of Controversy, Letter xxi. p. 137, Lond 1841. Again — in another place, in his letter on " the Qualities of Catho licity," he says, when speaking of the Church of England, and othei bodies of Christians not in union with the Romish Church — " AU tho young children who have been baptized in them, and all invincibly ignorant Christians, who exteriorly adhere to them, really belong lo the Catholic Church, as I have shown above." Letter xxix. p. 190. Tlie same view of this doctrine aj held by the Church of Rome is given by Palmer in his Treatise on the Church, vol. i. p. 240. When therefore they assert — ¦' There is no salvation wi thout the pal _ of the Catholic Church" — the question is, What do they mean ly "th. Catholic Church?" 28 NECE5SITY FOR KKOW'HiO THE say, tha the ,jious and sincere Quaker shall be ci.st ou of the kingdom of Christ, ou account of tt.ese serious errors in his system? God forbid. We are n.t the judge* of our fellows. Nay, it is the voice of the Redeemer himself whicli saith, 'Judge not, that ye be not judged.' On the other hand, shall we admit that the pious Quaker is on an equality with those who, being equally sincere, have.retained faithfully the whole system of the Book of God ? Surely not, for this would be an absurdity. It is preposterous to say, that the man who is in error can be on an equality with hhn that is not in error. It is preposterous to say, that he who departs from the rules of the Christian Church, is as sale as he who diligently keeps them. Consequently, while we behold the Quaker with all benevolence of feeling, and willingly praise every thing in his failh and practice which accords with the Word of God, we hesitate not to declare. plainly and unequivocally, that he has fallen into error on the points specified; that in this error we cannot take any part, nor can we give it either allowance or encouragement; while, nevertheless, we do not undertake to define the peril '.o which it exposes him before God, bat leave him to that tribunal before which we must all stand at the day of final retribution."* Now we may apply this view to the whole controversy, on the claims of the different denominations of Christians. The question is not — can a person be saved without the Church? but, has God established any Church with a par ticular organization, which is still in existence? If He has, it is clearly our duty to be included with this fold. Tims shall we be conforming ourselves most nearly to the divine standard, and of course be most certain of spiritual blessings. All these various sects cannot be right. Truth cannot have a hundred forms. She is one, and we must search her out among all the counterfeits by whi.-h she is surrounded, and then cleave to her. Again — another reason why we should understand cut distinctive Church principles is, because without this kno a- ledge we cannot be .-.eful or consistent Churchmen Te * The Prin. Church compared with the Prot Episcrpa] .Imrrb, by Bp. Hopkins, p. 7. KSASCttS WHY WE ARU .11(1 ACHMEN. 2'J ;imes iii which we live are peculiar, ft seems lo be a crisis both in the intellectual and moral history of our race. It ia an age of inquiry and investigation — an age "emulous of change" — when the truths in which our lathers rested are questioned and disallowed, and Ihe maxim of many around as is — " Old things have passed away; all things have be come new." And with reference to no subject is this spirit more fully displayed than that of religion. Whatever may be the result, the time of indifference at least is going by. Men seem to be awakening to the truth, that it is a matter of concern and importance whether or not they are in the right way. Experience is beginning to demonstrate to them, lhat he whose creed is erroneous, will al length become erroneous in his life also, and they are therefore learning to discard that shallow sophism of the poet — " For modes of faith, let graceless zealots fight ; His can't be wrong whose life is in the right."* For it is evident, that if his religion has any hold upon him at all, his life will partake of the eccentricities of his belief. and he, in fact, but his creed developed in action. The consequence, is, that the sound of theological warfare has lately come up with redoubled energy from ali quarters of (lie Christian world. We hear on every side the earnest inquiry — " What is truth ? " And the brightest sign of the times is, that the thoughtful and the serious in such numbers are looking to the Church. They see her standing unaltered iu the midst of all this conflict. It rages around, yet hei venerable battlements are untouched. The spirit of the age is continually modifying the sects about her, yet she is now in doctrine, and worship, and ministry, what she was in the Apostles' days. Time writes no wrinkle on her brow, and impairs not her strength. Is it not natural, then, that the question should be often asked by those who are tired ofthe contention and change they meet with elsewhere — What is the secret of this stability ? Is it not also the duty of each Churchman, to study her distinctive features, thathe maybe enabled both to stand fast in the old ways, ami also to give _ reason for his cl oice to the many who are. inquiring ? * Pope's Essay on Man, Ep. iii. 30 Nl.CESSItY FOR KNOWINO Tllfi We can see, too, that the day is approaching in which _he must ta_e part in the conflict, to repel the assaults of hei tuemies. Her wonderful increase has not been unmarked bv those who n re opposed to her, and now there is on every side a rallying to -,top her progress. Should not her friends then know why they belorg to her fold, and the points in wliich she differs from those who are arrayed against her? No one can long labor with effect in a cause which he does not perfectly understand. He may be aroused to a spas modic effort by some sudden burst of enthusiasm, but it need something more to sustain him amid the weariness and self denial of continued exertion. To inspire him with an abid ing earnestness, his views must be clear and distinct. He must be, as it were, deeply penetrated with the truth he would advocate, and then he will be compelled to listen reverently to her voice, and to go forth and labor in her behalf, when she points him to the field. Otherwise a secret, lurking un belief will belie the cold profession of his lips, or else, if believed at all, the truth for which he is bound to contend will be entirely inoperative, and " lie bed-ridden in the dor mitory of the soul."* The Church can never depend upon the stability of her ignorant members. He who attends her services, merely because he was born a Churchman — or because to do so ft convenient — or because he prefers the minister who hap pens to officiate at her altar — can be of but little benefit to her cause. The slightest reason will induce him to leave her fold and unite with others. He has merely a personal preference, not founded on any distinct understanding of her claims. Far be it from me, my brethren, to speak in the slightest degree iu disparagement of that feeling of affection which binds a people to their pastor, for no one prizes it more highly than I do. Yel it must be engrafted upon Churchmanship, not substituted for it. Let an individual be attached from principle to the Church herself, ani then any pastoral tie will but strengthen his love for her. B.it where this exists alone, pleasant as it may be to the in to be " faithful found among the faithless " — breasting the storm, and rebuking the cherished delusions of those around him, even though he should be obliged to stand forth, (to use Milton's words) as " the sole advocate of a discounte nanced" truth." Human language, therefore, could not write above the champion of the Church a nobler epitaph than that encomium which the first Bishop of Culcutta, Ur. Mid- dleton, pronounced upon the unbending Horsley — " He ran a glorious but unpopular career, in the midst of an heretical and apostate age." But we may remember that, if now these principles are disputed and disallowed, there was a time when their recep tion was fai different. In the earliest ages of our faith, * 1 Cor. iv. 3 4. f Isaiah xlis. 4. 2* 31 x-Aicilssitt fob. kKOWi.VG the reasons, _.__. when the memory of our Lord had not yet become dim in the minds and hearts of his followers, all gladly acknowledged those truths for which now we are forced to contend. We stand not alone then in this profession. We hold it with " the glorious company of the Apostles," and " the noble army of martyrs." And these days of union we believe shall once more return. Dark though the clouds may be which gather around us, the Sun of righteousness shall yet pour his beams over this benighted world, dispellir.g these mists of prejudice and error. And already the distant ho rizon is lighted up with the glory which heralds his coming. " Truth " — says the Eastern proverb — " is the daughter of Time ;" and though we wait long for her coming, yet at last she will appear. Her progress cannot be stayed, or her final triumph prevented. She mocks the vain efforts of her adversaries. They may, for a season, imprison her in the tomb, but it will only be that she may burst forth with a new and more glorious beauty. In vain for her will be the stone, the seal, the guard. She must have her resur rection. She must enjoy her own immortality. In this hope, then, we live ; when error is rife around us, striving to hold fast to our steadfastness — tc set forth the truth in humility — and looking forward to the time, when all warring sects which now distract the Christian world shall profess with " one heart the faith delivered to the saints," and with " one mouth glorify God." And for this we pray, when gathered in His Holy Temple, we utter those solumn words ofour own Litany — " From all false doctrine, heresy and sch:sm, Good Lord, deliver us." ii. EPISCOPACY PROVED PROM SCRIP _ URE. Wlio tlipn, uncalled by Thee, Dare toucli Tliy Spouse, Thy very self below? Or who dares count him summoned worthily, Except Thy hand aud seal he show ? Keble. It:', us look back this evening tnrough the long vista of neaily eighteen centuries, to a little group which then had gathered in Judea. It was our risen Lord, surrounded by His eleven disciples. The time of his triumph had come. The fearful conflict with our great enemy was over, and his power broken. Death had been vanquished, and the grave robbed of its prey. And now, when the Son of God w _s about to leave this world of suffering and ascend to his Father, His faithful followers had collected about Him, to hear His last injunctions before "the cloud received Him out of their sight." The outward, busy world knew not ofthis little assem bly, and cared not for its doings. Yet in that hour words were spoken which changed the destiny if man, and a com mand was given, whose influence shoulc. be felt to the end of time. Then was issued that broad commission — " Go ye and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost ; teaching them to observe aU things, whatsoever I have commanded you." Here is the Charter of the Christian Church — the source of all power to her rulers. The twilight dimness o_ Judaism was over, and the f.ll glory of the Sun of right eousness was about to shine. Our Master's kingdom was to fill the whole world. The faith, no longer shut in by the hills of J idea, was to go forth everywhere, enligh*'erdng the nations. His ministers were to inherit the earth. 3C EPISCOPACY PROVED FRO--' SCKIPTURE. But what is His Church, and who are His ministers* and how did He constitute them ? To be equal in rank er each, according to his degree, to yield obedience to those above him ? Did He, " of his wise providence appoint di vers Orders in His Church" — or one giade of ministers only ? Was the office of an Apostle to be perpetuated, or did its authority expire when the last survivor ofthe twelve died at Ephesus ? These are the points on which the Church dif fers with those about her, and to a consideration of which we would ask your candid attention. They are not questions which can be set aside, or regarded as unimportant. They act upon our conduct in daily, practical life. They have their influence on the spiritual interests of millions of im mortal beings. Are we — or are those who dissent from us — walking in the path which our Lord marked out, and en joying the ministry which He instituted ? These therefore are surely subjects to be approached, not " lightly," but "rev erently, advisedly, soberly, and in the fear of God." And where shall we begin this investigation? It is the glory of our Church, that she refers everything to the deci sion of Scripture. Her Sixth Article declares most expli citly — " Holy Scripture containeth all things necessary to salvation : so that whatsoever is not read therein, nor may be proved thereby, is not to be required of any man, that it should be believed as an article of faith, or be thought requi site or necessary to salvation." To this tribunal then let us go in the settlement of the important subject now before us, viz., the authority for the Episcopal form of Church gov ernment. Let us turn at once " to the law and to the testi mony," and make our first inquiry, What says the Word of God ? What do we learn ff .m its pages with regard to the government of that Church, which our Lord and his Apostles in their day established ? The first thing is — to set plainly before you what we be lieve to be the truth on this subject, and in what respects wo differ from the various denominations around us. We con tend, then, that in accordance with directions given by our Lord, His Apostles, acting under the direct influence of tho Holy Spirit, established a Church, having a ministry of three ordeis, and which ministry has been continued by their suc cessors down to the present time. These three orders were. A'PISCOPACY PROVED FKO.'i SCRIPT. RI . St (St, the Apostles — called in the following age, the Bishops: 2d, the Presbyters, or Elders ; and 3d, the Deacons. We contend, also, that there is no instance of ordination record ed in Scripture, as being performed by any except the Apos tles, or others, as Timothy or Titus, "who had been invested by them with the authority of Bishops ; in othei words, that there is no instance anywhere of mere Presbyteis ordaining. And we believe, also, that this remained an established rule ofthe Church, never violated for more than 1500 years, un til at the Reformation in the sixteenth century, when some bodies of Christians, who had separated from the Church, proceeded to ordain ministers by the hands of mere priests or Presbyters. We therefore require in those who officiate at our altars, that they should be Episcopally ordained, that is, that they should be ordained by some Bishop, who has de rived his authority from those Bishops who went before him in the Church, in uninterrupted succession since the Apos tles' days.* This is the doctrine of the Apostolical succes sion. On the other hand, those who deny the necessity, ol Episcopal government assert, that the Apostles of the Early Church left no successors — that it is not necessary for ordi nation to be performed by a Bishop — that there is but one order of ministers in the Church, that of Presbyters — and that these have a right, by their own authority, to ordain and admit to the ministry. Such then is the dividing line between us, and to decide which view is right, and most in accordance with the government of the Primitive Church, we must refer to the intimations given in Scripture, and the testimony of History in the earliest ages of our faith. The first argument, then, we would advance, is the anal ogy to be drawn from the nature of the ministry in the Jew ish Church.. The Church in all ages is the same, only de veloping itself at one time in a greater maturity than it had done under the dispensation which preceded it. In this way we may interpret the illustration used by St. Paul, in the xd. of Romans, where he compares the Church to an olive tree, * "No man shall be accounted or taken to be a lawful Bishop^ Priest, or Deacon, in this Churcii, except he hath had Episcopal Conse cration or Ordination." Preface to the Ordinal. 38 EPISCOPACY1 PROVEt FROM SCRtPTt'ltt. from which, when the appointed time had come, some branch es (that is, the Jews) were broken off, and the wild olive tree (that is, the Gentile nations) was grafted in. If, indeed, we look at the different dispensations, we shall find that each one was but an expansion of the last — elevat- .ng man to a higher stage of religious truth than he had before enjoyed. Thus the Jewish dispensation was an ad vance as compared with the Patriarchal — while the Chris tian Church is but the continuation — the ripening — the fuller development of the Jewish. All things in the Mosaic economy were but preparatory to things in the Christian dispensation, and typical of them. Therefore it was that each was prescribed by God Himself with such distinctness, and the direction given — " See that thou make all things according to the pattern showed to thee in the mount."* Look, then, how one thing answers to another. There were sacrifices in the Jewish Church, but these were only intended to shadow forth the one great sacrifice of our Lord. The rite of entrance into the former Church was circumci sion", but in the latter, Baptism took its place. The Pass over, in the old dispensation, commemorated the deliver ance of the people of Israel from the bondage of Egypt, and at the same time pointed forward to the Lamb of God. But .his was set aside by our Lord, when He substituted in piace of it the Sacrament of His Supper, which in the Christian Church was to commemorate the greater deliverance which He had wrought out from a more fearfu1 bondage. Thus, you may perfectly draw the parallel between the two Churches, and you will find, as we remarked, that the one is only the continuation of the other, modified by the clearer light which had beamed upon the world. The difference is, that in the former, they looked forward to an expected Sa viour — while, in the latter, we look back to this Saviour who has already come. Now let us turn to the ministry, and see how the analogy holds good in this case. We find that, in the Jewish Church, God Himself instituted a priesthood,, consisting of three orders, viz., the High Priest, the ordinary Priests, and the Levites These, through all ages, were the only authori>«il * Huh viii. 5 Episcopacy proved from sniipTURfe. _i_l teachers ofthe nation — the only ones permitted to offer sac rifice in behalf of the people. Should we not then naturally expect, that when the Christian ministry took the place of this priesthood, it woull be, like every thing else, conformed in some degree to the ancient model ? Such would be, out reasonable supposition, and we find it realized. In the early Church — as its condition is learned both from Scripture and History — we recognize everywhere the traces of a three fold ministry — Bishops, Priests, and Deacons. See, too, how strictly, under the old Dispensation, the Priesthood was guarded from the intrusion of those who could not enter it by regular descent from the family of Aaron. " No man " — writes the Apostle in his Epistle to the Hebrews — " taketh this honor unto himself, but he that is called of God, as was Aaron." In every case the most fearful punishment awaited those who ventured to discharge its sacred duties without having been thus regularly commis sioned. Such was the case with Korah and his company. tn that spirit which prevails so extensively at this day, they raised their voices against the authorized ministers of the Sanctuary, and in language the very counterpart of which we too often hear around us, proclaimed themselves to be as good as those whom God had commissioned, and therefore authorized to assume the duties of the priesthood. " They gathered themselves together against Moses and against Aaron, and said unto them; Ye take too much upon you, seeing all the congregation are holy, every one of them, and the Lord is among them : wherefore, then, lift ye up your selves above the congregation of the Lord ?" But mark the reply of Moses — " Hear, I pray you, ye sons of Levi : Seem- eth it but a small thing unto you, that the God of Israel hath separated you from the congregation of Israel, to bring you near to Himself to do the service of the tabernacle of the Lord, and to stand before the congregation to minister unto them? and seek ye the priesthood also?"* Read, too, how God gave forth His verdict on this point. Fire from the Lord burned all who joined in that act — the earth opened her bosom, and swallowed those who favored tb.m — while the breath ofthe pestilence was poured forth * Num. xvi. 40 EPISCOPACY PKO\ R. KROSl SCRIPTURE. until it had destroyed the people who murmured at the__ indgments.* Again — we have ancther example of the same kind in King Uzziah. Listen to the account in the sacred record— " When he was strong, his heart was lifted up to his de struction; for he transgressed against the Lord his God, and went into the temple of the Lord to burn incense upon the altar of incense. And Azariah the priest went in aftei him, and with him fourscore priests of the Lord, that were valiant men. And they withstood Uzziah the king, and said jnto him, ' It appertaineth not unto thee, Uzziah, to burn incense unto the Lord, but to the priests, the sons of Aaron. that are consecrated to burn incense; go out of the sanctu-. ary ; for thou hast transgressed ; neither shall it be for thine honor from the Lord God.' Then Uzziah was wroth, aud had a censer in his hand to burn incense ; and while he was wroth with the priests, the leprosy even rose up in his. fore head before the priests in the house ofthe Lord, from besiilo the incense altar. And Azariah the chief priest,- and all the priests, looked upon him, and behold, he was leprous in his forehead, and they thrust him out from thence : yea himself hasted also to go out, because the Lord had smilten him. And Uzziah the king was a leper unto the day of his death, and dwelt in a several house, being a leper; for he was cut off from the house of the Lord."t Thus, you per ceive that he entered the sanctuary an' unaccredited priest, and came forth smitten with the plague of leprosy. And do you think, that for fifteen centuries God thus * Mr. Percival, in his "Apostolic Succession," has paraphrased this passage, to adapt it to modern times. Let it be read as overlined, an. the address might be nade to some in our d.ay : Presbyters " Hear, I pray you, ye sons cf Levi : Seemeth it but a small filing Son of God Christian unto you that the God of Israel hath separated you from the congrt- people gation of Israel, to bring you near to Himself, to do the service of thu tabernacle of the Lord, and to stand before the congregation to ministej Episcopate unto them ? . . . . and seek ye the Priesthood also V t 2 Cl.-ron, xxvi. 16-21. t'l'IsCOf'ACY PROVE") FROM SCRIPT. I! K. 41 rsaref'ull; guarded the priesthood, and by fearful judgments taught His people, that none could be numbered with it ex cept they received the privilege by direct succession, and then, as soon as His Church had expanded into a nobler form, did he leave this subject totally unsettled ? Did He give no authority, as in old time, to be transmitted down by descent? Did He, instead of sending, authorized heralds who bore the terms of peace, do what no earthly monarch would have done, permit His rebellious subjects to appoint their own messengers to proclaim to them His will ? No, brethren, such is not the "lesson which we learn from the analogy ofthe Jewish priesthood. Neither is there any force in the objection sometimes advanced, that this argument proves too much — that it wou'd support, not only Episcopacy, but also the Papacy. We are told — :- There was but a single Jewish High Priest, and therefore, according to your analogy, there should be tut a single Bishop. The ancient Church had but one head ; if then the principle is to be carried out, but one universal Bishop should preside over Christendom. You, therefore, are sustaining the claims of the Romanist." A moment's reflection, however, will show the futility of this abjection. Tnere was but a single High Priest among the Jews, because that Church was to stand single and alone, confined in a great measure to but one land. All men were obliged '¦ to go up to Jerusalem," as the centre of their faith. But oue single temple was allowed to be built, in which sac- , rifi.es could be offered. Under the Christian dispensation, however, the Church assumed a Catholic character and form. It was to be universal — diffused everywhere. Jeru salem could no longer claim extraordinary privileges, as " the place where men ought to worship," for everywhere "the true wor_uippe:s could worship .the Father in. spirit and iu truth." Tha land became, under the new economy, but a portion of the Church, and as such had its Bishop — ils single head and ecclesiastical ruler. And "_o it was throughout the world. The office is everywhere one and the same, although, from the extended limits of the Church, it must be held in different countries, by different and numer ous individuals. The Catholic believer, therefore, in pass ing from diocese to diocese, finds everywhere a successoi o." _*_ EPISCOPACY PROVIaD FROM SCRIPTURE. the Jewish High Priest, but all the while he is undei on6 Apustolate as under one sky and sun. But let us proceed to the direct Scripture evidence. The first pi oof we advance is — that there is a recognition, in the Acts and the Epistles, of the existence of three orders in the early Church. A confusion is, indeed, sometimts cre ated in the minds of readers, in consequence of the indis criminate use of the title Bishop. A few sentences, how. ever of explanation will remove this difficulty. As w« already remarked — the three orders of min'sters were, 1st, Apostles; 2d, Bishops or elders; 3d, Deacons. After, how ever, the death of the Apostles, who were the first Bishops. those who succeeded to the Episcopal office, out of respect to them as . having stood nearest to our Lord, would not assume the name of Apostles, although they inherited their authority. They therefore took the name of Bishops, le-iv ing those in the second rank of the ministry to be called, as before. Elders or Presbyters — and the third, to retain the title of Deacons. Thus it is that the early historian, Theo doret, gives the history of this change of name. " The same persons were anciently called promiscuously both Bishops and Presbyters, whilst those who are now called Bishops, were called Apostles. But shortly after, the name of Apos tles was appropriated to such only as were Apostles indeed; and then the name Bishop was given to those who before were called Apostles."* Thus, he says, that Epaphroditus was the Apostle of the Philippians, and Titus the Apostle • of the Cretians, and Timothy the Apostle of the A.siatics. And this he repeats in other places."*" The ancient writer under the name of St. Ambrose as. serts the same thing. " They who are now called Bishops. were originally called Apostles. But the holy Apostles being dead, they who were ordained after them to govern the Churches, could not arrive to the excellency of these first, not had they the testimony of miracles, but were in many other lespects inferior to them. Therefore they thought it not decent to assume to themselves the name of Apostles, but dividing the names, they left to Presbyters the * Tlioi.dr.ret, Con m. in 1 rim. 3, 1. f Ibid. Com. in 1'liil. I 1, and _, 26. CPtSCOI'ACY PROVED FROM SCRIPTUR* . 4_ name ol the Presbytery, and they themselves were called Bishops.* Here, you perceive, is a full explanation 3f the change. The name however is a matter of no importance. It is the office and the authority for which we contend. We only wish to prove, that there was a grade of ministers higher in rank than the Elders or Presbyters. f * Bingham'sOrig. Eccies. lib. ii. c. 2, sec 1. f If a more familiar illustration of this change of title may be al lowed, we would give the following. Suppose that "Washington had been elevated to tlie office of Chief Magistrate over this country, with the name of Dictator, while the highest magistrate in each state was called, indiscriminately, President or Governor. We will imagine. also, that the successors of Washington, although placed in office with exa.tly the same powers, out of respect to him as the Pater Patriae would net assume the same title. They therefore took the name of President, leaving that of Governor to be. still borne by the magistrate of each state. Would this change make any difference in the office itself, or render it difficult for us to prove, that those who in 1785 were called Presidents or Governors, held tlie same office with those low called Governors ? Or would any one deny, on account of the change of name, that he who is now called the President of the United States holds the same office which his first predecessor held under the title of Dictator ? Bi__op H. U. Uhderdonk has given an admirable explanation, drawn from Scripture. " The word ' Sabbath' is applied in Scripture to only the Jewish day of rest ; by very common use, however, it means the Lord's day. Now. ' the Sabbath' is abolished by Christian ity, and the observance of it discountenanced ; yetministers of Christ ian denominations are constantly urging their Christian flocks to keep ' the Sabbath.' Does any confv sion of mind result from this confusion of names ! We suppose not All concerned understand, that in Scripture the word means the Jewish Sabbath, while out of Scripture the same word is constantly applied to the Christian Sabbath. Lot the same justice be done to the word ' Bishop.' In Scripture, it means _ Presbyter, properly so called. Out of Scripture, according to the usage next to universal of all age3 since the sacred canon was closed, it means that sacerdotal order, higher than Presbyters, which is found in Scripture under the title of ' Apostle.' When a Christian teacher who enjoins the observance ofthe day which he calls ' the Sabbath,' is asked for his New Testament aul hority, he ha3 to exclude all the pas sages which contain that word, giving them a different application, and go to other passages which do not contain it ; and he agrees that he seeks the thing, not the name. And when we Episcopalians aiv 44 EPISCOPACY PROVED FROM SCRlrTtlRE. Now turn to the Acts, and you will find _vorywr,___ recognized the three orders, Apostles, Elders, and Deacons. The first chapter contains an account of the election of Mai- dhias, as Apostle, that he might " take the bishopric " of Judas. In ihe fourteenth- chapter, we are told the Apostles "ordained them Elders in every church;" and in the sixth chapter, is the record of the selection of seven men " full of the Holy Ghost and of wisdom," on whom " the Apostles laid their hands," and thus appointed them Deacons. In several places " Apostles and Elders " are mentioned as dis tinct classes of ministers.* Nor can it be said, that the Elders here referred to were laymen, for these also are care fully distinguished in some passages, as being again a class distinct from the other two. The statement made is, " Apos tles, Elders, and brethren. "f And so it is in the Epistles. Take a single instance in wnich all the orders ofthe ministry are mentioned together. We refer to that salutation with which the Epistle to the Philippians opens — " Paul and Timotheus, the servants of Jesus Christ, to all the saints in Christ Jesus, which are at Philippi, -with the Bishops and Deacons." Here are cer- • lainly three orders of ministers — the two Apostles, Paul and Timothy, sending their salutations to the Bishops and Dea- •eons. Now, change the titles to those which we have shown you the same orders bore in the next age, and it will read thus — " Paul and Timotheus, Bishops, to all the saints (Laity) at Philippi, with the Elders or Presbyters, and Deacons. But let us proceed to the main point — -the authority ex ercised by Bishops in that day — and see how entirely differ ent it was from that entrusted to the second rank in the ministry. For instance, when an Apostle gives a charge to a Bishop, we perceive at once that hs is addressing " one having authority," and set to rule in the Church of God. He instructs Lim as ti the manner in wliich he should con- asked f r inspired authority for ' Bishops,' we do the very same ; we give a different application to the passages which contain that word, and build on other passages, which teach the /at., ofthe existence ot Episcopacy, without that appellation." Episcopacy Examined, p. 13 * Acts xv. 2, i, 6, 22. and xvi. 4. f Acts xi. 1, and _v. .3. EPISCOPACY PROVED IPO.I SCRIPTURE. 45 duct himself towards the presbyters-or elders over wlom he had been placetl. We shall find, on the contrary, that with these elders he dwells upon a tota'ly different class of luties. They are always addressed, and cautioned, and advised, as tliose who are merely pastors over congregations. There is u.o allusion made to their exercising ecclesiastical discipline, or admitting others to the ministry. Let me give you a striking example of Jus. We are told that when St. Paul was on his way to Jerusalem, bav in;" stopped at Miletus, he sent from thence to the neigh boring Church, at Ephesus, that its elders might come to liim, and receive his final charge, since " they should see his face no more." And what does he tell them? why, he addresses them as those whose functions are entirely pas toral, whose business it is to rule, and feed, and instruct the flock committed to them. He directs them " to remember his warnings for the space of three years" — "to take heed unto themselves" — "to take heed unto the flock over whicli the Holy Ghost had made them overseers" — " to feed the Church of God" — " lo watch against the grievous wolves that would enter in among them, not sparing the flock" — and also to guard against "men who should arise among themselves, speaking perverse things."* This is the amount of his address — that they should be vigilant in guarding themselves from error, and also in preserving their people from those who would inculcate strange doctrines. There is nothing said about discipline to be exercised among the ministry — not a sylla ble about one having authority over another to depose him — not. an intimation that any one among them had power to ordain. It is, in fa' t, precisely the kind of charge which any 13 shop in this Jay might. deliver to his clergy, to warn them to be faithful in the discharge of their pastoral duties. Now mark the > ontrast in the Apostle's language, when he writes to Timothy, at this same church in Ephesus. Timothy was a young man, probably younger than most of the elders at Ephesus, for St. Pa il charges hita — " let no man despise thy youth," — and yet every line of the Apostle's letter proves, that Timothy was invested with Episcopal authority over these same presbyters. The Epistle is not * Acts xx. 17-35; 40 EPISCOPACY PROVED FROM SCRIPTU IE intended to guide him. in any par'nral connection with nil flock, but rather to instruct him as to the manner in which he should rule over the elders. Everything, for example, is addressed to him personally, and in the singular number, as being something in which the others couid not share : " This charge I commit unto thee, son Timothy" — " these things write I unto thee, that thou mightest know how to behave thyself in the house of God" — " if thou, put the brethren in remembrance of these things."* Look at the directions with regard to his exercising ecclesiastical discipline. " That thou mightest charge some that they teach no other [that is, no false] doctrine" — " against an elder receive not an accusation, but before two jr three witnesses" — " them [that is, the elders thus accused] that sin, rebuke before all, that others also may fear" — " I charge thee, that thou observe these things [these rules for the regulation and .discipline of the clergy,] without oreferring one before another, doing nothing by partiality. "f See, again, the rules given him with respect to ordinations. The third chapter of the first epistle is taken up with describ ing qualifications, for which he should look in those who are to be admitted to the ministry. Thus, he says, that the deacons "must first be proved; then let them nse the office of a deacon, being found blameless" — "the deacons must be grave, not doubled-tongued, not given to much wine, not greedy of filthy lucre, holding the mystery of the faith in a pure conscience" — " they that have used the office of a deacon well, purchase to themselves a good degree" — " literally," says Dr. Bloomfield, " obtain an honorable post, or step, that is, a higher degree, viz., of Presbyter or Bishop.""): In the sarre way, the proper qualifications of a presbyter are given — " A Bishop [elder or presbyter] must be blame- ess, the husband of one wife, vigilant, sober, of good beha vior, given to hospitality," &c. These descriptions are to guide him in observing the directions afterwards given— " lay hands suddenly on no man"' — and again — " the things * 1 Tim. i. 18 ; iii. 14, 15 ; iv. 6. f 1 Tim. '. 8 ; v. 19, 20, 21. J Bloomfield's Greek Test, in loco. § 1 Tun. v. 22. EPISCOPACY PROViiD FROM SCRIPTURE. 47 yhich thou hast heard of me, the same commit thou to faith ful men, who shall be able to teach others also."* Now, I would ask, if, as we are told, Timothy was not a successor -vf the Apostles, but only a Presbyter, and _ young Presbyter too, what right had he to be " receiving accusa tions" against his brother presbyters,' and "rebuking them before all ?" How could these things be, if all ministers were equal in the early Church ? or. is it in accordance with human nature, that the elders of the Church at Ephesus should thus have submitted to the rule of one of their own number, evi dently, too, their j unior in years ? On the Presbyterian scheme of Church government, I cannot understand what was the position of Timothy in the Church, or his relative situation with regard to those who were in the ministry with him. These Epistles are to me, in this case, a sealed book. But look at the page of Ecclesiastical History, where we are told that Timothy was the first Apostle or Bishop of Ephesus. t and all is plain. Then, I see the meaning of every direction given by St. Paul. Totally out of place as they would be, if written to a mere presbyter, they at the same time com pose exactly the kind of charge wliich, in this day, an aged Bishop of the Church might write to one who was younger in the Episcopate, that he might know how to act towards the clergy of his diocese. , Look at another example, equally striking — that of Titus. He, says Eusebius, " was appointed over the Churches in Crete ;" and all ancient writers unite in making- the same assertion."): It is certainly confirmed most fully by the Epis tle, in which St. Paul addresses him as one invested with Episcopal authority.. He writes to him — " For this cause left I thee in Crete, that thou shouldest set in order the things that are wanting, and [that thou shouldest] ordain elders in every city, as I had appointed thee." He then goes on to describe, as we have already seen him doing to Timothy, * 2 Tim. ii. 3. ¦| Eusebius, lib. iii. c. 4. " Timothy is recorded as having first re ceived the Episcopate at Ephesus." ALso Chrysostom, Horn. 1, in Philip. Jerome, Catah Scrip, in Tin. Theodoret Com. in 1 Tim. iii. .1 % Eusebius, Chrysostom, and Tbodoret, as cited a' left to be handed down by the succession of human instru ments. Yet who doubts thatthe last who ministered at tho altar had every claim to reverence which Aaron himself pos sessed fifteen centuries before ? On this point we will quota the striking analogy used to illustnte it, by o _e of our own Bishops. " The beginning ofthe grass in the field was miraculous — by the instant and immediate mandate of God. It was created in full maturity. But its succession was provided for by no such measure. The grass, and the herb, and the fruit tree were furnished with the means of a succession, by ordinary laws, each having ' seed in itself after its kind.' Thus also with man. The head of the human race was created by the immediate hand of God ; but the succession from that moment to the end of time, was provided for by laws of ordinary nature. But we hold it to be no arrogance to say of any man, though the lowest of his kind, that he has succeeded to the nature of the miraculously created first man; nor to say ofthe herb ofthe field, that though il be but the offspring ofthe little, familiar seed in the ground which sprang and grew *Sy an ordinary law, and a human planting and rearing, it is nevertheless, in all the essentials of its nature, the successor, in an unbroken line of descent, of the herb which on the third day of the world sprang into maturity it the wonderful fiat of the AlmigV..;. 1 tfpfSCOPA.Y PROVED FROM S"CRi_TUR_! fjj know not that the man or the herb is any less a man oi an herb, or any less descended from the miraculous begin nings, of the ereation, because the laws of growth Were but ordinary, and the intermediate agency of production was but human. And so I know not that a minister of the Gospel is any the less 4 successor of the first Apostles, be cause, instead of receiving his authority, like them, imme diately from Christ, it has come to him by the intermediate communication of a chain, fastened at its beginning upon the throneof God, and preserved as inviolate as the line ofthe descent of Adam, or the succession of seed-time and harvest, of day and night, of summer and winter. I know not that this day is not a true day, and strictly a successor of that very day when first the sun appeared ; though that, you know,, was made by the sudden act of God suspending the sun in the skies, and this arose by the ordinary succession of the evening and the morning. The beginning of every institution of God must of necessity be extraordinary ; itt regular continuance, ordinary. So with the course of Provi dence, in all its branches. What is now an ordinary Provi dence was once an extraordinary. What began with mira cle, is continued by laws of familiar nature. And so it iu with the ministry of the Gospel. What was created by the direct ordination of God, is propagated and continued by the authorized ordination of men. Its ' seed is in itself, after its kind,' and at every step of the succession it is precisely the same ministry, and just as much of God, sanctioned by His authority, and sustained by His power; as if it had been received from the laying on of the hands of Christ Himself. Apd so with the office of the Apostles. It was the promise of Christ ihe Lord that it should continue to the end of the world. I* is not more sure that sun and moon, seed-time and- harvest, will continue to the end of the world ; and though its succession be now in the hands of very feeble and fallible men— rof men unspeakably inferior to the Apostles in every personal and official qualification ; yea, though many Iscariots ,be found under its awful responsibilities, the integ rity of the office, as essentially identical with that of the Apos tles, is in no wise affected."* * Bishop Mcllvaine's Sermon, at the Consecration if Bishop Polkj P- 17, 62 EPISCOPACY' PROVED JROM SCRtfUllfi. Here then is a brief view of the argument for Eplseop _c) as derived from Scripture. We contend, indeed, that the whole tenor of the Acts and the Epistles sustains the fact of there being three orders in the ministry, and a degree of authority committed to those of the first rank — whether you call them Apostles or Bishops, is immaterial — which those of the other two grades did not possess. Thus then the early Church waa constituted. Our Lord left not His flock without its Cl ief-Shepherds. While ordinary priests and teachers were appointed, there were also leaders in " the sacramental host of God's elect." And in that day the office of a Bishop was often but a passport to the flames and the stake. It obliged those who bore it to stand in the very first rank, where trials were to be encountered, and to endure a double portion of painful sacrifices. They were to be " examples of suffering, affliction, and of patience." And nobly did they fulfil the high duties imposed upon them, treading in the footsteps of their Master, even to prison and to death. The blood of her martyred Bishops was the seed of the Church. They were the first marks at which the enemy aimed, and therefore the record of their cruel sufferings contains often the history of those early persecutions which fell upon the fold. In bearing the Cross loftily before the Christian host, they were worthy successors of those Apostles whose office they had inherited. When, therefore, these had passed away, bequeathing their authority to others, have we a right to set it aside, as no longer binding ? If the Episcopal form of government was thus established in Apostolic days, can we depart from it? Are we not justified in cleaving to it, and insisting on it, as it has been handed down to us for eighteen centuries ? Yes — nothing can change the order of the ministry but a new and direct revelation from Heaven. It can be done by no human authority. We are contented then not to try experiments in things which God hath settled. The well- worn path is before us, and we will not wander from it. If the Rechabites were blessed, because they reverenced antiquity, and walked in the way which had been marked oul for them in distant ages,* is it not well for us, as a Christian Church, to imbibe their steadfast and unchanging spirit. * Jer. xxxv. fcHscofrAcir proved from soRtpfuRi.. $'} _"wo vdces are striving to enlist our attention. The one rises up from those around us — the voice of tbis present age, as, '' emulous of change," it invites us to novelties, and points out unnumbered paths, untried and unknown, in which we are exhorted to walk. It is a fitful voice, ever varying, ever altering its, tones. The other falls calmly, yet solemnly, upon the ear. It comes down from the years of a dim and distant antiquity, and every generation has heard it, from Ihe first founding of the Church until now. It bids us cleave to the faith of the Apostles and martyrs. Its accents are onchanged from age to age. The former, is the voice of erring, fickle man. The lat er ia the voice of God. Wliieh shall we heed ? III. EPISCOPACY PROVED FROS HISTORY. . Throughout tlie older world, story and rite. — Throughout the new, skirting nil clouds with gold Through rise and full, and destinies inanifi fr. Of pagan empires — through the dreams and night Of nature, aud the darkness and the light, Still young iu hope, in disappointment old — Through mists which fall'n hnmanitv unfold into the vast uud viewless infinite, ftises th' Eternal City ofour God. The Call._drur days upon earth are a sha dow) : shall not they teach thee, and tell thee, and utiei words out of their heart ?"* ~ The argument, then, to be presented is this : That all writers of the first three centuries, who describe in ar.y way the condition of the Church, in every hint they give, and every fact they state, show most plainly, that no ministry was known or recognized in that day, but the same three-fold or ders of Bishops, Priests, and Deacons, which have continued down even to us. in uninterrupted succession. And who are these writers ? Men who were the companions and imme diate successors of the Apostles — confessors and martyrs, who poured forth their blood freely for that faith- in which they hail lived — men, whose voices were heard proclaiming '"the doctrines of the Cross in every strange land — whose motto and principle of action was, that their Master must inherit the earth — men, whose virtues were too heroic, and their aims too lofty, to be fully comprehended in these de generate days — and on the record of whose self-denying labors we now look back as upon a vision of past beauty which has faded from the earth, and for whose return we scarcely dare even to hope. Are their words, then, as they come down to us from those holy days, to be received only with doubts and carping questions ? And we think, too, that the very manner in which they gave their testimony, increases its force. They wrote no arguments to prove the nature of the Apostolie ministry. They set forth no elaborate proofs of the constitution of the Church. These were truths "-hich in that day none dis puted, and no formal defence was therefore necessary. We learn all these things incidentally, as they are brought for ward in connection with other features of the Church, or the ordinary instructions by which they sought to train up m holiness the people of their charge. No writer in that age thought of proving that the Church was governed- by * Chap. viii. 8, 9. 10. 63 tPiscoiACY pr:v£d from history. Bishops, any more than he did of establishing by a.gumec". tho fact that Rome was governed by an emperor, and the provinces by governors who were under him. Both are meielv alluded to as established historical facts. If then they who were cotemporary with the Apostles, and they who for three centuries followed them, all speak of the three ordeis of |He ministry as being defined and established in their day, may we not — adding this to the testimony of Scripture — believe that it was the divinely constituted form which our Lord pre scribed to His Church ? Our first witness, then, is St. Clement. He was a fel low-laborer of St. Paul, who hail bestowed upon him the no blest commendation language can frame. When writing to the Philippians, the Apostle says — " Clement also, and other my fellow-laborers, whose names are in the Book of Life.'' Having been appointed Bishop of Rome, he held that office nearly ten years, until his martyrdom.* The single. Epistle of his which is stiU extant, was written to the Corinthiansf and so highly was it esteemed in the early Church, that Eu sebius (the Ecclesiastical Historian who wrote in the begin ning ofthe fourth century) assures us, " it was universally received by all," and indeed reverenced by them next to the Holy Scriptures, and therefore " publicly read in most of the Churches for common benefit, both in times past ami also in his memory."! The object of this Epistle is, to promote a spirit of subordination among those to whom he wrote, that no one should intrude upon the office of such as were above him, but each in his own station discharge his appropriate duties. The very language which he uses, and the compari sons by which he illustrates his meaning, prove most fully that in that day " God in His wise providence had appointed divers Orders in His Church. "X For instance, he says — ,; Let u. therefore march on, mou and brethren, with all earnestness, in His holy laws. Lei us consider those who fight under our earthly governors : how orderly, how readily, and with what exact obedience they perform those things that are commanded them ! AU are not prefects, nor tribunes, nor centurions, nor inferiin * Cave's Lives of the Fathers, vol. i. p. 157. f Lib. iii. c. 16 88. J Prayer in Office of Institution. E.'ISCOPACY PROVED FROM HlStOR?. _7 ijiccrs; but every one in his respective rank does what is commanded him by the king, and those who have the au thority over him. They who are great cannot subsist with out those who are little, nor the little without the great. But there must be a mixture in all things, and then there will be use aud profit too. Let us, for example, take our body (1 Cor. xii. 13) : the head without the feet is nothing, neither the feet without the head. And even the smallest members of our body are yet both necessary and^useful to the whole body. But all conspire together, and are subject to one common life, namely, the preservation of the whole .body. Let, therefore, our whole body be. saved in Jesus Christ ; and let every one be subject to his neighbor, accord ing to the order in which he is placed by the gift of God." ('37,38.) Again — he uses that comparison to the Jewish priest hood, which was so common among the early writers — ¦"God has ordained, by His supreme will and authority, both where and by what persons they [that is. His services] are to be performed For the Chief Priest has his proper services ; and to the Priests their proper place is appointed ; and to the Levites appertain their proper ministries ; and the Layman is confined within the bounds of what is commanded to Laymen. Let every one of you therefore, brethren, bless God in his proper station, with _. good conscience, and with all gravity, not exceeding the rule of his service that is ap pointed to him." (§ 40, 41.) By this illustration he clearly points out a three-fold ministry. Again — he declares most plainly that the Apostolic office was not to cease with those who first held it, but to descend to others also. " So likewise our Apostles knew by our Lord Jesus Christ that there should contentions arise about the name of the Bishopric. And therefore having a perfect forekno vledge of this, they appointed persons, as we before said, and then gave direction how, when they should die, other chosen and approved men should succeed in the ministry." (§ 44.) Our next witness is, St. Ignatius. He, as St. Chrysostom tells us, was intimately conversant with the Apostles, fitliicated and nursed up by them, and made partaker both oi 'heir familiar discourses, and more secret and uncommon 68 KHS 0PACY PROVED FROM HISTORf myfrtenes* He was more particularly the disciple of St. J-hn, and when fully instructed in the doctrines of Chris tianity, was consecrated Bishop of Antioch, the metropolis of Syria, and the most famous arid renowned city of the East. To this office he was ordained by the Apostles who were then living, and continued to guide the Church through thi stormy period which followed, for the space of forty years. thirty of which were passed in the first century, the age of the inspired Apostles.t At length, at the age of 80, he was arrested as a Christian, and refusing to deny that Lord in whose service he had lived, was sent to Rome to be devoured by wild beasts in the amphitheatre. On his way thither, he stopped at Smyrna, and was thus allowed to see once more ins ancient fellow-disciple, St. Polycarp, the- Bishop of that city. Touching indeed must have been the meeting of these asred Christians, as thus, for the last time on earth, they be held each other face to face. What hallowed recollections of the past must have come thronging back upon them — thoughts of the early friends who had already entered into rest — memories of days when together they sat at the feet of the last surviving Apostle, and learned those lessons of love for a fallen race, which since they had acted out in their long and toilsome ministry ! Had they been faithful to the lofty trust which he bestowed upon them ? And were they prepared for that dread account, which, fearful to any ofour Lord's ministers, must be doubly so to those who are the over seers of all ? Solemnly, too, must the future have opened its vista before them, as these aged disciples of the Cross communed with each other. They were men " appointed to death." With both, this dream of life was about to vanish into eternity One was rapidly approaching a death of agony ; while the other, bowed down with years, felt thatthe shadows ofthe grave must soon be gathering about his path. Did no I egrets, then, in this hour mingle with the musings of Ignatius, as the past, with its long array of trials, rushed back upon his mind, while coming days held out no promise but the pains of martyrdom ? Was '.here no shrinking from * Homil. in S. Ignat. v. ii. p. 593. f Cave's Lives of the Fathers, v. i. p. 179. EPISCOPACY PROVED FROM HISTORY. 69 "tie bitter cup" — no clinging still to this decaying life ? Pid not nature's feebleness wring from the aged man the prayer — " Spare me yet a little longer, that I may recover my strength, before I go hence, and be no more seen?" No — his lofty faith could triumph over all earthly evils. His courage rose to a nobler elevation, as the day drew nigh, and he could write to his sorrowing friends — " Now I begin to be a disciple ; nor shall anything move me, whether visible or ii visible, that I may attain to Jesus Christ. Let fire and the Cross — let the companies of wild beasts — let breakings of bones and tearing of members — let the shattering in pieces of the whole body — and all the wicked torments of the Devil come upon me ; only let me enjoy Jesus Christ. All the ends ofthe world, and the kingdoms of it, will profit me nothing : 1 would rather die for Jesus Christ, than rule to the utmost ends of the eaith Suffer me to enter into pure light, where being come, I shall be indeed the servant of God. Permit me to imitate the passion of Christ, my God."* It was while in this situation, and filled with such emo tions, that Ignatius, when at Smyrna, wrote four epistles — one to the Ephesians, one to the Magnesians, one to the Tral- lians, and one to the Romans. Having once more resumed his journey, while stopping at Troas on his way, he added three other Epistles — to Polycarp, to the Philadelpbians, and to the Smyrnians. These seven Epistles were collected by St. Polycarp, and being highly prized in all ages of the Church, have been carefully preserved, until they have come down to our day. Here then is a witness who well knew the divinely appointed form of Church government. What then does he say on thispoint ? Why his Epistles are filled with incidental allusions to the Episcopal office and the three orders of the ministry. We will select a few of these as examples. In his Epistle to the Ephesians, he testifies that in his flay — that is from the year 70 to the year 107 — Bishops were established in all parts of the world, in accordance with our Lord's will. His words are — " For even Jesus Christ, our insuperable life, is sent bythe will of the Father: as the Bishops, appointed unto the utmost bounds oj the i irth, are by 'he will of Jesus Christ." (§3.) * Epist. ad Rom. § 5, 6. 70 EPISCOPACY PROVED FROM HISTORY. A nd again — " Wherefore it will become you to run to gether according to the will of your Bishop, as also ye do For your famous Presbytery, worthy of God, is fitted as ex actly to the Bishop, as the strings are to the harp." (§ 4.) And in enforcing the duty of obedience, he says — '•' Whomsoever the Master of the house sends to be over His cwn household, we ought in like manner to receive him ae we would do Him that sent him. It is therefore evident, that we ought to look upon the Bishop even as we would doupen the Lord Himself." (§6.) In his Epistle to the Magnesians are these passages. " Seeing then I have been judged worthy to see you, by Damas, your most excellent Bishop; and by your very worthy Presbyters, Bassus and Apollonius ; and by my fellow servant, Sotio the Deacon, in whom I rejoice, forasmuch as he is subject unto his Bishop, as to the grace of God, and to the Presbytery, as to the law of Jesus Christ." (_¦ 2.) " I exhort you, that ye study to do all things in a divine concord: your Bishop presiding in the place of God; your Presbyters in the place of the council of the Apostles; and your Deacons, most dear to me, being entrusted with the ministry of Jesus Christ; who was with the Father beforo all ages, and appeared in the end to us." ("¦ 6.) " Study therefore to be confirmed in the doctrine of our Lord, and of his Apostles, that so whatsoever ye do, ye may prosper both in body and spirit ; in faith and charity ; in the Son, and in the Father, and in the Holy Spirit ; in the be ginning, and in the end ; together with your most worthy Bishop, and the well- wrought spiritual crown of your Pres bytery ; and your Deacons, which are according to God. Be subject to j our Bishop." (§ 13.) In the beginning of his Epistle to the Philadelpbians, he Bays that he salutes them, " especially if they are at unity with the Bishop, and Presbyteis who are with him, and the Deacoi\s, appointed according to the mind of Jesus Christ, whom he has settled according to His own will in all firm ness, by His Holy Spirit." In the body of the Epistle, he utters a fearful sentence against those who violate the unity of the Church. After ¦calling them " wolves who seem woi'hy of belief, that with a false pleasure lead captive those that run in the course cf EPISCOPACY PROVED FROM HISTORY. "J\ i.od," and " herbs which Jesus Christ does not dress," he adds — "Be not deceived, brethren; if any one follows him that makes a schism in the Church, he shall not inherit the kingdom of God. If any one walks after any other opinion, he agrees not with the passion of Christ." ("> 3.) And again — "I cried while I was among yru ; I spake with a loud voice — attend to the Bishop, and to the Presby tery, and to the Deacons Do nothing without the Bhhop." (§7.) ¦ To the Smyrnians, he wrote — " See that ye all follow your Bishop, as Jesus Chris*, the Father ; and the Presby tery, as the Apostles; and reverence the Deacons, as the com mand of God. Let no man do anything of what belongs to the Church separately from the Bishop. Let that Eucharist be looked upon as well established, which is either offered by the Bishop, or by him to whom the Bishop has given his consent. Wheresoever the Bishop shall appear, there let the people also be ; as where Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church." (*. 8.) And in conclusion, he says — " I salute your very worthy Bishop, and your venerable Presbytery, and your Dettcons." (,12.) In his Epistle to Polycarp, also, he thus through him ad dresses the Church of Smyrna — " Hearken unto the Bishop, that God also may hearken unto you. My soul be security for them that submit to their Bishop, with their Presbyters and Deacons." (<" 6.) Again — he exhorts the Trallians — " He that is within the altar, is pure ; but he that is without, that is, that does any thing without the Bishop, and Presbyters, and Deacons, is not pure in his conscience." (§ 7.) Stich then is the character of all the allusions made by Ignatius, and testimony like this to the existence of the three orders of the ministry might be much increased from his Epistles. We will give, however, but one more extract. It is from the Epistle to the Trallians, where he says — " In like manner, let all reverence the Deacons, as Jesus Christ ; and the' -Bishop, as the Father; and the Presbyters, as the ¦"Sanhedrim of God, and the Ct liege of the Apostles. Without ;he.e there is no Church." (§ 3.) Now, mark this expres sion. f_t. Ignatius, who personally Knew the Apostles, afte* 72 EPISCOPACV PROVED FRO.M HISTORY. mentioning the three orders of the. ministry, declares — Without these there is no Church. And he was one, cotemporary with the immediate disciples ofour Lord. Yet in this day we are told, that-it is not necessary to retain the Apostolic Constitution ofthe ministry, and are ridiculed be cause we cleave steadfastly to it, following in the steps of these ancient martyrs. But who — we appeal to your reason — who was most likely to know what was necessary to the constitution of a Church — Ignatius, who had been a disciple of St. John, and gathered instruction from his holy lips, or those who in the nineteenth century, having separated from the Church, hesitate not to pronounce its Apostolic ministry "a cunningly devised fable?" If, indeed, instead of 'he mass of testimony before us, we had nothing but the Epislles of this single writer, they would be amply sufficient to prove- the existence of Episcopacy in the dajrs ofthe Apostles.* * With regard to the genuineness and authenticity of these Epis tles, we would observe, that several ancient writers — such as Irenreus, a disciple of Polycarp, Origen, who was born in the latter part of the second century, and Eusebius, the Ecclesiastical Historian — all possessed copies of the works of Ignatius, and the quotations they made agree with passages now found in our versions of them. Bishop Pearson, in his Vindicia Epistolarum lgnatii, and John Daillr. iu hi. De Scriptis quce sub Dionysii Areop. et lgnatii Antioch. 7iomiuc-»uf circumferuntur, have fully asserted their claims. Grotius, » Presby terian (as quoted by Pearson, chap, v.), writing to Vossius, says — " The Epistles of Ignatius, which your son brought out of Italy, pur« from all those things which the learned have hitherto suspected. Blon- del will not admit, because they afford a clear testimony lo the antiqui ty of Episcopacy." Even Mosheim allows — Perhaps there would be no contention with most persons about the Epistles of Ignatius, if those who contend for the divine origin and antiquity of Episcopal government had not been enabled to support their cause with them." De rebus Christianis ante Constantinum, p. 160. Presbyterians always endorse Ignatius, except when he proves Episcopacy. Thus, Dr. Miller of Princeton, when arguing on the minis try, finds Ignatius to be unworthy of any credit. When wishing, how ever, to prove the belief of the Early Church in the divinity of our Lord, he discovers that the disciple of St. John is excellent a Hhority ifio recorded testimony therefore stands thus :<— *" EPISCOPACY PROVED FROM HISTORT. *J| The next testimony we shall cite' is that of. Si. .I'd/uup. who has been already mentioned as the iuliuw uiscipAt _.. Ignatius. After having been cotemporary with the A|_ut>i.Ae» foi forty years, and filled the office of Bishop of Smyrna (io which he was ordained by St. John ) for more than naif a century, he suffered martyrdom in the year 147, being then eighty-six years old. We have but one letter of his remain ing. The' Philippians had requested him to send thern the Epistles of Ignatius, which he did, adding to them an Epistle of his own, beginning with these words — " Polycarp and the Presbyters that are with him, to the Church of God which is at Philippi." This Epistle is chiefly valuable, because it contains an entire endorsement of all that Ignatius had asserted." His words are — " The Epistles of Ignatius. which he wrote unto us, together with what others of his have come into our hands, we have sent unto you, according to your order, wliich are subjoined to this Epistle ; by which ye may be greatly profited, for they treat of faith and patience, and of all things that pertain to edification in the Lord Jesus." (M3-) Did not then St. Polycarp believe Episcopacy to be a divine institution ? Unless such had been his views', no earthly consideration would have induced him thus openly and decidedly to have recorded his approval of Epistles which so plainly set forth as binding upon all men, the three orders ofthe ministry. I.E'ITEIIS ON THE MIXISTRY. LETTERS OX UXITARIANISM. "That even the' Shorter Epis- "The great body of learned ties' of Ignatius are unworthy of men consider the smaller Epistles ronfidun.e, as the genuine works of of Ignatius as, in the main, the the Father whose name they bear, i* real works of the writer whose tlie opinion of many of the ablest ¦ name they hear." p. 122. an I best judges in the Protestant world." p. 150. " Inte'ligent readers are no " I do not admit that the most doubt aware, that the genuineness learned and able of the critios cf the Epi-ttles of Ignatius has been reject as spurious the seven lalled in question by a great ma- shorter EpisHes ofthis Father." joritj of Protestant divines, and is Letter on the eternal Sonship of not only. really but deeply ques- Christ. tionable." Essay on the office of Ruling Eldtr. 4 '. r"Ir=.C0P.4CY PRCVFP FROM IIISlOUY. 7"'".f •lex', witness from whom we shall cuote is St lie- i tri* He was a disciple of Polycarp, and born about the .'-»..-• nf St. John's death. Mosheim speaks of his works as Iving " a splendid monument of antiquity."* Listen to his I lain declaration with regard to this historical fact — "We ran reckon up those whom the Apostles ordained to be Hishops in the several Churches, and who they were that r ueceeded them, down to our own times For the Apostles desired to have those in all things perfect and un- reprovable, whom they left to be their successors, and to whom they committed their own Apostolic authority. We have the successions of Bishops, to whom the Apostolic Church in every place was committed. All these [viz. the heretics] are much later than the Bishops to whom the Apos tles did deliver the Churches."^ " The true knowledge is the doctrine of the Apostles, and the ancient state of the Church throughout the whole world, and the character of the body of Christ according to the succession of Bishops to whom they committed the Church that, is in every place, and which has descended even unto us."X ..And he afterwards adds, with regard to those who in herited the Apostolic office — " With the succession of their Episcopacy, they have the sure gift of truth, according to the*good pleasure ofthe Father." We will bring forward the testimony of but one more witness. It is that of Tertullian — the most eminent Latin scholar of his day — who lived at the end of the second cen tury. In his work, De Prcescrip. Hcereticorum. when arguing against those who had wandered from the faith, he says — " Let them produce the original of their Churches ; let them show the order of their Bishops, that by their suc cession, deduced front the beginning, we may see whethei their first Bishop had any of the Apostle., or Apostolical men, who did likewise persevere with the Apostles, for hi» ordainei and predecessor : for thus the Apostolical Churches do derive their succession ; as the Church of Smyrna .rom Polycarp, whom John the Apostle placed there ; the Ct «rcb of Rome from Clement, who was in like manner ord. <*»p * Eccies. Hist. v. i. p. 146 ¦* Adv. H*res. 1. in. p t Ibid. I ir. c. 6. EPISCOPACY PROVED FROM SCRIPTURE. /. by Peter ;. and sc the other Churches can produce those con stituted, in their Bishoprics by the Apostles." (c. 32.)*. And thus we might go on, age after age, anti multiplj * We can show from two early writers how carefully the thur»h in thaf day preserved — as Tertullian" here states — the succession ot the Bishops' in the different sees. Thus Irenrfius sSys, " seeing that it is very long, in such a volume as this to enumerate the succession oj Bishops in all the Churches," he will give, as an example, that of Rome which he does in these words : — ¦¦. . " The blessed Apostles, therefore, founding and instructing the Church, [of Rome,] delivered to Linus the administration- of its Bish opric: JPaul makes mention of this Linus in his Epistles to Timothy. To him succeeded Anaeletus ; after whom, in the third place from the Apostles, Clement had the Bishopric. allotted to him, He had seen tlie blessed Apostles, and was conversant with them ; and as yet he .had the preaching of the Apostles sounding in his ears, and their , tradition, before Ius .eyes: and not he alone, for at* that time there ¦were many yet remaining alive, who had been taught by the Apostles. To this Clement succeeded Evarestus, aud to : Evarestus', Alexander ; and then Xystus was appointed the sixth frori. the i Apostles '; and after him Telesphorus, who suffered a glorious-martyrdom ; after him, Hyginus ; then Pius; after him, Anioetus. And Soter having suc ceeded Anicetus, Eleutherus now has the Bishopric, in the twelfth place from the Apostles. By this order and succession, that tradition which is from the Apostles, and the preaching of the truth, is descend ed unto -us." Adv.. Hceres. lib. iiL ch. 3,,- . ... In the same way, Eusebius, the -ecclesiastical historian, in his Church -History, written about the time of the council qf .Nice, .a. u. 325, gives the. successions. of the four Patriarchal Sees, of ,Rome, Alex andria-, Jerusaleru, and Antioch, from the beginning down to the year 305, These he copied from the archives and records of the different Churches, which were extant in his day, but have since teen lost. We - - r* V , -, - > J . ... . . ... . are told, indeed, that by the express command of the Emperor^ all these public registers throughout the Roman empire were laid open to him, -"and out of these- ma-erials he -'-"principally compiled hia Eccleshistic'History." (Cave's Lives of t/w'Falhers, v. ii. p. 135:) The same lists are given by other writers, so is -to render the facts with regard to the .succession in the prirui|ive -Churchy indisput able, j.v . . ;', cl .;,-¦.. ¦ :¦¦¦- ¦"> There was also in that day a library at .^liyi which .jfas. founded by Alexander the Bishop there, whicli litis since been destroyed "From this'"— says Eusebius — " wo h ive also , been, able to collce* materials for our present work."' ( .'ccles. Hist. lib. vi. chap. 2 ).) *"6 EPISCOPACY PROVED FROM HISTORY. ._r witnesses to this iruth. The writings of Hegesippus, Polycrates, Dionysius of Corinth,* Clement of Alexandria, Origen, Cyprian, *)ptatus, Ephrerr. Syrus, and that code of ,a\vs called " The Apostolical Canons," are all equally clear and distinct in their assertion of the truth, that through all those ages the Episcopal form of government was the only one existing in the Church. t So evident, indeed, was the pre-eminence of the "Bishops, that even the heathen were well aware of the fact. Thus, when the Emperor Maximinus commenced his persecution against the Christians, we are . told by Eusebius, that " he commanded at first only the Archontes, or chief rulers of the Churches to be slain. "J And St. Cyprian tells Antoninus, that so great was the ha tred of the Emperor Decius against the Christians, that " he could have heard with greater patience that another prince had set himself up as arival in the empire, than that _ Bishop should have been settled in the city of Rome." § The historian Gibbon is forced to admit the existence of Episco pacy even in th* apostolic days. His words are — " The Episcopal form of government .... appears to have been introduced before the close of the first century." " It had acquired in a very early period the sanction of antiquity." " Nulla ecclesia sine Episcopo, ( no Church without a Bishop,) has been a fact as well as a maxim since the time of Tertullian and Irenseus." He acknowledged, that " after We have passed the difficulties of the first century" — which * The writings of these three authors have pel 'shed, and must be included among those ancient records used by Etisebius, which are now lost to the world. We receive, however, their testimony ou the subject of the government of the early Church, from the extracts ho has incorporated in his own history. Hegesippus in the second cen tury wrote a history of the Chinch from the beginning to his own clay, and having travelled extensively, speaks of the Bishops presiding in the different countries he had visited. (Euseb. 1. iv. c. 8, 22.) For die vestimony of Polycrates, see Euseb. 1. v. c. 24. — and for that of Dionysius, Euseb. 1. iv. c. 23. T Ann yet with all this array of testimony before him, (for we hare only _i>-i'ii a mere specimen,) Dr. Miller cf Princeton can say, rliov refer _s r, syme vague suggestions and allt sions of _ fem of th* tarlj faxhe. s. _.'<-ers on the Miiistry, p. 50. \ fccch.j. '.'.J. >. vi. c. 28. § Epist. 5f BflSCOPACY fftOVED FROM HISTORY. Tl would be before he death of St. John — "we find the Epis copal goVernihent universally established, until it was inter rupted by the republican genius of the Swiss and German reformers."* The skeptical historian found in truth, when he sa: down to sketch the progress of our faith in that early day, that the history of Christianity was the history of Epis copacy. To hare drawn the picture of our religion in the first three centuries, yet without admitting the government of Bishops, would have been as easy as to have given a view of Imperial Rome in the ages of her " Decline and Fall," without making any mention of her Emperor3. The Church with her three-fold ministry met him at every step. From the very first they were inseparable, and could not be dis severed. God had "joined them together," and man could not " put them asunder." Regarding them simply a.. historical facts, we have the same evidence of the existence of Episcopacy throughout the Church ia primitive times, that we have of the use of baptism, or the weekly reception of the Eucharist. f * Decline and Fall, ch. xv. f Palmer in his -"realise on the Church (v. i. pp. 392-4) shows the uniform practice with respect to ordination by Bishops only, and the decision which was at once made with regard to the invalidity of this rite by Presbyters only. " We find several instances La which such ordinations were declared null, but not a single case ha* been adduced in which they were really allowed. In 324, the council of all the Egyptian Bishops assembled at Alexandria under Hosius, declared cull and void the ordinations performed by Colluthus, a Presbyter of Alexandria, who had separated from his Bishop, and pretended to act as a Bishop himself. (Athanas. Oper. t. i. p. 193.) In 340, the Egyp tian Bishops, in their defence of St. Athanasius, alluding to Ischyras, wlto pretended to be a priest, said, ' Whence, then, was Ischyras a Presbyter ? Who was his ordainer ? Colluthus ? For this only re- maim. But it is known to all and doubted by no one, that Colluthus died a Presbyter ; that his hands were without authority ; and that all who were ordained by him in time of the schism, were reduced to the state of laymen, and as such attend the Church assemblies." (Ibid p. 134.) Epiphanius refutes the doctrine of Aerius, observing, that Bishops beget fathers of the Church by ordination, Presbyters _eget sons only by baptism, and concludes, ' How can he constitute a Presbyter, who has no rig'rt to ordain him by imposition of hands }' KEpiph. Hams. lb. Of er. t '. p. 908.) .... Bo difficultie; induced ?8 El 'IJCOrACY PROVED FKCM HISTORY. And t_:s continued to be the case for fifteen hundred years : "for until the Reformation in the sixteenth century there is fio evidence of the existence of any religious com munity; without a Bishop and Episcopal government. Ai this time it was, when old customs and rites were broker up, and the restless desire was created to make all things new, that the many parties which we see in the Christian world took their rise. The Church at that period being deformed hy the' corruptions which had gradually gathered around her as the Middle- Ages went by, there was a natural wish in the minds of men to restore her to Apostolic purity. Yet iu this, as is often the case in other things, they ran to tho opposite extreme. Among the reformers on the continent, the reason let loose from its thraldom, indulged in the strang est extravagances. The followers of Luther, Melancthon, Zuinglkts, and Calvin, differed' widely, but looked only to their Own private views as their guides. And the result was, that instead of retaining what was primitive and apostolic in the Church — retaining in fact the Church herself, relieved from all corruptions — they abandoned every ancient landmark. Thus the expedient was at last resorted to, of forming. a new Church and a new ministry of their own, and their- followers, to defend its validity, have been obliged since that time to take the ground that Episcopal ordination is not necessary, and-" that but one. order of ministers is required. The door being thus thrown widely open, unnumbered sects arose, each modelled after its particular leader, as he happened- to give a prominence to some single doctrine of his creed ; and these, or their offspring, form that "mixed multitude" which encircle the camp of the true Israel as it journeys through the wilderness. That the Reformers at first intended to separate from the Church we do not believe. This step grew out of occur- fhe Church to break through this rule. Never do we read, even in thp height of the Arian persecutions, of an, - attempt to supply the necessities ofthe Churches by means of Presbyterian ordinations; no, not though it was held that in a time of such necessity, all the ordi nary rules miifbt be dispensed with. Even when the Vandals < xiled the whole body of the Africin Bishop; to the number of nearly 500 (Fleury. Hist. Ecci. lib. xsx. % 1,) we re.id of no attempt to deviate from the universal rule." EPISCOPACY PROVED FRl M HISTORY. 79 fences which they could not have foreseen. The storm they had raised was indeed . beyond all human control, and the whirlwind swept them along with it in its course. They had called forth the passions of men, and taken ofT every restraint from spiritual freedom, and who had power to say— " Thus far and no farther shalt thou gc ? " The successive steps too taken by the court of Rome, at last rendered an accommodation impossible, and placed the Lutherans under the ban of interdict, as heretics, whose company the faithful were commanded to avoid. " It would be, therefore, a great mistake to suppose that Luther or his party designed to effect a reformation in the Church ; they were driven entirely by the force of circumstances to adopt the course they did. It was not premeditated or desired by them. They would have widely altered the Lutheran system, which was a merely temporary arrangement, if by so doing they could have recovered the communion of the Church. But the opposition of the Roman See thwarted these designs; the Council of Trent rendered them still more difficult : and, in time, the Lutherans forgot that their system was merely provisional, pretended to justify it as ordinary and sufficient, and lost their desire for accommodation with the Roman and German Churches."* * Palmer's Treatise on tho Church, v. i. p. 341. See this point proved in Part. i. ch. 1 2, sec.1, 2. — It was a favorite remark of Napoleon, that " no man who commenced a revolution, knew where he was going " — and the statement is as true of moral and religious, as of political clianges. It is, we think, an error to regard Luther so entirely a« creating and moulding the opinions of his age, or by any means con templating the extent to which he himself would be carried. He was tlie living development— the speaking voice — of that deep feeling wliich pervaded all classes of society, and which would- eventually have found utterance and produced a reformation, had Luther never existed. The opposition to the Romish Church in France, commenced before the name of Luther had been heard in that country. Of course, after he had taken the bold stand into which he was driven, his reac tion upon the people was as great as their action upon him. He presented a centre of unity, and gave direction and aim to their efforts. Hut no one can thoughtfully read his life, without perceiving, that instead of loading his generation, he was himself borne forward by tbe heaving? of the mighty mass beneath him. (JO EPISCOPACY PROVED FROM MI-TORT. The Reformers fully realised the difficulty of their poe. tion, and the necessity of Episcopacy ^constitute a Church dr a valid ministry. We accordingly find in their writings, repeated declarations in favor of this form of government, and even the distinct acknowledgment of its divine authority. They arrayed themselves, not against this power itself, but against the abuse of it in the Romish Church. Thus in the Confession of Augsburg, (pars. i. art. 22,) " whicli Melancthon drew up, holding consultation all the while with Luther," * it says of Bishops — " The Churches ought, necessarily, and jure divino, to obey them." .... " The Bishops might easily retain their legitimate obedience, if they would not urge us to observe traditions which cannot be kept with a good conscience There is no design to deprive the Bishops of their authority, but this only is sought, that the Gospel be permitted to be purely taught, and a few observances be relaxed." And in the Articles of Smalcand, "drawn up in German by Luther, in his own acrimonious style," f in denouncing the supremacy assumed by the Pope, he says — " The Church can never be better governed and preserved, than when we all live under one Head, Jesus Christ, and all Bishops, equal in office, though unequal in gifts, are most perfectly united in diligence, con cord of doctrine, &c The Apostles were equal, and afterwards the Bishops in all Christendom, until the Pope raised his head above all." (pars. ii. art. 4.) In the same strain Melancthon always wrote. In the Apology for the Augsburg Confession, which he drew up. he says — " We have oft protested, that we do greatly approve the ecclesiastical polity and degrees in the Church, and as much as lieth iu us, do desire to conserve them. We do not mislike the authority of Bishops — we do here protest that we would willingly preserve the ecclesiastical polity — that it may not be impute I to us, that the authority of Bishops is overthrown by us." Again he says — ' I would to God it lay in me to restore the government of Bishops. For I see what manner of Church we shall have, the ecclesiastical polity being dia- nolved. I do see that hereafter will grow up a greatei tyranny in the Church, than there ever was before." * Mosheim'u Eccies. Hist. v. iii. p. 49. f Ibid, p 64. fiPiscoFACt pR.ovfeb FkOM ftistoRir. Si Once more he asks — "By what right or law may we dissolve the ecclesiastical polity, if the Bishops will grant us that which in reason they ought to grant ? And if it were lawful for us so to do, yet surely it were not expedient. Luther was ever of this opinion." ' .-_ . 1 <____, in his treatise against Saravia, says — " If there are any, (which you shall hardly persuade me to believe,) who reject the whole order of Episcopacy, God forbid that any man of a sound mind should assent to the madness of such men." We will quote the opinions of but one other of that age. Among, thosa who are now reverenced by the opposers of Episcopacy, there is no name stands higher than that of Calvin. Yet listen to his testimony. In his commentary on Titus (chap. i. v. 5) he says — " At this time" (that is, in the time of Titus) "there was no equality among the ministers :>/ the Church, but some one in authority and council had the pre-eminence." Again, he declares — "To every Bishop was committed the government of his own clergy, that they should rule their clenry according to the Canons, and hold them to their duty." * " ' " In th* solemn assembly, the Bishops had a certain apparel whereby they might be distinctly known from other Priests. They ordered all Priests and Deacons with only laying on of hands. But every Bishop, with the company of Priests, ordained his own Priests." f In his Book, De Necess. reformand. Eccies. he has these words—" Let them give us such an hierarchy, in which Bishops may, be so above the rest, as they refuse not to be under Christ, and depend upon Him as their only Head ; that they maintain a brotherly society, &c. If there be any that do- not behave themselves with a 1 reverence and obedience wards them, there is no anathema, but I confess them -_rthy of it."t But especially is his opinion of Episcopacy shown by a letter, whi'.h he and Bullinger, and other learned men, wrote in 1549 t« King Edward VI., offering to make him .heir Defender, and to have Bishops in their Chur«hes * Instit, lib. 4. ch. 12. t Ibid. ch i. t Stryne's Life of Archbishop Parker, p. 1.40. 4* £§ EPISCOPACY PROVED FROM HI! ,*ORT. _ as there were in England. Unfortunately, this letter fell into the hands ofthe Romish Bishops. The following account of ii was found among the papers of Archbishop Parker — " And whereas John Calvin had sent a letter in.. King E.l ward 'the Vlth's reign, to have conferred with the clergy of England about some things to this effect, two Bishops, viz. Gardiner arid Bonner, intercepted the same ; whereby Mr. Calvin's overture perished. And he received an answer, sis if it had been from the reformed Divines of those times, wherein they checked him and slighted his proposals.; from which "time John Calvii. and the Church of England were at variance in several points ; which otherwise through God's mercy had been qualified, if those papers of his proposals had7 been discovered unto the Queen's Majesty during 'John Calvin's life. But being not discovered until or about the sixth year of her Majesty's reign, her Majesty much lamented they were not found sooner : which she expressed before her Council at the same time, in the presence of her great friends, Sir Henry Sidney, and Sir William Cecil.* Such then were the opinions of the Reformers on the Continent — the fathers of Presbyterianism. But borne along by the current, they at length violated their own declared principles and clear convictions of duly. . Like John Wesley in modern times, impatient of the moviags of Providence, they could not wait God's time, and therefore rushed into open schism, and cut themselves off from the Church. And now, for three hundred years, the world has been reaping the "bitter fruits ofthe harvest which they sowed. Strife and dissension, and every form of error, prevail among their followers, and in the lands where once they preached scarcely a trace of their spirit remains. "The first loss drew all others after it. Although the full declension was aot seen at once, the mystical, moral, and doctrinal systems perished together. They lingered on as bodies of which the organic frame is maimed ; and they died rather by a natural t han by a mysterious law. Even after their virtual extinc- tion'as Christian Churches, there was, as in the corpse ofthe dead, a -lingering warmth, which made a mocking promise oflifej till that tob fled, and they were left in the cold.torpor of l.ei-esy'or unbelief."-)- * Ibid. p. 14.'. + Mai___ig"s Unity of the Church, p. 281*.. EPI? _0_ it We require you to find out bat one Church upon the face aj the whole earth, that hath been ordered by your discipline, or hath not been ordered by oms, that is to say, by Episcopal regiment, sithence the time that the blessed Apostles were here conversai i!."* This challenge has never yet been answered, and it is- or. this point that we rest our argument. If for the first 1500 years no Church can be shown without Episcopal govern ment, then what authority had any; at the end of that time, to form a new ministry of their own, setting aside that de rived in uninterrupted succession frdm the Apostles ?t * Preface to Eccies. Polity, sect. 4. ¦)¦ There are two excuses generally made by the followers of the Continental Reformers for this step. The first is that of necessiiu-- their inability to procure orders from regularly ordained Bishops. We will answer this plea in the words of Bishop Whittingham : — " It will not be denied that Luther was virtually in possession of Episcopal jurisdiction, at Wittemberg, after 1526 ; and Onivin, at Geneva, after 1541. They needed but to obtain the order, to secure the Apostolical succession at least Could they have obtained the order ? "I. As to Luther. Several Bishops arc known to have been favor able to ' the new learning,' and to its founder personally : e. g., George I'olentius, Bishoo of Sambia, in 1524; liis successor, Paul Speratus, 1530; (Wcrnsdorf. Program, de Anhaltinorum in Ref. meritis. p. 1. s.); Matthew, Bishop of Bantzig** who wrote to Luther in terms of strong affection, and sent him a present, in 1529 ; (Luther's Briefe. Ep. 1110, ed. De Wette. III. 462); Matthew Jagovius, Bishop of Bradenbtirg ; (the Diocesan of Wittemberg) ; the Archbishop of Salzburg, who preceded Ernest ; (accessit, 1540) ; and Herman, the famous reforming Archbishop of Cologne, of whose liturgical labors so much use lias been made in some of the offices of the English Church. It is hard to believe, that if due anxiety had been fell, and proper measures taken, the Episcopal succession might not have been obtained for the Lutheran communion from some ono or more of these prelates. "II. As to Calvin. Peter Paul Vergerio, Bishop of Capo d'Istria, aud more than once Papal nuncio, went over to the Reformed about 1546. H:s brother, also a Bishop, followed him. Spifame, Bishop of Nevers, became a Protestant in 1557. He was employed in im portant negociations, and was in Geneva about that time. He wan called t • be ' jumistre' at Lyons, in 1561. (Bayle, Art. Spifame.) Jo tftSc'dPAcY PRdvE'b f'ltojf HfsTdaf . ga We will briefly mention one fact more. The reply com monly made to us is, that our evidence comes through the Church of Rome, and that this form of government is one of the corruptions introduced by her. We have, however, shoWn you, we think, most fully, that it existed in the ear liest age, when the Bishop of Rome had no more authority than any other Bishop in Catholic Christendom. But suppose that ' a Church should now be discovered in some secluded corner ofthe world, which had been founded by the Apos tles, and since their day remained cut oflf from other Churches, and without ever having heard of the Church of Rome; would you not consider their evidence as to the form of government handed down to them from the Apostles, to be a conclusive argument on this point ? Yet precisely such an: instance we have. When, in the sixteenth centurv, thePprtuguese visited Southern India, they were agreeably surprised to find, on the coast of Malabar, _. Christian nation, with upwards of a hundred Churches. But When they be came acquainted with the simplicity and purity of theii worship, they were offended. " These Churches," said they, "belong to the Pope." " Who is the Pope?" said the natives: "we never heard of him." The tradition handed down among them was, that their Church had been founded by St. Thomas. They had always maintained the order and discipline of Episcopal jurisdiction, and for 1300 years past Anth. Caraccioli, Bishop of Troyes, publicly embraced Protestantism in >1561. j He offered to resign to the people, but was re-elected and re-ordained. (Bayle, Art. Caraccioli.)" Note to Palmer's Treatise cm the Church, v. _. p. 355. The probability is; that Calvin, being disheartened by the repulse he supposed he had received from the Church of England, resigned himself to circumstances, without making any further effort. The second excuse made for the Reformers is, the corruption of the Church. But was it not rather their duty — as was done in England— to labor m the Church for its reform ? When the ancient prophets were forced to cry, " Help, Lord, for the godly man ceaseth 1" did they ever think af going out from their people, and establishing a new nation, to serve God in greater purity ? The Reformers, indeed, have given a mournful iUustration of that declaration made by Irenams, with regard to the heretics of his time—" No correction can be made by them so great as is the mischief of schism." Adv. Hares, lib. i v. c. 39 56 fcptscoPAcY pro-._:d from HisTOnr. had enjoyed a succession of Bishops, appointed by the Patriarch of Antioch. " We"— said they—" are of the true faith, whatever you from the west may be ; for we come from the place where the followers of Christ were first called Christians." Refusing to subscribe to the tenets of the Church of Rome, or to exchange for her form of service the pure liturgy they had inherited, persecution was commenced, and some of their clergy seized, and devoted to death as heretics. They were accused of the following practices and opinions, — which are, in truth, some of the points on which we also differ from the Church of Rome — " that they had married wives ; that they owned but two Sacraments, Baptism and the Lord's Supper ; that they neither invoked Saints, nor worshipped Images, nor believed in Purgatory ; aud that they had no other orders or names of dignity in the Church, than Bishop, Priest, and Deacon." The Churches on the sea -coast were thus compelled to acknowledge the supremacy of the Pope ; but they still refused to pray in Latin, and in sisted on retaining their own language and liturgy. " This point" — they said — "they would only give up with theii lives." The Pope therefore compromised with them : Menezes altered their liturgy, but they retained their Syriac language, and have a Syriac college unto this day. These are called the Syro-Rornan Churches, and are principally situated on the sea-coast. Not so however with those in the interior. They refused to yield to Rome — proclaimed eternal war against the Inquisition — hid their books — fled to the mountains, and sought the protection of the Native Princes, who had always been proud of their alliance. Two centuries then elapsed without any definite infor mation being received of their situation, and it even began to be doubted whether they were still in existence. In 1806 however, Dr. Buchanan in his missionary travels again found them in the interior, there in poverty and purity maintain ing their faith in the seclusion of the wilderness. The chain of their Episcopal ministry was still unbroken, their discipline was orderly, and their Scriptural liturgy "pure from the corruptions of Rome. He thus relates part of a jonversation which he had with one of their Bishops. '• The Bishop was desirous to know something of the other EPisCc .'ACY pi.oV_b From IiistorY. _7 Churches which had separated from Borne. I waa ashamed o tell him how many they were. I mentioned, that thore was a Kasheesha or Presbyter Church in our own Kingdom. in which every Kasheesha was equal to another. ' Are there no Shumshanas ? ' ( Deacons in holy orders.) None. ' And what, is there nobody to overlook the Kasheeshas ? ' Not one. ' There must be something imperfect there,' said he."* It was, you perceive, a matter of surprise to him, that a Church could exist without a Bishop, and he justly con. sidered it as wanting the marks of its Apostolicity. Here hen is an argument coming down from Primitive days in a different channel. Such then, brethren, is the historical evidence. We- ask, therefore, if these three orders have not been in the Church from the very beginning, when were they introduced ? This is a question which those opposed to us have never yet an swered. We are told, in general terms, that at first all ministers were of equal rank and power in the Church, but at some period — when they know not — some managed to usurp authority, and thus arose the order of Bishops, and the Episcopal government. j- And yet on the page of Ecclesi- * Buchanan's Christian Researches in Asia, pp. 69-71,84. Edit. New-York, 1812. f" The only writer to whom they can pretend to refer, is Jerome, a few sentences from whose works they endeavor to construe in their favor. In his Epistle to Evagrius, he says—" I hear that one was so impudent as to rank Deacons before Presbyters, that is, Bishops. Now the Apostle plainly declares the same to be Presbyters, who also are Bishops." In his Comment on Titus, i. 1, he writes: — " The same there fore is a Presbyter, who also isa Bishop: for before bythe instigation of tlie Devil, parties vere formed in religion, and it was said by the people, I am of Paul, and I of Apollos, and I of Cephas, the Churches were governed by the council of Presbyters. But after some began to consider those which he had baptized to be his own, not Christ's, it was decreed throughout the whole world, that one be elected who "houid -he. put over the, rest of the Presbyters By degrees, ypaulatim,) that every sprout of dissension might be rooted out, all tlie authority was conferred Upon one alone." L Let us, then, examine thi.- passage, and we shall find it proves nothing against us. Ho says— 1st. " The same were Presbvters.who llso were. Bishops." This he himself afterwards explains when lie 8_: Hpis-OpacV tfitdviii froM rifsfoaf . astical history, it is impossible to point to a single trace of this great change. And would the Church, which contend ed so earnestly with regard to the day of celebrating. Easter, or the reiteration of the baptism of heretics, have passed it over in total silence ? Every minute heresy — every varying shade of opinion wliich arose, is fully dwelt upon, by the adds — " Because in tlie Bishop the Presbyter is contained. We are advanced from the less to the greater." 2i When does he say the change took place ? " When people said, I am of Paul, <_c" — that is, in the very days of the Apostles. 3d He asserts, that fixed Bishops were introduced " by degrees" — this is exactly in accordance with tlie Episcopal theory. As the Church extended, the Apostles could not personally superintend it, and therefore, " by degrees" placed others over the Churches with the same power they had themselves exer cised, as increasing dissensions rendered it necessary. Such in brief is his testimony. II. He has here a particular object in view, to oppose those who exalted Deacons to a level with Presbyters. He naturally, therefore, uses strong language, exalting Presbyters above measure. He says — " I hear that one was so impudent as to rank Deacons above Presbyters, <_c." III. In every other place, he distinctly upholds Episcopacy. In thi, very Epiutle, in elevating Presbyters, he says — " What can a Bishop do, that a Presbyter may not do, except ordination ? " This is all we ask. And again — " James, after the passion of our Lord, was immediately, by the Apostles, ordained Bishop of Jerusalem." (Oper. t. IV. pars, ii p. 102.) Again—" The power of wealth, or the lowli ness of poverty, renders a Bishop neither more nor less exalted ; but all are successors of the Apostles." ( Ibid. p. 802.) On the 45 th Psalm, he says — " Christ hath constituted Bishops to be the chiefs or princes of the Church, in all parts of the world." If, therefore, he ever writes against Episcopacy, he contradicts himself. IV. Jerome personally could know nothing of the matter, not liv ing until nearly three hundred years after the death of the Apostles. We have the record of history through all the long interval between the apostles' and his day, testifying with one voice to the existence of Episcopacy. Here then is the sole hope of the Presbyterians. It is, of course, impossible in this note to do more than glance at this passage. Tlie reader will find it fully analyzed and discussed in Dr. Bomden's Letters to Dr. Miller— Letter 1st of 1st Series, and Letter 5 th of 2d Series. Also in Slater's Original Draught. _p "CorAc. proved pu_m MistoitV. 89 early writers, and yet — except tliose two misinterpreted sen tences in Jerome — the advocates of parity cau find not one word — not the most distant hint, of this revolution which they say has taken place, and which in that case would have entirely remodelled the government of the whole Christian Church throughout the world. We ask you, then, whether this is probable ? " When I shall see" — says ChiUingworth — " all the fables in the metamorphosis acted, and prove true stories ; when I shall see all the democracies and aris tocracies in the world lie down and sleep, and awake into monarchies ; then will I begin to believe, that presbyterial government, having continued in the Church during the Apostles' times, should presently after, ( against the Apos tles' doctrine, and the will of Christ,) be whirled about like a scene in a mask, and transformed into Episcopacy."* Again — Is it in accordance with human nature, that all the clergy of the Church, in every country throughout the world, should simultaneously have given up their rights, and submitted themselves to some among their number, thus creating the Episcopal authority ; and that all this should have, been acquiesced in by each one so quietly, and per formed so silently, that history nowhere notices the change ? " Imagine," — says ChiUingworth again — " that the spirit of Diotrephes had entered into some, or a great many of the Presbyters, and possessed them with an ambitious desire of a forbidden superiority, was it possible they should attempt and achieve it at once without any oppositioi. or contra diction ? And besides, that the contagion of this ambition should spread itself and prevail without stop or control ; nay, without any noise or notice taken of it, through all the Churches in the world ; all the watchmen in the meantime being so fast asleep, and all the dogs so dumb, that not so much as one should open his mouth against it ?"¦"¦ Why, try this argument by what would happen undei like circumstances in this day. Suppose that in a single widely extended denomination of those around us, now holding to an equality in the ministry, it should be proposed to make this change — that a few should be invested with the authority of Bishops, and all the rest yield to them in obedi- * Works, p. 525. t Ibi'>- P- 52t •JO jfipisc&pAKy proYed from History, enoe— how long, do you think, it would take to produce this alteration ? And how quietly would it be done ? Why protest after protest would be entered against it — their fold would be rent asunder with dissensions — and it would be .found recorded upon the page of their history, that this was for years the absorbing topic of debate. And yet they tell us, that such a change did once actually take place i>< ancient times, and history has preserved no evidence of it. No, brethren, such arguments bear with them their own refutation. Human nature then was precisely what it is now, and in similar circumstances would have acted as it now does. We know, therefore, that this power of the Episcopate must have been from the very beginning — must have been sanctioned by Apostolical, nay, by Divine au thority — or it never would have been acquiesced in during any later age. And now, I submit the truth of Episcopacy to your judg- .Tient, as a matter of fact. I appeal away from your passions and your prejudices, and resting this subject on its historical evidence, 1 bring it to the bar of your reason. And think not ihat this is a doctrine held only by a small minority. Nine- tenths of those who bear the Christian name, cling to it, and avow their belief in the three-fold ministry _s handed dovvt from the Apostles' days.* Our own Church, with her 21 * Malte-brun, in his Geography (vol. i. p. 2*73), has the following ectunate of the Christian population of the world : — The Church of Rome, \ *f ^nr" ^ } 116 millions. The Greek Church ... 170 The Protestant Churches - - - - 42 " Total, 228 Now, out of the 4_ millions of Protestants, we may safely set down one-half as belonging to these branches of the Church — such as the Church in England and its colonies, Denmark, this country, and among the Moravians — whicli acknowledge Episcopal government. This leaves, therefore, 21 millions of Dissenters, out of 228 millions — less than one-tenth. "They," says Manning, 'that are concerned to establish a looser theory than that of the Catholic Chut ch, how nu merous soever when taken by themselves, are a small fraction of tho Christendom of to day, and as a handful compared with _m tmdti EPISCOPACY PROVED FRdM HtSTORY. 91 Bish.ps and her 1200 .lergy, scattered through the length and breadth of the lain.''., everywhere maintains it. So does the1 Church of England, planted as she is in every clime and on every shore.* The Church of Bome, amidst all the corruptions she has p.dmitted, has in this point remained steadfast to ancient truth. The many millions ofthe Greek Church, spread through the East, have never doubted it ; while the decayed Oriental Churches of Syria, Asia Minor, and Ethiopia, have, even in their fallen state, found in their government the sole preservative for the little spark of life which yet remains. Only a small portion of the Christian world therefore dissents. t tud_3 of Christian, who from the beginning have lived, hoped, suffered, and died, in another trust." Unity of the Church, p. 288. * " The Church of England, in the preface to the Ordination Ser vices, has these express words : ' It is evident unto all men diligently reading the Holy Scripture and ancient authors, that from the Apos tles' time there have been these orders of Ministers in Christ's Church — Bishops, Priests^ and Deacons, <__.' . . . And it is on this account that, if a clergyman of the Roman Communion does in this country join himself to the Englbh Church, his ordination is acconnted good and valid, because the Roman Church has Episcopal ordiuation, and an Apostolical Ministry. He is not ordained over again, but simply licensed by a Bishop to teach and preach in his Diocese. Whereas, if a Protestant dissenter, who has been accustomed to call himself _\ minister of the Gospel, repents of his schism, and is anxious to become a clergyman, the English Church considers him merely as a layman, and not as a minister of the Gospel; and makes him a clergyman by Episcopal ordination." Fabers' Tract on ' The one Catholic and Apos tolic Church,' p. 18. f There is a body of Christians, called " Methodist Episcopal," which we have not included in this list; because, although they have the office of Bishop, yet it is in name only, and without any legitimate authority. This sect, it is well known, was founded about 1730, by John Wesley, who was only a Presbyter in the Church of England. After professing through his whole life that he did not intend to abandon the Church, or create a schism, when 82 years old, he was induced to lay hands on Dr. Coke, and thus pretend to consecrate him a Bishop for America. On this act, his brother, Charles Wesley, makes these remarks — " How was he surprised into so rash an action ? He has renounced the principles and practices of his whole life, acted contrary _• all his declarations, protestations, and writings, roblcd his friends rg2 BPi-co.Aet _-rov_!d frcm ats-faR*.1 Let us cling then to this, as a precious inheritance which has come down to us through 1800 years Everything else has altered, but the government which our Lord instituted in of their boasting, realized the Nag's Head ordination, and left an in delible blot on his name, as long as it shall be remembered. . . . What will become of these poor sheep in the wilderness, the American Methodists . How have they been betrayed into a separation from the Church of England, which their preachers and they no more intended than the Methodists here I Had they had patience a little longer, they would have seen a real Primitive Bishop in America, duly consecrated by three Scotch Bishops [referring to Bishop Soa- bury]." " His ordination would be indeed genuine, valid, and Epis copal." Dr, Coke himself felt his ordination to be invalid, and often hy liis acts admitted it. For instance, in 1791, he applied to Bishop White, for the Methodist Society to be received into the Church, and their preachers re-ordained, thus acknowledging the invalidity of their ordi nation received from him. (See his letter in Bp. White's Memoirs of the Church, p. 345.) In a subsequent interview, he suggested that lie himself should be. elevated to the Episcopate (p. 170). Still later in the same year, he made a similar proposal to Bishop Sea- bury. (See this letter in Banner of the Cross, April 27, 1843.) Eight years afterwards, he made written application to the Bishop of London, to ordain some travelling preachers in England, to administer the Sacraments to their people. Again, in 1813, he made the greatest efforts to procure consecration for himself as a Bishop of the Church, to be sent to India, writing a most extraordinary letter to Wilber force, setting forth his own good qualities. (See this in Wilberforce 's Correspondence, v. i., date April 14, 1813.) He offers to return most fully and faithfully into the bosom of the Established Church, and do everything in his power to promote its interests, and submit to all such restrictions in the fulfilment of liis office, as the government and the bench of Bishops at home should think necessary." Failing m this, he was obliged to settle down for life with the conviction that his office was a pretence, and his Episcopal shield deformed by the bend sinister. Thus, then, stands the case. Wesley attempted to invest Dr Coke with an office which he had no authority to confer. Coke or- dai_.ed Asbury, and from him all the Methodist preachers iu this country derive their ordination. But Asbury was of course nothing but a layman through life, and therefore those on whom he laid hands are in the sai le condition. Such, thai, is Methodism in this country-1— without a Church or a Ministry. jepiscopacy pRovm from history. 93 His Church is still unchanged. Century after century, the dark and troublous stream of Time has swept by, its waters choked \i ith the wrecks of all that earth admires. Nations and peoples, courts and dynasties, have played their part, and then been seen no more. The mighty monarchies of the Elder World have long since passed away — the kingdoms which were the early cotemj oraries of the Church — those which beheld the dawn of her youth — now live only on the page of History — yet she still rides the waves, and as she passed along, has made all tributaries to herself, gathering from each spoils to enrich her Master — jewels to gleam in His unfading diadem. With her hopes now just as bright and glorious as ever, she remains in her organization what she was in the Apostles' days. The same Episcopal govern ment which Timothy then exercised at Ephesus, and Titus in Crete, and which they "committed to faithful men," is new with us in this distant land, of whose very existence they were ignorant. We feel, then, that as members of this Church we be long to a cause which in the end must triumph. ' The heathen may rage, and the people imagine a vain thing — the kings of the earth may stand up, and the rulers take counsel together" — yet the Church they cannot overcome. "-There shall no divination prosper against Israel." He who is its Protector " shall laugh them to scorn, and its Lord shall have them in deris__n." Yes,, brethren, the past may be with us a pledge for the future. If for eighteen centuries the Apos tolic Church has breasted the storm, and uninjured, un changed, come down to us — if now we trace in every linea ment, that here is the same Church which existed in "our fathers' days, and in the old time before them" — then we may believe that thus she shall continue to go on in the greatness of her strength, until the trumpet ofthe Archangel proclaims that her warfare on earth is accomplished. Her ancient ministry shall never be wanting. Her holy succession of Bishops shall be uninterrupted, till the last who bears that sacred office stands amidst the ruins of a crumbling world.* * " Remarkable and positive promises clearly establish the pei petuity of the Church ; and it may also be inferred easily from the promise made to the faithful servant, whom the Lord should set ovi 94 EPISCOPACY PRCVF.D FROM HISTORY. Unless i. shall be so, what meant our Lord's parting promise to His Apostles — " Lo, I am with you always, even unto the end ofthe world" ? It could not have been restricted to those ocly who heard it, for they have long since passed away. I'rless, then, they left their successors, who are to keep up the unbroken chain " even unto the end of the world," we know not who are to inherit the benefits which our Master's words seem to promise. Are we then united with this Church — not only outwardly, but also in heart and spirit ? Are we sharing in her trials here, that we may partake of her triumph hereafter ? Shall we, in the hour of her glory, stand with her upon the holy moun tain, and help to upraise that anthem which the redeemed shall sing forever? Christian warrior! the conflict is raging around you — the Church is summoning you to her aid — the voices of Apostles, and martyrs, and confessors, come down to you from the ages of a distant antiquity, urging. you to live for this cause 'or which they were willing even to die. Will you turn away from this appeal ? Will you prove re creant to this high trust? Your daily, hourly life is furnish ing the answer. His household : ' Blessed is that servant whom his Lord, when He cnmeth, shall find so doing.' In whicli words it is intimated, that when Christ shall come in the latter day, He shall, even then, find fa'tliful servants presiding over His own household, still existing up< n ths tWtb." Palmer's Tret ti sc on the Cl_w :li, v. i. p. 3 i IV. ANTIQUITY OF FORMS OF PRATER. Then, fainting soul, arise am! sin_, Mount, but bo sober on the wing; Mount up, for Heaven is won by prayer, He sober, for thou art not there. Keble. Tm founda ion of all true devotion is reverence. f.emein bering the hwliness of our own. state, and the awful majesty of Him iu whose presence our petitions are uttered, our spirits should be bowed within us, and we realize, while in His sanctuary, that "this is none other but the House of God, and this is the gate of Heaven." The question then invol untarily rises to our lips — "Wherewith shall I come before the Lord, and bow myself before the high God ?"* And tlie answer which Scripture gives us, is in these words of caution — " Be not rash with thy mouth, and let not thy heart be hasty to utter anything before God ; for God is in Heaven, and thou upon earth; therefore let thy words be few."-"- In the spirit of this exhortation the Church has always acted, when she prescribed a Liturgy, by which her members, in their public assemblies, were commanded to worship God, instead of trusting to the extemporaneous effusions of the moment. And this is a peculiarity which still marks hei services, and which, perhaps, more forcibly than anything else, would strike a casual observer. In her public devotions, he finds everything definitely arranged and settled; while iu the different denominations around her the players are left to be composetl as they are uttered by hirr who may hn-oper, * Jlicah vi, §, f Eccies v. 2 ANTIQUITY OF FORMS OF PRAYER. o minister to ...em. As, therefore, the charge is often made, that to have an established ritual for public worship leads necessarily to coldness and formality, an examina tion of this subject is one which is interesting to us as Churchmen. The first and most natural inquiry is, as to the authority for a Liturgy. Is it sanctioned by Scripture — by the example of our Lord, and the custom cf the early Church ? If so, Burely none can now object to it as wrong or even inexpe dient. What our Lord authorized by his own example, and the Church in her first and purest ages continued to practise, it may be safe for us to follow. We certainly cannot do bet ter than tread in their footsteps. Our first argument then is — that the entire worship of the Jewish Church, as commanded by God, and as practised for ages, was in prescribed forms. On every occasion in which the people were required with one voice to offer their praises to God, or to entreat His forgiveness, we find them doing so in the words of a previously written form. Thus, when the Israelites had passed the Red Sea in safety, and paused awhile upon their march to chant their song of victory, we find their leader composing for them that noble ode, which the Holy Ghost compares with the Heavenly song of those who have obtained the last great triumph over all spiritual enemies — the once suffering, now ransomed followers of the Lamb.* " It was fitted for alter nate recitation, with musical accompani ments. "t Moses begins the song, and in the first two heraistichs states if? object — " Sing ye to the Lord, for He hath triumphed gloriously ; The horse and his rider hath He thrown into the sea." And we learn from v. 21, that these two lines became the grand chorus of the piece, and were probably repeated at in- * " And I saw as it were a sea of glass, mingled with fire : and ihem that had gotten the victory over the beast, and over his image, and over his mark, and over the number of his name, stand on the sea cf glass, having the harps of God. And they sing the song of Moset t he servant of God., and the song of the Lamb." Rev. xv. 2, 3. *¦ Bishop Jebb's Sacred Literature, p. 10. ANTIQUITY OF FORMS OF PRAYER. 97 ieivals, -after the people had rec." ted each mercy bestowed upon tneir nation. " And Miriam answered them — " Sing ye to the Lord, for He hath triumphed gloriously ; The horse and his rider hath He thrown into the sea."* This song was, therefore, used responsively, in the same way in which we now recite the Psalter in our service. When, again, in the wilderness, their public worship was arranged by the express commands of God, we find that forms were provided for every occasion. Thus, Aaron and his sons are enjoined to use these words, in blessing the peo ple — " On this wise ye shall bless the children of Israel : The Led bless thee, and keep thee ; the Lord make His face to shine upon thee, and be gracious unto thee; the Lord lift up His countenance upon thee, and give thee peace." This was the authorized form of benediction, and the declara tion is added — "They shall put my name, saith the Lord, upon the children of Israel, and I will bless them," JVum. vi. 24, 27.) In the book of Deuteronomy are recorded various forms 'o be used by the people on different public solemnities. Such is the confession the Israelite was to make when offer ing the basket of first-fruits — "And thou shalt speak and say before the Lord thy God — A Syrian ready to perish was my father," &c. (xxvi. 5-11.) Such also is the prayer he was to use when offering his third year's tithes — «'- Then thou shalt say before the Lord thy God," &c. (v. 12-15.) With equal accuracy is prescribed the form of deprecation to be uttered by the elders of a city near which a murder had been com mitted, in protesting their own innocence — " Our hands have not shed this blood, neither have our eves seen it. Be merci- ful, O Lord, unto thy people Israel, whom thou hast redeemed, and lay not innocent blood to thy people of Israel's charge." (xxi. v. 7.) Thus, by examining the ancient books of the law, we could show that provision was made for every portion of their regular services. And on extraordinary occasions it is * This is the view given by Dr. Kennicott, in his arrangement of this song, and also by Bishop Lowth. Prcelect 19. They show the different intervals at which the chorus probably came in. 5 qfl ANTIQUITY OF FORMS OF PI 1VER. evident that something was in like manner written for theii use, to meet the exigency. Such was the case with, the prayer of Solomon at the dedication of the Temple, a. copy of which was preserved among the records of the nation. " The regular construction of the whole prayer, the formal division of the subject, together with the continued series and almost poetical arrangement of the versicles in the original, scarcely seem compatible with extimporaneous devotion, and obviously suggests the idea of previous com position."* But let us look at the usual worship of the Temple, and of what did it consist? From the minute accounts of the Hebrew Rabbis which have come down to us, we learn that. it was composed of the Sacrifices, Liturgical Compositions. and Psalms f But it is evident that the Psalms are nothing but forms of prayer, and are in most cases direct and solemn adresses to the Supreme Being. In this way they were used in the Jewish Church, and we can often learn from theit titles alone, that they were appointed to be recited by the congregation on particular days. This -collection was pro bably first arranged definitely by King David, who added sa much as to gain for himself the title of " the sweet singer ol Israel." It was afterwards remodelled by Hezekiah, of whom it is said — " Moreover, Hezekiah the king, and the princes. commanded the Levites to sing praises uuto the Lord, with the words of David and of Asaph the seer; and they sang praises with gladness, and they bowed their heads, and worshipped. "t The last changes in the Psalmody of the nation were made by Ezra, after the captivity. Did then the adoption of these devotional services lead to mere for mality ? If so, why is not the same effect produced upon those who now can address the Deity in metrical hymns, yet whose scruples prevent them from using a form, if it be in prose ?{• * Sinclair's Dissertations, p 8. f The reader will find the whole service, with its prayers and arrangement of Psalms, accurately given by Lightfoot, in his Temp's Service, ch. 1. p. 59. X 2 Cliron. xxix. 30. § "Unless it can be proved that the fault an J evil which is e» ANTIQUITY OF FOR; IS OF PRAYER. 99 But this is not all. We have direct evidence that al r_rious periods during the existence of the Jewish nation, their prophets and holy mon composed prayers to be used in their public worship. Thus, after the return from Babylon, Ezra prepared eighteen collects, for confession, supplication, thanksgiving, and intercession. These, under the title of Ezra's Benedictions, are still found in the Prayer Books of the Jews. Maimonides, a learned Rabbi, says — "Ezra composed these eighteen forms of prayer, which were enjoined by the great council : that every man might have them in his mouth, and be perfect in them, and that thereby the prayers of the rude and ignorant might be as complete as those of a more eloquent tongue." And then, after stat ing the custom which prevailed, that the people should say "Amen" at the conclusion, he adds — " This is only in those cases where the people are not perfect in the prayers, and cannot say the same by heart ; for they who can repeat the prayers; do not discharge their duty as they ought, in case they themselves do not pray with the public minister."* These prayers have all been translated by Dr. Prideaux, and are to be found in his Connection of Scripture History. f And so it was also in the worship of the Synagogue. The service there differed somewhat from that of the Tem ple, for no sacrifices were offered up. It consisted of three parts: prayers, reading of the Scriptures, and preaching from them. Here also the prayers were by stated forms, the most solemn and ancient of which were the prayers of Ezra. J To these — as we learn from Justin Martyr — they added, just before the destruction of Jerusalem, a. nineteenth Bential to a form in prose, is entirely removed if the substan ;c of the obnpxious form be expressed in metre aud chime — Crito freely will rehearse Forms of prayer and praise in verse : Why should Crito then suppose Forms are sinful when in prose ! Must my form be deemed a crime Merely for the want of rhyme ?" Newton's Apologia, p. 14 * Maimon. apud Seld. in Eutych. Alex. p. 43. \ Part I, book vi. p. 315. X Bmgham s Orig. Eccies. lib. xiii. chap. 5, sect. 4, ]00 ANTIQUITY OF FORMS OF PRAYER. colli) ;t, praying against the new sect of the Nazare Aes, whom they denominated apostates and heretics.* In addition, as we are informed by Jewish writers, their Ritual provided for all those occurrences which mark the changes in domestic life— for those solemnities of their e- Iigion which were performed at home — for times of joy and sorrow — for the Passover — the marriage, and the burial. f And many of these had been handed down from a remote antiquity. The Samaritan Chronicle speaks of a. book of prayers used by the Jews at their sacrifices, " from the timo of their legate Moses until that day ; "} and Josephus asserts, that at the period in which he lived, the sect of the Essenes made use of prayers " received traditionally from their fathers. "§ Nor has the lapse of eighteen centuries entirely changed their customs. Could you now meet with the feeble, dispersed remnant of Israel, scattered as they are throughout all the world, yet every where cleaving to their • forefathers' rites — could you see them in their private services, or when on the Seventh Day they have gathered in their Synagogues — you would hear the same words of the Hebrew Psalter chanted forth, and the same ancient prayers of their Liturgy offered up, with which two thousand years ago their fathers worshipped, in the days of their pride and power. || We perceive then how fully established under the Old Dispensation, and how entirely authorized by God — nay, especially commanded by Him — was the use of forms of prayer. If, then, these were enjoined upon the Jaw, is it wrong in the Christian iu this way to worship the same God? But the Old Dispensation, we are answered, was a day of rites and ceremonies — a clay when the human mind was in bondage, "subject to ordinances." We are directed to look to the coming of our Lord for that spiritual freedom which was then bestowed upon the world. He was indeed our Great Exemplar, and we may well mark His course, as He travelled on in His earthly pilgrimage, and in all respects * Dial, cum Tryph. p. 335. f Sinclair's Dissertation, p. 10. X Sinclair's Dissertation, p. 11. § De Bello Jud. lib. ii. chap. 1_ | See the Prayers ofthe Jews as they are now used, translate" ;_ dome's Intro i. to Scrip, v iii. p. 250-3. AKtiQUlfY Of FOftMS OF rAAYfcli. IQj lUhibly walk in His footsteps. Can we then gathe:- aiiV thing from His life to aid us in this investigation? We _an and therefore we set forth the argument, that the use offornii of prayer in public worship was sanctioned by oilr Lord while on earth, both by precept and example. We have already shown you that the worship of the Jews, both in the Temple and the Synagogue, was accord^ ing to a prescribed Liturgy. And yet our Lord always attended these services, and scrupulously joined in thelf public devotions. On all the great Feasts tte went up tti Jerusalem with His disciples, While Sabbath after Sabbath fit/ appeared so regularly in the Synagogue, that Itis watchful enemies, while seeking every Occasion to charge Hint With opposition to the LaW, never brought forward the accusa tion of neglecting their appointed worship. Bdt had there been anything Wrorig in the manlier in which this Was per formed — had the Liturgical Service been merely a corruption introduced' by the Scribes Und Pharisees— would He, think you, have been backward in denouncing the innovation, ami restoring the service to its ancient Simplicity? No, brethren j had there been coldness or formality in this custom, the Same zeal which led our Master to drive from the Temple " the money-changers, and those that sold doves," would have impelled Him also to rebuke the priests for the want of spirituality in their worship. But He did not : on the contrary, He fully countenanced it; and therefore it cannot be wrong or inexpedient. In that solemn hour, too, when the Paschal Supper was just closing, and our Lord " sang a hymn" with His disciples, before He went forth to the last scene of His trial and agony, we know from the voice of tradition, and the concurrence of all antiquity, that He adopted, as was natural, the particular form always made use of by the Jews at the end of the Passover. It was called he Great Hallel, or hymn of praise, and consisted of Psalms cxv. to cxviii. inclusive.* So was * Lighlfoot's Temple Service, ch. xiii. Jahn's Bib. Archaeology, p. 449. Home's Introd. to Script, vol. iii. p. 306. Dr. Adam Clark, in his Commentary on Matt. xxvi. 30, makes it begin with Ps. cxiii. He Bays, " As tl the Hymn itself, wo know from the universal consent o/ Jewish ant quity, that it was composed of Psalms cxiii. to cxviii. ,LQ% ANT1'QU:,,*V OF FORMS OF PRAYER. it also amid the fearful sufferings of the Cross When Hia ¦human nature was, as it were, crushed by the sorrows heaped upon Him, the words which seemed naturally to rise to His lips were those of the Psaltei The inquiry— " Mj 'God, my God, why hast Thou forsake l me?" is the com mencement ofthe 22d Psalm; and the words which last he uttered — " Into thy hands I commend my spirit," compose the *>th verse of the 31st Psalm. Thus, in the language ot •the oivines of Leyden — " Christ, while suspended from the Cross, used that golden form of prayer which David, as His prototype, had composed."* Another stong proof of our Lord's sanction is derived from that model of devotion which He Himself gave to His disci ples. John the Baptist had taught his followers to pray by ¦a set form, and the little household of believers who had gathered around our Master, and composed the Early Church, requested Him also to do the same. Their petition was — " Lord, teach us to pray, as John also taught his dis ciples." And what did He ans\ver ? Did He tell them, in all cases to trust to the passing feelings of the moment, and to shun as coldness everything which is not extemporaneous? No ; He at once prescribed that form now known by the name of the Lord's Prayer, and which the Church has since in all ages continued to use in her worship. It is a most striking termed by the Jews Hallel. . . . These six Psalms were always sung at every Paschal solemnity." Jacob Abbott, in his Corner-Slone, ends his description of the last Passover with a pathetic appeal to St. John. " ' And when they had sung a hymn, they went lut into the Mount of Olives.' What could have been their hymn Its sentiments and feelings, they who can appreciate the occasion may perhaps conceive ; but what were its words? Beloved disciple! why didst thou not record them? They should have been sung ir. every nation, and language, and clime. We should have fixed them in our hearts, and taught them to our children, and when we came together to commemorate our Redeemer's suffer- ings, we should never have separated without singing his par*ing hymn." (p. 219.) A very slight knowledge of Jewish antiquities might have pointed out to Mr. Abbott what was probably the form which hs wishes to have so extensively adopted. * Sinclair's Dissertation, p. 1 _ . ANTIQUITY OF FORMS OF PR AYES. 103 fact, too, that every single santence in this prayer is takon from lh_ Jewish Liturgies, with which the disciples were already familiar* "So far,'-' says Grotius, " was the Lord Himself of the Christian Church from all affec'.ation of un necessary novelty." What stronger confirmation, then, could He give of His approval ? And should we not be contented to follow in the steps of our Divine Master — to worship as He did — and in accordance with the example which He sets, lo "hold fast the form of sound words," when we approach our _iod ? Our next argument is derived from the uniform practice oj the Primitive Church. The early disciples followed the ex ample of the Jewish Church, which their Lord had thus sanc tioned, and adopted forms of prayer suited to the wants of the Church under the new dispensation. In the fourth chap ter of the Acts is an Apostolic form of Prayer. It was de livered on the return of Peter and John from the Jewish council, when, in the assembly of their brethren, they " re ported all that the chief priests and elders had said unto them." We are told, " when they heard that, they lifted up their voices to God with one accord," and in (what Bishop Jebb calls) " this noble supplicatory hymn, poured forth at once by the whole Christian people," they returned thanks for the past, and begged strength for the future. We give the same distinguished writer's version of the parallelisms — t 1. 0 Lord, thou art the God, Who didst make Heaven and earth, * Abundant proof of this can be found in Lightfoot (on Matt. ix. fl-1 3) and the works of several other learned men. Mr. Gregory has collected the expressions out of the different Jewish Euchologies, and th is translated them : — " Our Father, which art in Heaven, be gracious unto us 1 0 Lord our God, hallowed be Thy name, and let the remembrance of Thee be glorified in Heaven above, and upon earth here below. Let thy king dom reign over us, now and for ever. The holy men of old said, remit und forgive unto all mei. whatsoever they have done agait st me. And leadus not into temptation, but deliver us from the evil thing. For tliiue is the kingdom, and thou shalt reign in glory for ever aiid fo* evermore." Home's Introd. to Scrip, v. iii. p. 29 "S, 4 Jebb's Sacred Literature, p. 132-142. i 04 ANTtQUl+V OF FdttfrlS OF fRAYER. And the sea, and all things that are in them ; Who, by the mouth of thy servant David, didst ».V 2. " Why did the heathen rage, And the people imagine vain tilings, The kings of the earth stand up, . And the rulers combine together Against the Lord, and against his anointed V A. For of a truth there have Combined Against thine holy child Jesus, whom thou hast ahniumd, I Both Herod and Poiltiits Pilate, With the heathen and the peoples of Israel, Tb do whatsoever things thy hand And thy counsel predetermined to be done. 4. And now, Lord, look down upon their threatenitigs, And give unto thy servants With all boldness to speak thy word : While thou art stretching forth thine hand for healinjr, And while signs arid wonders are performed Through the name of thirie holy child Jesus. Thi manner in which this prayer" was uttered— the whole people " lifting up their voices to God with one accord" — to gether with the regular poetical measure in whicli it is writ ten, prove, we think, that it must have been a pre-corrlposed form, with which all were familiar. To use again the wort's of Bishop Jebb — " The same sacred vein of poetry animates the whole; and yet, amidst all this poetic fervor, we may discern-much technical nicety of construction." The view." therefore, taken of it by Mr. Chapin, is one wliich would commend itself to the reason of any person not biassed hy prejudice. " The occasion upon which the use of this prayer is recorded, was the extraordinary escape of IVter. and John from the hands of the Jews. And yet there is no allusion to the circumstance. It is just such a prayer as they would be likely to use on every occasion of meeting rogether — one that would be applicable to their case at al] times. Hence, as this general prayer was used upon an especial occasion, it is but reasonable to infer that it had been prc-compose.) and formed a part of their daily worship."* * Prim. Church, p. 1 30. XNttabi+t at FO.iivis of _•_._..-_:_.. 1fj_ Occasionally, in the Epistles, we find an incidontal allusion to their service, which strengthens the view we have given. . Thus, the Colossians are directed " to teach and admonish one another in psalms, and hymns, and spiritual songs." These, of course, must have been previously pre pared. Arid to vvhatj unless one Of these — probably an Easter Hymn — _ould the Apostle refer in his Epistle to the Ephe sians (v. 14), when he writes—" Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead; arid Christ shall give thee light" ? Where is this said in Scripture? The words are nowhere else to be found. Since therefore A/o xiy.t, rendered in our version "he saith," might as well be translated "it saith,". we may believe this to be a quotation from some now for gotten anthem of the Early Church. Such is the view of Bishop Jebb,* and the lines certainly form a triplet of con structive parellelisms — eyiifoti a xahvtfav, y.r/A CVioCTTX SJfc T„l|r VrrK^iVlt, „.«! EirttpxvF_t trot _ X.ptrro_-. Awake, thou who sleepest, And arise from the dead, And Christ will shine upon thee. St. Paul, also, in writing to the Corinthians, mentions the custom of saying Amen, at the close ofthe prayer. (1 Cor xiv. 16.) This, Justin Martyr, in the middle of the second century, says, was the universal practice of the Church. f We now turn to the Primitive Church in the age imme diately following that of the Apostles. The form most fre quently used was the Lord's Prayer, endeared to them by so many associations connecting it with Him from whose lipa **- " Wolfius, Cur. Pliilol. ; and Rosenmtiller, cite Henmann (Poe- ciles, tom. ii. p. 390), as conjecturing these three lines to have been borrowed from one of those ' hymns, or spiritual songs,' which, even in the Apostles' days, were nsed in tho Christian Church, and wliich are smmediately noticed by St. Paul, it. the same chapter of the same Epistle, verse 19. The conjecture has been approved and adopted by Professors Stow and Michaelis, nor e it opposed by Rosenmiiller." Tcbb's Sacred Literature, p. 160., t ApiLi. c. 87. 5* 0_ ANTIQUITY Of Fiji MS 3* fRJ-Yistt. they first learned its holy worls. Tertullian calls it '.* ndl only a rule prescribing the methoc and matter of prayer, but a form to be used in the words in which Christ delivered it, and to be added to ali other prayers, as the foundation of a superstructure."* St. Chrysostom, in two volumes of his works — the third and the fifth — makes the declaration more than twenty times, " that the Lord's Prayer was a. common form in use among them by the express command of Christ." And St. Augustine, in his Retractations, confirms this, as serting that ¦" the whole Church will continue to use it to the end of the world."t " Evident is it, beyond dispute," says the learned Bing ham, " that the whole Primitive Church constantly used it in all her holy offices, out of consciousness and regard to Christ's command. ..... For there was no considerable Divine office, in the celebration of which this prayer did not always make a solemn part. "J This was the case in Baptism, when each person was enjoined to repeat it as soon as the rite, was administered. "Immediately after this" — say the Apostoli cal Constitutions — "let him stand and pray the prayer which the Lord hath taught us."} And St. Chrysostom in like manner informs us, that as soon as he leaves the water, " he says these words, ' Our Father which art in Heaven,' " &c.|| This was done in the same manner at the celebration of the Eucharist. St. Cyril says — " After the oblation prayer, we say that prayer which our Saviour delivered to His disciples, calling God our Father with a pure conscience, and saying, ' Our Father which art in Heaven.' '""[ And St. Augustine informs us — " The whole Church concludes the prayer of benediction and sanctification with the Lord.'s Prayer."** It also made a part of their daily Morning and Evening Prayers, distinct from the Communion office,;)"*" as well as of the private devotin is of individuals. Thus St. Chrysostom says — " Christ, ""to induce us to unanimity and charity, enjoins us to make common prayer, and obliges the whole Church, as if it were but one person, to say, ' Our * De Orat. cap. 9. •*• Lib. i. cap. 19. X Orig. Eccies. lib xiii. chap 7, soot. 2. § Lib. vi. cap. 44. j Horn. 6, in Coloss. •^ Catech. Myst. v p. 298 * * Epist. 59, ad. Paulin. f f 3 Bing dig. Eccies. lib xiii. ch. 7, sect. __ ANTIQl'TY OF F6RMS _F PlUYliR 107 father/ and ' Give us this day our daily bread,' &c, always using a word of the plural number, and commanding every one, whether he pray alone by himself, or in company with others,' still to make prayer for his brethren."* Therefore it had the name of Oratio Quotidiana, the Christian's Daily Prayer, and was used alike by heretics and schismatics, as by the Catholics. f We have so particularly brought forward the use of this prayer in the early ages, not only as showing the attach ment of Christians to it as a form, but also because it will be evident, from an examination of the passages quoted, that it often thus formed one portion of a pre-composed service. There were indeed certain forms which were in all Churches substantially the same, and were used in connection with the ordinary Liturgy. These were, the form for Baptism,:]: ihat for the consecration of the Eucharist,} and the Dox- ologies.l! This, Bingham has most fully shown. And the reason for uniformity in these particular services is evident. They included the grand cardinal points of our faith, and therefore, while they agreed, there was — to use Bingham's own words — " but one form of worship throughout the whole Church, as to what concerned the substance of Christian worship." With respect to the other parts of the Liturgy — the ordinary prayers — it is evident that each Bishop was at liberty to form his own in what method and words he thought proper, only keeping to the analogy of faith and sound doc trine. Thus, we are told that St. Basil, among other good services which he did for the Church at Csesarea, while he was but a Presbyter in it, composed forms of prayer, which by the consent and authority of the Bishop, Eusebius, were regularly used there. And this is thought by many to be the first draught of that L *urgy which bears his name to this day. The Church of Neo-Caesarea, in Pontus, where St. Basil was born, had a Liturgy peculiar to itself, of which he speaks in one of his Epistles. St. Chrysostom's Liturgy, * Com. iu Ps. cxii. f Orig. Eccies, lib. xiii. ch. 7, sect. 7. X,. Ibid. lib. xi. ch. 3, and ch. '. See also Chapin's I'rim. Chnrr_\ D. 127. § Ibid lib. xv. ch 3. J Ibid lib. xiy. ch 2. idS ANTIQUITY OF FORJlS di1 PRAYER. which he composed for the Church of Constantinople, dif fered from these. The Ambrosian, Roman, and African forms, all varied in some particulars.* When also any ne,* Church was founded, it did not feel itself obliged to follow, except in spirit, the model and words of the Church from which it came, but altered the old Liturgy to suit it_ Olwn peculiar circumstances and condition, in the same Way that we adapted the Liturgy of the Church in England to Our situation in this country. Of this, the historian SoizOnlen gives an example in the instance -of Maiuma, in Palestine, Which once belonged to the dioCese of Gaza. For, as soon as it was erected into a disthlc't Episcopal See, it was ne longer obliged to observe precisely the rules and forms ol the Church of Gaza, but had, as he particularly remarks, a calendar for the festivals of its own niartyrs, and commemo rations of the Bishops and Presbyters who had lived among fhem.t After, however, a Liturgy was adopted in each Church, and so modelled in mi rior points as to meet its peculiar want..; we have reason to believe that it remained with but little alteration. Mr. Palrrier says1 — :" That each Church preserved continually the same Liturgy is certain. It is impossible to peruse the notices supplied by the Fathers, without perceiv ing that the baptized Christians were supposed to be familiar with every part of the service ; and continual allusions are made to various particulars as well known, whioh it would be impossible to explain, except by referring to the Liturgies still extant. The order of the parts was always preserved, the same rites and ceremonies continually repeated, the same ideas and language, without material variation, trans mitted from generation to generation. The people always knew the precise po'nts at which they were to repeat theit responses, chant their sacred hymn, or join in the well known prayer. """f. We can give an example ofthis by a comparison ofthe woiks of Justin Martyr and Cyril of Jerusalem. The former in the middle of the second century gives an account of the order of worship in the Syrian Churches in his day.} The latter, 150 years later, describes the solemn Liturgy * Orig. Eccies. lib. iii. ch. 6. f Ibid, lib. xiii. ch. 5. X Antiq. of English Ritual, v. i. p. 9. § Apoi. i. p. 96. AStfQblf Y OF FOfiMS b_" PRAYER. 10. wliich was celebrated after the dismissal ofthe Catechumens.* These two writers lived in different parts of the Patriarchate of Antioch, but it is evident they are referring to a Liturgy essentially the same, and which, during the interval of time which separated them, had not substantially changed. It is that which we now have under the name of the Liturgy of St. Jam.s. Froifi the prevalence of this spirit of hostility to change, we should naturally expect that, after the lapse of some centu ries, a substantial uniformity would be found in the ritual of the different Churches. And _iich is the case All the Prim- .tive Liturgies may plainly be reduced to four, which were undoubtedly the original forms from which they were model led; These are, first-, the Oriental Liturgy, Which prevailed through the entire East, and was ascribed by tradition to St. James. Second, the Liturgy of St: Peter, which was used through Italy, Sicilyj and the North of Africa. Third, St. Mark's LMrgyj adopted by the Christians throughout Egypt, Ethiopia, and the neighboring countries on the Mediterranean Sea. And* fourth, St. John's Liturgy, whidh prevailed through Gaul, Spain, and the exarchate of Ephesus, until the fifth century. Now, upon examining these, we find that the principal ideas are the same. The principal rites are identical, and there is a general uniformity of arrangement among them all. These facts prove, therefore, that at a distant antiquity they must have had a common origin, or been at least written by men who shared in the same feelings ; while there is also sufficient diversity to show the remoteness of the period at which they had their rise.-*- Their use was * Cyr. Op. 296. ¦*¦ We here give the arrangement. The striking resemblance ta our Communion Service will be at once perceived : — St; Peter's Liturgy. St. James' Liturgy Italy, Sicily, and Africa. Oriental. 1 Lift up your hearts, dec. 10. The kiss of peace. 2. Therefore with Angela, (fee. 1. Lift up your hearts, <_c. 3. Prayer for the Church militant. 2. Therefore with Angels, «tc. 4. Consecration Prayer. 5. Commemoration of our Loi I _ 5. Commemoration of our Lord's words. words. 6. The Oblation. fl Ihe Oblatioc. 4. Consecration Prayer. 1 10 AN.iQUltY 6 If FORMS OF PRAYiilt. indeed so extensive in those ages, when Bishops were mo_ independent, that it is difficult to ass'gn their origin to ¦_ lower period than the Apostolic age. "The liberty," says 7 Prayers for the dead. 3. Prayer for the Church militant 8 Breaking of Bread. 7. Prayers for the dead. 9. The Lord's Prayer. 9. The Lord's Prayer. 10. Tho kiss of peace. 8. Breaking of biead. li.. Communion. 11. Communion. St. Mark's Liturgy. St. Jonx's Lmm.Gr. Egypt and Ethiopia. Gaul, Spain, and Ephesus 10. The kiss of peace. 3. Prayer for the Church militant 1 . Lift up your hearts, <__. 7. Prayers for the dead. 8. Prayer for the Church militant.10. The kiss of peace. 7. Prayers for the dead. 1. Lift up your hearts, <_c. 2. Therefore with Angels, <_c 2. Therefore with Angels, <_c 5. Commemoration of our Lord's 5. Commemoration of our Lord's words. words. C. The Oblation. 6. The Oblation. 4. Consecration Prayer. 4. Consecration Prayer. 8. Breaking of bread. 8. Breaking of bread. 9. The Lord's Prayer. 9. The Lord's Prayer. 11. Communion. 11. Communion. The order in our Church is somewhat different : — h. Prayer for the Church militant. 8. Breaking of bread. 1. Lift up your hearts, _r,c. 6. The Oblation. 2. Therefore with Angels, die. i-. Consecration Prayer. 5. Commemoration of our Lord'sll. Communion. words. 9. The Lord's Prayer. For the benefit of those who are not familiar with this, subject, we would remark, that the Prayers forthe Dead in the Primitive Liturgies • bear no resemblance whatever to those now used in the Romish Church. They were rather an affectionate remembrance of those who had slept in the faith— "a commemoration of the departed faithful," as Mr Palmer calls them, — and were in these words : — " We commend unto 1 hy mercy, 0 Lord, all other Thy servants which are departed hence from us with the sign of faith, and now do rest in the sleep of peace • grant unto them, we beseech Thee, Thy mercy and everlasting peace and that, at the day of the general resurrection, we, and all they whicn be of the mystical body of Thy Son, may altogether be net at His right hand, and hear that His most joyful voice, ' Come untc vie, 0 y« ArtttQUi+Y Of tfORMS Ot" t>_.A ._._.. __i Mr. Palmer, " which every Christian Church plainly had and exercised, in the way of improving its formularies, con firms the antiquity of the four great Liturgies; for where this liberty existed, it could have been scarcely anything else but reverence for the Apostolical source from which the original Liturgies were derived, that prevented an infinite variety of formularies, and preserved the substantial uni formity which we find to have prevailed in vast districts of the Primitive Church."* They form, therefore, four distinct channels, by which the faith and practice of the early Church have been handed down to us. To one of these, indeed — the Liturgy of St. James — we can assign a very great antiquity, from the manner in which it has been kept separate from all others. Nearly fourteen centuries ago, at the Council of Chalcedon, which met a. d. 451, a sect of Christians, called Monophysites, were anathe matized for heresy. Since that time they have been, of course, entirely separated from the orthodox, and no commu nion subsisted between the two parties. For a time, they each had their establishments in the different dioceses, and their own patriarch in the Metropolitan City. At the timo of the Mahometan invasion, the orthodox were driven out, and the Monophysites, patronized by the invaders, remained in undisturbed possession of their sees, and represented the ancient Patriarchate of Antioch. At this day, the members of this sect are still scattered through Judea, Mesopotamia, Syria, and the southern part of Asia Minor, and use a Liturgy in the Syriac Language, which they ascribe to St. James. The singular fact about this Liturgy is, that a great part of it coincides, expression for expression, with the Greek Liturgy used by the Orthodox Church at Jerusalem ; so that one must evidently be a translation of the other t When, then, was this done? It must have been prior to the Council of Chalce don, for since that time these two parties have shunned each other. This coincidence, therefore, between their most solemn religious rights proves their services to be at least more than that be .blessed of my Father, and possess the kingdom which is pre pared for you from the beginning of the world I' Grant this, O Father, for Jesus Christ's sake, our inly Mediator and Advocate.'' * Antiq. of English Ritual, v. i. p. 8. * The Antiquity of the Existing I Iturgie., Oxford, 1 _.*"8. i 12 ANtiQUffY OF FdRllS OF FRAYi-R. 1400 years old. Such, then, is the authority we have for thii practice — from the custom of the Jewish Church — the sanc tion and example of our Lord — and its universal prevalence in the early Church. " No doubt" — says Hooker — "from Go_ it hath proceeded, and by us it must be acknowledged as a work of singular care and providence, that the Church hath evermcre held a prescript form of prayer, although not. in all things everywhere the same, yet for the most part retaining still the. same analogy. So that if the Liturgies of all the ancient Churches throughout the world be compared among themselves, it maybe easily perceived they had all one origi nal mould, and that the public players of the people of God in Churches thoroughly settled, did never use to be voluntary dic tates proceeding from any man's extemporal wit."* It would not indeed be possible, during the whole course of the 1500 years which preceded the Reformation, to find any Church, the public worship of which was conducted without a pre scribed form. Not only the ancient Greek and Latin Churches, but all the other Christian Societies in Europe, Asia, aud Africa, conformed to this rule. The Abyssinians and Egyp tians — the Jacobhes, , Maronites, and Nestorians ot Asia — and the Christians of St. Thomas, in Indiaf — all had their Liturgies. * Eccies. Polity, lib. v. sect. 25. f Dr. Buchanan, speaking about these Indian Christians, says — " They Jiave the Bible and a Scriptural Liturgy ; and these will save a Church in the worst of times. And as there were but few copies of the Bible among the Syrians (for every copy was transcribed with the pen), it is highly probable, that if they had not enjoyed the advantage of the daily prayers, and daily portions cf Scrip ture, in their Liturgy, there would have been, in the revolution of ages, no vestige of Chris tianity left among them In a nation like ours, overflowing with knowledge, men are not always in circumstances to perceive tho value of a Scriptural Liturgy. When Christians are well taught they think they want something better. But the young and the ignorant, who form a great proportion of the community, are edified by a little plain instruction, frequently repeated. A small Church or sect may do without a form for a while. Bi't a national Liturgy ia that wliich preserves a relic of the true faith among the people in a large empire, when the priests leave their Articles, ind their Coisfes sions of Faith." Researches in Asia, p. t?0. AK.IO._ITY OP fORMS OF PRAt-fitt. 11'J Strictly considered, all public prayer is a foim to tht.su who unite with the speaker. Whether his petitions have been previously composed, or arise from the impulse of th_ moment, it is the same to his hearers. His extemporaneous prayer must be to them a form of 'prayer. We come then to the simple question — whether it is better to have this arranged beforehand, or to trust to the passing feelings of him who happens to be the minister ? As far as the spiritual benefit ofthe hearers is concerned, we should say that the former would be the wiser course. Otherwise, the effect produced will be that so admirably described by an eminent prelate ofthe Church of England^" If there should be nothing ab surd or unbecoming in the prayers, yet the audience must first endeavor to Understand the Woftls; and then they must weigh and consider the sense arid riieaning : and then they must deliberate Whether such requests are prdper for persons iii theit1 condition, before they cart lawfully join therri; and by that time, the minister is passed on to some other subject which requires the like attention and consideration ; and so their curiosity may be raised, and they may exercise their judgment, but there can scarce be any rdom left for de votion."* Equally important is the influence of a Liturgy upon a Cnurch collectively. It preserves its orthodoxy unimpaired. Without a prescribed form of prayer, each individual teacher is left to inculcate such doctrines as best suit his own private views. He may preach error, and then pray in accordance with it. There is no standard to which his people can at all times direct their attention, and judge of his doctrines He may become a disbeliever in one of the cardinal articles ofthe Christian faith, but if he omit all mention of it, both in his sermons and prayers, it may not be brought before the attention of his people for years, anti thus insensibly, yet gradually, they fall into his eirors. Such, however, can never be the case where there is a Liturgy like that of our Church. Let one who ministers at our altars become heretical, and he cannot lead his people with him. He may for a time preach his views, but oach prayer he reads in the service will contradict him, and pro * Bishop Newton's Sermons, vol. ii. 114 ANTIQUITY OF 10RMS OF PRAYER. claim most unequivocally that he is faithless to the Church Thus he will be placed in a false position, until at last he k compelled to go out from us. showing that he is not of us. Now see how this ha_ always been exemplified. What religious siciely without a Liturgy has ever subsisted for any length of lime, and yet not wandered from its early faith ? Look at those on the continent of Europe, which, after the Reformation, while they abandoned the Apostolical ministry, give up the ancient Liturgy also. To what result have those in Germany been led ? Why, we see them wan dering in all the mazes of rationalism, each year tending downward to a darker, more hopeless infidelity.* What is the faith which now prevails at Geneva, where once John Calvin inculcated his stern and rigid creed ? There, all is changed, and in place of the strictness of his views, we have the latitude and coldness of those who scoff at the Di vinity of our Lord.f We are compelled then to regard the * Henry Dwight thus describes their progress — " The genuineness and authenticity of the Old Testament was first attacked, and outwork after outwork was gained, until all belief in it as a revelation, was almost literally exploded from Germany. The Epistles of the New Testament were afterwards assailed with the same weapons. The inspiration of one writer after another ceased to be believed, until by an almost equally large proportion of the theologians, they were alsc viewed as unworthy of regard, except so far as they contain a beau tiful system of morality, and so far as they are historically interesting from their instrumentality in spreading Christianity. At a subse quent period, the Gospels were attacked in a similar mariner. The character of Christ was soon generally believed, by the clergy, to have no more claim to our respect than tliose of Plato and Aristotle, unless from the greater purity of his example and hi_ code of morals, and from his exhibition of powers of intellect, which most of them would have probably admitted to be much superior to those of the Greek philosophers So universal was this disbelief, that there were not, in the year 1808, as one of the most distinguished orthodox professors informed me, five clergymen, who dared to come forth and declare themselves to the world, as belonging to the orthodox party." Travels in Germany in 1825-6. See, too, Hugh James Rose's ' State of Protestantism in Germany' f Dr. Sprague of Albany says—" The Protestant Church of Geneva has greatly departed from the faith of the early reformers. Most of their present ministers are unquestionab'y Unitarians of the German ANTI.UITY OF FORMS OF PRAYER. 115 reformation on the continent, as, a thing that has passed away. '"' Lutheranism and Calvinism are indeed now little more than matters of history ; for the feeble and lifeless relics which they 1 ave left behind, ajid which still bear their name, are but painful memorials of systems whose imperfec tions and faults, wnatever they might be, were dignified by a holy ardor and zeal for God and for God's revelation. Now, when the confessions of faith foe ivhich Luther, and Zuinglius, and Calvin would have laid down their lives, are thrown aside as obsolete, or subscribed with salvos and de clarations which render the act of subscription a mere mock ery ; how can we recognize the existence of their faith ? * Overrun by the audacious impiety of Neologism, an infi delity which cloaks itself under the name of Christianity in order to inflict a more grievous wound on faith, or sunk into the deadly slumbers of Socinian and Arian apostacy, Lutheranism and Calvinism, as religious systems, seem to have nearly perished in the countries where they arose."! So it is, too, among the dissenters in England, and the same pulpits in which, during the last century, their ablest divines preached, are now held by Socinians.J And is not School, though it is believed there are a few whose religious views are, in the main, evangelical. Here, as in most places in France, I under stand there is very little that charity herself can believe to be vital piety." " Letters from Europe in 1828. * One of our own clergy has thus recorded the result of his obser vations, during a visit to Geneva, in 1819 : — " And thrives pure faith there now with roots wide spread ? Is Calvin's name revered — it's master dead ? I too an exile, but for health, around That Lake, whose mirror yields the raptured eye Scenes of transcendent grace and majesty, Have strolled, and in Geneva's streets ha 'e trod, ' Where's Calvin's tomb ? ' I asked ; — tl e sole reply, ' Who knows ? ' — ' Is Christ still worshipped here as God . ' ' In private by dull fools who yet in darkness plod.' " f Palmer's Treatise on the Church, v. i. p. 358. X The most fearful picture we have seen of the English Dissenters is given by two of their own authors, Bogue and Bennet. They say — " Many, who drank the cup of Arianism first, and then of Socinianisin to the very dregs, ceased to be memb rs of the dissenting cougrega 11(5 ANttQttTY Of fORMS OF PRAffilt." this the case in our own land, where even the descendant* ofthe Mew England puritans have abandoned their faith, and substituted in its place the most fearful heresies, " denying the Lord that bought them ! " - There is reason, therefore, for that exclamation, uttered by Buchanan, the apostle of the East—" Woe to the declining Church which hath not a Gospel Lituigy ! "* But where could .this melancholy history be written of any who adhered faithfully to a prescribed form in their pub lic devotions? Take our own Church, for example. In vestigate the doctrines which are embodied in her formula ries, and you will find that they are now what they were eighteen centuries ago. Faithless and unworthy men have indeed at times beeii the teachers of the Church, but their errors passed away with them, and the great body of her members, by looking td the Liturgy for instruction, still held to their steadfastness; Its holy language, bearing the im press, arid breathing forth the spirit of the purest days, in tiuti. . . j . By the operation of these causes, rriariy a PresbytdHrtli congregation dwindled from a giant into a dwarf. Aged people who remember their respectable condition in the metropolis, at the com mencement of this period, must' be convinced that heresy has acted like all enchantress, in silently, by her fatal spells, accomplishing their destruction. They are, in general, now but the shadow of what they formerly were, and many of them have ceased to exist. Devonshire, the cradle of Ariamsm, has been the grave of the Arian dissenters, and there is not left in that populous county, a twentieth part of the Presbyterians which were to be found at her birth. More than twenty of their meeting-houses, it is said, have been shut up, and in those which remain open, there are to be seen the skeletons only af congregations which were full and flourishing before error had _>anish«d prosperity." " Like the devouring pestilence, Arianism and Socinianism have, with few exceptions, carried desolation with them into every congre gation where they have obtained an entrance ; and some scores mure of their meeting-houses would have been shut up, but for the pious benevolence of persons of a different creed, in the former generation. By their endowments, many of the Presbyterian ministers have beer, ' enabled to retain their office, and to preach to what deserves not the name of a congregation." History of Dissenters, vol. iv. p. 319 * Researches iu Asia, p. 80. ANT .UITY OF FORMS OK PRIYER. '17 stamped upon the memory of each one of her true children, and wrought into the very texture of his mind. Her beau tiful services, adapted to every change and circumstance of life, from the cradle to the grave, speak to his heart with a power which no extemporaneous prayer can have. In these words his fathers have worshipped. These prayers, per haps, have trembled upon the lips of some whom he has loved, but who long since have passed away to their reward. By the chain of association they unite him to the departed. They recall them to his memory, and thus, by means of these petitions, he lives again in scenes which have long since gone. Oh, solemnly and sweetly do these words and these services come home to the Churchman's heart ! He would not part with them — so rich in hallowed recollections — for all the eloquence that modern wisdom could devise. He clings to them through life, and trusts that the last sound which shall fall upon his dying ear, will be that soiemn prayer by which the Church commends the departing spirit to the mercy of its Gcd.* Thus it is, that a thonsand remembrances gather around our time-honored Ritual and commend it to our affection. We have seen, that in this manner the followers of our Mas- lei worshipped, even in the Apostolic age. When, there fore, we are called to abandon it, and adopt in its place the extemporaneous effusions of man in our public worship, may we not reply in the words of Scripture—" We have no such custom, neither the Churches of God." We will not fear to ¦ walk in our Lord's footsteps and to follow those ancient confessors and martyrs, who, in the earliest, purest days of our .faith, amidst sufferings and trials won their way to Heaven. Did they lack spirituality, or find their devotion cramped and narrowed down by the words of a Liturgy ? Has the whole Christian Church been in a grievous error on this subject, until within the last three hundred years ? No, * When George Herbert was on his death-bed, he said to Mr. Dun- ran, who had come to visit him — " Sir, I see by your habit that you , aro a priest, and desire you to pray with me." Whicli being granted, Mr. Duncan asked him — "What prayers?" To which Mr. Herbert's answer was — " 0, sir, the prayers of my mother, the Church of Eng land ' no other prayers are equal to them." Walton's Lives, p 339 I ^8 ANTIQUITY OF FORMS OF PRAYER. brethren ; and the best we can do in our feebleness is, t« tread in the old paths, and " hold fast to the form of sound words" which was used " in our fathers' days, and in the old time before them." Our venerable Liturgy speaks to us in the language of God's own word. Let us strive to imbibe its holy spirit, and we shall need no better preparation foi death. And when at last the worship of the earthly sanc tuary is over, we shall be admitted to join in that service which the redeemed in glory use, as ever, day without night, .they circle the throne rejoicing, and raise the lofty anthem — " Worthy is the Lamb that was slain, to receive power, and riches, an 1 wisdom, and strength, and honor, and g lory, ami blessing. ' V. HISTORY OF OUR LITCRQT. Mine is no solitary choice, See here the seal of saints impress 'd ; The prayer of millions swells my voice. The mind of ages tills my breast. Cunningham. The sixteenth century opened upon a scene uneq'ualled in the history of the world. The power of the Church of Rome was dominant through Europe. The opposition of the Albigenses had been extinguished in their blood, and all was apparently peace in Western Christendom. The institution of the Orders of St. Francis anil St. Dominic had added a new element of strength to the Romish See. The members of these fraternities wandered through every land, mingling with the mighty masses of the great city, or diligently in each lonely valley seeking out " the few sheep in the wilderness," and every where they were the sworn servants of the Vatican — ready to teach its doctrines, and to do its bidding. The Pontiffs acted in the spirit of their lofti est pretensions, deposing princes, and bestowing kingdoms at their will, yet every where they seemed to be obeyed. But this universal peace, was hollow and deceptive. A day of awakening for the human mind was at hand. Learn ing had begun to come down from its high places, to en lighten the multitude. The remains of that literature, which ages before had called forth the plaudits of as sembled Greece, or awakened the genius of Rome's nobles'; orators, was again taken down from the dusty 120 HISTORY OF OCR LITURCY. shelves of monasteries ; and thus " in this setting part of Time," a new audience was created to listen to the strains of Homer, or to muse over the glorious reveries of Plato Communing with the mighty dead, and dwelling upon the noble works which they had bequeathed to us — those' forms of antique beauty, which were for ever the bloom of ah im perishable youth — the intellect of man was quickened irito action, and reason once more asserted her claims.' The moral sense, too, of that generation was outraged by the sight of a pontiff like Julius, emulating the fame' of a warrior, and embroiling kingdoms in his mad ambition ; or one like Leo, passing life in an unbroken dream of graceful voluptuousness, and scoffing at the mysteries of our faith as long-since refuted fables. Beneath this quiet surface,, there: fore, the public mind was stirred up to its lowest. deptlis. A restless, eager spirit of inquiry was abroad. The question, " What is truth ?" was earnestly asked. A craving after spiritual freedom and purity was deeply felt. The successor of St. Peter stood upon a volcano, though the landscape was smiling around him, and he perceived not the beginnin,-; of its heavings. Is it wonderful, then, when the storm at last came, and the human intellect burst the fetters by which Rome would bind it down, that _ scene of wild confusion ensued? Was it not natural, that men should pass at once to the opposite extreme, and, rejoicing in their newly acquired freedom, in dulge in the strangest eccentricities ? It was ; and therefore we -are prepared to behold in that an age " emulous of change" — an age whose motto was — "old things have pass ed away — all things have become new." In less than, fifty years from the first controversy between Luther and Tetzel, Protestantism had attained to its highest ascendancy on the Continent. For the first time the love of novelty could be indulged, and this liberty was used to the utmost. The first half of tbe sixteenth century Was the- age of experiments, the fruits of which, in weal or Woe, this gene ration has inherited. Among the Other changes made — "as we showed you in the last lecture — was that which related to the manner of public worship. Those societies which] hail abandoned the Church with her Apostolic ministry, in many eases gave up her ancient Ritual also, ami trusted to have HISTORY OF OUR LITURGT. 121 their devotions led by the extemporaneous effusions of those who might minister to them.* In this respect, as in all others in this great crisis of her I. story, the Church in England was enabled lo act moie wisely.. As she had retained the Apostolic ministry which hail been handed down for 1500 years, so she preserved her Ritual, only throwing out those things which were not prim itive, but were corruptions which had gradually crept in during the darkness of the few preceding centuries. Thus our service was merely restored to its ancient purity. Each view, therefore, which we gain of the true state of feeling in those times of excitement and change, deepens our grati * The early Reformers themselves were often too clear-sighted not to perceive the evil of this step, but it was taken by their follow ers, and, in truth, naturally grew out of the state of feeling we havo described. We will give some of their recorded opinions in favor of a Liturgy. " For so much as concerneth the form of prayer and ecclesiastical rites, I much approve that it be determined so that it may not be lawful for the ministers in their administration to vary from it ; as Well to help the simplicity and unskilfulness of some, as that the uni formity of all the several congregations may better appear; and, finally, that the desultory and capricious lightness of such as affept novelties may be encountered and stopped." Calvin's Letter to Pro- <«__," Somerset. " We account it grievous to contemn all tliose holy Churches which, from the times of the Apostles, and of the primitive Church, unto this day, have celebrated the public worship of God out of prescribed forms —wherefore, we blame the over-nice singularity of those men who would cast out all prescribed forms from divine worship." Letter from the Walachrian Classis of Zealand to the assembly of Divines in Ltmdun, 16,6. " Any one may satisfy himself, from a view of all the particulars, that in the ancient Church, the whole of divine worship was adminis tered by prescribed forms. The question is, whether every minister should have liberty of obtrudiug private prayers, which he has him- aelf composed, with which no one else is acquainted, and to wliich th_ Church is unaccustomed, instead of forms matured with grave delib eration by the servants of Chr'-tt, revised by the higher officers of tho Church, and approved by the Synod. This liberty we do not grant." Preface to the Agenda or Book of Common Prayer in the Reform*!. Churches of Poland and Lithuania. Dated at Thorn, a. d. 1636. 6 122 HISTORY OF OUR LITUROY. tude to that kind Provide.ice whicn so piainly led cur Mother Cl-.irch "in the way wherein she should go," — overruled every thing for good — and prepared her to be in all age* '' the Witness and Keeper" of the Truth. This evening, then, we will endeavor to go back to the early ages of the Church, and show you the origin of oiii Liturgy — the different changes through which it passed, asii was gradually compiled in the course of centuries, until it .finally assumed the form in which it now is in our Prayd Book. It will surely be interesting to us as Churchmen, tc know from whence came this precious legacy, which, whdeii ministers to the spirituality of those who now unite in its ser vices, has performed also the same holy office for many gen erations of the saints who have gone before us. There ii another object, also, to be answered by this investigation We are often told that the Church in England, from which our own is derived, was founded by the Romish Church, ami has merely seceded from her, while our Prayer Book is nothing but an alteration of the Romish Breviary. I trust that the historical inquiries into which we shall be led in this Lecture, will demonstrate to your satisfaction, that neither of these charges is correct — that the British Church existed, pure and independent, centuries before the Bishop of Rome had any authority in that land, and that her Ritual is lerived from the Primitive Liturgies which were in existence during those early ages, in which corruption had not yet begun lo invade the Church of Rome. Let us look, then, at the origin of the Church in that island. Is she indebted to Rome for her existence? So far from this being the case, we know that the Christian faith was professed in Britain even in the Apostles' days, and when the Church of Rome herself was but in the feebleness ¦ of her infancy. While the Panthoon was yet filled with its multitude of gods, and day by Cay there ascended the smoke of sacrifice to the Capitoline Jupiter — when Christianity in Rome was only recognized as a "pernicious superstition/'* the adherents of which were doomed lo the fire and the stake, even then, the name of Christ was honored on the banks of the Thames, and prayers went up to Him in th.e Strang * Tacitus, Annal. xv. t4. HISTORY OF OUR LITURGY. 123 IjOi-gue oi ttose on whom Cicero .poured his contempt when he wrote, to Atticus,* and who formed the subject of his jest with: Trebatius, as he warned him against a horde of Celtic barbarians.f This fact is fully proved by the testimony of ancient writers. GildaSj a native of Britain, and Abbot of Bangor, speaking ofthe birth ofour Lord in the days of Ti berius, and the fatal victory of the Romans over Boadicea, which took place about the middle of the reign of Nero, says — "Jn the mean time" — that is, in the interval between the*" two events — " Christ, the true Sun, afforded his rays — that is, the knowledge of his precepts — to this island, shivering with icy cold."J Eusebius, when showing that the Apostles " preached their doctrine in the remotest cities and coun tries." adds particularly, "that some passed over the ocean, iVi t*j _a/_>jLinia_ B^.Tra.t.x.a_, vuVo.;, those which are called the British islands. "$ Tertullian, a. r>. 190, says — " There are places in Britian inaccessible to Roman arms, Whicli were subdued to Christ."|| Origen, a. d. 230, writes, "When did Britain, before the coming of Christ, unite in the worship of one God?""[[ and again, "The power of God our Saviour is ever with them in Britain, who are divided from our world."** And, to give one more authority, St. Chrysostom says — " The British Islands, situated beyond our sea, and lying in the very ocean, have felt the power of the word, for even there churches are built and altars erected."ft , , The unvarying tradition of the early Church points out the Apostle Paul as* the one by whom the doetrines of the Cross were preached in that land. Clemens Romanus and Jerome speak of his travelling " to the utmost bounds of the West;" — of his " preaching as far as the extremity of the earth "^— and " preaching the Gospel in the western parts " — expressions which. Stillingfleet has fully shown from other ..vriters. were always use! in.that age with reference to the * Ep. ad Att. iv. 16. \ Ep. Fam. vii. 7. 11. X Stillingfleet's Orig. Brit. p. 4. According to Usher, (Brit. Eccies. Aidiq. p. 278,) Gildas wrote his history about a. d, 564. To this Du I in agrees, (Eccies. Hist. Cent, vi.) _nd also Collier, (Ecelet. Hist, lib i p. 61.) '¦' ; §Detn. Evang. lib. iii. cap. 7, ». 112. Paris, 1628. ' Adv. Jud. c. 7. *([ In Ezek. Roin. iv. ** Luke c, i. ; Rom. vi ft Tom, vi. p 635. !*._ HISTORY OF OUR LITURGY. British is es.* He has also classified the evi ence on i m subject by shewing — 1st From St. Paul's ciroumstaiv _s. ihat he had leisure and opportunity enough to have goni. to Britain. 2d. From the circumstances of Britain, there was encouragement and invitation enough for him to have gone. 3d. From th<; circumstances ofthe rest ofthe Apostles, that he was the most likely to have gone of any. The most direct proof on this point, however, is derived from an assertion by Theodoret, which shows the belief in his day. He says — " Our fishermen and publicans, and he who was a tent-maker, carried the Evangelical precepts to all nations; not only to those who l.ved under the Homan jurisdiction, but also to the Scythians and the Hunns; besides to the Indians, Bri- tains. and Germans."!' We have, therefore, no hesitation in agreeing with the learned Camden, when he says — " From these authorities it follows, not only that the Gospel was preached in Uritain in the times ofthe Apostles, but that St. Paul himself was the preacher of it. "X Such then is the historical evidence of the early estab lishment of the Church in that island, and in every succeed ing age we can clearly trace its progress. The old historian Bede tells us of Kings who gloried in the Cross, and sought to aid its triumphs, while it is to this cause we must ascribe the gradual dying out of the super-stitiou of the Druids, which after the second century of Christianity is no longer to be Inet with iu the history of the country. Neither did her remote situation shield this Church from the rage of perse. cution, but iu the reign of Diocletian she was called to give up also her witnesses for the truth. There, too, "the bloo.1 of the martyrs was the seed ofthe Church." Foremost in that glorious baud who " counted not their lives dear unto them selves," the annals of the day tell us of St. Alban, whose name still remains in the scene of '.is simple faith, when more than fifteen centuries have passed away. Her Bishops were present and assisting at the council of Aries, convened in 314 by the Emperor Constantine from all the Western Churches, to take cognizance of the Donatist controvers"."} * Orig BrU. p. 39. |- Theod. S.:rm. is. de legibus, tom. iv. p. 610 ^iris 16... { Britanm i, Intro, p. 86. § Their sub ;criptio.is stand in this way— HtSTORY OF OCR LttUROt. 1 S ft Again, in the year 325, we find the British Bishops at the council of Nice ; also in 347 at Sardica ; and in 359 at the Synod of Aminium, where Bishops from all parts ofthe West ha: I assembled.* This, then, is the first historical fact to which I would call your attention. You pi rceive that the British Church evas not derived originally from that of Rome. ' She sub- Eborius Episcopus, de civitate Eboracensi Provincia Britannia. Restitutus Episcopus, de civitate Londinensi. Adelsius Episcopus, de civitate colouia Londinensium. The Diocese of this last Bishop has been the subject of much dispute, since it is evidently a mistake as it here stands. Archbishop Usher supposes it to be Cair-Colun, (Prim. 60, 195,) which means the city of Chester. Selden (in Eutch. 118) and Sir H. Spehnan (Com: i. p. 39) both refer it to the Old Colony of Camalodunum. The supposition of Stillingfleet (Orig. Brit. 77) is, that he was from the third province of Britannia Secunda, where .was a colony of the Eleventh Legion. Therefore, this Bishop Adelsius came ex Civit. Col. Leg. ll, which an ignorant transcriber might easily turn to ex Vifit. Col. Londin. Stillingfleet also says, "There being but' three bishops present at the council of Aries, is so far from being an argu ment that there were no more in Britain, that it is rather an argument to the contrary, since it was the custom to send but one or two out of a province where they were most numerous." (p. 78.) This is con firmed by the Emperor's summons to C'hrestus, Bishop of Syracuse, whit'li is the oiily imperial summons to this council extant, (Euseb. Keel. Hist. lib. x. cap. 5,) and whicli Baronius believes was in the same form with the rest. In this summons, Chrestus i9 required to come out of that province and bring two priests with him. And St. Hilary, in speaking of the councils in his day, says — " That one or two Bishops were sent for out of a Province." (Collier's Eccies. Hist.) v. i. p. 26.) It is worth while to observe the conduct of this council to the Bi hop of Rome, who was not present, that we may f;e how little in that day they dreamed of his supremacy. They send heir decrees to him only "to make them more public' They uill him "Dear Brother," and express their regret that he had not been there, as they would have been glad of his vote and company. Or, as it is in the Latin — " Et utinam, Frater Dilectissime, ad hoc tantum Spectaculum interesses, et te pariter nobiscum judicante, coetus noster majore latitia exnltasset" (Collier, v. i. p. 28, and Stillingfleet' s Orig. Brit. p. 86.) There were also present with the British Bishops Sacerdos, g Presbyter, and Arminius, a Deacon of the Church * CoUier's Eccl. Hist. ,. i. p, _8, 37. i26 histoi.y of ""tiR iiTtiReY. -isted entirely independent of the Church in Italy until the close ofthe sixth century, bound to her only by friendship and amity, as she was to all other Churches throughout the Id. She owed no subjection to any foreign power, noi s there a record of any Romish Ecclesiastic in that island intil the year 596.* What, then, during these six centuries, was the Liturgy used in our Mother Church? We mentioned to you in the last Lecture, that there were still existing four great Litur gies, which had come down to us from Primitive times, and were the original sources from which all others were derived. These were called after the names of St. James, St. John, St. Peter, and St. Mark, and from their origin in the first age of our faith, were of course similar in their general features. The Liturgy of St. John was used not only in the East by the Ephesian Church, but also in Western Europe, and from the Gallican Church the Christians in Britain received it. Such, at all events, was the testimony of tradition among those by whom it had been adopted. The ancient author, whose tract has been published by Spelman, and who is allowed by all critics to have written not later than the beginning of the eighth century, thus positively affirms it — " John the Evangelist first chanted the Gallican course; then afterwards, the blessed Polycarp, disciple of St. John; then afterwards, thirdly, Irenajus, who was Bishop of Lyons in Gaul, chanted the same course in Gaul."f The Church of Rome during this period was using the * It was a Church ancient and glorious many hundred years before Popery began, being planted by the hands of the Apostles, as some affirm upon no improbable conjecture ; but we are assured from his-- tory, very near those days And this British Church was renowned througliout the -nurld, flourishing under Bishops and a glorious priesthood till about the seventh century ; when the Bishop _ " Rome claiming a supremacy over other Bishops, the Church of Rome claimed the same over other Chur dies, and from the precedence of un elder sister leaped into the authority of a parent. Under hei corruptions, this Church, like her other sisters, sate down a contented captive many hundred years, till the great release of the Reformation." Bisse on " The beauty of holiness in the Common Frayer." p. 11, 12. f Spelman, Concilia, torn. i. p. 176. rtRrORl OF OUR LITURGY. 127 Utuigy of St. Peter, which varied in some particulars from that of St. John, which the Western Chuich had adopted. We learn "his from the interrdgation which St. Augustine addressed to Pope Gregory, at the close of the sixth century. 4e asked — " Why the customs of Churches are different, vhen their faith is the same, and one custom of Litufgy nevails in the Church of Rome, another in those of Gaul'?"* (_nd again, in his effort to bring the British Church under Ihe dominion of Rome, he addressed her Bishops in the following terms — " In many respects you act in a manner contrary to our customs, and indeed to those of the universal Church ; and yet, if you will obey me in these three things, to celebrate Easter at the proper-time ; to perform the office of Baptism, in which we are born again to God, according to the custom of the Holy Roman and Apostolical Church; and with us to preach the Word of God to the English na tion ; we will tolerate all your other customs, though contrary to our own."-f It is evident, therefore, that in her early day the British Church did not receive her Ritual from Rome. When, then, first commenced the intercourse between these two Churches? It was in the year 596 that Gregory, Bishop of Rome, carried into execution a plan he had long cherished of sending missionaries to aid in the conversion ofthe Saxons. For this purpose St. Augustine was selected with forty monks from his own monastery at Rome. Taking with him interpreters from France, he landed at the islam] of Thanet with his company, in the month of August of that year. He found the Church in Britain regularly estab lished, although weakened by the oppositiOrl of- the Pagan Saxons, who had in some parts of the country driven out her Bishops and caused their to take refuge in Wales ; "" for Ihe Saxons" as the old EngUsh Chronicles tell us, " left not the face of Christianity wherever they did prevail.""*: The worship of the Church was, as we have shown, with theii own ancient Liturgy, while their Episcopal organization ig proved by the correspondence which took place between * Bede, Hist. Eccies. lib. i. c. 21. f Ibid. lib. ii. c. 2. Collier in bis Eccies. Hist. lib. i. p. 49- 61, hss given the points of difference between the Roman Ritual, and that Of tlie Gallican and Anglican churches. X Sti'lingfleet's Orig Brif p. 36-6. 123 HISTORY OF OUR LITURGY. Augustine and Gregory. When Augustine, in asking m structions, inquires—" How he ought to manage with re spect to the Bishops of Britain ?" the Pope replied, "As tr the Bishops of Britain, he put them all under his jurisdic tion:"* From whence he derived his right thus to give Augustine authority over an independent Church, it wtuld be difficult to show. In accordance with these directions, when firmly estab lished in the island, A^ugustine invited the British Bishops to a conference. The meeting took place on the banks of the Severn, at a place long afterwards called Augustine', Oak. There were Seven English Bishops present, — prob ably from St. David's, Llandaff, Llanbadarn, Bangor, St Asaph, Somerset, and Cornwall— besides the most learned men from Bangor-Iscoed, with Dinoth, their abbot. t No efforts of Augustine however could induce them to submit to the jurisdiction of Rome. His proposals were at once .ejected, and the reply of Dinoth, Which is still preserved, gives most fully the views of his Church. Speaking iu the name of his brethren, he said—" That the British Churches owe the deference of brotherly kindness and charity to the Church of God, and to the Pope of Rome, and to all Chris tians. But other obedience than this, they did not know to be due to him whom they called Pope : and for their parts, they were under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Caerleon upon Usk, who under God, was their spiritual overseer and director. ""f Thus it was that the free spirit of our old Mother Church spake out. But power was on the side of Rome, and all the weight of her influence was put forth to bring the Church in thai distant island under subjection. The Saxons, too, weakened her ranks by their assaults, and on one occasion 1200 priests and monks were slaughtered together, when they had posted * Collier's Eccies. Hist. 1. ii. p. 68. f Bede, 1. ii. c. 2. " X Collier tells us, (Eccies. Hist. 1. ii. p. 76,) that this passage, first published by Spehitan', (fvncilia, v. i. p. 108, 109,) was copied; by liim " from an old manuscript, which had also been transcribed from an nlder." The Romanists have attacked its genuineness, but the reader will sec their aigiiments and objections answered, in Collier, tu ftbove. Stillingfleet' 's Orig. "*>'_ p. 371, and Bingham': Antig. -fiise a 9. .ilStORY OF OtlR LITufSGY. f2ll Iheit^selves on a 1 eminence near the field of battle, to pray for "the Success, of .their countrymen.* Offen therefore must the 'members of that stricken and suffering Church have been forced "to teca),l as prophetic the parting threat which Augustine hud addressed to them at the close of his confer- ence—-" I .foresee that if you will nr>t have peace with brethren, you will have war with foes ; and if you will not preach the way of life to J he, English, you will suffer deadly vengeance at .their hands," Yet even thus depressed — with the .savage cruelty of , the Pagans on the one side, and the opposition, of, their Christian. Brethren on the other— the old British Church struggled on, maintaining her rightful and -fj__... *-» -,,ti,r„i OO } CJ O ilignifietl positipn, and only yielding at last, when reduced by the strong arm of secular force. It took therefore five centuries of conflict, to compel her into submission to the Romish See. nor was it until the Norman conquest that the authqrity of the Pope can be considered as firmly settled.! * Bede, l.;ii.c.82. '.' f "There doth not appear much of the Pope's power in this realm before the Conquest. But the Pope having favored and sup ported King William I. in his invasion of this kingdom, took that op portunity of -enlarging his encroachments, and in this King's reign be gan, to send his legates hither ; and prevailed with Henry I. to give up the donation of Bishoprics ; and in the time of King Stephen gained the (prerogative of appeals; and in the time of Henry II. exempted all chirks from the secular power. j(1 -'.A^ndjiiot, long after this,, by a general excommunication of kings and people for several years, because they would not suffer an Arch bishop tp.Jie imposed upon them, King John was reduced to such straits, that he. was. obliged to surrender his kingdoms to the Pope, and to receive them again, to hold of him at a rent of a thousand marks: " And in the following reign of Henry III, partly from the profit of ohr best Church benefices, which were generally given to Italians and others residing at the Coult of Rome and partly by the taxes imposed by the Pope, there went yearly out of the kingdom, seventy lliijusahd pounds — an immense sum in those days." Burn's Ecclesias tical Lay),' v. iii.' p. 1 08. .¦ Such was the gradual progress of Papal encroachments in Eng- giahd. It will be observed, that the reign of William ths Conqueror commenced in 1060, and that of Henry VIII. in 1509 The period between eo'ira' ts onl- 443 years. e* 1 3. J_i_Tt-.it fr 6f dt._. L.T'.it(3f. Ther, for four centuries, ai.d a half, the saitip darknes. which had settled upon the rest of Western Christendom, seemed to have gathered over Britain also. The spirit of Popery everywhere prevailed, and the Church of England was bowed down at the feet of a foreign Bishop. Yet the breath andpulse of life had not yet ceased. Scattered through the land during all these years were those who saw her fall, ami mourned over it in secret. Occasionally, too, they spake out, and boldly bore witness against this corruption, although it was at the peril of their lives. The page of Ecclesiastical History in this way records the names of Grostete— whose best encomium is that exulting exclamation of Pope Innocent, on hearing of his death, " I rejoice, and let every true son of the Church rejoice with me, that my great enemy is re moved" — and Fitzralph, and Wiclif, who in succession entered their protest against the evils of Romish dominion. These were men who knew the right, and having solemnly counted the cost, shrunk not from an opert couflict with the crushing power of Rome. Alone, uncheered by the loud voice of popular sympathy, supported only by the purity of their in tentions and the goodness of their cause, they stepped forth from their cloistered retirement, and endured " the dust and beat" of this battle, which was waged for the best interests of man. For them, persecution had no perils by, which it could terrify ; but, receiving the torch of truth from each other's hands, they bore it steadily onward, and thus acted as the heralds of the coming reformation.* In this way it * " It would be easy to show, that during this whole period there were leading men in the English Church wno made bold stand not only against tlie usurpations, but also against the corruptions of the RoMish Church. Even Archbishop Dunstan, in many things subser vient to the Pope, did not hesitate to set at defiance the Tapal mandate, when, he deemed it unjust or improper, A. d. 961. And Alfric Puttock, Archbishop of York, from 1023 to 1050, openly impugned the doctrine of transubstantiation. In his ' Sermon to be spoken to the people at Easter, before they receive the holy housel,' (the communion,) he teaches doctrines that would now be considered oithodox by sound theologians. In the next century, Gilbert Foliath. consecrated Bishop of Hereford 11 48, translated to London 1163, died 1 187, set at defiance the Papal authority, and though twice excom »mnifjat» d by tlie Pope, paid no regard to the thunders or a** Vati'*-". slstORV or cuit LittJftGf. 151 Was t'.iat the faith had ever some to witneus for it in that land. But the Church, even with these seeds of truth withiii her breast — these germs of future purity and life — like the Pilgrims in '.heir Progress to the Celestial City, slumbered on the enchanted grmhd. For a time, she bowed to the witchery of that spell which Rome had cast over her, and suffered her senses to be overpowered by the incantations of that oppressor who had led her intd captivity. But at length the hour of her redemption came, and a voice broke iii upon her, crying — " Sleep no more." Then her dream was dispelled, aiid shaking from her garments the dust of ages shecaiiie forth iii her ancient strength. She had discerned;! vision of the Truth, whioh, while it made her free, enabled her also to proclaim spiritual freedom to the world.' You perceive, then, how groundless is the charge that the Church of England, and of course our own Church, are only seceders from that of Rome. The whole statement of the case is briefly this — that the Italian Bishops invaded the British branch of the Catholic or Universal Church, which, after a long struggle, was for __ time reduced to submission ; yet ultimately her rights were recovered, and this foreign jurisdiction thrown off. Successive councils of the Chutch had declared the independence of each particular branch, and the Bishops of Rome therefore had no authority in that island. The sixth canon of the Council of Nice, a. d. 325, Cotemporary with Foliath, was Ormin the poet, whose works present us with the purest English, and the purest doctrines of that age. The next century was rendered famous by Robert Grostete, or* Greathcad, Bishop of Lincoln, from 1234 to 1258. In 1247, a demand was made by the Tope for 6000 marks, (about £50,000,) And' he had the courage to refuse to levy it until he had the sense of the nation upon it: He visited Rome, and protested against its corruptions, before the Pope and Ctrdinals. After his return, the Pope again tried his courage by collating in Italian youth to a vacant Canonry in the Cathedral of Lincoln. But Grostete was inflexible. He set at nought the Pope's comniarrds, for which he was excommunicated. But the thunderbolt fell harmless at his feet, and he died in peaceful possession of his See. Other examples of a similar nature occur, but these are amply suffi ' cient to show that many of the clergy asserted that in their writings to which they assented in their legislative capacities." Chapi%'§ Prim. Church, p. 38(1. ,__? riis-rosr o* otm LirvH&t. commanded that the "antient customs should prevai./' 0M the "privileges of Chufches be preserved." In like manner, the Council of Ephesus, a. t>. 430, forbade Bishops to assume jurisdiction over provinces which had not from the beginning been subject! to' their predecessors. It _njOin_d on all who might have talked, such provinces, an immediate restitution, a!nd decreed " that every provirlce shodld pres'erve pure and ifi'violate the rights which it had ffOrn the beginning ; that"'— as the Council added, with a degree of prophetic wisdom — " the Canons of the foithers may iitit be transgressed, nor the pride of worldly dominion enter,- uridef the' pretence of the sacred ministry."* At that time., the ChUrchin Britain was independent of the Roman patriarch ; What right, then, had he' afterwards to assume anil enforce jurisdiction ? IV_r. ffods- Worth has thus briefly summed up the whole question — "I repeat, what is so' essential in these days for every Church man to remember, that the Church of England' never separated from the Church of Rome. It was originally an independent Church, founded — not by emissaries, from Rome — but at a period riot far removed from Apostolic times, and perhaps even by an Apostle himself. ... . It was not. till the period ofthe Conquest, in the middle of , the eleventh century, that Rome assumed anything like an ascendancy over our Church, and then it was not without a long and arduous struggle that she established it. So that the real fact ofthe case is this, that out of eighteen centuries, during which the Church of England has existed, somewhat less than four centuries and a half were passed under the usurped domination of the See of Rome : so great is the absurdity, and palpable ignorance of historical facts, evinced by those who represent the Church of England, as a separated branch from the Romish communion."! * Palmer's Orig. Liturgi&B, v. ii. p. 263. f Discourses on Romanism and Dissent, p. 168. Dr. Ho6k, of Leeds, Chaplain to the Queen, m a sermon preached in the Chapel Royal, also thus finely illustrates this point — " About two years ago the very Chapel in which we are now assembled, was repaired, cer tain disfigurements removed, certain improvements made'; would it not be absurd on that account to contend that it is no longer the Chapel Royal ? Would it not be still more absurd if some one were to build a, new Chapel iu the neighborhood, imitating closely what this Chapel wa» tftttMrt 6V *M tmaUi. _#. . '&_>•& j fiir.otig the chsfflges which took place dcirihig Ms lung period of bbrMrfge, the E.fic_ent and primitive Liftfrgy tii = the •fin^Mh Church suffered also; for the overshadowing .po'wef tit Rome was too gre_ft fo illow the continuance ih lisie o'fthiS* pfecitfus legacy frqrn1 fo'frfier ages. It r_ecess'a!ril^ becariVe (fio_e( and more assimilated to that of ttaly. The tidS 6'f Roliiish priests Was poured ir_ frimi the continent— iheh Bishops grddddUf Usurped the glees of the English pf'_"l_t_s— foreign riteS afeid ceferiionies were taught to' the pteople— "pert idoptrines, si_ch a_ the worship of saints, the adoration oT the „Oross, transubstantiation, indulgences, and' purgatOry, wefe Jatrrodyeed— -and thus these corruptions, which their invaders hade brought with them, were gradually ingrafted Upon the Ritoalaf the British ChUrch. At length that tfflifblrility was produced which it is eve* the object of Rome fO attain, and so the. Liturgy renrained liiitit the feig'n of Henry VIII. t ,- -At this tiirte the _/p_ri. of reformaltio'ri commenced in England, and the Church, hivirig first thrown ojf her alle giance to theRomish See, proceeded to purify her service, i-and restore it lo its ancient form.* This, however, was not five years ago, and carefully piling up all the dust and rubbish which was at that time swept from hence, and then pronounce that, not this, to be the Undent Chapel of the Sovereigns of England ? The absurdity is at ence apparent ; but this is precisely what has been done by the Roman Catholic or Papist. The present Church Of England is the old Catholic Church of England, reformed in the reigns of Henry, Edward, and Elizabeth, of certain superstitious errors ; it is the ssune Church which came down from our British and Saxon ancestors, and, as such, it possesses its original endowments, which were never, as ignorant persons foolishly suppose, taken from one Church and given to another. The Church remained the same after it was reformed aa it was before, just as a man retkains the same man after he has washed his face, as he was before; just as Naaman, the leper, remained the same Naaman after he was cured of his leprosy, as he was before." * It-may be well here to notice a usual objection, that Henry VIII. commenced the Reformation and separated from Rome, to serve his own .licentious passions. But has this any thing to do with tlie ques- , *-ion,. . Does not God often make "tlie wrath of man to praise Him ?" Iu this instance, we behold Him bringing good out of evil, raising up holy men. to complete in purity what was begun in passion, and thus even the vices of an unholy king were made to mic-ter to the success 34 history of our tit-vast. done hastily. Time was taken, and each step, made, tjit, subject of careful deliberation, and profound learning calje.l in to aid, and a thorough investigation pf the past resorted to, during every stage of the compilation. The questions were often asked — "What is to be retained, because -it is Scriptural, Primitive, and Catholic?" and— "What is to be stricken out, because it is modern and Romish!" Theii own ancient existing missals, the '-' Uses," and other ritual Books of York, Sarum, Hereford, Bangor, and Lincoln,* were sought out, and also the Primitive Oriental forms of worship examined, and from these materials, the service was restored to its original purity, and that Ritual composed which is now our Book of Common Prayer. More than 120 years, however, passed — from the year 1537, in the reign of Henry VIII., to the year 1662, in the reign of Charles II. —while this church was going through its successive steps, and gradually maturing to the form in which we now have it. Twice indeed it was interrupted — once by the reign of Queen Mary, who of course endeavored to restore the Roman Ritual, and agrin by the rule of the Puritans, when all ancient forms were rejected as the remains of Popery— - but during the remainder of this period, it was a subject of frequent study with the Prelates of the English Church, of His Church The truth of a cause, and the personal characters of its promoters, are very different considerations. Some pf the Jewish kings, whom God employed as reformers, to restore His worship— Jehu, for example (2 Kings x. 29) — were by no means saints. Con stantine estabhshed Christianity in '.he Roman Empire, and Napoleon restored it in France. Yet who ce, . lis at either of these great changes, on account of the want of personal sanctity in their authors . * These were, in the main, transcripts of the Sacramentary of St. Gregory of the sixth century, and of course free from those corruptions of the Romish Church -which were most objectionable, as they were prior to the adoption of these errors. As each Bishop had the powe! of altering the particular Liturgy of his own Church, in process of time different customs arose, and several became so established as to receive the names of their respective Churches. Thus gradually the "Uses," or "Customs" of York, Sarum, Hereford, &_„. caine to bo distinguished from each other. (Palmer's Orig. Lit. v. 1, p. ISo.j An examination of these Uses will therefore oftes show the faith A the Eiiglinli Church in the seventh century. tfistofci. of dull LiTCRG-i'. ijjg fissisfed by ti.e learned of the lar.d, to return to a purer mode of worship. The first step was in the reign of Henry VIII., when si sommittee, appointed for that purpose, translated certain portions of the Service into English, which were published under the title of "The Institution of a Christian Man." It was known also bythe name of "The Bishop's Book." Six years afterwards, this was revised arid republished under the title of "A necessary Doctrine and Erudition for any Christian Man." Again, in 1545, the King's Primer was published.* * These words have all been reprinted in England during the last few yearsi To show the gradual progress of feeling during the reign of Henry VIII. we will give the contents of these three Books. J. The Institution of a Christian Man. "This book, called The Institution of a Christian Man, containt.li four special parts, whereof . The first part containeth the Exposition of the Creed, calle 1 the Apostles' Creed. The second part containeth the Exposition or Declaration of the Seven Sacraments, viz., Matrimony, Baptism, Confirmation, Penance, Holy Eucharist, Orders, Extreme Unction. Tlie third part containeth the Exposition of the Ten Commandments The fourth part containeth tlie Exposition of the Pater Noster and the Ave, with the Articles of Justification and Purgatory." IL A Necessary Doctrine and Erudition for any Christian Man. The Declaration of Faith. The Articles of our Belief, called the Creed. The Seven Sacraments. The Ten Commandments of Almighty God. Our Lord's Prayer, called the Pater Noster. The Salutation of the Angel, called the Ave Karia. An Article of Free Will. : An Article of Justification. An Article of Good Works. Of prayer for souls departed. HI. The Primer, set forth by the King's Majesty, and His Clergy, !¦& "be taught, learned, and read ; and none other to be used throughout •11 his dominions, 1545. The Calendar. The Seven Psalms. The King's Highness Injunction The Litany The Prayer ef our Lord. Th« Dirge ijjfj riisfbRY of ouk U'iiiite-*'. tn-the reign if Edward VI,, When' the ancient. custom of adnbfinisterihg the Communion iri both kinds was restore/1, it \\_is of course fodrid necessiry to' have a Service giving the true vieW c/f this Sacrament. The King therefori. appointed " ceriain iftshaps arid other' learned -Divifies, • fc d.aw an office in English to be. Used for that purpose ;: which being finished, wi_s called, The ConXm-umion.'** ¦'¦ 'In' May 1_>4§, the greatest step in: this series of Changes was taken The sarnie Bishops and Divines were again selected by the King " tO draw up a general public Offi'eein English; in the rotirri o'f the Latin mass-book," This having been done, arid the whole Liturgy With its public offices having been compiled, it Wats confirmed by Parliament, in the latter end of the' same year, and set fo'rth under the title of "The BOok of Co'mlmori Praiyer arid Administration of: the Sacra ments, and other Rites and Ceremonies of the Church of England." Upon this StrypB remarks- — "The rule' tl-iey went by in this work was, the having an eye -and -respect uuto the- most sincere and pure Christian religion taught by the Holy Scriptures, and also to the usage of the Primitive Church As for the work itself, as it is said to be done by one uniform agreement, so also ' by the aid- of the Holy Ghost,' such was the high and venerable esteem then had of it."! -^ few slight alterations having been made in 1552, together with some useful additions, such as the Introductory Sentences, Exhortations, Confession and Ab solution, and the forms for ordination of Bishops^ Priests, and Deacons, it was again confirmed by Parliament, and this is the book known by the name of " The Second Book of Edward VI." Under Elizabeth and James I. Committees were it dif ferent times appointed to see what further revision of the Prayer Book was expedient. The changes however Wire trifling, generally referring merely to the form of expre* The Salutation at", the Angel. The Commendations. The Creed, or Articles of Faith. The Psalms of the Passions. The Ten Commar.iments. The passion of our Lord.'''"' Tlie Matins. Certain godly prayers for snn The Even Song. dry purposes. The Compline. * Strypc's Mem. Eccies. v. ii. part, i. p. 96. •*¦ Ibid p. 136 IttSTORV 01' OCR IrtTLRt.V. )-.** 1*1011, except Ihe insertion of some prayers for .Thanksgiving, and <_ few Questions and Answers in the Catechism. At last, in the reign of Charles 11^ the final alterations were made. Some of the Collects were remodelled, the Epistles and Gospels were taken from King James's trausla tion of the Bible, the office for the Baptism of adults, to- gether with a few prayers for particular occasions, were added, and thus the Prayer Book was finally adopted as it is now used bythe Church in England. Thus it is that we have given the History of our Litur gy, from its rise in Primitive times down to its present form in our Mother Church abroad. You perceive therefore that it is no modern production, nor is it a set of forms which grew up amid the corruptions of the Middle ages.* It is a Ritual which, in all its" principal features, can be tracet. back to the Apostolic age. And so close is this resem blance, that in very many parts it extends even to the expres sions and the words. To effect this was the avowed object of the English Re formers. Unlike those on the Continent, they made no at tempt to found a new Church, nor did they desire to intro duce a new order of worship. They knew that " the old was better," and ..therefore their work was simply one of Restoration. Thus, in the answer of the Co'uncil to the Princess Mary, afterwards Queen, when she wished Mass * Ingram, in hia True Character of the Church of England, thus allows that our Prayer Book is older than the Roman Missal now used — " Our Common Prayer was compiled in 1648, receiyed a re- Vision in 1552, and was established in its present form in 1569. Whereas the Roman Missal was dravn up by certain fathers chosen for that purpose towards the close of the Council of Trent in 1562, and was not sanctioned and promulgated until 1570 by a bull of Pope Pius V. bearing date the 1 2th of January in that year. It is therefore impossible that the later Roman could have been the sourc.j wlience tlie earlier English Ritual was derived The Reformed Church of England might, with iruch greater appearance of reason, charge the Italian Church with having copied from her Liturgy all tltat is Scriptural and Primitive in the Roman Mass Book. But tlie 5act i*,both Churches had one common fountain from ivhich to draw , _<_Diely, Scripture and Primitive usage. The Church of Rome pliose U> corrupt the pure waters of this fountain." — p. 95. 1*1*. Histouy of ot'R Litiikty. performed iu- her "house, they say — :i That the Christian fa'.th professed is the same in substance as befoie ..... that the English Reformation had recovered the worship tn the directions of Scripture, and the usage of ths Primitive. Church:"* And Bishop Collier adds — " That part of the letter which relates to religion, was penned in all likelihood by Cranmer and Ridley, who were then of the Privy Couii- cil." When again, in the reign of Queen Mary, Arch bishop Cranmer drew up " A Manifesto in Defence of the Reformation," he has the same appeal to antiquity. He says, " And with the Queen's leave he offers to justify the English Communion Service, both from the authority of the Scriptures, and the practice of the Primitive Church. And on the other side, that the Mass is not only without foundation in both these respects, but likewise discovers a plain contradiction to antiquity He will maintain the Reformation made in the late reign, with respect to Doctrine, Discipline, and Worship, to be more orthodox and defensible, more agreeable to the true standard, and Primitive Plan, than the belief and practice of the Church of Rome. "I In the same way, Queen Elizabeth, in reply to the Roman Catholic Princes on the Continent, who de sired favor to be shown to the Romish Bishops, gives as a reason why they should conform to the established Church, that "there was no new faith propagated hi England; no new religion set up, but that which was commanded by out Saviour, practised by the Primitive Church, and approved by the Fathers of the best antiquity ."% When therefore the Prayer Book was published in its present form, it was re commended to the Clergy and Laity in these words — -" Here you have an order of Prayer, and foi the reading of Scrip ture, much agreeable to the mind and purposes of the old fathers."^ In the " Act of Uniformity," the Parliament of England declared that thus they received it, and it was au thorized as " A very godly Book, agreeable to the word of God anc. the Pi-.tiitive Church, very comfortable to all good people, desiring to live in Christian conversation." || * Collier's Eccl. L.st. v. ii. p. 311. f Ibid. p. 347. X Ibid. p. 346. § Pr. face to the Prayer Boik. {, Collier's Eccl. Hist. v. ii p. 82ft HiStOHY or Ot'R tttttRGV. 13& \V"e. hr.ve thus brought before you the History of our l.iturgy, through all ages, from Primitive times until it assumed its present form, that you may see huw much it retains the spirit and even the words derived from the days of ancient purity. To impress this however still more — to show how fully we have the. sanction of antiquity for out manner of worship — we will briefly take up the principal parts ofour Ritual, and state their derivation. With respect to the Communion Service, we showed in the last Lecture, when referring to the four Original Liturgies, how entirely our form for the administration of this solemn Sacrament is taken from them. It Was the ob ject of the compilers of our Prayer Book — says Wheatley — . "out of them all to extract an office for themselves ; and which indeed they performed with so exact a judgment and happy success, that it is hard to determine, whether they more endeavored the advancement of doctrine, or the imita tion of1 pure antiquity."* For example, all these ancient Liturgies have a prayer answering in substance to ours, " For the whole state of Christ's Church Militant." All contain that portion beginning, " Lift up your hearts," with the responses which follow, as well as that noble an them, " Therefore with angels and archangels." In each one of them also we find the commemoration of our Lord's words- — the Breaking of Bread — the Oblation — the Prayer of consecration — the administration of the Elements — and the Lord's Prayer. Other parts ofthis service, although not taken from these four Primitive Liturgies, are still of great antiquity. Thus, the Offertory has been receiver1 in the English Church since the end of the sixth century It is foumi indeed in Rit uals of that period although it may have been used long before.t The Exhortation also has its parallel in the an cient Liturgies. In that of Antioch particularly, which was used for a preat length of time by the Syrian Monophosites. there is s> similar address from the deacon to the people, which it its position in the service corresponds with oui E^ru-'.Mr-n. This if not of greater antiquity than the sep a1'''"'',," of the orthodox anr: Monophosites in a. d. 451, can • On Otncmon Prayer, p. 274. f Palmer's Orig. Lit v. ii p 73 140 MtsToRV of o" .1 ttft'ur-i not be r.iuch. .latei than that event.* A form of Confession was common in the ancient Churches, and in the Liturgy of Jerusalem it occupies exactly this place in the service. There is also extant a Sacramentary of the time of Charle magne, which contains one in substance similar to our own. \ The same antiquity may be claimed for the Absolution, which follows. The Thanksgiving after Communion may be traced in several early Liturgies, particularly that of Cas- sarea, which is more than 1500 years old, that of Antioch, and the Alexandrian Liturgy of Basil. % The date of the Gloria in Excelsis has never been accurately fixed. By some it has been ascribed to Telesphorus, Bishop of Rome, a. d. 150; by others to Hilary, Bishop of Poictiers in the fourth century. We know, however, that it is more than 1500 years old in the Eastern Church, and the Church of England has used it either at the beginning or end of the Liturgy for above 1200 years. *¦ The Benediction is found in some form in all ancient services, and the one with which our service concludes is a judicious enlargement of that which was used iu the English Church before the year 600. || In the same way, did our limits permit, we could go through the Baptismal Service, and point out the origin of its different parts. Some of these — like the vows of re nunciation and the profession of faith — are of primitive antiquity, while the remainder can generally be found in the ancient Manuals of Salisbury and York, or in manuscripts which were used more than nine hundred years ago. If Let us turn to the Psalter. The manner of reading or singing the Psalms responsively, as we now do, prevailed in very ancient times. We showed in the last Lecture that thus the Song of Moses was used, after the passage of the Red Sea, when the people sang, " and Miriam and all the women answered them." In this way, too, we know that many of the Psalms of David were chanted forth in the ser vice of the Temple. Such, for instance, was Psalm cxxxvi., where the first part of each verse was sung by the Levites, while the chorus, "For his mercy endureth forever," was tlie response of the people. * Palmers Oiig. Lit. v. ii. p. 100. "• Ibid. p. 106. X Ibid. p. 156. § Ibid. p. 159. || Ibid p. 161. *¦*]" Ibid. p. 173. HlflOBY OF OUR I.ITl'KGr. 141 From them the early followers of our Lord inherited these hymns cf praise, and ever since the times of the Apos tles HI, HISTORY OF OUR LITURGY 1 43 the Epistles ar.d Gospels.* The early fathers, i; ciieir ser mons which have come down to us, frequently alludi1 j the _essons for the day. Thus St. Basil, in one of his Ihmiilies on Baptism, takes notice of three of the lessons that wero read that day, besides the Psalms, one of which was from Isaiah, another from j_cts, and a third from Matthew. t St. .Augustine, in like manner, refers to four lessons which had been read on a particular occasion, one out of Moses, anothe; out of Isaiah, a third out of the Gospel, and tlie last out of the Epistles. X Ther<» were also proper Lessons selected for the different seasons ofthe Ecclesiastical year; as during the Festival of Easter, for four days successively the History of'Chrisl's Resurrection was read out of the four Gospels, and on the day of His Passion, they read the narrative of His sufferings as related by St. Matthew. § You perceive, then, the great antiquity of this portion of the service, and how faithfully, in this respect, we follow the example of the early Church. The : Litany' next claims our attention. We can trace this kind of prayer back to the third century, in the Eastern Churches. It was introduced in.o the Western Church (luring the fifth century. The petitions in our Litany are of very great antiquity in the English Church. " Mabilloir, has printed a Litany of the Church of England, written probably in the eight century, which contains a large por tion of that which we repeat at the present day, and which preserves exactly the same form of petition and response which is still retained. The still more ancient Litanies of tho Abbey of Fulda, of the Ambrosian Missal, and of Gela- sius. Patriarch of ROme, together with the Diaconica or Irenica of the Liturgies and Offices of the Churches of Con stantinople, Caesarea, Antioch, Jerusalem, &c, which all preserve the form of the Litany; all these ancient formula ries contain very much the same petitions as the English Look now at the Collects for each day. The origin of this Word is doubtful, so great is the antiquity of its use. * Tei-tull. de Prasscript, c. 36. f Bingham, lib. xiv chap. 3, sect. 2. X Ibid. § Bingham, sect. 3 || Palmer's Orig. Lit. v. i. p. 287 144 HISTORY OF OCR LITURIJY. By tJvime Ritualists, these prayers are said to derive theii name from the priest, thus, as it were, collecting the devo tions of the people, and offering them at once.* By others, it is asserted they took their rise from the collectings of tlje people, as was usual in the early times of Christiaijity, pn fast lays, and especially during a season of public calamity, for devotion in one of the Churches. When the, clergy .and the people had assembled at the place appointed, the Bishop," or the Priest who was to officiate, recited over the collected multitude a short prayer, which, from the circumstance, was denominated the Collect or gathering prayer.f We have Cassian's testimony that in his time — that is,, in the fourth century — Collects were recited amongst the Psalrhs and lessons of morning and evening prayer, by the Egyp tians ; and Athanasius, in several places, alludes to the existence of the same practice in his time. J It has been thought by some writers on this subject, that the Collects were framed by St. Jerome. § They were certainly arranged by Gelasius, Patriarch of Rome, ic __. d. 494, and afterwards by Gregory *.he Great, a. d. 590, in whose Sacramentary many of them are now found. As he, however, only col lected them, they are much older than his day. Yet it will be perceived, that even this revision of them dates back more than 1200 years. || * Bingham's Orig. Eccies. lib. xix. ch. 1, sect. 4. f Rock's Hierurgia, voL i. p. 91. J Palmer's Orig. Lit. r. i. p. 810, § Wheatley, p. 212. | As it may be interesting to Churchmen to see the date of each Collect, and the changes through which it has passed, we have copied ths following tables from Shepherd's Elucidation, of the Prayer ofthe Church of England p. 301-6. PART I. Consisting of such Collects as were retained from ancient Liturgies ai the Reft rmation. Collects for Whenen tnkr-n. . Sunday in Advent. In some old offices for the first Sunday in Advent. St. John's day. St. Greg. Sacr. and Gothic Litur; The Epiphany. St. Greg. Sacr. 1, 2, and 3 Sun. after Epiph. The same, and St. Ambros. Liiurg. *> Epi.nanv St. Greg. Sacr. HISTORY OK OUR LITURGY. 14& " Let us now examine the selection of the Epijtle and iJosPEL for each day, which follow these collects. " It i» , -, Collects far ¦ Septuagesima. _Sexagesima.2, ' S,"4, S: Sunday in Lent. 6'Sunday in Lent ll'Xid Friday, tbe three Collects. Easter Day. 8 Sunday after Easter. 5 Sunday after Easter. Ascension Day Whitsunday.1 Sunday after Trinity. Wlience l_keu. The same. The same. The same. The same; but in St. Ambroo. Liturg. for Good Friday: ; They are in all offices with little variation ; but they are left out . of the Breviaries of Pius V„and Clem. YIII. St. Greg. Sacr. and a Collect almost , the same in the Gallic Liturgy. St. Greg,.Sacr. St. Ambros. Liturg St. Greg. Sacr. The same. The same. The same. This, in some old Of flees, is called the SeCond after Pentecost; in others, the first after the octaves of Pentecost Are all in St. Greg. Sa,c_.- The same. The same. The 8,4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,- 12, 13, . 14, 16,16, 17, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, and 25, after Trinity. The Purification. St. Michael's Day. The reader will observe, that the greater part of this class of Col lects, is found in Gregory's Sacramentary, which was composed before the yeiir 600 All of these, therefore, are at least 1200 years old, ami many of them are much older. For Gregory did not originally form tlie offices. He only collected and improved them. To wave all other proof of this, we have his own" testimony, given in vindication of his conduct. ' I have followed,' says he, ' a. practice common in the Greek Church,. and haye altered some old Collects, and added, some new and useful ones.' But the generality of the Collects in his Sacramentary, he compiled frrm Liturgies wliich in his time were esteemed ancient. ' , , . , part ii. Qtytisting, of Cfillfcts taken, from ancient models, but considerably al- tered and improyecljbyoiir Reformers, and the Reviewers of the Liturgy. < .-C,ollp.g.tsffi,r-.r ^ime.pf Improvement. ., How it e.N.ud before. St Stephen's Beginning add. Grant us, O Lord, to learn lo lovf L>av 166_!. our enemies, tSsa 1 16 history of our liturgy. cerf-a... " — says Wheatley — " that they were very anciently appropriated to the days whereon we now read them ; since they were not only of general use throughout the whole Collects for Time of Improvement. i Sunday after End improved Epiph. 1652. 4 Sunday after Inproved 1662. Easter. Sinday after A little varied Ascension. 1549. 2 Sunday after Trin. S Sunday after Trin. 11 Sunday after Trin. 18 Sunday after Trin. 19 Sunday after Trin. St. Paul's Day The order in verted 1662 Beginning im proved 1662. Improved 1662. Improved 1662. Improved 1662. Improved 1559 and 1662. Tlie Annuncia- Improved 1549. tion. St Philip and Improved lfl 62. James. St Bartholo Improved 1602. mew. How it stood before. Grant to us the health of body and soul, that all those things which we suffer for sin, &c. Who makest the mindR of all faith ful people to be of one will, . 595. In his day a Psalm was sung between the Epistle and Gospel. Thus, in one sermon he says—" We have heard the Apostle, we have heard the Psalm, we have heard the Gospel; all the divine lessons agree." In another sermon he says — "We have heard the first lesson from the Apostle, then we have sung a Psalms ... after this, came the lesson from the Gospel, these three lessons we will discourse upon, aS far as time permits."! There is a curious thought in Alcuin— an Eng lish writer, who lived about a. d. 780 — that this arrangment of the Church is " not without a spiritual meaning. For, in causing the writings of God's envoys to be recited previous to the lectnre of the Gospel, the Church appears to imitate 1 he example of Jesus Christ, who deputed some among his disciples to go before him into those quarters which he was about fo honor with a visit.""): You perceive in these quotations the reference made to the Gospel a\so. Even in the manner in which it is read, out Church continues to follow the example of the early ages. It was a general custom for all the people to stand up, and when it was announced, vney uttered the ascription of praise —"Glory be to Thee, 0 Lord." Thus the author of an ancient Homily, sometimes ascribed to St. Chrysostom, as serts — "When the Deacon goes about to read the Gospel, we all presently rise up and say, ! Glory be to the Thee, 0 * On Common Prayer, p. 213. •"¦ Orig. Lit. v. ii. p. 42-7. X Alcuin s d -? Divin. Offic. (quote 1 in Rock's Hierurgin, v ii. p. 95.' HtSToWf Of Otlfl LtTOSGY. .4i* L.rd,' ' * We know, indeed, that this custom of rising is ccitainly is old is the days of St. Chrysostom ; for he sneaks of it in one of 1 is Homilies on St. Matthews" If the letters of a king are read in the theatre with great silence, rjiueb u jre ought we to compose ourselves, and stand, up;. "with attentive ears, when the letters, not of an earthly king, but of the Lord of angels are read to us."t In the same way the Author of the Constitutions says — "When the Gospel is read let the Presbyters and Deacons and all the people stand with profound'silence.":*: These then, are the principal parts of our service, and you perceive not only their great antiquity, but r- also how carefully the Church now adheres tq the rites and customs nf early days. From the manner in which our Liturgy was arranged by the .English reformers, you can see the object they had in view in the great work to which they were,call ed, and, the spirit in which it was accomplished. They wished simply to purify their Church and Ritual from. the co. ruptions of the Middle Ages, and to have them both con formed in every respect to the pattern of primitive times. In this respect they differed widely from those on the Conti nent. There, antiquity was disregarded — the Church, with hei ministry and Ritual, entirely abandoned — a;yl instead of a Reformation, the result was a. Revolution.^- Casaubon, therefore, paid but a merited tribute to our Church, when he wrote — " Si me cpnjectura non fallit, totius refonnationis pars integerrima est in Anglia ;~"ubi, cum studio veritatis, vigtt studium anliquitatis." * Bing. Orig. Eccies. lib. xiv. ch. 3, sect 10. f Horn. i. in Matt X Constit lib, ii. cap. 57. § "Thus when the infatuate Council, named- of Trent, Clogg'd up tlie Catholic course of the true Faith, Troubling the stream of pure antiquity, And tlie wide channel in its bosom took , : Crude novelties', sea/ ne known as that of old : Then many a schisn. overleaped the banks, Geiievese, Lutheran, Scotch diversities. Our Church, though straiten'd sore 'tween craggy walls, Kept her trUe course, unchanging and the same ; Known by that ancient clearness, pure and free, W.th which she sprung from 'neath the throne of God* Tlioughts on Past Tears, p. 274 150 HISTORY OF OUR LITUKGT. It remain 3 to say but a few words with regard to the dif ference between the Prayer Book as used in England and in this country. At the close of that revolution which po litically separated us from England, the Church also in this land was, of course, severed from that to which she had been " indebted, under God, for her first foundation, and a long continuance of nursing care and protection."* Wher/, there fore, the Archbishop of Canterbury, assisted by other Eng lish prelates, had consecrated three Bishops for this coun try, that we might have the Apostolical succession among ourselves,-)" it became necessary also to make some trifling alterations in the Prayer Book, to adapt it to the circum stances of the Church. These changes were made,: and these only ; for, as it is expressed in the Preface to that volume — " This Church is far from intending to depart from the Church in England in any essential point of doctrine, discipline, or worship, or further than local circumstances require." «J*\r early Bishops, looking to the Church from whicli their own derived her existence, wished that every one should trace the Mother's lineaments in the features of the child. Thus, then, the Prayer Book was finally arrang ed, and so we trust it will remain through all ages of our Church here, until her earthly warfare is accomplished, and this service gives place to the anthems of Heaven. And now, in conclusion, let me ask — have we not rea son to bless God for this " form of sound words," which has thus come down to us from a distant antiquity ? May we * Preface to the Prayer Book. 4 The Right Rev. Wm. White, D. D., of Pennsylvania, and the Right Rev. Sam. Provoost D D., of New York, consecrated in the Chapel of the Arcliiepiscopal Palace at Lambeth, in England, on Sun day, Feb. 4th, 1187, by the Most Rev. John Moore, Archbishop of Canterbury, assisted by the Archbishop of York, and the Bishops of Bath and Wells, and Peterborough. The Right Rev. James Madison, D. D., of Virginia, consecrated in the same place, on Sunday, Sept 19th, 1790, by the Archbishop of Canterbury, assisted by the Bishops of London and Rochester. The Right Rev. Samuel Seabury, D. D., of Connecticut, had been previously consecrated in Aberdeen, Scotland, Nov. 14th, 1784, by tne Bishop of Aberdeen, with his coadjutor, and the Bishop of Ross and Moray assisting. HISTORY OF OttR L/TtJRGY. 15 not say of "he Church — " Her clothing is of wrought gold ? " Our Ritual contains not the sentiments or thoughts of any one man — or even any one generation of men — but embodies the spirit and the devoticn of Universal Catholio Christendom, in its earliest, purest day. It is tinged with ml party views. It is not intended to speak the language oi any One small section of believers, but it seeks to bring, us before the throne of God in the same spirit with which His children were accustomed to approach Him, when warring eects were unknown, and but one united Church was spread every where over the earth. Oh, are there not, then, sol emn recollections and glorious memories connected with the Liturgy by which now we worship ? Is it not some thing, to realize that in our devotions we are not dependent dii the feelings ot a mortal like ourselves, for the direction which our thoughts shall take, but that the prayers we uttei bear the stamp and breathe the spirit of Apostolic days ? Does not this Ritual come to us with new power when wo think that, age after age, its solemn, elevating voice has been heard in the Church — that it is now what it was, when Christianity itself, in the dawn of early youth, was contend ing even for existence With a Pagan world ? Yes — when I stand at this altar, to minister in that holy rite by which with bread and wine we commemorate our Lord's death, I remember that seventeen centuries ago these emblems wero consecrated, with almost the sarr 3 words, in the distant Kast where our faith had its birth, and through Northern Africa, where once hundreds of Bishops sat in the councils of the Church. There also that noble ascription — " There fore with angels and archangels, and with all the Company of Heaven, we laud and magnify thy glorious name" — was uplifted in many a strange tongue, as men thus professed their faith even at the peril of their lives. And now it has descended to us, as a chain which binds us to them in holy fellowship. The same anthems which you sing, havo been sounded forth from ancient confessors and martyrs, aa they went joyfully to the stake, and been the last accents heard from their lips as the flames gathered around them.* * " Then .odies were quickly wrapped in flame ; they shouted li Deum laudamus. Soon their voices were stifled — and their ashes 162 HISTOR\ tT OCR LITURGY. Countless generations of tie saints — the dead who -slept il Christ a thousand years ag3 — have worshipped in the very prayers which now you use, and had their souls thus trained up for Heaven. Therefore it is that, as each age passed by, this Ritual has gone down with a richer freight of halloWed associations and blessings to the generation which succeeded, until we in our turn have inherited it. We wish, therefore, nothing better. We are willing to tread in the footsteps of the holy dead who have gone before us. We will worship in' thei- words, and trust that at the end we shall share in their re ward. We will feel, too, that the noblest legacy we can leave to those who shall come after us, is this form of sound words — so full — so complete, that we may well say in the words of Dr. South — " There is no prayer necessary, that is not in the Liturgy, but one, which is this : that God would Vouchsafe to continue the Liturgy itself, in use and ho'-or, and veneration, in this Church forever. alone remained." Death of Esch and Voes, the first martyrs of the Reformation, at Brussels, 1525. Tlie venerable Bcdo, as he was dying, repeated the Collect foi tbe day, wliich was the Festival of our Lord's Ascension. Matmt Lie.8. -•¦"¦•¦;¦¦;• , VI. Vi:fk CHURCH'S VIEW OF INFANT BAPTISM .j .; , Blest bo the Church, that watching o'er- the needa Of inOincy, provides a timely shower,. Wllo.sb virtue changes to a Christian Flower -- /» growth from sinful nature's bed of weeds I — . Fillitsi b.nialk the sacred roof proceeds The ministration ,- while parental Love 1 ' Looks' bn; and grace dcscohdetll from above, ; ! As tllGrll'igh-serviei. pledges now, now pleads. Wordsworth's Ecclesiastical Sonnets, XV Human language, could not frame a question which would appeal with greater force to the parent's heart than that sirnpjeriuquiry w'hioh.. Elisha addressed,, to the woman of Shu^ijj^-" Is it, well with the child?"* It is asking after the welfare of one around whom their warmest affections are clustering, with all the strength of a father's love, and the undying steadfastness of a. mother's tenderness. The infant, even in the first months of its helpless innocence, is already exerting a powerful influence over many hearts. How many bosoms — alike of childhood and of age — are filled with its love ! How many countenances, as they cluster around it, light up with gladness at its smiles ! How does its presence spread happiness through its home ! Thu? early do the threads of its influence go out, and entwine about the hearts of those to whom Providence hath committed its keeping. How powerfully, then, do the warmest feelings of our nature respond at once to the question — " Is it well with the child ? " But expressive as is this inquiry when applied to the temporal welfare of your child, what an added emphasis does it have, when w i carry it still farther, and refer the question * 2 Kings iv. 26. I* f&4 *_«! C«tfRCH*S Vlfiw to that child's spiritual hopes ! There it is, in the feebleness of wailing infancv — apparently so frail, that its existence, like that of the delicate flower, might suddenly be nipped even by the rude winds of Heaven — and realizing the descrip tion which Job gives of our nature, that its " foundation is ki the dust, and it is crushed before the moth." Yet that frail creature is a candidate for immortality, and no power in the universe can end ihe existence which has now been Dreathed into it. Disease or violence may reduce to insen sibility that tender frame, but it will only be transferring its life to another sphere of being. That weak and power less body is the prison-house of a spirit which must live long after the material universe has passed away, and which, through all the wasteless ages of its immortality, must be rejoicing in bliss ineffable, or else -mingling its wail with the despairing cry of those to whom ¦" Hope never comes, That comes to all."* To the thoughtful mind, then, what solemn reflections gather around the unconscious infant ! How strange the contrasts suggested, between what it is and what it shall be ! How lofty the speculations in which we may indulge, on ths destiny which awaits it in this world, and in that which is to come ! But with what intense interest should these emotions come home to the hearts of those who are intrusted 'with the guidance of that child ! They are to give the first im pulse and direction to that immortal being. They are to allure it on to Heaven, or else suffrr it to be lost forever. They are to impress upon its infant mind, those earliest les sons which are tc give tone and character to its expanding faculties. On them, then, ir. a great measure it depends, whether that infant is to be hereafter a saint in glory, oi through eternity, undone — a castaway. What force, there fore, is there in the question — " Is it well with the child?" It is asking, whether you have done all that *s in yourpowei to lead it forward in the way of life. * Paradise Lcet Book L c. 66. Ot IIO-ANT _>APTISM. \£(, Neither is this an inquiry which is without meaning until your child is old enough to be benefitted by your in structions. You have a spiritual duty to perforin in its behalf, even before the hours arrive when its unfolding mind allows it to profit by your teaching. Long ere that time has come, you may place it within the f jld of Christ, and by the waters ;f baptism dedicate it to Him forever. This is your earliest duty, and until it is fulfilled, you have neglected the first step in seeking the welfare of your child. In addressing you then this evening, on the Church's view of Infant Baftism, I would endeavor, by God's blessing, to impress upon you the necessity of bringing your children forward, " that they may be baptized with water and the Holy Ghost, and received into Christ's holy Church, and be made living members ofthe same."* The first point, then, to be considered is — the authority for infant baptism. This rite is rejected by some, as you are well aware, on the ground that it is not expressly com manded in Scripture. The futility of this objection will at once be seen, if we remember how many other duties we perform, which are not even mentioned iu the word of God. That volume is intended to be merely the outline for oui guidance, and it would be impossible, within its narrow limits, to specify each particular act incumbent upon us. If we take this ground, that the authority for each rite, and custom must be drawn only from the Inspired Volume, we must refuse to admit females to the celebration of the Lord's Supper, because there is no instance recorded in the New Testament of their having received it, and decline any longer to observe as holy the first day of the week instead of the, seventh, because we can fir 1 no express command enjoining the change. We turn, therefore, to the practice of the Primitive Church, and as we find that the early followers of our Lord observed both these customs, we have no hesitation in following their example. And for a reason precisely simi lar we feel constrained to admit infants to the waters of baptism. But although this rite is not expressly inculcated in Scripture, yet we think there are many intimations in tho * A.ddress in the Baptismal Service. J 06 ti<_ i-TOKfH' v_Evr New Testament, w lich are clearly in its favor.- We find : (hat, when the heads of families were converted to Christianity by the Apostles, they were not only themselves baptised but also their households with them. Thus it is stated,' that " Lydia and her household "* — " the jailer and all his .... with all his house "f — and " the household of Stephanas-"t— were baptized by St. Paul. Now, is it probable- that these households were all composed of none but adults— that there were no children belonging to them ? If, indeed, we exam ine in the original the meaning of the word (oixo.) rendered "house" and "household" in our version of Scripture^: we shall find that the term has a comprehensiveness, extending to children, and sometimes to even more remote descendants.' And this interpretation is strengthened by the fact, that in the Syriac version of the New Testament, which was com pleted early in the second century, if not before, II this word is in every case rendered "children;" thus — "Lydia and her children" — " the jailer with all his children" — and " the children of Stephanas." The Church therefore in that age must surely have believed, that children were baptized by . the Apostles. This indeed was only the enjoyment of that grace which St. Peter declared to the Jews they were to inherit. "For the promise" — said he — "is unto you, and to your children." And this too was but in accordance with the conduct of our Lord while on earth. He seems to have loved the little ones of His flock, and to have received them into His pecu liar favor. On one occasion, we are told, "He took a child, and set him in the midst of them ; and when He had taken him in His arms, He said unto them, Whosoever shall re ceive one of such children in my name, receiveth me," And when, again, His disciples wou'd have prevented those * Acts xvi. 15. f Acl.xvi. 33, S4. J 1 Cor. L 16. § " oixov, ' family,' including every age and sex, and of course, infants. So Ignatius Epist p. 21, cited by Wolf: ao-s-a^o/xni roic. oixouf twv adeX$_"y pov trtrv yvvcu^l x.cu T.itvoif," Blo&mfieUxVs Greek Test. 1 Cor. i. 16. \ " This version (the Syriac) is c >nfessedly of the higlicst antiquity, and there is every reason to believe .hat it was made, if not in the 6rst century, at least in the beginning if the second century." Hor»s ' fnlrod. tt Scrip. V. ii. p. 203. t» MfAii. ixriisH. iff tfjiqjtftoftg.it. little ohildren to Him, our Lord rebuked them, and ^ was much- displeased," saying, "Suffer the little children to come unto me, and forbid them not ; for of such is the Kingdom. of God." And may rot the phrase, " King dom of God," refer to the Militant Church here, as well aa to the Church triumphant in Heaven? St. Mark also adds — " And He took them up in His arms, put His hands- upon them, and blessed them." Among, too, the last exhortations which He gave to His Apostle Peter, was the injunction — "•-Feedniy lambs." Is it probable, then, with this affection forthe Jittleones ofthe flock, that he would debar them from entrance into His Church — that He would bid them stand without the shelter of the fold, and not participate in the henefits it affords ? No — such a course would be but little in accordance with that character, under which the prophet Isaiah foretold Him, when he described Him as the good Shepherd, who should "gather the lambs with His arm, and caFry them in His bosom." j. Neither can anything be argued — as is often done — from • the command to His disciples, which seems to render faith a necessary antecedent to baptism — " He that believeth, and is" baptized, shall be saved; but he that believeth not, shall be damned." This refers to the adults who then listened to the word, and who, of course, as the Gospel was in that generation new in the world, had never before'had an oppor tunity of being baptized, and therefore in their maturer years Were obliged to submit to that rite, when they became prose lytes to Christianity. It is by no means an evidence that faith was in every case an indispensable requisite for baptism. This argument, indeed, would prove entirely too much. If the first half of the verse — "he that believeth, and is bap tized, shall ' be saved" — debars infants from baptism for want of faith, then the last half — "he that believeth not, shall be damned" — would exclude them from heaven, for tjie, same reason. The Church, therefore, in her Baptismal Service, afjer that portion of St. Mark's Gospel has been read, which gives the narrative of our Lord's love for little children, directs , the following exhortation to be made — "Beloved, ye hear iu this Gospel the words of our Saviou* Christ, that He commandea the children to be brought unto fliri • how He blamed those who would have sept them from 159 titi church's vi£W . Him ; how He eichorteth all men fo follow their innocency'. Ye perceive how, by his outward gesture and deed, He declared His good will toward them; foi He embraced t.em in His arms, He laid His hands upon them, and blessed ihem. Doubt ye not, therefore, but earnestly believe, that He will likewise favorably receive this present infant; that He will embrace Him with the arms of His mercy; that He will give unto him the blessing of eternal life, and make him partaker of His everlasting Kingdom. Wherefore, we being thus per suaded of the good will of our Heavenly Father toward this infant, declared by His Son Jesus Christ; and nothing doubting, but that He favorably alloweth this charitable work of ours, in bringing this infant to this holy baptism ; let us faithfully and devoutly give thanks unto Him." And I rejoice, brethren, that it is so. 1 thank Heaven that the Church takes this wide and expanded view of the loving-kindness, of Him, in whose steps she directs us to walk. Were she unfaithful to her high trust, in this "par ticular, I could not minister at her altars, or coldly repel from her fold those who most need her nurture. I" could not preach the chilling doctrines of a creed, which proclaims to be unworthy of admission into the Church on earth, those little ones, with regard to whom our Lord has expressly said — "of such is the Kingdom of God." Again — a direct argument in favor of infant baptism is derived from the fact, that baptis a has taken the place of cir cumcision. The Christian dispensation — as I have already remarked to you in a former Lecture — is only a continuation — a fuller developement of the Jewish. It is the same Church, but expandel into a nobler form.* While, there- f re, the most perfect parallel can be drawn between ihe t vo, among other particulars, we find circumcision as an initiatory rite laid aside, ard baptism adopted in its place We should expect, therefore, to find the latter in every respect answering to the former. And so it does. When an adult became a oroselyle from idolatry to Judaism, God commanded turn to be circumcised ; and when a heathen in this age, in the maturity of his years, listens for the first time to the news of the Gospel, and bows hi_t heart to its sway t « in he same way is baptized, in token of his allegiance 1*»_ * See Lecture II. BS* INFANT BAPTISM. i5«J 6y t_ie.e__pie.-s direction of God, infants were also admitted by circumcision into the Jewish Church; why; then, can they not by baptism be received into the Chriatian fold ? If they are unworthy in the latter case, why were they not in the former? If they are to be debarred now, because they are incapable of understanding their obligations, and believ ing in God, surely they were equally incapable of doing so under the Mcsaic Economy. No, brethren, believe it not, that the little ones of the flock are to be excluded. The Church is the same in all ages, and so are the general prin ciples by which she is regulated. And now, as in the ancient days, "the promise is to you and to your children."* * This argument might be strengthened by a more particular reference to Jewish customs. Baptism, under the Christian dispen sation was not a new rite, for it had long been practised among tlie Jews. Our Lord merely retained it, at the same time investing it with a new authority and meaning. When John, therefore, com menced baptizing, the Pharisees and Scribes did not ask him the meaning of this rite, but, simply, by what authority he administered it. '.' Why baptizost thou then, if thou be not that Christ, nor Elias, neither that prophet ?" (John i. 25.) Every proselyte among the Jews was circumcised, baptized, and ooliged to offer a sacrifice. Thus, Maimonides says — " In all ages, when a Gentile is willing to enter into Covenant, and gather himself under the wings of the Majesty of Ood, and take upon him the yoke of the Law, he must be circumcised and baptised, and bring a sacrifice : or, if it be a woman, be baptized, and bring a sacrifice." In such cases, their children, even if infints, were baptized with them. This was done in the presence of three persons, called the Court, or the House of Judgment, who acted as witnesses ; and from this Jewish practice the Christian Church has derived the custom of having the same number of sponsors at the* Baptism of each child. Thus, in the Geinara Babylon, we find this declaration — " They are wont to baptize such a Proselyte in infancy, upon the profession of the House of Judgment ; for this is for his good." IJporr wliich pas sage there is the following gloss — " ' They are wont to baptize.' Because none is made a Proselyte without circumcision and Baptism. ' Upon the profession of the House of Judgment.' That is, the three men who have the care of his Baptism, according to the law of the haptism of proselytes, which requires three men, who do so become to him a father, and he is by them made a Proselyte." Again, "He is no Proselyte, unless he is circumcised and baptised, and if he be not baptized he remains a O entile'' tbO THi_ ativkc^S vf __-"'*' Thare is ano'.her argument on this subject which is mos. ""- conclusive. It is the fact, that even in the first age of tlie Church — from the Apostles' days — infant baptism has been- practised. We learn this, in a great measure, incidentally from the early writers. We do not find this rite explicitly set forth and commanded by them, because it was unneces sary to do so; for in that age no one doubted its obligation. Yet the allusions to it are such as with any reasonable mind place the matter beyond a doubt. For instance — Justin Martyr, who was born near the close; of the first century, in speaking of Christians cotewiporary with himself,*says that " there were among Christians in hi3 time many persons of both sexes, some sixty, some seventy : years old, who had been made disciples to Christ from their infancy, and continued virgins or uncorrupted all their lives."* Now in what way, we ask, could infants be made disciples1 of Christ, except by baptism? And as Justin wrote -tfiig Apology about the year 148,-f- those of whom he speaks tis baptized sixty or seventy years before, in thejr infancy, must have been persons baptized in the first age, while some of the Apostles were living. This rite must therefore ha v.e-: been administered with their concurrence and sanction. , Again — such is also the testimony of Irenaeus, who was born during the days of the Apostles, in the year 97,"j: and trained up under St. Polycarp, " the angel of the Church in Smyrna," who had himself been a disciple of St. John, He Again, Maimonides says, "A Proselyte that is under age,. they are wont to baptize upon the profession of the Court ; because this Is, for his good." And — " An Israelite that takes a little Heatlien child,, or that finds a Heatlien infant, and baptizes him for a proselyte, behold he is a proselyte." The works of Lightfoot, Selden, and Wall, abound with similal extracts from Jewish writers, proving their custom of baptizing infants But did our Lord any where rebuke his countrymen for it ? Did. He denounce it as a vain form .ind superstition ? If He did not, is it nat rather late in the day for uninspired teachers to begin this work, or. to iligmatise as " a remnant of Popery," a custom which has existed fin ' S500 years ? * Apoi. ii. p. 62. *• Bingham's Orig. Eccies. lib. xi. ch. 4,seet.-> X C _ve's Hist Liter. voL i p. 41. OP tN_*AKT SAPfls&t. | (*, , .peaks of baptism as " regeneration,"* and mentions among those who are thus regenerated to God, "infants and little cmes, aud children, and youths, an_ elder persons '"t Clemens of Alexandra, who was born about the middle of the second century, wrote a work intended to instruct young Christians in the practical duties of their faith. In the course of this, he reproves them for the devices engraved on their seals, for which purpose they sometimes used "ima ges taken from the ancient idolatry, and at the same time suggests some figures more Christian in their character. Thus, he says, — "If any one be a fisherman, let him think of an Apostle, and the children taken out of the water. "t If then, Clemens could thus exhort them to select the repre sentation of an Apostle baptizing infants, does it not prove that he believed the Apostles did administer that rite even to those of that tender age, and that such in his time was the practice of the Church ? Origen, who was born in the second century — had been * To show the sense in which the word " regeneration " has always been used in the Church, we give the following passage from Bishop Hobart's writings — " When the Churchman, in the language of Scrip ture, of primitive antiquity, and of the Articles and Liturgy of his Church, calls baptism regeneration, he does not employ the term in Its popular signification among many Protestants, to denote the di vine influences upon the soul in its sanctification and renovation, in abolishing the body of sin, and raising up the graces and virtues of the new man. Tlie term regeneration is used by him in its original, and* appropriate, and technical acceptation, to denote the translation of the baptized person from that state in which, as destitute of any covenanted title to salvation he is styled ' the child of wrath,' into that state which, as it proffers to him in all cases the covenanted mercy and grace of God, and in the exercise of repentance and faith actually conveys to him these blessings, is styled a ' state of salvation.' (Catechism of tlie Church.) It must be obvious, that the sacramental commencement of the spiritual life in the regeneration of baptism, and the subsequent sanctincation of tho principles, the powers, and affec tions ofthe new man, by the renewing of the Holy Ghost, are distinct acta and operations ; the former leading to the latter, which, without it, is wholly inefficacious to salvation ; on the contrary, increases the coodemnation of the despiser of the gifts and calling of God." Charge to the Clergy of New- York in 1819. f Adv. Hares, lib. ii ch 89. X Poedogog. lib. iii ch. 1 . I ft'2 fHfi <;__u"Rch'S VfF/W trained up frorr. infancy by Christian parents — visite;.. in hia travels, most of the Churches in the world — and gained the reputation of being the most learned ma.i of his age — records his testimony most unequivocally in behalf of infant baptism. His language is — " Let it be considered, what is the reason why the baptism of the Church, which is given for remission of sins, is, by the usage of the Church, given to infants also , whereas, if there were nothing in infants which needed for giveness and mercy, the grace of Baptism would seem to be to them superfluous."* Again, he says — " Infants are baptized for the remission oj sins. Of what sins, of at what time have they sinned ? Or how can there be in infants any reason for the Laver, unless according to that sense of which we have spoken a little before, viz — ' No one is free from pollution, although his life upon the earth has been but one day.' And because by the Sacrament of Baptism native pollution is removed, there fore infants also are baptized."] And again — " The Church received from the Apostles a tradition to give Baptism also to infants. For they to whom the Divine mysteries were committed, knew that there is in all persons the natural pollution of sin, which should be washed away by water and the Spirit, and on account of which, also, the body itself is called the body of sin."f We would appeal then to your reason ; who is most likely to have been correct on this point, Origen — who lived before the memory of the Apostles had faded from the Church — or those who, 1500 years after their day, for the first, time discovered that infant baptism should not be ad ministered. St. Augustine, Bishop of Hippo, in Africa, who was born about the middle of the fourth century, bears the same testimony. His words are — "And if any one do ask for Divine authority in this matter — though that which the whole Church practises, and waich has not been instituted by 'onnciis, but was ever in use, is very reasonably believed to be no other than a thing delivered by authority ofthe Apostles •—yet we may besides take a true estimate how much the • Homil.-viii. in Levit. ch. 12 \ Horn, in Lue c, 14. t Com. in Rom. lib. 5 ot infant baj /ism. . (53 Sacrament does avail infants, by the circumcision which God's former people received."* " We afliim, that the Holy Spirit dwells in baptized in fants, though they know it not ; for after the same mannei they know Him not, though He be in them, as they know not their own soul. The reason whereof, which they cannot yet make use of, is in them as a spark raked up whish will kindle as they ginw in years."! In another place, referring to the Pelagians, he says— " They grant that infants must be baptized, as not being able to oppose the authority of the whole Church, which was doubtless delivered by our Lord and his 'Apostles."% "Original sin is so plain by the Scriptures, and that it is forgiven to infants in the Laver of Regeneration, is so confirm ed by the antiquity and authority of the Catholic faith, and so notoriously the practice of the Church, that whatsoever is contrary to this cannot be true."§ "The custom ofour mother, the Church, in baptizing in fants, must not be disregarded, nor considered needless, nor believed to be other than a tradition ofthe Apostles. "|| St. Ambrose, the Bishop of Milan, who was born a. d. 340, in speaking of the miracle by which Elijah divided the river Jordan, and caused the waters to flow backwards tc iheir source, (2 Kings xi.) says — " It signified the Sacrament ofthe Layer of Salvation, which was afterwards to be insti tuted, by which those infa its that are baptized are reformed back again from a state oi wickedness, to the primitive state of their nature."1[ "No person comes to the kingdom of Heaven but by the Sacrament of Baptism. For ' unless a person be born again of water and of the Holy Spirit, he cannojt enter into the kingdom of God.' You see He excepts no person, not an infant, not one that is hindered by any unavoidable acci- Jen'."** St. Chrysostom, the eloquent Bishop of Constantinople, fho was also born about the middle of the fourth century, * De Bap. lib. v. a 23 f Epist. 57, ad Dardanum. X De Peccat. c. 26. § Contra Pelag. Lib. iii. c. 10. j De Gen. ad lit. lib. 10 ""jf Comm. lib. i. in St. Luc. c 1 ** De Abraham Patriarch, lib. ii. c. 11. Ib4 ¦tit c_it.Rcit'S View B;lyS — '< And those that are baptized, some of them were chil dren when they received it."* Again, when referring to the Jewish Circumcision, and the age of eight days, at which it was administered, he says — "But our Circumcision — I mean the grace of Baptism — has no determinate time as that had; but one that is in the very beginning of his age, or one that is in the middle of it, or one that is in his old age, may receive this circumcision made without hands, in which there is no trouble to be un dergone, but to throw off the load of sins, and receive pardon for all foregoing offences."! In the same way, his cotemporary, Theodoret the his torian, a Syrian Bishop, speaking of Baptism as conveying forgiveness of past sins, says — " If it had no other effect than that, what need we baptise infants, that have not tasted of sin?"."!: Such, then, is the unvarying testimony of the Primitive Church, on this important doctrine. And the view we have given is strengthened by the discussions which in those ages took place on this subject, since in none of them do we ever find a doubt suggested as to the lawfulness of infant baptism. The controversy was always on some collateral point. The earliest of these is by Tertullian, in the beginning of the third century, a writer whose strange speculations led him on from one step to another, until at last he fell into heresy, and openly became a Montanist. Believing that the rite of Baptism at any period of life entirely washed away all sin, he proposed that '_ should be delayed as long as possible, even if it could be done, to a person's last hour, that thus the collected iniquities of a lifetime might at once be swept away. He acknowledges, however, that the custom of the Church has always been otherwise; a. fact which is suffi ciently proved by the very nature of his argument. He is plainly contending in behalf of an innovation. His wortls are —-"For according to every one's condition, and disposition, and also their age the delaying of Baptism is more advan tageous, especiall) in the case of little children. For what need is there that the godfathers should be brought into * Horn. 23, in Acta. Apost. *• Horn. 40, in Gea X Hteretic. Fabuk c. lib. v. de Bapt. OF infant baptism. 16ft danger ? Because they may either fail of theb promises by leath, or they may be deceived by a child s proving of ivicked disposition What need their innocent age make such haste to the forgiveness of sins ? "* " The way of Tertullian's arguing upon this point " — says Bingham— "shows plainly, that he was for introducing a new practice; hat therefore it was the custom of the Church in his time to give Baptism to infants, as well as to adult persons."! But, in giving this a'dvice about delay, he himself con fines it to cases where there was no danger or apprehension of death. "For, otherwise, he pleads strongly for, the neces sity of immediate baptism, both from those words of our Lord — " Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God" — and also from that general corruption of original sin, which infects infants as much as adults.J The only other ancient writer who varied somewhat from the general opinion of the Church wps St. Gregory Nazianzen, Bishop of Constantinople, in the latter part of the fourth century. He did not carry his wish for innovation as far as Tertullian, for he did not desire Baptism to be postponed until persons had reached years of maturity, but .only until they were three years old, thai they might gain at least some little glimmering of religious truth. He agrees with Ter tullian, however, in declaring that all who are in any danger should be at once baptized, lest any die without that sacra ment. With regard to those in whose case nothing like this is apprehended, his language is — " As for others, I give my opinion that they should stay three years or thereabouts, when they are capable to hear and answer some of the holy words; and though they do not perfectly understand them, yet they form Ihem ; and that you then sanctify them in soul and body with the great sacrament of initiation. "§ Here again we see, that he was pleading against the ancient, uni- form practice ofthe Church. Such, too, is the evidence we may draw from the r.st hscussion of this subject before a public council of the Cnurc.h. This was the Council of Carthage, a. b. 253 * De Bap. c. 18. + Orig. Eccies. lib. xi. ch. iv. sect. 10 X De anima, cap. 40— De Bap' -ap. 13. § De Bap. Orat. 40. 166 the church's view where 66 Bishops were assembled, whose proceedings we leari from St. Cyprian. No one had then the hardihood to inquire, whether infant baptism ought to be administered or not ; but Fidus, the Bishop of a country diocese, proposed lo the Council the question — "Whether infaats ought to be baptized before they were eight days old ?"- -since this was the age for circumcision in the Jewish Chirch. But the Council unanimously decided, that there was no occasion for this delay, but infants' might be baptized at any time. And in their Synodical Epistle to Fidus, the following unequivocal language is used — " As to the case of infants, whereas you judge 'that they must not be baptized within two or three days after they are born, and that the rule of circumcision is to be observed, so that none should be baptized and sanctified before the eighth day after he is born,' we were all in our assembly of the contrary opinion. For, as for what you thought fitting to be done, there was not one that was of your mind, but all of us, on the contrary, judged that the grace and mercy of God [i. e., as conveyed through Baptism] is to be denied to no person that is born." "And, therefore, dearest brother, this was our sentence in the Council, that no one oughl to be hindered by us from Baptism and the. Grace of God, who is merciful and kind and affectionate to all." The result, then, to which history brings us is this — .hat during the first 1100 years of the existence ofthe Chris tian Church, no society of men, or even single individual of whom we have any record, denied the lawfulness of infant baptism. The fii .t direct opposition to this rite arose about the year 1126, in the midst of the darkness which had over spread the greater part of Europe, and the wild fanaticism and fearful perversions of the truth to which it gave birth. At this time, an obscure sect founded by Peter de Bruys — some of whose opinions were afterwards adopted by the Albigenses and Waldenses — declared against the baptism of 'nfants, because they believed them to be incapable of salvation.* This doctrine, however, was received by but few, and became exiinct in 1147, after the death of de Bruys and his immediate followers. * Mosheim's Eccies. Hist. v. ii. >. 309 OF infant baptism. lb 7 lt was not until about 1522 that this heiesy obtained any peimanent footing.. At the time of the Reformation, when [he human mind, bursting from its long thraldom, naturally abused its newly acquired liberty — when it rioted in a thou sand fantastic forms, enabling each one to form his creed according to the peculiar caprices of his own heart — when, antiquity and authority being disregarded, an hundred sects arose, each differing from the Church in some one particular which it insisted upon as essential — then it was, that Infant Baptism was set aside, and a small and inconsiderable party announced to the Christian world that for 1500 years the whole Church had been in grievous error. The preacher of this new doctrine was Munzer, 1521, who, having excited his followers to insurrection and civil war, was finally de feated and executed. It was not until 153 . that the sect of the Anabaptists became regularly organizod as a distinct religious society. In this year, headed by John Boccold, a journeyman tailor, whom they had named their King, and incited to the most impious extravagances by John Matthias, a baker, who claimed to be a prophet, they captured the city of Munster, and attempted to establish a kingdom to be caUed the New Zion.* The city being re-captured in the following year, and their forces dispersedj some escaped to England, and then for the first time these doctrines began to spread in that land. , This, then, is the view which history gives us, of tho rise of those who deny to infants the rite of Baptism. And who, with this account before him, could hesitate for a mo ment to decide whether or not it should be administered ? On the one side is the united testimony of the Catholic Church as it comes down through eighteen centuries, and on the other are the loud clamors of a sect which three cen turies ago just struggled into being, and whose cradle was rocked by the wild heavings of ignorance and fanaticism. t * Mosheim's Eccies. Hist. v. iii p. 65. f It is well known that Roger Williams was the founder of the sect of the Baptists in this country. Who, then, gave him his commission ? An answer to this question is found in the following extract from the " History of the Baptist Church in Providence." " Being settled in this place, which, from tl e kindness of Uod tc r.hem, they called ?rov* 168 the church's view We may, in this respect, as in every other, cleave to ihe faith of Apostles and Martyrs who lived when the memory of their Lord's instructions was still fresh on the earth ; or we may turn aside from the old paths, to embrace every novelty which courts our notice. We may repose' on the wisdom and example of the many generations which have gone before us; or we may unsettle our faith by yielding to the varied teaching of those whose creed arose when dence, Mr. Williams, and those with him, considered the importance of Gospel union, and were desirous of forming themselves into a Church; but met with considerable obstruction. They were con vinced of the nature and design of believers' baptism by immersim, but from a variety of circumstances had hitherto been prevented from submersion. To obtain a suitable administrator was a matter of consequence. At length the candidates for communion nominated md appointed Ezekiel Holliman, a man of gifts and piety, to baptize Mr. Williams, and who in return baptized Mr. Holliman and the other ten." It is now a principle for wliich none contend more strenuously than the Baptists, that Scriptural and valid baptism cannot be administered by any one who is himself unbaptized Yet of these twelve persons who thus baptized each other, not one had previously been immersed, and, of course, on -Baptist principles, they were unbaptized. What right, then, had they to admit into the visible fold of Christ, or to " form themselves into a Church ? " And are not the Baptists in this country, on their own confession, now destitute of any kind of valid baptism ? We have never yet seen a satisfactory answer to this question. It was brought forward in the Banner of the Cross, April 1, 1843, but those to whom '. was addressed seem not to be anxious to have any inquiry into their origin in this country, or to reply to the demand — " By what authority doest thou these things ? and who gave thee this authority !" The Missouri Baptist, however, with more can dor than its associates, thus apologizes for the manner in which these unbaptized laymen mutually dipped each other — " Under other cir cumstances they would gladly have availed themselves of a regular administrator of the ordinance ; but situated as they were, . . . they naturally and wisely concluded that He who requireth this service will not annex conditions incompatable with their obedience, and, of course, will accept of their right intention in the performance," . May not this presumption be met with the question addressed by Jehovah to some of Did — " Who hath required this at your hand, to tread my courts?" ("See the Banner cf Ihe Cross, April 22,) OT INFANT BAPTISM. 169 flie human intellect was let loose from its old restraints, and, in .the first moments of its delirium scarcely knew what vto Relieve, , n ..-.The next point to.be considered is — the benefit to be , , derived from Baptism. We hear the question ofteu asked . —'.What use is it, to the infant?" I answer— " Much, every way."* In the Catechism of the Church it is defined to bo, "an outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace given unto us." We have already seen in what lofty terms the Primitive writers always refer to it, and how St. Augustine speaks of the Spirit which then rests upon the h.e,art ofthe unconscious infant, as "a spark which,- will -kindle as he grows in years." And this is in strict accord ance with. the view given Scripture, where it is mentioned i.n, direct connection with the influences of the Holy Spirit. Thus our Lord speaks of a person as being " baptized with water and the Spirit." One of the Fathers of our Church — Bishop Seabury — therefore thus sums up this point : — "As to the benefits of Baptism, they are remission of sins, regeneration or adoption into the family of God. the pre sence ofthe Holy Spirit, the resurrection of the body, and everlasting life. That these .benefits are annexed to baptism, the Holy Scriptures give ample testimony. ! Repent ' — said Peter to the multitde inquiring what they should do — ' and be baptized every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ, for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of tbe Holy Ghost.' In the same language Ananias addresses Saul — 'And now, why tarriest thou ? Arise, and be baptized, and wash away thy sins.' That we are regenerate and born, or adopted into the family or Church of God hy Bap tism, Christ declared to Nicodemus when he said — ' Verily, verily, I say unto thee, except a man be born of water, and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God.' The cKmgdom of God is the Church of God^=the same Church both iii this world and the next, (for God has but one Church, the body of Christ.) By Baptism we are made members of this Church ; and if we continue faithful mem bers till death, shall in it obtain a happy resurrection and everlasting life — shall continue members of it to all eternity." Therefore it is, that in onr service we use petitions like these, before the Baptism — " We beseech Thee, for Thine 8 l7Q THIS CHURCH'3 view infinite mercy, that Thou wilt mercifully look upon this child : wash him, and sanctify him with the Holy Ghost"— " We call upon Thee for this infant, that he, coming to Thy holy baptism, may receive remission of sin by spiritual re generation" — '•' Give Thy Holy Spirit to thh infant, that he may be born again, and be made an heir of everlasting sal vation" — " Sanctify this water to the mystical washing away of sin, and grant that this child, now to be baptized therein, may receive the fulness of Thy- grace." And after the rite is administered, we say — " We yield Thee hearty thanks, most merciful Father, that it hath pleased Thee to regenerate this infant with Thy Holy Spirit, to receive hira for Thine own child by adoption, and to incorporate him .into Thy holy Church." Such is the plain and unequivocal teaching of the Church, as displayed in her formularies. Ami unless this truth is allowed, that the Spirit is given in Baptism, that rite becomes nothing but * mere empty cere mony. Now look for a moment at the two most common objec tions to this view. The first is — " that infants cannot re ceive the influences of the Spirit at so tender an age." But who can pretend thus accurately to draw the line, or to assert at what period it first becomes possible for the image of God to be stamped upon an immortal soul ? Who can declare the manner in which the Father of spirits acts upon our spirits, or the rules by which He is guided ? We are told that John the Baptist was " filled with the Holy Ghost, even from his mother's womb ;" why then is not an infant as capable of receiving spiritual blessings now, as it was eigh teen centuries ago ? The other cbjection is — •'* that the child as it advances in years, often gives no evidence of these spiritual influ ences." We reply — that this is no proof that grace was not inparted to it in Baptism? May it not be given at that time, Lilt when not subsequently nourished by the proper means, become as it were dormant, and even be quenched ? Baptism is the child's spiritual birth into the Church of Christ, but unless, through the unceasing care of parents, it is nurtured and trained up in the fear of the Lord, it may soon impai' and weaken the benefit to be derived from this introd ction into the fold. It is precisely so in the natural world. The OF INFANT BAPTISM. 17) .rjfict. tha .he child is born into it, is no proof that it shall carta ,nly -ive and grow. If neglected, and the prope.- means are not used to increase its strength, it assuredly will die. And in the same way the spiritual life which it gained at baptism may, byneglect and the' commission of sin, soon decay, until, as its faculties unfold, it becomes more and more of the earth, earthly. Yet for all this, who can gainsay the truth, that Baptism is a high and holy privilege ? If it place benefits within the reach of those who receive it, and impart to the soul the first principles of vital, spiritual life, have wo not reason to rejoice that God thus permits us to dedicate our children to Him ? We believe, therefore, there is as much truth as beauty in the passage in which one of the digious poets of England describes this touching rite — "In due time A day of solemn ceremonial comes ; When they, who for this minor hold in trust Rights that transcend the highest heritage Of mere humanity, present their charge \t the baptismal font. And when the pure jd consecrating element hath cleansed Tlie original stain, the child is there received Into the second ark, Christ's Church, with trust That he, from wrath redeemed, therein shall float Oyer the billows of this troublesome world - To the fair land of everlasting life."* The third point in connection with this subject, which 1 would bring before you, is — the manner in which this ritt should be administered. The Church regards as a lawful .node of Baptism, either Immersion — Affusion, or pouring— and Aspersion, or sprinkling. In each of th£se ways she declares it to be equally valid. If therefore the consciences of any of her members are scrupulous on this point, hei ministers can administer this sac.ament in the way thoy may select. The Church has decided that the manner is intjiffeient, for three reasons. The first is, because the word Baptizo d3x7rr.£tD;) which we translate baptize, and which our Lord used when he gave the command — "Go teach all nations, baptizing (/SafrifoiTjj' * Wordsworth's Excursion, Book T. 172 THE church's view Inem " — does net necessarily, meaii to immeise. . On ti.e contrary, in mai:y cases, to translate it in this way wou'd entirely destroy it. meaning. The same is true with regaid to Bapto (fix-mui.) Irom which it is derived.* We will give a single example of this result with each of these words. In - the Si'ptuagint — the Greek translation of the old Testament — Daniel iv. 30, in the 'escription of the judgment which fell upon Nebuchadnezzar, when he was "driven forlh from the abodes of men, and did eat grass, as oxen," it ia slated that "his body was wet (l/Sx-J:.) with the dew of Heaven."" Here the word certainly means nothing but to wat, or to moisten. And we would ask, which sounds most in accordance with common sense, to say — " his body was * " As it is agreed on all hands, that the native Greeks are the best authority for the meaning of their own language, we shall refer the question to them. We give therefore the definitions of these words; only from the native Greek Lexicographers. " The oldest native Greek Lexicographer is Hesychios, who lived in the fourth century of the Chri. tian Era. He gives only the root Bapto ; and the only meaning he gives the word is antleo, ' to draw or pump water.' Next in order comes Suidas, a native Greek, who wrote in the tenth century. He gives only the derivative, Baptizo, and defines it by pluno, ' to wash.' Passing over the intermediate Greek Lexicographers, we come down to the present century, at the beginning of which, we find Gases, a learned Greek, who with great labor and pains compiled a large and valuable Lexicon of the ancient Greek language. -His book, in three volumes quarto, is a work tie- , cervedly held in high estimation by all, and is generally use 1 by native Greeks. The following are his definitions of Bapto, and Baptizo. 'Bapto. Brecho, to wet, moisten, bedew. Pluno, to wash, (viz., clothes.) Gemizo, to fill. Buthizo, to dip. Antleo, to d-aw, to pump water. 'Baptizo. Brecho, to wet, moisten, bedcto. Pluno, to wash. Leuo, to wash, to bathe. Antleo, to draw, to pump water' "These a e the definitions of a native Greek, and are entitled to the highest . _ference, both for his learning and his eccies' astical con nections." ( h .pin's Primitive Church, pp. 43, 44. OF INFANT BAPTISMa 173 sf->;nkled with the de v of Heaven" — or, "his body vrni ivunersed with the dew of Heaven ? " . Again— in the Nev. Testament, John the Baptist pre dicting the coming of our Lord, says — " He shall bapti; a (j}wmi_rn) you with the Holy Ghost and with fire." Now, translate this — " He shall immerse you with the Holy Ghost" and with fire" — and we at once perceive the absurdity. But the prophet Joel, when referring to this same event, (as St. Peter declares, " this is thaf which was spoken by tlie prophet Joel," Acts ii. 16,) says — " I will pour out ray Spirit upon all flesh." This prophecy, therefore) was first' fulfilled on the day of Pentecost, when the Holy Ghost descended and rested on the Apostles, and afterwards when it was given to ihe Gentiles also; and we are told— " they of the circumci sion were astonished, because the gift of the Holy Ghost was pouted out upon the Gentiles also." This is the only direct reference in the New Testament to the mode in which baptism of any kind Was performed, and it certainly argues nothing in favor of immersion.* A second reason for this decision of the Church is — > because it is not in accordance with our Lord's custom, to enjoin upon His disciples any duty Of rite Which cannot be universally put in practice. Were immersion, therefore, absolutely necessary, you perceive that in some situations and climates it would be impossible to receive it. Suppose, for instance, that a person should be lying on a bed of sick ness, with life waning away, yet feeling the earnest desire before death comes, to be admitted into the. Church of Christ. That privilege must, in this case, be denied him. He must ili'e arr alien from the fold, if we believe that our Lord has appointed but one form in which the Sacrament of Bap'ism is valid. But all His commands, on the contrary, be.-r the stamp of universality. The Holy Communion of His body * It is of course impossible in this irief lecture to enter into any particular discussion of the meaning cf these terms. The reader will rind, however, iu Chapir.'s Primitive Church, a critical examination of all the plao.s both in the Old and New Testaments, in which the words Bapto and Baptizo are used, (p. 44-52.) The result is, that out of twenty three cases in which Bapto occurs, it has the ser _e of ininieiyioii but twice; and that in seventy places where Ba.pt to a found, there is not one where it means to immerse. 174 the church's view tr.d blood can be administered in all climates, and to aflj one, however enfeebled by sickness, atld So we believe can baptism. Our Lord never directs any thing which it would be impossible to obey. The third reason is — because affusion and sprinkling have been both practised and recognized as valid in all ages of the Church. It is not probable, that John the Baptist. when " there went out to him Jerusalem, and all Judea, md all the region round about Jordan, and were baptized of him in Jordan," administered this rite by immersion, for time would scarcely have been found, to allow so slow a process to be so often repeated to these multitudes. Many, too, must have come there unprovided with proper garments for this purpose. And these same objections will apply against immersion being the form used in any of those cases, in which, under the preaching of the Apostles, large numbers at once submitted to the faith. Rivers and lakes could not always have been at hand, nor a sufficiency of water have been easily obtained.* * " After the preaching of St. Peter, it is stated that 3000 were baptized, and that these were added to the Church in one day. Now the immersion of 3000 persons in so short a time, carries with it so great an air of improbability, that we must be excused, if we suspect that some more rapid mode was adopted for their baptism. Reflect upon this one moment : — Peter's sermon began (as we are told) after the third hour of the day ; that is, nine o'clock in the morning. His addresses occupied a considerable time ; for, besides the sketch given in the Acts, it is said that 'with many more words he exhorted them ' — which are not recorded Now, it was not until after all this, that the Baptisms began, — and the time remaining to the evening, could scarcely have been more than eight hours. Dividing, therefore, the 8000 persons, there would be 375 to receive baptism in each of those eight hours — a number so great that it is difficult to imagine how thev could possibly have been immersed. "But again; in the case of the jailer at Philippi, we have an instance of a whole family, suidenly baptized, and this, too, at mid night. The whole matter was transacted in a very limited time, and we cannot, witho t violence, bring ourselves to believe in the reality of such a thing, a; the instant arousing from slumber of a whole family and the immediate plunging of them in the cold element of baptism lo say nothing of the improbability of there being on the spot, and af »t INT ANT ..A_*flsM. 1,71 The probability seems to be that all three methods wera iractised in the Early Church. In the hot countries of the East, where men went lightly clad, and bathing was often used; it Was natural that immersion should frequently be the manner of baptism. As, however, the faith extended into tfie colder climates of the North and West, affusion and sprinkling were more generally resorted to, as agreeing bet ter with local circumstances. Thus St. Cyprian, even Whon he declares against the validity of heretical Baptism, defends that performed by sprinkling. "For the contagion of sin" —says he — " was not washed away as the filth of the body is, by a carnal and secular washing. There was no need of a lake or other such like helps to wash and cleanse it.'' Ami he proves the lawfulness of aspersion frorri Ezekiel xxxvi. 25 — "I will sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be clean."* The manner was conformed to the climate, and the situation of the recipient. The mistake in all this matter is, that men have not dis • tinguished what is essential from what is non-essential. The essentials in baptism are — the proper person to administer it — the use of water — and the name of the Trinity in which it is applied.f Other things may be regulated by circum stances. The case is precisely the same with the Eucharist. This, at its first institution by our Lord, was administered in a very different way from what it now is ; but we have dis criminated, and retained what is essential. And why not do so with Baptism? To make the mode of Baptism the distinctive feature of a sect, is as reasonable as it would be, now to form a new party in the Christian world, to be called " the Corrimunionists," who should sever themselves from the Catholic Church on the ground that the Communion is not administered in a Valid manner, unless received precisely as it was, by the Apostles of our Lord, reclining on couches around a table, and in an upp. r chamber. The fact that the the time, a sufficiency of pure water, and suitable vessels to meet tho emergency." Staunton's Church Dictionary, Art. " Immersion." * Epist. 76. \ '' It cannot appear that the child was baptized with water, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost (which are vsential parts of baptism.") Rubric at the end of Form for privatt \aptism of children. j76 the church's v ew whole Christian Church for eighteen centuries had beliefiM differently, would, in this age of new di icovenes, be a mattei of no importance. There is, however, a much more summary way Of dis posing' of the question. Suppose we were to allow, that iii the tally Church in the East, imirierSion was always use. I, does it prove that the Church is now bound to continue it *" Certainly not. There is nothing in this manrier essential to the existence of the Sacrament. This is merely a practice, resting on no express command, and involving no doctrine or point of faith. The only difference about the manner is, whether this or one of the other two ways is most significant of spiritual purification; It is one of those things which the Church has a right to alter and adapt to the changing cir cumstances of the world. And the Church general has long since adopted aspersion as the mode of baptism. A striking instance of this same power of altering the manner in which rites are administered, is furnished by the history of the Passover. The Jews, al first, by the express command of God, were to receive this, " with their loins girded, their shoes on their feet, and their staff in their hand;" as those who eat in haste. But when settled in their own land, they seem to have totally changed the mode— =to have added many new rites to it — -and to have partaken of it, reclining on couches. Yet our Lord sanctioned this by His exantple. And has not the Christian Church this same power ? Such is precisely the view given by Bishop Burnet, when discussing Art. XX., "The Church hath power to decree rites or ceremonies." He even gives this very case of Baptism, as one of his illustrations. His words are — " Iu matters that are merely ritual, the state of mankind _n dif ferent-climates and 3 ges is apt to Vary: and the same thing that ill one scene of human nature may look grave, and seem fit for any society, may in another age look light ; and dissi pate men's thoughts. It is also evident there is not a sys tem of rules givfen ih the New 1 estariient about all these : and yet a dite method iu them is necessary to maintain tht order and decency that become divine things. This seems to be a part of the Gospel liberty, that it is not a. ' law of ordinances;' these things being left to be variet' according to tee diversities of mankind Though » kiss of 8_- iikHst hAHisit. i7s flekde, jln'I ai truer. Of deaconesses, were the practices of the -'Apos'olicr*. time; yet when the one gave occasion tit raillery, gnd the other to scandal, all the world was, and still is, satisfied .with the reasons of batting both fall." After speaking of the changes made, by the Jewish Church in theif rites, he says — "If. then such a liberty was allowed in so limited a religion., it seems, highly suitable to the sublimer slate of Christian liberty, that there, should be room left foi such appointments or alterations as the different state of time" and places should require. In hotter countries, for instance, there is no danger in dipping; but if it is other wise ill colder climates, then, since 'mercy is better than even sacrifice,' a more sparing use may be made of water ; aspersion may answer the true end of baptism." It is of cours-i (o be observed, that these changes can only be matie in thihgs merely ritual, and by the authority of the Catholic Church. The last point which we would briefly bring forward is Ihe place in which the Sacrament of Baptism should be admin istered. This is declared by our regulations to be in tho Church. The Rubric states that "the Godfathers and Godmothers, and the people with the children, must be ready at the font, either immediately after the last lesson at Morning Prayer, or else immediately after the last lesson at Evening Prayer, as the minister, at his discretion, shall appoint." And , the minister is also enjoined, to warn the people, " that without great cause and necessity, they procure not their children to be baptized at home in their houses." And this surely is right — that here at the Font, in the house of God, these solemn vows should be made, whicli devote your children tc the I ord. Thus is it shown, tha' we all are one body, Ur.ited b; a common tie when we enter our Master's temple — that here at, least, before His altar, all worldly distinctions are unknown. "If baptisms always took place oh Sundays or holydays, and in the public ser vice, and at every poor child's baptism the rich did not sit in their Jews',' as if it did not concern them and were a wea riness, but rose, and knelt, and joined in the service with readiness ' and fervency ; experience in certain places has showa'that a good feeling has been generated among the peer far beyond what seemed Ukely from sue '» a trifle; »iwl fftl the cfiirRCH's iitHH/ or course a more right feeling would be produc3tl amoii^- the rich, who in such cases are far more deficient in it than the poor."* The severity of the climate, however, sickness, or other causes which cannot be enumerated, may often furnish that "great cause and necessity" which will justify the minister iu performing this service in private. Yet, in such cases, you will perceive at once that it should be private. Tho administration of this solemn Sacrament is surely not a time for gathering together your worldly friends, and giving loose to festivity and mirth. When the young immortal is signed with the sign of the Cross, and the influences of the Spirit are invoked to uphold it in its future life, is it the time oi place for frivolity and amusement ? When solemn words are spoken, and the pomps and vanities of this sinful earth are renounced, shall worldliness in that hour have gathered there to hold its carnival ? Should there thus be furnished at the very moment, a practical denial of all the lips are uttering? Should this be made merely an excuse for ex citement and gayety ? No, brethren, whatever else you may do, at least bring not the Sacraments of the Churcli into your homes, except with awed and chastened feelings. The humble prayer and the "ieartfelt petition for grace to fulfil your fearful reponsibilities, might well befit a scene like this — not the light jest or the empty laugh. Remem ber, with whom you are dealing in that rite — that He is not mocked — that He marks the feelings with which you kneel before Him — and that this servi'.e concerns the eternal well- being of a young spirit, which is thus setting out for immortal life. We have thus, my brethren, endeavored to bring beforo you in the narrow limits of this single Lecture, a subject which might well fill a volume. You will perceive, how ever, even from these brief observations, the spiritual force of the question — " Is it well with the child?" If it be still uncleansed by the waters of baptism, I tell you, it is not well with it. It is an " alien from the commonwealth of Israel," and a stranger to the Christian Church. Are you willing that thus il should remain? Shall that being around whom * Faber's " Churchman's Politics," p. 44. ¦3t IrtfAS* BAt'TlSM. 179 j'odr foudest affections are clustering, be sent forth into a stormy and sinful world, without being fortified by the aid of God's Spirit — feeling as if no obligation was resting on him —and cut off from all union with that holy fellowship, whicn comprehends the just ¦ » . earth and the angels in Hea ven ? Are you willing, that through your remissness that link shoult i _ u_u.ti:ig which binds him to the th-~ne of the Eternal? Who can tell the momentous results which may ensue from his being thus debarred ? Separated from the nursing care of the Church whose object is, to have her ¦ children first in infancy brought within her fold — then in maturer years confirmed in this grace — and thus by regular s'eps advanced to partake of the communion of their Lord's death — he may feel himself enabled to live without restraint or care for these things. Thus, the world claims him as its own, and the claim is allowed. He yields to temptation- resigns himself to its embrace — lives in sin, and dies with out hope. And when at length he has risen from his lowly grave, only to find himself a partaker in " the resurrection of damnation," and you and he meet once more before the last dread tribunal; as you stand up to receive your sentence, perchance from the ranks pf the lost there may start forth one, whom in speechless dismay you recognize as him whom you haye nurtured on earth ; and as he points to you, the author of his being, his familiar tones thrill in your ear, when he shrieks forth to the Judge — " This, this, 0 Lord, is he, through whose remissness I must inherit the horrors of the second, death. Through his neglect it happened, that I was not numbered with Thy Church, or baptized with Thy Spirit, ere the cared of life gathered around mo, mi', now, I am a caitaway — undone forever," ta. ttw murai training of the church. 1 lore the Church— the Holy Church, That o'er our life presides. The Birth, the Bridal, anil the Grave, . And mniiy an hour lics-ide. I Be mine, through life, to live in her, And when the Lord shall .call, To die in her — the spouse of Christ, The Mother of us all. Rev. A. C. Coze. Oi'i faith appeals to the heart as much as to the intellect. Its object is, not to inculcate a set of abstract truths, but to render us " meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light." Among the changes and trials of this lower world, we are to exercise our hope and patience — the grace of God being our strength — the prizes of eternity, the rewards to which we look forward. Thus, as this life wear_ away, we shall feel that in our spiritual warfare we are going on from "conquering to conquer" — mastering the evil of our nature — and, by self-denial and self-discipline, fitting ourselves hereafter to mingle with the. children of immortality. Each year will witness some new advance in the divine life — some new acquisition in holiness, until, as our sun declines towards the West, we can calmly watch its setting, beirg confident that the night of death which gathers around us, shall soon give place to a glorious awak ening. It is to produce this result that the whole system of the Church is iniended. She would educate the soul for Eter nity. She is indeed the Churchman's guide through life— at once his instructor and Lis own familiar friend, who meets liim, at e ~ery change and turn, with words of warning and lSa fHi MdRAi TftAiSWtV of comfor., and thus systematically and unceasingly exefli her influence to prepare him for that rest which awaits the just in the Paradise of God. This then is the moral training of the Church, with regard to which I would this evening address you. I wish to show, that no emer gency can happen to us in this world, for which the Church has not provided — no possible condition of life, from the cradle to the g.ave, which she has not anticipated, or where she is found wanting in her power to convey spiritnal aid. Thus it is, that we are enabled to attain that privilege, for which the kingly Poet of Israel longed — " to <_>*e]l in the house of the Lord all the days of our life, to behold the beauty of the Lord, and to inquire in his temple." Let us begin then with the infant, whose reason and senses are just unfolding to a perception of the world it haa entered, and what course does the Church pursue ? Does she disregard or scorn that feeble being, as it passes through the months of wailing infancy and the years of helpless childhood ? Does she repel it from her fold, telling it ta live on, "an alien from the commonwealth of Israel, and a stranger from the covenants of promise," until the fresh dew of life is gone, and the beauty of its early years departed ? Does she refuse to notice that young immortal, until in ma turer years it can apply for admission at her gates, coming fresh frem the world as a heathen would do, who had not till then heard the news of redeeming love ? Does she pro claim, that by nature that being, about whom your warmest affections are gathered, Is born in sin, yet without offering any remedy to blot out the stain ? Such is by no means the Church's want of care for little children. She claims them even from their birth, and gathers them at once into her fold, that from the first the promises of the Gospel may be pledged to them, and they share in those rich blessings which are offered to her members. The first Rubric in our Prayer Book which relates to the nfant, is one for the guidance of the minister of the Parish, directing b'm " often to admonish the people, that they de fer not the baptism of their children unless upon a great and reasonahs cause." As the children of the Israelites at eight days old were made members of the Jew ish Church, and thus entitled to the covenant promises Of TH*! CHIJRCH. 182 *__ioh God had male to -the nation, so arc your cbildien bj haiptism'-to bei received, into the fold ofthe Christian Church. When, therefore, the child is presented before the altar, the appeal -is made to those present — " I beseech you to call upon God the Father, through our Lord Jesus Christ, that of His bounteous mercy, He will grant to this child that whicli by nature he cannot have ; that he may be baptized with water and) the Holy Ghost, and received into Christ's Holy Church, and be made a living member of the same." And> this, is done. The, water is poured forth — the sign of the iOross*ris impressed upon the forehead of that uncon- * Among th& refinements of modern wisdom is a dread of the Sign of the Cross. Are we ashamed of it ?> Have we forgotten the example of St. Paul, and ceased to " glory in the cross of Jesus Christ?" Such was. not by any means the view of the Primitive Christians. ".When heathens;" says Hooker, "despised the Christian religion because , of the sufferings, of Jesus Christ, the Fathers, to tes tify ,hqw little suchi.contunielies and contempts prevailed with them, phpse rather the sign of the Cross, than any other outward mark, where by. fhe .-world might most easily discern always what lhcy .were." (Eccies. Polity, book v.) Tertullian, in the second century testifies,, that 'on all occ<.si6fis they used this sign. (Deo Coron. Milil. _. iii.) It was made upon those persons who were admitted as Cate chumens, (Bing. Orig. Eccies. lib. x. c. i. sec. 3., and c. ii. sec. 8,) and signed upoh their foreheads at the time of bapti-tm. (Palmer's Orig. Lit. v. ii. p. 190.) ' Thus they would, manifest — St. Augustine says — "that so" far are they from blushing at the Cross, they do not conceal this' instrument of .redemption, but carry it. on their brows." .(In Psalm cxli.) ¦ "¦¦„.'.- . It was this spirit whicli induced our, forefathers everywhere to sei up.thesign of the Cross — in their Churches — their houses — by the way-side— and at the fountain — -that as the weary traveller stopped M. drink, he might have before him the emblem of the Crucified. There may sometimes have been superstition mingled with this, but was not even superstition better than the refined indifference of our day ? In a treatise on the Ten Commandments;' 'entitled'" Dives ei Pauper," and printed itt "Westminster by "Wynk'Bn de Worde, a. i>. 1496,'the real'' and piotis object" of erecting the Cross by the, road-side is- third expressively assigned — " For this reason ben Crosses by yo ' Waye, that whan folke psssy nge see the Crosses, they s. wide tliynka on 'Hym that deyed on ye Crowe, and worshy7pe Hym above all thynge," 1*4 r-ik m ri iu.. H\ii.i_.6 •cious' beiiigi " ir. token that hereafter he Shall , hot ;,b>. ashamed to confess the faith of Christ cruciaed, and mar.. fully to fight under His banner, against sin, the world, and But we are told, " it is Popish." Are we then to give up every Primitive practice which the Romish Church has retained ? If so, we shall soon be worse off than our dissenting brethren. The Church of England in one of her canons thus vindicates her retention of thin sign— " Following the steps of our most worthy King, because he therein followeth the rules ofthe Scripture, and the practice ofthe Primitivt Church, we do commend to all true members of the Church of Eng land these our directions and observations ensuing: the honor 'and dignity of the name of the Cross begat a reverend estimation even in the Apostles' time, (for aught that is known to the contrary,) of the sign of the Cross, which the Christians shortly after used in all their nctiens. The use of this sign in Baptism was held by tlie Primilne Church, as well by the Greeks as the Latins, with one consent mid great applause. This continual and general use of the sign ot the Cross is evident by the testimonies ofthe ancient fathers. " It must be confessed, that in process of time, the sign of the Cross was greatly abused, in the Church of Rome. But the abchs of a thing does not take away the lawful use of it. Nay, 60 fill was it from the purpose of the Church of England to forsake and reject the Churches of Italy, France, Spain, Germany, or any such like Churches in all things which they held and practised, that as the Apology ofthe Church of England confesseth, it doth with reverence retain tliose ceremonies which do neither endamage the Church of . God, nor offend the minds of sober men • and only departeth from them in those particular points, wherein they were fallen both from themselves in their ancient integrity, and from tlie Apostolical Churches which were their first founders. "Tlie sign of the Cross in Baptism being thus purged from all I'opish superstitions and error, and reduced in the Church of England to the primary institution of it, upon those rules of doctrine concern ing things indifferent, which are consonant to the word of God, ami tlie judgments of all the ancient fathers, we hold it the part of every private man, both minister and other, reverently to retain .he true use of it prescribed by public authority." Canon xxx. Let us then continue to glory in the Cross. Let it be elevateu on our Churches, to show a heedless world the object of those con.e crated buildings. Surely, this emblem of our common faith — glitter- fig in the sunshine, and immovable in the storm — is more appropriate on our pinnacles and spires, than the light vane, turning to ever? of TBI. CHVlltH. 18ft Hie tltsiri] : ahd to continue Christ's faithful soldier anJ ser vant Uiito liis life's end." Thus he becomes a member of the visible Church, tier responsibilities. are resting on hi'B —her blessings belong to him. " A few Culm words of failh and playfet, A few bright drops of holy d r el ip below are " carried about with every wind of doctrine." " And we will not we beseech Thee, upon the sorrows of Thy servant, for whom our prayers are de sired. In Thy wisdom,. Thor. hast seen fit to visit him with trouble, and' to bring distress upon him. Remember him, 0 Lord, in mercy ; sanctify Thy fatherly correction to, him; endue his soul with patience under his affliction, and with resignation to Thy blessed will; comfort him with a sense of Thy goodness; lift up Thy countenance upon him, and give him peace, through Jesus Christ, our Lord." " Is any sick among you?" — asks the same Apostle— '.' let him call for the elders of the Church, and let them pray over him." And for this also the Church has provided. In her " Visitation of the Sick," she marks out the course to be pursued, bringing down the subject ofour faith to something •tangible and practical — dispelling at once the dreamy reve ries of modern days — and fastening upon those points in the belief of the mind, and the conduct of the life, which present the only true evidence of preparation for Heaven. She has also " The Communion of the Sick," by which, with appro priate prayers, the Sacrament of the Lord's death can be administered to him who is debarred from mingling with his fellow- worshippers in the House of God, and.in this way, he eats the bread of life, and keeps up his spiritual union with the faithful.* And thus she is present, to sustain and com fort his fainting spirit, while days of suffering and nights of weariness are appointed him, ever being at hand with her holy words. Nor does she leave him when life is just Hick ering away. In the very latest moment of existence, when the soul is trembling on the brink of eternity, she has pro vided that solemn prayer, by which her ministers may com mend the departing spirit into the hands of its God. Thus. the last accents which fall upon his ear are the touching words — " 0 Almighty God, with whom do live the spirits ol just men made perfect, after they are delivered from theii * " A simple altar by the bed For high Communion meetly spread, Chalice, and pla'te, and snowy vest. We eat and drink -:- , then calmly blest, All mourners, one with dying breath. We sate and talk'd of Jesus' death." KtbU ot fHE c-i-jKci".. IM earthly prisons ; we humbly commend the soul of this Thy ser vant, our dear brother, into Thy hands, as into the hands of a faithful Creator, and most merciful Saviour ; most humbly beseeching Th«e, that it may be precious in thy sight: wasn itj we pray Thee' 'in the blood of that Immaculate Lamo, that Was slain to take away the sins of the world ; that whatsoever defilements it may have contracted in the midst ofthis miserable and naughty world, through the lust ofthe flesh, or the wiles of Satan,' being purged and done away, it may be presented pure and without Spot before Thee." Never, indeed, in time Of health -and strength, can the: words of this prayer come horrie to us in all their force. To realize their full solerrtrtity, we must hear them uttered in the cham ber of the dying, wheti the spirit of the Christian is wrestling in its last conflict, and the mortal is just putting on immor tality.* Nor does the Church's care end here, even when the spirit is gone. She still lias a voice to utter with regartl to the eiirthly tabernacle which it once inhabited. She proclaims over it the holy promises ofthe Gospel, in the name of Him who has declared Himself to be "the Resurrection and the Life," and then commits it to its last resting-place, " earth to earth, ashes to ashes,_dust to dust," pointing forward the surviving relatives who have gathered around, to "the general resurrection in the last day, and the life of the world to come, through our Lord Jesus Christ; at whose second coming in glorious majesty to judge the world, the earth ami the sea shall give up their dead ; and the corruptible bodies of those who sleep in Him shall be changed, and nia.lt.' like unto His own glorious body ; according to the mighty workitigj whereby He is able to subdue all things to Himself." Such then is the system of the Church — that ancient and Catholic system, derived by her from her earlier and better days — which she has kept in her formularies, and which by means of her Prayer-Book is. ever spread out before her children. You perceive, then, that never for an instant does she lose sight of one committed to her trust. From his Bap tism to his Burial— from the cradle to the grave — she is ever at his side. She does not hazard his Spiritual improvement or the fidelity or changing viev s of those, who may happen 198 THt MORAL TRAINING! to minister at her altars, but heiself marks out the plan am; sketches the system by which her members are to live. Day after day— ^month after month — year after year— she expects to go forward, leading them svei on to nobler attainments in the divine life, and as this World gradually fades away, preparing them more fully for that which is to come. Her lesson is-^-"_f»i quietness and confidence sha"., be your strength." Tell me then-^I again ask^is not this the end which God intended his Church should answer, to train up His children for Heaven ? And is not this the true object of oui faith — by a constant struggle with ourselves, and by inward, spiritual discipline-^steadily to increase the power of holi ness over our hearts ? Or, does religion consist in periodical excitements^— in renouncing for a time all dependence on the reason, and suffering the imagination to be awakened to a perfect delirium — until we lose sight of things earthly ami terrestrial ? Is the soul to pass from spiritual death to life, by one spasmodic effort, amid the whirlwind of excited pas sions? Is an inquiring, immortal being to be taught the way to Heaven, by distorted, unnatural appeals — by array ing scenes of terror before the eye, until the mind is inca pacitated from forming a calm and rational decision ? , Are the holiest themes of our faith — themes on which angels can dwell with the deepest adoration — to be bandied about by ignorance and fanaticism, and lowered by every degrad ing association, until all reverence is gone ? Was it thus that our Lord proclaimed the solemn precepts ofthe Gospel, on the hill-sides of Judea, or in the Courts of the Temple ? No, everything with Him was elevating, lofty, and impres sive. Men might quail beneath the truths He uttered, bul the skeptic found nothing in His teaching from which he could gather new topics for scoffing; nor were the worldly- minded able to indulge in ribaldry and laughter. And in the same spirit would the Church impart all hei instructions. Solemnly, and steadily her voice is heard, impressing upon our hearts the awakening lessons with which she is charged. She appeals to you, not for to-day only— -or for this month — or this season — but she goes on unceasingly through your lifetime. She wishes you deeply to realize the truth, that religion is not a thing for part iculai or THE CHURCH. 199 limes and places, but a holy influence which is to be exerted oVer everypart ofour existence, here and hereafter. There fore it is, that " she takes to herself almost' every common action of our lives, and makes it her own by giving it a reli gious turn, a Church meaning. She keeps meddling with us in every stage of our lives. She comes among us in our Baptism, Education, Confirmation, Marriage, Sickness, and Death. She calls upon us to consecrate our worldly goods, by yielding a portion up to her. She bids us make our time minister to Eternity, by calling us away from a worldly use of it on her Sunday and Saints' days. She makes us put a limit even upon our natural appetites, that she may teach us, through her Fasts, obedience and self denial, and bountiful giving of alms. Thus she strives to interweave herself with our most secret and common thoughts, our every-day actions, our domestic griefs and joys. She would put something spirit ual into them all. She is diligent, unwearying, ungrudging as her Master, always going about doing good. " * Is not this system, then, one most beautiful in all its parts, and proving, what care the Church has taken of our spiritual interests ? Is there any thing here left undone, which ought to have been done — any link wanting in the chain by which she binds us to the Throne of God ? No, he who is once within her fold, and yet wishes to cast aside her influence, and return to worldliness, would be obliged to make an effort, before he can succeed in bursting the bands which she hath twined about him, and breaking away frOm her holy restraints. Not on her therefore must be cast the blame, when any who have belonged to her, fall by the way, and thus prove that they are to have no part nor lot in the Heavenly inheritance. She has provided every thing necessary for their spiritual welfare. The waters of life are flowing beside them, brightly and beautifully) but they will not stoop and drink. The HeaVenly armor is before them j but they will not array themselves in it forthe conflict. Do I address one individual, then, who has ever felt in clined to distrust the Church, and to wander elsewhere, seek ing food ? Is there one, who fears lest he cannot grow in hul'aess beneath her quiet round of services, who chaiges * Faber on " 1 he Chiirch-Ca„ jehism, " p. 6. §00 THE MORAL TRAINING her with formality j and wishes to turn to some place, where h« can find more excitement ? My brother ! it is not by noise and bustle that you are to be aided in your progress to Ilea Ven. The contest you are to wage, must be fought withir — in your own heart — and from the responsibility of this nothing can relieve yon. Excitement will only lead yom thoughts away to the outward world of action, instead of tht little inward world of meditation. It can never produce th. necessary moral discipline, and if you trust to it, you will find. When the morning of the Resurrection comes, that you are without the vVedding garment. Again ; let me ask such a person another question — Have you thoroughly tried this system of the Church, to see what is its effect ? She has appointed, as we have shown Jou, varied services. Have you faithfully attended all of these — Sundays and week-days — on Festivals and in Lent ? llave you acted out that principle, by which alone her true children are guided, that nothing but an insuperable obstacle shall prevent them from being present here ? If you have not, what possible idea can you form, ofthe influence of'hei holy system ? She has also her regular Fast days, to disci pline your spirit, and recall your affections from a world which is passing aWay. Have you observed them us yon should, afflicting the soul here that it may be saved hereaf ter? She has too her Holy Festivals, when, in a spirit of subdued joy, we are to come before God in thanksgiving. Have you done so, or have those solemn, consecrated days been lost, and unmarked ..midst the other days of jour worldly life? Oh, if you have not, month after month sat humbly at her feei, and listened to her teaching, what right have you to allege that she does not supply every spiritual want ? She can only place her system before you, and then ltjave it to yourself to enjoy its benefits or not. She can minister only to the faithful. Come, then, and make but trial of her power. While trouble is out among the nations, and " men's hearts are failing them for fear, and for looking after those things which are coming on the earth," we call yc i to this ancient folJ, where the landmarks are still unchanged. Her strength is unabated — her grace is undiminished — and she can now pour into your heart the same f:ll lide of joy, which she _? mi earnm. 201 has1 given t> the saints in the generations which have gone. Slill, her prayers, and Sacraments, and holy rites, remain as of old, and she stands before you, in this world a home for the lonely, and at the same time a type of that eternal and unchanging home for which she would prepare you. POPULAR OBJECTIONS AGAINST THE CH'JRCH. Bide thou thy time I Watch with meek eyes the race of pride anil crime Sit ill the gate, aud be the heathen's jest. Smiling and self-possest, O thou, to whom is pledged a Victor's sway, Bide thou the Victor's day I Lyra Apasioaca. There are some so blinded by prejudice, that every thing connected with the distinctive principles of the Church, is the object of their special anathema. They see no beauty in her ancient, solemn services — nothing venerable in the .ung succession of her Bishops, as the unbroken line" comes down through eighteen centuries. They understand but little of her peculiarities — they know not what is Primitive and Catholic — and they care not to inquire. The fact that any thing which they have abandoned, has been retained by tlie Church, is sufficient to draw down upon it their reprobation. "Having eyes, they see not, and having ears, they hear not." They form a perfect illustration of. old Fuller's description of Prynne — " So great is his antipathy against Episcopacy, that if a Seraph himself should be a Bishop, he would either find or make some sick feathers in his wings." Now, to such persons explanations are useless. Words are wasted on them. They can only be left te go on, until their wilful blindness leads them into some strange extravagance, and they thus by their, conduct give a- new proof of what Dr. Johnson asserted, that " fanaticism is robust ignorance." There are others, however, who will listen like reason able beings. They have perhaps, been mutated in entire .OftlLAIt OBJECTIONS AClAlNST T_tE CHtmCH. 203 nusappiehension of the spirit which pervades the Church, and even of the object of her services. They have heard the oft-repeated calumnies which are urged against her, yet never met with their refutation. By such persons then, a few words of explanation will often be received in that spirit which should always characterize the sincere inquirer after truth. I propose, therefore, this evening briefly to dis cuss some of the common and popular objections which are urged against the Church. Several which I shall mention, may appear to those already within the pale of the Church, as being too trivial and unimportant' to be fi'bticed. Yet they are only such as I have often myself encountered. for few subjects connected with religion are so little under stood by the great mass of those about us, as the claims and true position of our Church. One objection employed against us is — our use of the word " Catholic." In the Apostle's Creed, which we repeat every Sunday, we declare — "I believe in the Holy Cntholit Church" — and in the second Creed set down in our Prayer- Book — that called" the Nicene, and which was adopted a. d. 325, to be explanatory of the first— this confession is made still more strongly — " I believe one Catholic and Apostolic Church." So, too, in one ofthe Prayers in " The Visitation of the Sick," we pray God, that "when we shall have served Him in our generation, we may be gathered unto our fathers . ... in the communion of the Catholic Church." Now, to many persons the phrase Catholic Church conveys nothing but the idea of the Church of Rome,' because they have most erroneously been accustomed to distinguish the members of that particular body by the name of Catholics, al though it is a title which belongs to them no more than it does to any other branch of the Christian Church. This word is derived from the Greek word KaSoXmof, which means general or univerml. The Holy Catholic Church, then, means the Holy Universal Church, as existing in herdif- ferenf branches iri all purls of the earth, and in all ages of the world. For example,' this is the Greek word which is employed in the New Testament in setting forth tho titles of the Epislles of St. James, St. Peter, St. Jude, and the First Epistle of St. John ; because instead of being address- i"'l to particular Churches— #s St. Paul addressed his Epis 204 PI _>ULAR OBJEC-riONS ties to the Churcl in Corinth, or Rome, or Ephesus — ihiA were written to all the Churches throughout the world It might, therefore, be translated — and it would be the most literal rendering—" the Catholic Epistle (t_r-.ar_\rt KsAoTmu.) of James, Or Peter or John." Instead of which, as you remember, it is translated in our version — " the1 General Epistle of James and Peter, anil John." In the early ages, when small heretical sects occasionally arose, and separated from the great body of the faithful, calling themselves by different party names, the Church in stead retained the title of Catholic, to distinguish hersell from them, as being that one, continuous, orthodox body, which had always existed, and to which the preservation ol the truth was committed. The Catholic Church then was that which was spread throughout the world, and was des tined to continue also through all ages, even unto the end of time. Her common bond was the Apostolic Ministry, an, I her unity on all the grand cardinal doctrines of the faith. On every shore her branches were found under their different Bishops. Thus, there was the Catholic Church of Jerusalem, that of Antioch, of Alexandria, of Rome, and that in VVest- ' ern Europe. They had, indeed, no single, visible earthly, head, presiding over them all, but were independent of each other, in the same way that the Church in this country is now independent of the Church in England.* Yet. although * The causes which gave rise to the supremacy of the Bishops of Rome are obvious. The principal one' was, the temporal dignity and wealth of that city. This gave to its Church an early pre-eminence, and placed great power in the hands of her rulers. Rome was the mistress ofthe world — the entre to which all eyes were directed-— and this feeling of respect and veneration naturally extended to the Church there. Thus the Council of Chalcedon declared that Rome. had obtained privileges on account of its being the imperial City (Can. xxviii.) Cyprian also assigns this reason for honoring the Roman Church : " Quoniam pro magnitu.line sua debet Carthaginem Roma pracedere." (Epist. 49.) Precisely the same causes now give the Bishop of London greater influence in the Christinn world, than is possessed by the Bishop of Sodor and Man. In an age of darkness and superstition, it ,vas easy for a succession of ambitious prelates gradually to expand this influence into a supremacy *' Nothing, however, can be more conclusive than tha historical AGAix.f -i!_ik niviicU. gflft .hiis separated in distant regions, and speaking' divers lan guages, they still looked to each other, as being branches together of the same vine. Beautifully, indeed, is this illus trated in the writings of one of the old Fathers — "The Church," he says, "is one, though multiplied far and wide by its naturally prolific tendency ; in like manner as the eun has rays many, yet one light;, and the tree has many boughs, yet tlteir Strength, from the root upwards, is a single property; and When many streams flow from one argument against this claim of the Bishop of Rome. When Poly- crates and the Rishops of Asia disagreed with Pope Victor, they seemed to pay very little i-eg^rd to' his opinions or his excommuni cations. (Euseb. Eccies. Hist. lib. V. c. 24.) Irenoeus, too, rebuked the surrie Pope for his arrogance. (Ibid.) St. Cyprian bestowed on the Bishop of Rome no highef title than that of brother and colleague, and expressed the utmost disregard of Pope Stephen's judgment with regard to heretics. (Cyp. ad Pomp. 74.) The early Eishops of Rome indeed disclainied all such authority. Gregory the Great, iii the ijth Century, tells us, that "the Fathers of the Council of Chalcedon were they -who first offered to his predecessors the title of Universal Bishop, which they refused to accept," (Epist. Lib. vii Ep. SO.) He elsewhere condemns the Patriarch of Constantinople for assuming this title, and says — " Whoever claims the Universal Episcopate, is the forerunner of Anti-Christ." (Ego fidenter dico, •juod quisquis se Universalem Sacerdotem vocat, vel vocari desiderat, in elatione sua, Anti-Christum proecnrrit.) (Lib. vi. Epist. 30.) The Second General Council ii^leed-rr-that of Constantinople, a. d. 381 — gave the title of " Mother of all Churches," not to the Church of Rome, but that of Jerusalem. (PercivaVs Roman Schism, p. 32.) It was not until the eleventh century that this gigantic system was fully matured. Then came the attempt by the Henries of Germany — the Imperial line of Fraconia — to secularize the Church, and incor porate it into the State. The question was, therefore, whether the Church should submit to this feudal vassalage, or be herself the ruler if the world ? To affect the latter result, Hildebrand set forth lqftiy,,and unauthorized pretensions in behalf of the Church of Rome, and his victory in this struggle endowed her with that supremacy, vsrtiich she has ever since claimed, See Bowden's Life and Pontificate of Gregory VII. 2 vols. Lond. 1840, passim. See this subject fully discussed in Barrow on, the Pope's Supremacy —Bp. Hopkins's Church of Rome compared with Prim. Church — an- Palmer's Treatise on tlie Church, vol. ii. p. 451—493 2()fi POPULAR OBJECT ONS head, a chaiacter of multiplicity may be developed in thu copio isness of their discharge, and yet the unity of their nature must be recognized in the fountain they proceed from. Divide the ray from the sun, and the principle of unity will negative their separation ; lop the bough from the .tree, it will want strength to blossom ; cut the stream from its fountain, the remnant will be dried up. Thus the Church, invested with light from the Lord, sends out her rays ot»i the whole earth ; and yet the light is one, disseminated over every where, with no separation of the original body she stretches forth the rich luxuriance of her branches over all the world, and pours out her onward streams, and spreads into the distance ; yet is there one head, one source, one mother, in all the instances of her eventful fecundity.* Such in that day was the view entertained of the Church Her members felt, therefore, that they were one " in the fellowship of the Spirit," while with the different secjs of heretics about them, they held no communion. It was in this spirit that St. Augustine defined the word Catholic. "The Catholic Church," said he, "is so called, because it is spread throughout the world."f Again, he adds, address ing certain heretics — "If your Church is Catholic, show me that it spreads its branches throughout the world ; for such is the meaning of the word Catholic."t So also Vincentius of Lerins writes in the fifth century — " The Catholic or uni versal doctrine is that which remains the same through all ages, and will continue so till the end ofthe world. He is a true Catholic, who firmly adheres to the faith which he knows the Catholic Church has universally taught from the Jays of old ,"J Who then in this day are the Catholics ? We answer, ihose who belong to any branch of the original Church, in whatever country it may exist, which has retained the Apos tolic ministry, and owns its subjection to the Universal Church, rendering obedience to her voice. We are members af the Catholic Church, for we derive our succession front, Primitive days, and still h< id in all respects to " the faith jnce delivered 1 1 the saints." We recognize our connection * Cyprian, de Unit. Eccies. f Epist. 170, ad S. Sever. X Cotr.ra Gaudent, L iii. c. 1. § Commonit ad. Hasret. c. 2B. AtiAfNSf Ths: dittJROfi. 20*? tvjthdhe.ilJniversal Church,, whenever we repeat the Creeds, or, that declaration , in the Te Deum—" The Holy Church throughout all tl}e world doth acknowledge Thee.?'. Our Mother Church in England has nev«r given up the title. " Wq hope". — says Hooker-^" that to reform ourselves, if at any time.we.have done amiss, iSinot to sever ourselves from thp-ChurflhjWe were of before,, -In the Church we were, apd.we are, so still."* . ..<. ..This too, i&.fhe,;title,of the Greek Church,:and of those vast; anil, numerous Churches in the) East, which, even in th^ir low, .estate, ; have never severed themselves from the Universal .phurch. We acknowledge, too, as Catholics'. the numbers of the Church of Rome, within the bouiids of her own proper jurisdiction", ancl- when she .does, not -put forth clams which conflict with thpsei. of j.other; branches of the Qhurch.-j-.. Yoii, perceive then from this explanation, how ' * __ccl'es. Pol. works, v. i. p. 437, ed.' Keble. Mr. Painter has col lected many instances from public'do'ciiments, of the 'continued use of the title Catholic. Tor example — In the order of prayer before sermnnB in 1535, the preacher Was- to "prity for the whole Catholic Church of Christ, &e., and especially for tlie Catholic Church of this realm" and for King Henry "VIII. the " siipremediead of this Catholic Cliurch of England" (See Burnet, v. -iii; Records, n. 29,) In the act against Annates, (23- Hen. viii. c. 33,) it- is said, that the. King and all his subjects," "as well spiritual as temporal, been as obedient, devout, Catholic, find humble children, of God, and holy Church, as any popple be within any realm christened." (Treatise on Church, v. i. p. .227.) ,, flie, writers of the. Church in England always speak in these terms. ... - , !J(_-' " ¦ , . '.:.,:< . i . f There are some writers who take the ground that, since the Council of Trent, *he Romanists have cut themselves off from the Catfiolic'Chiirch, and' are i ihismatics. This opinion is supported by Jewel, Field, and others' ' Even Mr. Froude, who has been accused of leaning towards Romanism', says — " The Romanists [are not schismatics! i_t>'Ehglahd and Catholics abroad, but' they] are wretched Tridfentines every where,'' Remains, v. ii p. 434. -.Wehave followed, however, on this point, the great body of Englislidivines. Hooker calls the Church of Rome- " a part of the hpuse, of God, a limb, of the visible church of Christ.": ( Works,n. 478.) And again — " We gladly acknowledge them to be of the family of Jesus Christ." (76/4 438) iThis was the view bf. Land, Hammond Bran, hall, Andrewes, ChiUingworth, Tillotson, Burnet, &c, It is as gflS ftfrtUii oiitc-tidiii errom ius is that popular mode'of speech by which so many are accustomed to confer this title exclusively nipoh the' members of the Romish Church. " The name Catholic be longs equally to all the members of Christ's Catholic Church, wherever dispersed and however distressed. Hence a name, which belongs equally to all, whether oriental, or occidental, cannot be correctly employed as the special, and exclusive, and descriptive appellation of a part only; because when the term is thus used, the common character of Catholicism is by implication denied to every Christian, who happens not to be a member of that provincial Western Church which is in communion with the Bishop of Rome, and which acknow ledges him as its chief or Patriarch."* eerted also most clearly in the formularies of the English Church. Thus, in the " Institutions of a Christian Man," signed in J537 by- twenty- one Archbishops and Bishops, (among whom were Cranmer, Latimer, Shaxton, Bradford, May, and Cox, all warm supporters of the Refor mation,) we find this passage — "Therefore I do believe that the Church of Rome is not, nor cannot worthily be called the Catholic Church, but only a particular member thereof. And I believe also that the said Church of Rome, with all the other particular Churcl'.'-. in the world, compacted and united together, do make and constitute but one Catholic or Church body." (p. 55.) So again, the " Neces sary Doctrine and Erudition," approved by the Bishops of England, in 1543, after acknowledging the particular Churches of England, Spain, Italy," Poland, Portugal, and Rome, adds that these churches are "members of the whole Catholic Church, and each of them by himself is also worthily called a Catholic Church." (p. 248 s We think, therefore, that the decision of the Church in England, on this point, is clear. Leading modern writers generally take the same view. It will bt- found expressed in the works of Palmer. Bp. Whittingham, Dr, Hook, G. S, Faber, and others. The latter, even when writing against tlie Romanists, says — "That the Latins constitute one of the many branches of Christ's Universal Church, I am far from wishing to deny." Diff. of Romanism, pref. xxxiii. * Faber's Difficulties of Romanism, pref. xxxiii. The same idea is expressed by Dr. Hook, in a sermon preached before the Queen, .a the Chapel Royal — " You see here, by the way, the folly (if it be not a sin, for it is calling ' evil good, and good evil ') of styling the Romish Dissenters in England, as some persons in extreme ignorance aud others pet haps with bad intentions, do, Catholics; for this ii AGAtNST THE CHURCH. 209 ..Let lis not then misinterpret this term, or shrink from acknowledging, .'./at we " believe in one Catholic, and Apos tolic Church," It, is declaring, the truth, that we are ni. obscure, sect* — no mere party in the Christian world, calling oui^edves by the name of some human teacher: but that wi. claim fellowship, with the great, fold of Christ — the corn- mmiion,. of .the ^faithful, not only in this generation, sprear e\;ery where throughout the earth, but also of those who, it eyery age which has gone, have "slept, in Jesus," and those who shall be united " witfi His body, which is the Church," in ajl future time, even until the trump of the archangel proclaims that the Warfare of His followers is over. Again, another objection often urged against us is— -th, use by our ministers of peculiar clerical garments. In the En glish Ritual, published in 1549, directions are given 011 the subject of Ecclesiastical Vestures. Among these we find particular mention ma.le of the Albe. This garment, which is noticed among the acts of the Council of Narbonne, a. d 589, was very similar lo the present Surplice, by which name it began to be called about the twelfth century,-)- We will quote some of these Rubrics of 1549. " Upon the day and eiuuates, that we of the Church of England are heretics, whereas you have seen that ours, not theirs, is the true and orthodox Church of Christ in this country, the real Catholic Church in and of England If they dislike the name Papist, we may speak of them as Roman ists, ..-or even Roman Catholics. Roman Catholics they may be styled,, for (though schismatics and dissenters in England) in France and England they belong to a-Church true by descent, though corrupted by Roman, or Popish superstitions. A bad man is still a man, and you may refuse to associate with him before he reforms ; but still you will never permit him so to style himself a man, as to imply that you yourself are not a human being." * By not adhering to this name we furnish the Romanist with an argument against us. Thus, Dr. Milner, speaking of the members of the Churdi in England, .ays — " Every time they address the God of truth, either in solemn worship or in private devotion, they are forced each of them tc repeat, ' I believe in the Catholic Church.' Andyet.ifl ask any of them the question, ' Are you a catholic ?' he is sure to answer me, ' No, I am A teotestant.' Was there ever a more glaring instance of incoLsisteiicy and self-condemnation ami fig rational buings ." End of Religious Controversy, letter xxv. | Palmer on the Ritual, v ii. p. 320. 210 POPULAR OBJECTIONS at Ihe time appointed fer the ministration if the Holy Coin munion, the priest that shall execute the holy ministry shall put upon him the vesture appointed for that ministration: that is to say, a white albe, plain," &c. " In the saying oi singing of matins and evensong, baptizing and buryintr. the minister, in parish churches and chapels annexed .o the same, shall use a surpless." Following this ancient regula tion ofthe English Church, we have adopted the custom that the Priest, when he officiates in the usual services, should be clothed in a white linen surplice.* And yet there are some so sensitive, as to make this a cause of offence. "It is used by the Romauists" — we are told. And so it is; but if good- in itself, is this any reason for abandoning il ? Is it the object of the Christian world, to get as far as possible from the Church of Rome, without exercising any discrimination as to what is correct, and what incorrect in her rites and services? Why not then abandon the custom of singing, as a part of public worship, because vocal music is heard in her temples — or give up baptism, because that Church has retained it — or the use of any commissioned ministry whatsoever, because she has still clung to the order of the priesthood.f The question is not, whether it is a custom of the Romish Church, but whether it is sanctioned by the usage of the ancient Church, and whether it is ad- * Tlie origin of this word is somewhat doubtful Webster, in his Dictionary, gives its derivation as from the Latin " super pelliciitm, "»bove the robe of fur." This agrees with the account given by Durandns, who, in his work on the Divine Offices, written about the year 128(5, traces tip the etymology of the word superpelliceum, to a custom which anciently prevailed in the Church, of wealing tunics made from the skins of such animals as the country furnished, over whicli was cast a white linen alb or vest, which thus received its name superpelliceum, from the circumstance of its being worn above fur. Rock's Hierurgia, vol. ii. p. 661. f We might find a fit answer in the reply given by Cyprian in are ient times, to similar objections — " Quid ergo ? quia et honoreiu cathedra? sacerdotalis Novatianus usurpat, num idcirco nn. cathedra, rcnunciare debemus? Aut quia Novatianus altare coUocare, et .acrificia offerre Contra jus nititur ; ab altari et sacraficiis cessare nos oportet, ne paria et similia cum illo celebrare videamur !" Epist. ad Jubaian de llaret. rebapt. AGAINST THE CMtfRCH. 211 .antageous, -as adding solemnity to the forms of public wor ship?, When on this, and- other kindred points, such puerile objections. are brought forward, instead of attempting gravely to meet, {hern, we feel- inclined to respond with the Apostolic injunction — "• Brethren, be not children in Understanding ; lint in understanding be mem"* i ',' Buti,the;jSui:p]ice,is not necessary for the worship of God " — we are again told. Now suppose we should carry out did**' principle, and only retain what is absolutely and barely. necessary; how much would be left to us? Why, not even these consecrated temples, in which we offer up our prayers, are indispensable. We might worship God' " in spirit and in truth," ill any building however humble. We might ppur forth our pejitionsji where the dark forests wero waving around us, and. the'. Heavens above formed our only canopy ; like the ancient Christians), when in days; of perse cutioij, far away from the abodes of men, "" They shook the depths of the desert's gloom Witli their hymns of lofty cheer." B.t we know that the mind and the devotional feelings are. reached: through the outward senses, and therefore it is meet and proper, that some spot should be set apart, ih which week after Week we may assemble before God. By being thus " separated from all unhallowed, worldly, and common uses, " it will -" fill men's minds with greater reve rence for God's glorious majesty; and affect their hearts with more devotion and humility in His service, "f And the same regard for the: principles of association Would dictate, that' when '.he minister of the Church officiates in the solemn rites of the sanctuary, even his outward apparel should declare to those before whom he stands, the sacred duty in which he is engaged. Thus, the recollections of this world are broken in lipo'i^— men forget the individual, and remember only the office which he holds. . , Lopji. again at the authority for the use of this garment, a„J tjije, antiquity .which can be pleaded in it# behalf. Un- ler the Jewish dispensation, God Himself prescribed withibt. * 1 Tor. xiv, 20. , ,.:,.,. { Addresr in the ffi. for the Consecration of i Church 212 POPtrUtt oSJH . rldtss utmost mi AUteness, the dress of all who should minister before Him in holy things. While magnificent robes were provide! for the High Priest, the ordinary priests when per forming service, were to wear " a white linen ephod.'^ The Levites also, who were singers, were arrayed in white linen. And this continued to be the law through all ages ei. the Jewish state. The early apostles being Jews, and thus trained up tn see " a.I things done decently and in order, "it was natural that under the new dispensation they should have continued to observe the- ancient custom of appropriate priestly gar ments. This is shown by frequeut allusions to the surplice in the primitive writers. Thus it is said in the Apostolical Constitutions — "Then the High Friest standing at the allai with the presbyters, makes a private prayer by himself, having on his white or bright vestment." * Pontius, in his account of St. Cyprian's martyrdom, says that there washy chance near him at that time "a white linen cloth, so that at his passion he seemed to have some of the ensigns of the Kpiscopal honor."t EsebiUs, in his address to Paulihus, Rishop of Tyre, mentions "the sacred gown" and "the sacerdotal garments " worn by Bishops and Priests. X It was one of the charges made against St. Athanasius, that he had imposed a tax Upon the Egyptians, to raise a fund for the linen vestments of the Chunk, y This fact is mentioned both by Athanasius himself, and by Sozomen. We observe in this, that the accusation was not, that he used such vestments in the Church, but only that he laid a tax upon the people to provide them; which supposes them to be in ordinary use. St. Chrysostom intimates that Deacons wore this habit in their ministrations when he says, "their honor, crown, andglory, tlid not consist so much in their walking about the Chucoh m a white and shining garment, as in their power to repel unworthy communicants from the Lord's table. " II The historian Sozomen, when speaking of the assault made upon the Church by '.he enemies of St. Chrysostom, says— • Lib. viii. ch. 12 f Wheatly on Common Prayer, p. 10*1 X Eccies. Hist. lib. x. ch. 4. § Bingham's Orig. Eccies. lib. xiii. ch. 8. sec. 2. j Chrys. Horn. 82 in Matt. agaIaNst the church. 213 " The prieuts and deacons were beaten and driven out of tha hureh, as they were in the vestments of their ministration." * And to give one more instance; St. Jerome in the same sen tence both shows the- ancient use of the dress, and reproves the dress, and reproves the needless scruples )f those who oppose it-™" What harm or enmity, I pray, is it against God, f a Bishop, Presbyter, or Deacon, or any other ofthe Ecele- astical Order, come forth in a white vestment, when they minister the Sacraments ? " t And how suitable is the color of this dress in which the priests minister at the altar ! White has in all ages been the emblem of innocence and purity. Therefore' it is. that when in the book of Daniel, the Ancient of Days is represen ted as appearing to the prophet, we are told, that " His garment was white as snow " — when our Lord was transfig ured, "His raiment was white as the light "'—and when angels have appeared to men, they have always been clothed in white apparel. It declares the frame of mind in which we should a^ipea. before God — cleansed from all sin, like those whom . St. John saw in vision, who had "washed their robes,: and made them white in the blood of the Lamb." .To the Lamb's wife, which is the Church, we are told, "it was granted, that she should be arrayed in fine linen, clean and white; for the fine linen is the righteousness of saints." ">;And more than all, by this significant emblem we are pointed forward to the glory which awaits the ransomed. "They" — declares our Lord — "shall walk with me in white, for they are worthy. He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment, and I will not blot out his name out of the book of life, but I will confess his name before my Father, and before his angels." And again, the same Apostle says — "I beheld, and lo, a great multitude, which no man could number, of all nations, and kindred, and peo ple; and tongues, stood before the throne, and before the lAamb, clothed with white robes, and palms in their hands ; and cried with a Inud voice, saying Salvation to our God which litteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb. " Surely then it is right, that our ministers, when public.) * So,?om. Lib. ii. cap. 21. ¦*¦ Ady, Felag 4b, i. ch *"• torn. 2. 2*4 POPULAR JB. ECTIONS offering prayers to God, should retain this ancient gaiment, Which was first prescribed by the God of Israel Himself— adopted iii the Primitive Church — in all ages the emblem of devotion — and thus descending to us, consecrated by the veneration of mo>e than three thousand years.* * It will be observed, that we have said nothing about the blacn gown, which is generally used by the minister while preaching. The reason of this omission is, because it is not a clerical dress. It was originally an academic dress, which is still worn in many of our col leges, and by the judges of some of our courts. There is therefore nothing about it strictly ecclesiastical. The object of this change of cOstume While officiating in the ser vice is briefly this. The priest while at the altar or engaged in reading the words of the Liturgy, acts and speaks in the name of the Church, authoritatively, and is therefore clothed in the vestments of the Church. In preaching, however, he is delivering his own words, not the words of the Church, and therefore does not wear her dis tinctive garments. , .',,.,. It was not indeed originally intended, that he should put, on a gown after the prayers, for the purpose of preaching. The gown and cassock were the ordinary daily dress of the clergy, even down to the middle of the last century. We learn this from the works of Fielding, and several of the pictures of Hogarth. The priest is supposed therefore to be already clothed in his gown and cassock, over which is his surplice. It is only necessary, therefore, for him to take off the latter, and. he is ready for preaching. This is what is referred to in Shakespeare, where he so clearly shows the manner of wearing both the surplice and gown. In " All's well that ends well," the clown, being obliged to do something which he dislikes, consoles himself by saying, that he " will wear the surplice of humility over the black gown of a big heart." This is the view given in" a late work— -A few Thoughts on Church subjects, by Rev. Edw. Scobell, Lind., 1843. He says — "And the law ordains this distinction warily; with a special design and good reason. As a -ministering priest, a clergy man is the representative and voice of the Church, speaking in her own words, and in the use of the Liturgy, delivering her written, deliberate, unalterable doctrines; and therefore she clothes him, n it only with a power, but with spe cific dress for that solemn purpose." .' . ... "But in the' regular sermon, and as a regular preacher, high and holy as his employment may be, and sincerely as the Church' hopes for tbe best, still the preacher is no' longer her sacerdotal organ." In thi? case — Mr. S. argues — while the minister rnay be endeavoring to AUAIKST THE -.HURCH. 215 Eut a third objection urged against the Church, is one ir.rr.i'h mjro i.nporiant. It is — that tlie terms of admission into .turfold are easy, and but little scrutiny exercised. Now, what is the door of admission into the Christian Church? We - answer, of course, Baptism— for this was commanded ex plicitly by our Lord, as the right of entrance into His King- _tom, for all who embraced His doctrines. " Go," said He, "and teach" — or, as it might be translated—" make dis ciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of tho Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." Everv person, therefore, who has been baptized is as much a mem ber ol the Church as he ever can be. The question, Whethei after I his he walks worthy of his high calling? opens ae entirely different subject, and one, the responsibility of whicn rests upon himself, not upon the Church. But let us see whether the Church does lightly receive her members in Baptism. Take up the questions propo«e'l to one who is a candidate for that Holy Rite, and the mere reading of them will at once cause this objection to vanish. What then does she require him to believe, on entering her fold ? The question addressed to him is — " Dost thou believe all the Articles of the Christian faith, as contained in the Apostles' Creed? " Now, you well know the simple, com prehensive Creed called by this name, and which is repeated give the views and expositions of the Church, still he does so in hia own language, and with his own thoughts. In doing this, he is liable to error, and sometimes is actuaUy in error. " On this account it is, that the Church purposely disrobes him in his new function, (by giving him no license to appear in them,) of those ornaments with which, in her reading desk, and at her communion table, she has invested him by authority, and suffers him to speak his own private thoughts in his own private dress ; and thus it is that the preacher, (if the office be united,) when in the pulpit he ceases to be a priest, puts on no new dress for the purpose, but simply takes off the surplice, and remains in his original gown." P. 42. See also Lond. Quar. Re view, May, 1343,, p. 262. This view is confirmed by the invariable custom of the Church ot Rome. There, when, the same priest performs the service and preaches, before he ascends, the pulpit, he takes off the peculiar vest ment, (chasuble cr cope,) in which he performs the rites, and assume) it again when he returns to the altar. 2'.b POPULAR OBJECTIONS in our services every time we meet, [t contains- a trie! summary of all the cardinal doctrines of our faith— of a'.l wliich are to be believed, as necessary to salvation. These are lo be received heartily and truly — in their literal mean ing, as they have always been explained and interpreted by the Church* And is not this all that we can lawfully require of our members ? Have we any right to force them lo subscribe to minute points of abstruse theology, not fully proved from .Scripture, and which are often, to say the least, questionable? No — the very simplicity of this Creed — and it has been used for this purpose in all ages of the Church — is its strong recommendation. It can be clearly understood by all — even the unlettered and the child. Regulating essential matters, it places such restrictions on its members, as prevent them from straying beyond the bounds of orthodoxy, while. on the other hand, in those things which are unessential, where ttirfeient minds will necessarily take different views, it leaves room for a liberal variation of opinion. Thus are avoided tnose endless disputes on the deep doctrines of our faith, wliich so often disturb the peace of those denominations around us, and even rend them asunder into separate bodies, while attempting in every minute particular to bring all men down to one precise standard. Experience, too, has proved that this system is the best in its practical effects, to preserve purity in doctrine. Let one come to us, who has erred from the faith — who disbe lieves, for example, in the Divinity, of our Lord — and by applying the test of this Creed, (as interpreted by the Nicene Creed.) we debar him from the Church as a heretic. There is. therefore, as much sound orthodoxy within our ranks, as tvithin the ranks of any of those who endeavor to enter into * It is evident, that a person may sometimes be able fo repeat .he Creed, and profess his belief in its articles, while a.t the same nine he gives hi. own interpretation to some of them, and philoso phizes away their natural sense. In this way Arus was willing to subscribe to the Apostles' Creed, while denying the true ami proper divinity of our Lord. The Church therefore obviates this difficulty by having from the earliest age explained the creed in hey formularies, Mid her members must, hold it in the honest sense she does, or be counted heretics. AWAINST THI CHURCH. 2]7 i inore ir.inute investigation of doctrinal belief. This how ever is but one requirement at Baptism, and concerns the intellect only. There are others,' also, which refer directly to theAeart and the life. : Another question then is — " Dost thou renounce the devi' •ind all his works, the vain pomp and glory of the world, with all covetous desires of the same, andthe sinful desires of the flesh; so that thou wilt not follow nor be led by them?" To which, the answer is given — " I renounce them all ; and, by God's help, will endeavor not to follow nor be led by them." Now, how can a more perfect vow of re nunciation be uttered ? The individual who thus wishes to " put on Christ " — standing here before God, and in the presence of His people, looks back at a world of sin, with whicli heretofore he has been leagued, and then solemnly abandons it ; recording his decision, that for the future he " wi'l not follow nor be led by it." But the Church even goes farther, and puts one more question — "Wilt thou then obediently keep God's holy will and commandmentSj and walk in the same all the days of thy life?" To which the required answer is — " I will, by God's help." Let me ask you, therefore, to weigh these pledges, and then tell me, where is there any body of persons calling themselves Christians, who more strictly oblige those uniting with them to discard an evil world, and devote themselves to the service of God ? How futile then is this objection against us ! Again, a fourth Objection often urged is — that we receive persons lightly and hastily to the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper. Look then at our Communion Service, and see its require- merits. Like those in the Baptismal vows, they also are simple, yet comprehensive. The priest is directed to say — " Dearly beloved in the Lord, ye wh i mind to come to the Holy Communion of the Body and Blood of our Savioui Christ, must consider how St. Paul exhorteth all persons diligently to try and examin? themselves, before they pre sume, to eat of that bread, a". 1 drink of that cup. For as the benefit is great, if with a tine penitent heart and lively faith we receive 'that holy saor< ment, so is the danger great, if weteceive the same unv jrthily. Judge therefore yourselves, Brethren, that ye be not judged ofthe Lord ; repent ye truly 10 2 IS POPULAR OBJECTIONS for your sins past; have a lively and steadfast faith in Chris" our Sayipur; amend your lives, and be in perfect charit J with-all men ; so shall ye be meet partakers of those holy mysteries,," Can any one, then, hearing this solemn invi tation, and realizing its force, come forward lightjy ?., Or. supposing that he should do so, is the Church, to be blamed ? Certainly not; he has the requirements before him, aid the responsibility rests. with himself ... . The rule then with us is this.. Since all baptized per sons are, members ofthe Church, we regard them «._: having a right to come forward to Communion, if they are giving evidence by their daily walk, of the existence of , Christian character. If, however., they haye been baptized in infancy, there is yet a preparatory step which they must take. They must .first publicly assume those vows for themselves, or.at ieast show their willingness to do .so.. This, as we have shown in the last lecture, takes place at Confirmation. And the Fi.ubric declares — " There shall none be admitted to, the Holy Communion, until such time as he be confirmed, or be ready and desirous to be confirmed." ; ., . Is it not, evident, therefore, that any one who can go through the solemn service by which he thus publicly assumes and ratifies, his Baptismal vows, devoting himself willingly to the service of God, must be prepared for the Holy ; Communion ? At all events, we can have no bettei security with regard to him, than this ordeal, ff, therefore after seriously weighing the matter, he. has passed through it, or professes to be ready to pass through it, we have no right to debar him from the Christian privilege which his Lord has provided, of partaking of His body and blood. ,. The Church, therefore, takes the power out of the hands of hei ministers, and throws the responsibility upon the individual himself. She bids us explain to him, this holy rite, lay the requirements before him, and then he is left to formhisown decision. We may advise him, but we have no power to investigate his heart, or to penetrate into the nature of those hidden, sacred feelings, which rest between his God and himself. . ... -.-,-¦ The only case in which we have authority to debar an individual from communion is, (as stated in the Ilubrio,) " if among those who come tc be partakers of the Holy AGAINST THE CHURCH. 219 Ciir.ini.nion, :hc minister shall know any to bi an open and _otorious evi. liver, or to have done any wrong to his neigh bors by word or tleed, so that the congregation be thereby offended ; he shall advertise him, that be presume not to come to the Lord's table, until he have openly declared himself to have repented and amende 1 his former evil life, that the congregation may thereby be satisfied ; and that he hath recompensed the parties to which he hath done wrong ; or at least declare himself to be in full purpose to do so, as soon as he conveniently may. The same order shall the minister use with, those, betwixt whom heperceiveth malice and hatred to reign ; not suffering them to be partakers of the Lord's Table, until he know them to be reeonciled. And if one of the parties so at variance be content to forgive from the bottom of his heart all that the other hath trespassed against him, and to make amends for that wherein he him self hath offended ; and the other party will not be persuaded to a godly unity, but remain still in his frowardness ami malice ; the minister in that case ought to admit the peni tent person to the Holy Communion, and not him that is obstinate. Provided that every minister so repelling any, as is herein specified, shall be obliged to give an account of the same to the ordinary, as soon as conveniently may be." In these cases, we have of course the overt act — the outward conduct — by which to judge. There caii, therefore, be no doubt on the subject, and we act with certainty in cutting ofl the unworthy member. And now, is not this reasonable ? If an individual haa been by baptism solemnly admitted into the Church of Christ — unless he should show beyond doubt, by his out ward conduct, that he is unworthy of the privilege — have !. afcr any one else, authority to debar him from a Sacrament which his Lord has provided to sustain and strengthen him ? After the Jews were at'mitled into their Church by circum cision, was any priest gifted with power to prevent Ihem from partakiiij; of the Passover, until Ac should think tlu-ii' prepared ? And if the baptized Christian, in addition tu this, after having airivetl at years of discretion, professes bis willingness to stand up publicly before the Church in Con firmation, to take these solemn baptismal vows upon him self* and then is able also, after listening to the se.ircniug 220 POPULAR OBJECTIONS lf-st prop isr 1 in our Communion service, to come forward where is the fal.ible man who shall dare to read his heart, mil say that he is not prepared? By what examination ran we arrive at any certainty, on this point? An indi vidual may have the grace of God in his heart, and. yet be unaiile clearly to disclose his feelings, or embody them in language. On the other hand, the self-deceiver, or the wil ful h\ pocrite, may be gifted with a volubility which shall eel tlib mosl severe scrutiny at defiance. Each minister oi ihe Church has, therefore, reason to be thankful that this power rests not in his bands, lest at the last day it might appear that in some cases he had been mistaken, a,nd had tleburrtd from that spiritual feast some of the little ones of Christ's flock. We may well shrink from this responsibility, anil rejoice ihat it is taken away fiom us, and placed upon the individuals themselves whe wish to come forward. Aiiolhet objection which it may be well briefly to notice is- -that the Church docs not believe in what is called "'a changi vf heart." To this we reply, that she nowhere, it is tiue. usus this term in her formularies. Neither, indeed, is it to be .ound iu the Bible. It is not, of course, to be expected 'hit a Lituriry framed more than a thousand years, ago sh'.uld now have engrafted upon its rich anti beautiful ser vices, the shifting, changing phraseology, with whicli the .religious world around chooses in this tlay to express its viiiws. Her object rather is, to shun every thing moderr and evanescent, and to cleave steadfastly to those old ex- [ ressions which, drawn originally from the solemn laiuiuaire o( Holy Writ, have come down generation after generatior. among her children, always " familiar in, their mouths as household words." But that the Church requires her children to be renewed, renovated, and sanctified by the,Ho!y Ghost, as requisite for membership with her, while n ilitant here, or in glory here after, no ono can doubt who has ever read her offices. She every where teaches the truth, that "without holiness no man shall see the Lord." She constantly seeks to draw men away from dependence on their own changing feelings, oi the delusive visions of the imagination. She presents be fore them tests of Christian character which are real and tangible, 'calling them to self-denial and a holy life. Oi AtiAWSV ttiii cHttRCtt. 22] (his principle every page of Our Player-Bdok has been framed, and we might prove it from each of her services, or from the general spirit arid tenor1 of Let prayers. We content Ourselves, however, with merely quoting the collect for Ash- Wednesday — " Almighty Snd EveflastingGod, whobatest net- tiling that Thou hast made, and -'.oSt forgive the Sirls' of till those who are penitent ; create, and make inusneit) and toiitriie hearts, that we, worthily lamenting our sinSj and acknow ledging bur wretchedness, may obtain of Thee, the God of all mercy, perfect remission and forgiveness, through JesUS Christ our Lord." There is but one more objection which bur limits will allow us to bring forward. It is — that the standard of reli gious feeling is low among the members of the Church. How this conclusion is reached, I know not ; for I caniiot per ceive but that they walk as consistently as others',. who are called by a different name. It is a question, therefore, en tirely intangible, and [ cannot pretend' to discuss the amounl tip religion amoiig the members ofthe Church, as compart..'! wifh other religious bodies aroiind, for God hiis' not' given me the poWer thus to judge the heart. Neither can I pre sume to forestall His filial sei'tence, and decide on the spiritual condition of my neighbors. " For we dare not make ourselves of the number, or compare ourselves with some that Commend themselves; but they measuring themselves by themselves, and comparing themselves among themselves, are hot wise."* On such topics the Christian rule is— fo fear every thing for ourselves, alid to hope every thing fot others. We would merely warn you, however, that talking ahoiit religion, is not religion itself; and that there is a wide difference between possessing an elevated degree of devotion, and being familiar with its language, and having if ever on our lips. The Church tells her member's, that their daily liVeS must be the test — that in silence ami quiet they must, by the aid. of God's grace, tiaiii themselves up fot Heaven ; and not be forming erroneous conclusions with ••tespect fo others. Her direction is that which was Oiict given by a'n Apostle — " Judge 'nothing bef re the timo, until the I. orij come.' * 2 Cor. x. 12. 322 POPULAR 0SJKCTf0»S In such cases, it is well to follow that proverb given by Solomon—" Let another man praise thee, and not thine f-wn mouth , a stranger, and not thine own lips.*' What, then, Is the reputation of the Church with those whose opinion is worth heeding ? Has she " a good report of them which are Without ?" We know that the Storm of vituperation is con stantly directed against her, yet amidst the uproar we can gather the testimony ofthe more thoughtful and considerate Let us attempt then to do so. The Puritans of New-England — the fifst settlers of Massachusetts— are generally quoted, as having been arrayed in deadly hostility against the Church of England. We are told, that they were driven from their own pleasant homes by religious corruption and ecrlesiastical tyranny; and obliged to fly to the wilderness of this western world, that here they might worship God in purity. Was this the case? We can answer the question by referring to the letter written by the leading men ir. ..at enterprise, " aboord the Arbella, April 7, 16?0," and signed by Gov. John Winthrop, Rich. Saltonstall, Charles Fines, Isaac Johnson, Tho. Dudley, William Coddington, Geo. Phillips, &c, &c. As they were about to launch forth upon the deep, and direct their course for that " rock-bound coast" which was to be their future home, they once more looked back, and sent their parting farewell to the Church they were leaving. From her care they had voluntarily cut themselves off. If formerly oppressed by her, they had now nothing more to fear. What, then, were their emotions? As they listened to the surging sea on whose bosom they were soon to be tossing, did no sound or the sweet anthems of their ancient mother come back, and seem to mingle with the sighing of the wild winds which were sweeping around them ? Did there not flit across the eyes of any of those stem men, a bright vision of the old Parish Church, at whose font he had been baptized — at whose altar he had received his bride — and within the shadow if whose walls his forefathers were sleeping ? Did they not realize, that the very strength which now upheld tlem in their hours of darkness, had beec gathered in her Courts ? Such is the infere'/ce we draw from their address, entitled — AGMKST TttR cl_t*R.;H. 223 fkchumtti request of his Majesties loyall Subjects, the 'Gidirnot -•' Arid the Company lite ''g'irne for New- England '• to the rest of their Br'ethreh'in and of the Church of England. " Reverend' Fathers and Brethren, -P . . ... We desire you would be pleased to take notice of the principals, and body ofour Company, as those who esteem it our honour to call the Church of England, fiom whence wee rise, our, deare mother, and cannot part frorn our native countrie, where she specially resideth, without much sadness of heart, and many tears in our eyqs; ever acknowledging that such hope and pari' as We have obtained in the common salvation, we have received in her bosome, and suckt it from her breasts : wee leave it not, therefore, as loathing that milk wherewith we were nourished there, but, blessing God for the parentage and education, as members of the same body, shall alwayes rejoice in her good, and unfainedly 'grieve for any sorrow that shall ever betide her, and while We have breath, syncerely desire and indeav- our the continuance and a.biindance of her welfare, with the irilargemeht of her bounds in the Kingdom of Christ Jesvs. . .So farre as God shall enable us, we will give him no rest in "your behalfes; wishing our heads and hearts may be as fouhtaines of tears for your everlasting1 welfare, when wee shall be in our poOre cOltages in the wildernesse overshadowed with the Spirit of supplication, through the manifold necessities arid tribulations which may not alto gether unexpectedly' nor) we hope, unprofitably, .befall us. And so, commending you to the grace of God in Christ, wee shall ever rest, ''' "Your assured friends and Brethren."* How beautiful is this testimony! thus acknowledging giatefully the spiritual benefits they had received within the fold ofour Mother Church — ascribing "to the purity of her faith and the soundhess'of her instructions, the hope of ever lasting life which they then enjoyed — and praying earnestly for the enlargement of her bounds. How do their words re buke the carping spirit bf too many among their descendants ! ' Our next witness is Dr. Adair. Clarke, the. author of the • Gov. Hutchinso.'s Hist, of __issachusetti, (Appendix, No. 1,) r.Lp. 431. 224 rorui.AH objections Cornmeiitary on tne Bible, and one of the brightest "lig.ilij oi the Methodist' connection. "1 consider" — he says— " tire Church of England, the purest national Church in the world I was brought up in its bosOm. I was intended for its mi nistry. I have been a Methodist for half a century. I have been a preacher foi' forty-three years. And I am greatly deceived indeed"; if I be not. without any abatement, a thorough member of the Church of England. Its doctrines and its sacraments, which constitute the essence of a Church, I hold conscientiously as it holds them. I reverence the Liturgy next to the Bible. I proclaim its doctrines and ad minister its sacraments, not only in the same spirit in which it holds and administers them, but also in the same words or form. I also reverence its orders, and highly esteem ita hierarchy, and have not a particle of a dissenter in me; though I love and esteem all good men and able ministers wherever I find them. But I preach, and have long preached. without any kind of Episcopal orders. My' family fell' into decay, and my education was left imperfect. I would greatly have, preferred the hapds of the Bishop, but not having gone through, the regular courses, I could not claim it. Even now, at this age of comparative decrepitude, I would rejoice to have that ordination, if I might, with it, have the full liberty to preach Jesus, wherever I eould find souls perishing for lack of knowledge. The Church has our warm attachment, and if the time should ever come, which Dieu ne plaise ! that the bodies of the various dissenters were to rise up against the Church, the vast bodies of Methodists would not hesitate to be your light infantry."* Hear also the sentiments of the celebrated Dr. Chalmers uf Soot land — " There are many who look, with an evil eye Iu the endowments of .he English Church, and to the iudoleneo of her dignitaries. But tq that Church, the theological liter ature ofour nation stands indebted for her best acquisitions. And we hold it a refreshing spectacle, at any time that meagre Socinianism pours forth a new supply of flippancies and errors, when we behold, as we have often done, an armed champion come forth in full equipment, from some high and lettered retreat of that noble hierarchy. Nor can we grudge ' Chri-'ian Guardian, Dec. 1832. _(_Ai,\sf TJIic cni'ncif. 2§J fit3! 'he wet Itli of her endowments, when we think how well, under her yeperable auspices, the battles of orthodoxy have been.fqugb.t^.that, iii this holy warfare,: they are her sons and her schplars, who aro ever foremost in the field, ready at all , t>mes to., fate the threatened .mischief, and by the weight of their erudition to overthrow it."* Similar to this is the testimony of another in the same hind— •" Thus much art attached Presbyterian may sincerely and readily say of the Chuich of England : It is a noble and' venerable hierarchy. Its foundations are laid deep in the old feelings of the people. Its clergy, mingling the accom plishments of the aristocracy, with the condescension of Christian pastors, rivet together the different ranks of society, as with crossing, bars of iron. Its bishops have exhibited, many pf them, the pomp of the prelate in beautiful unison with, the spirit of Christ's meekest martyr. Its massive learning is the bulwark of Christianity. Its exquisite Lit urgy, second in divine composition only to Scripture itself, ready at all tjn_.es to supply the needs of the f.iinting soul, and fitted, in its comprehensive devotions, aptly to embody every different individual aspiration, binds in one chain of prayer, the, hearts of its members, and the hearts of genera tion (after; generation. From; its pulpits, no longer occupied Dy slumbering watchmen, the true doctrines of the Cross are proclaimed, as with the sound of a trumpet. The costliest offerings for the cause of Christ are poured in generous profusion into the treasury. The zeal of the missionary, that finest token of apostolic origin, has awoke within its bosom; and bishops are going forth, making ofthe crosier a pilgrim staff, in order to proclaim amongst the Gentiles the good tidings of salvation. Well might the members of any other, communion excuse the generous feeling which would awake those words of holy writ, concerning her whom the best pf her song have rejoiced to call tneir Mother Chinch of England,: ' Many daughters have done virtuously, but thou.excellest. thern all.' "t Ar,d, such also is the feeling of many in our own country, who, although arrayed against us, can yet acknowledge the * Quarterly Review, Dec. 1832. f A Tract for the Times, by William Penny, Advocate, nf Edinburgh 10* i% $6p\JLki- ofitEcffSfts beauly of :he Church's system, and pay their proper tiiiiutt to the services she has rendered the world. Read for exam ple, the words of Dr. Barnes of Philadelphia — the more val uable because written in the midst of a controversy " We have no war to wage with Episcopacy. We know, we deeply feel, that much may be said in favor of it, apart from the .lairn which has been set up for its authority from the New Testament. Its past history, in some respects, makes us weep ; in others, it is the source of sincere rejoicing and praise We associate it with the brightest and happiest days of religion, and liberty, and literature, and law. We remember that it was under the Episcopacy thai the Church in England took its firm stand against the Papacy ; and that this was its form when Zion rose to light and splen dor, from the d_.rk night of ages. We remember the name of Cranmer — Cranmer, first in many respects among the Re. formers; that it was by his steady and unerring hand, that under God, the pure Church of the Saviour was conducted through the agitating and distressing times of Henry VIII. We remember that God watched over that wonderful man • that He gave this distinguished prelate access to the heart of one ofthe most capricious, cruel, inexorable, blood-thirsty and licentious monarchs that has disgraced the world ; that God, for the sake of Cranmer ami His Church, conducted Henry, as ' by a hook in the nose,' and made him faithful to the Archbishop of Canterbury, when faithful to none else ; so that, perhaps, the only redeeming trait in the character of Henry, is his fidelity to this first British prelate under the Reformation. The world will not soon forget the names of Latimer, and Ridley, and Rogers, and Bradford ; names associated in the feelings of Christians, with the long list of ancient confessors ' of whom the world was not worthy,' and who did honor to entire ages of mankind, by sealing their attachment to the Son of God on the rack, or amid the flames. Nor can we forget that we owe to Episcopacy that which fills our minds with gratitude and praise, when we look for example of consecrated talent, and elegant literature, and bumble, devoted piety. While men honor elevated Christian feeling; while they revere sound learning, while they render tribute lo c'.ear and profound reasoning, they will not forget •he names jf Barrow and Taylor, of Tillotson, and Hooker. against tMs! ciiur.";H. 227 md Ilutliir. anil. .when they think^ of .bromide,. pureriswept, ,'ie.avenly puty, th^ir miiyls will^ recur instinctively to the .name,, of Leighttm. ,.S;Uch[ names, i^'ith, ^ host of others, lo honor tq.lhe.woiid., Wh,en we think:)of them we have it .^pt .in.our d^ajts, to utter one word, against a Church which has,th,us.dpnie honor tp our race, and to qpr common Chris tianity. ,,,,-; , . , ,. ,; , , ( "Stich wewish Episcopacy still. to be. We have, always tbuogbt that there are Christian minds and hearts that would find more edification in. the joj-m^, of worship in that Ciiurch, than, in any other. We; regard it as adapted to call forth Xl!. i'i*stian energy, that might otherwise be dormant-, .:'',. We .ourselves, could ljye,anUI.All OH.-E^ltONS of truth, which her clergy and her illustrious layini.ii lifi'.* in other times enkindled in the darkness of > this world's his, , tofy, and which continue to pour their pure and steady lustrt. on the literature, the laws, and the customs of the Christiai. world ; and we trust the day will never come, when our own bosoms or the bosomsi of Chriftians in any denomination, will cease to beat with emotions of lofty thanksgiving to the God of grace, that he raised up such gifted and holy men to meet the corruptions of the Papacy, and to breast the wickedness of the world."* Beautiful indeed are these testimonies to the purity and devotion of ou- venerable Church-! We point then loisuch acknowledgments as an appropiate answer to those, who, unacquainted with her past history, and ignorant of the spirit which now reigns within her courts, would charge upon the members of the > Church, a want of religious principle. We have thus endeavored to notice some of the promi nent arguments urged against the Church. Do they not come from those who— in the words of the APost'e — " un derstand neither what they say, nor whereof they alfirm !" There are other objections, also, which might be brought forward; but the time would fail, were we fo attempt to reply to every thing which ignorance or captiousness may allege. All indeed that we ask, is investigation. We know that the Church which our Lord founded, and which now has descended to us with the veneration of eighteen centuries, cannot be found wanting in any one single point which con cerns man's spiritual welfare. We will trust her, therefore, in preference to any of the shifting, changing experiments which court our notice. From the many ages that have gone, there comes down to us the recorded experience of those who have slept h the faith — the holy dead whose words and ac'.ions still speak to the world, urging it on to godliness — ar 1 whose spirits are now rejoicing in the Para dise of God. We question them, therefore, as tp the way in which they reached their lofty stand in holiness. We ask them to point out to us the path in which we should tread. And t'leir answer is uttered in the words of the prophet— a ' S'And ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the old paths * Ibid. p. 110. At_!Ait.s* tHe Clfi.ki.ft. 22." where ds'the good way, and walk therein, and ye shall find restfor-your souls." We. learn, that id.) There was a Canon of the African Councils, which says, -" No Bishop shall leave his principal Cathedral, and reside in any other church of his diocese." (Ibid.) Thus implying, that there were more churches than one in t.aeh diocese. And when there were in the same diocese rival Bisliop. set up by the Catholics and Donatists, they were in diffeient par.9 ol the diocese. In this way we might go through the East, and one who had not bvestigated the subject, would be surprised at the strength of the THF KEEPER OF THE TKUTH. 2*3' while St, Paul himself preached the faith in that little bar barous isle, which then wg,s looketl upon as "cut off from all the world,"* but which has since sent the Church to us, and now is planting it throughout the earth. Thus il was that, in the words of an Apostle—" the Gospel was preached lo every creature which is under Heaven." 1 But the triumphs of the Church were not confined to tlie provinces. Our faith entered the Imperial City, and St Caul was " ready to preach the Gospel to them that were at Home also. " It did indeed require fortitude and devotion, to attack Paganism in this its strongest hold. The obstacles which impeded its progress in other lands, were tenfold increased in the Capital. The chariot- wheel of Roman greatness had gone on, levelling one kingdom after another, until all the earth had been given to, its sceptre. Idolatry was there in its most splendid form, and its strongest array. Embodied in the national customs, it seemed exactly suited to thg- tastes and feelings of the popular, mind. Its Pantheon of gqds appealed to the prejudices of every nation. The Court was there, wielding a despotism , which scorned all opposition, and whioh' scrupled not to shed rivers of blood in furthering its designs. The luxury, and vice, and licentious ness, which prevailed in the rest of the world, seemed but a Church, as shown by the number of her dioceses. In, the.Patriarchatii of. Constantinople were about 600 dioceses, varying in size.. Of these 400 were in Asia, and 200 in Europe. In the dioeese of Caesarea, which was about one hundred miles square, St. Basil, When Bishop in a. d. 37 5, had under him 50 Chor-episcopi, or assistant "Bishops, each having under his authority many Presbyters and Deacons. (Greg. Naz. Carm. De Vita, Basil. Bos. Ep. 181, 412.) In Italy were 300 dioceses ; in Spain 70 , _n France 1 17. In Persia alono there were 50 ; and during a persecution, a. d. 330, we learn that 23 Bishops suffered martyrdom at the same time. In one of these dioceses, 250 of the clergy were put to death with their Bishop. See Bingham, lib. ix. So easy is it, by an appeal to the records of that day, to refute the objection derived from the great number of Bishops. In those lands Christianity lias receded, and it is estimated that we have lcet 1 50 millions of worshippers by the returning wave of Paganism, v the strange imposture of the prophet of Mecca, * '' Britnnnos orke divisos. " £38 THE CHURCH IN ALL AGES faint reflection of that developing itself in every form in tha Capital. „ -Tt^ere then was a task, to plant the pure faith of our Lord in the midst of all this corruption, But it was accomplished. The sacrifice was indeed a great one, for Rome through many years was purple with the blood of the children ol Gotl,; and the sands ofthe amphitheatre were dyed with the gore of the martyrs. But yet, the end was attained, and in a space of time shorter than the wildest hopes of the Chris tian could have imagined. It was but thirty years after the crucifixion, that Nero, to remove from himself the suspicion of having set fire to the city, charged it on the Christians, and proceeded to inflict upon them the most cruel torments. The historian Tacitus, when giving an account ofthis per secution, shows us. how strong at that time must have been the Church at Rome. " The founder of that name " — he says-.-" was Christ, .who suffered death in the reign of Tiberius, under his procurator Pontius Pilate. This perni cious superstition, -thus checked for a while; broke out again; and spread, not only over judea, where the evil originated, but, through Rome also, whither every thing bad finds its way, and is practised. Some who confessed their sect, were first seized ; and afterwards, by their information, a vast multitude were apprehended. "* We see, then, from this statement, how great must have been the number of disci ples in the. city. Buf; persecution did not stop the good cause. The faith increased, even within the precincts of the court. It forced usglf into high places. It entered the palace of the Ca_sars ; anil three centuries more beheld a Roman Emperor adopting, as his proudest badge, the Cross of the once despised Nazii- rene, and proclaiming Christianity to be the religion of the Empire. Then came one decree after another, smiting heathenism, and closing Its temples, until it gradually withered away. That splendid mythology of Greece, from wtiiebithe immortal poets of old time drew their inspiration, faded utterly from the earth. The long array of divinities, whose namea once were held in reverence, vanished ev»'i from the knowledge of the people ; until to later generations they have THE KEEPER OF THE TRUTH. 2'Jfl " ¦ipneglimmering through the dreams of things that were — A school-boy's tale. " It was a. ruin, which Gibbon prohounces "perhaps the only ex.iniple of the total extirpation of any ancient and popular superst^tjpp "* Thus, died the antagonist ofthe Gospel, an enemy which, whilst gathered around it all that was splendid and allur ing, wifs aJjso the natural enemy of man; for in its whole creed.it could point to, no traces of purity and holiness. Its fall, therefore, was the freedom of the world. Such, then, was the early triumph of the Church. And now,, looking hack, upon this history, what we do perceive to have been the secret of her strength? We answer, under Providence, it was her union — the presentafion of herself visibly before the world — her strict, compact, ana energetic government. And. if. we come down a few centuries later, to the time whpn the fierce barbarians from the North trampled the Ro man, Empire beneath their. feet, we shall find, that then the perfect organization of the Church was the instrument of Heaven for the preservation of religion. Had it not been for the influence of her standing ministry, all traces ofour faith would at once haye been obliterated from the West. Look at the materials of which the population was then composed. Among the conquered people, the higher classes had ceased to be either numerous or powerful ; while the lower, recently converted from polytheism, were not always the most sin cere in their change, nor had their faith — which was no longer purified by persecution — yet gained the' requisite strength. The clergy alone occupied a commanding position, which rendered them the able and efficient defenders of tbo oppressed. They extorted respect even from their Gothic in vaders. In the first confusion of conquest, they might indeed share in, the indiscriminate evils of warfare, yet the rudest soldier, brought with him a superstitious reverence for the priesthood , -particularly when he found them, honored, an>l the -cerempnips of their worship, imposing. f He soon It am * Decline and Fall, chap, xxviii. \ Waddington's Church History, p. 208. 240 THE CHURCH IN ALL AUKS eti to invest the ministers of this faith with a saii.tity, which enabled them to wind their chains about the hearts of their conquerors, and to win them to that faith itself. The illiterate prince found himself confronted fearlessly by the Christian Bishop; and the respect which he felt was soon increased by- the discovery, that the clergy were the exclusive possessors of that learning which commands- the reverence even of barbarians. The invaders had been al ready converted to the faith before they left their northern homes, and now the ministers of the Church stood between th_t!ii and the conquered, as the only connecting link — -the only intermediate power — -which gave some community of interiist to the master and the slave.. They found them selves worshippers ofthe same God, gathered into the same Church, and united under the same spiritual supervision. Thus the Church, with her high authority, pievented the complete disorganization of all the existing relations of society. She gradually mingled up the invaders with the invaded into one people, and before the next wave of con quest came from the North, the commnnity was in seme measure prepared to breast the shock. In this way, by regulating the social system, and stand ing forth a perpetual witness for the truth, the ChUrcll pre- vented_all religion being absorbed and lost, in the conflict anil confusion of the times.* But had Christianity then ex isted as a mere individual belief, or had its form of govern ment been less complete and vigorous, it would have pos sessed neither the energy nor discipline necessary to main tain its hold in the midst cf the deluge which rolled over it. Or", had its preservation been then committed to the keeping of warring sects, which were ever shifting and changing, both it and they would have beeu swept from the earth like chafl before the wind. And thus it was through all the ages wliich followed, when , before God shall arise tu wtKe terribly the earth. Come, and unite yourself with thi) bright arrfljr of those who have gone before, on whtlrri IS resting the Spirit of glory and of grelce. They life bedding down from their thrones on high—" a great clddd df wit; nesses" — \e see whether yoU will still Sustain that Holy Church, to advance which they considered life itself as ndt too precio is to be sacrificed. They have beqedthed to you this cause, to bear it onward as once they did. You are standing in their places and are the inheritors of their re sponsibilities. You are " baptized for the dead. " And now, the host of the elect is pressing onward. Some have already passed into Canaan, over the river of death, and some are still toiling on in the wilderness. Oh, may you, when the dispersed of God's spiritual Israel are gathered into one, be fiund again united as men. bers of " the general assembly aud Church ofthe fiist born which are writteh in Heavcu.' THE TRUE, CATHOLIC CHURCHMAN. All limy save .-.If;— but minds that heavenward tower Alrrrl rr* _ w ;ier V ,_•.?, tlit'ts on the world to shower. And Illis Is not at once ; — by fastings gained, A ri.l trials well sustained, By put ones., righteous deeds, and toils of love, Abidance in the Truth, and -zeal for God above. Lyra Jpostolica. K.vimg endeavored to bring before you the distinctive principles of the Church^— those by which we are separated from the different denominations around us — the question naturally occurs, What is the practical bearing of those truths? We answer — they are to be acted out in the life, and embodied in the daily walk and conversation of those who profess to be members of our Holy Apostolic Church. I know not, therefore, that I can select a more appropriate subject with which to close these Lectures, than a delinea tion of the true, Catholic Churchman. The very name indeed which he bears — if he walk wor thy of it — proclaims the principles by which he will be di rected. He has received his title from no human teacher. He assumes the badge of no mere sect. He shares in that jealous vigilance v.hich induced St. Paul so sternly to chide the Coriuthiai.s, 1 ecause one parly said '' we are of Paul,'' and another, " we are of Apollos," and another " we are of Cephas." And this feeling the Primitive believers be queathed to tliose who came after them in the early Church, " We take not," says St. Chrysostom, "our denomination from men. We have no leaders, as the followers of Marcion, or Manichiens or Alius."* " The Church" says Epiphanies • Horn. 33, in Acts. THE fRUE, CATHtlJC CHURCHMAN 25l ' iVas never called so much as by the name nf any Apostle. We never heard of Petrians, or Paulinus, or BarthoIoma_aus, or Thaddseans : but only of Christians, from Christ."*" " J honor Peter" — says another Father — "but I am not called a Petrian ; I honor Paul, but I am not called a Paulin ; I cannot bear lo be named from any man, who am the creature of Gcd."f And Bingham tells us that when Sempronian, the Novatian heretic, demanded of Pacian the reason why Christ ians called themselves Catholics, he answered, that it was .o distinguish; them from Heretics. ". Chqsfi.an" — he says — " is my name, and Catholic my sur-name; the one is my title, the other my character or mark of distinction." X Such •vas the feeling of these early saints. Leaving to the sects ivhich started up on every side, to name themselves aftei their leaders, they still kept to that general appellation, which was more expressive of unity and relationship to their Lord. The Churchman ofthis day therefore ha!s inherited these views, and by the name Catholic Churchman, he expresses both his allegiance to his Divine Master, and to that, Apos tohc' Church He founded. "• , :, ,. One characteristic of the true Churchman is — that he receives with humility ali the doctrines of the Church, and avows his belief in them . This mUst at once be evident. It would be an absurdity for a disciple to call himself by the name of a teacher to whose instructions he did not fully sub scribe. As the Jew prided himself on being the follower of Moses, and showed his reverence forthe ancient dispensation by observing all its requirements, even the most minute, so does the Churchman proclaim to the world the fact, that- he is a disciple of Christ, aryl a member of His Holy Apostolie * BiDg. Orig. Eccies. lib. i. ch. 1, sect, 6. f Greg. Naz. Orat. 81 X Orig. Eccies. lib. i. _h. 1, sect. 7. § • I wear the name of Christ, my God, So name me not from man 1 And my broad country Catholic, Hath neither tribe nor clan : Its ruler', are an endless line, Through all the world they went, Commissioned from the Holy Hill Of Christ's sublime ascent." Rev A. C. Coxa "iSal THIS TRUE, CATHOLIC tiritlRC jf IvfjilS Church. He is ready to acknowledge his belief in all ifia. his Master taught, either when,, Himself on earlti, He acted as the earliest herald of the Gospel ; or when, after His ascension, He inspired holy men to enlarge the circle of revelation, and then committed to the Church which He had organized the lofty duty of being a Keeper and Witness of the Truth. But we are told that there is no necessity for an appeal- to the Church, to learn the fundamental doctrines' of our faith — that " the Bible alone is the religion of Protestants" — and we need no other intervention to aid us in forming our Creed, or in settling our belief. Look then over the world, and see how this assertion is supported by actual ex perience. The first sound which strikes the ear is the din of controversy, as the most solemn truths which God has reveal ed, are openly questioned and denied, or banded about among warring herectics from mouth to mouth, until the reverence .even of the believer is insensibly impaired. The first sighl which meets the eye, is that of the body of Christ rent asun der, and contending parties using as hostile watch wortls those solemn verities, to which man should have listened only with awe and reverence. The present situation of the different Protestant sects around answers but too truly the description which Dante has given : — " Christ's host, which cost so dear to arm afresh, Beneath its ensign moves with tardy step, Thin are its rank, each soldier coldly looks ' • Upon his fellow, doubtful of his faith. "* Amidst then this changing, shifting sea of opinions, where is the truth? In what can I believe, as the certain teaching of my Lord? The Bible is of course before ine, and I may study it for myself, but the same privilege is nfforded others also, and yet I bel old a hundred varying Beets — all holding different Creeds — and all professing to derive them from that Volume. Which then is right ? Where can I find a guide to direct me in the right pa.th ? I ran truly say, like the Ethiopian Eunuch — " How can I un derstand, except some man should guide me ? Now, these difficulties are natural, and must be felt b» * Paradise, xii. fHf. fi.dE, cAftfotc cMfjfccHirfAi. §o3 bvery iteflecting mind.* The Church, therefore, has pro vided a remedy. She does not say to her children " Each one of you may explain the Scripture according to your own fancy" — but she furnishes them with an interpretation. Going back to Primitive times — to the days of Apostles and Martyrs* — she unrolls their writings, and inquires, how these men, who stood nearest to the fountain of light — who lived when the tradition of all our Lord's words and deeds had not. yet laded from the earth — how they understood His pre cepts ? She takes the sjround— and surely it is a reasonable one^-that doctrines which have been the admitted faith 01 the Church from the first age down through eighteen hun dred years, are probably correct, and therefore she teaches them to her children in her creeds and formularies. Here then is her rule of faith — Scripture as it always ha9 been interpreted bv the Church. The Church of Rome contends that there are two rules of faith, of equal authority; that there is an unwritten tradition, alike definite and^alike to be respected with the written word of God. Thus it was asserted in a decree of the Council of Trent — " All saving truth is not contained in the Holy Scripture, but partly in the Scripture and partly in unwritten tradition, which whosoever doth not receive «_'i.7ii like piety and rever ence as he doth the Scriptures, let him be accursed, "t The clearly stated doctrine of our own Church, on the contrary, is, that tradition is to be used only to interpret Scripture. " The Church hath power to decree rites or ceremonies, and authority in controversies of faith ; and yet it is not lawful for the Church to ordain any thing that is contrary to God's word Written : neither may it so expound one place of Scrip ture that it be repugnant to another. Wherefore, although the Chureh be a witness and a keeper of Holy Writ, yet as it * " Wc learn to prize that wliich is not of this earth ; we long for revelation wliich nowhere burns more majestically or more beauti fully than in the New Testament. I feel impelled to open the original tert — to translate for once, with upright feeling, the sacred original into niy darling German. It is written : ' In the beginning was the Word' Here I am already at a stand; icho will help me onf Qnthe'i Faust, p. 44. f Se.s. ir. Decret. de Can. Script. _o4 tHe TRt't:, CATrtotlc drifiucMMAiV. ought r.ot to decree any thing against the same, , so, herd lea the same, ought it not to enforce any thing to be believed foi necessity of salvation. "* Again — the Church of Rome fetters the judgment, by requiring a blind, unconditional submission to those who, from time to time, occupy the place of ecclesiastical rulers. They constitute the Church, and are to be implicitly obeyed. Thus, an appeal to Catholic antiquity, to verify her doctrines, is practically forbidden, since each one must believe what the Church does now holil.f The different denominations around us, going to the other extreme, give unbounded license to the fancy, by an unrestricted exercise of private interpreta tion. Our own Church, avoiding either error, " inculcates a liberal, discriminative, yet undeviating reverence for pious antiquity : a reverence, alike sanctioned by reason, inspired by feelir.g, and recommended by authority. "% She adopts the rule laid down by Vincentius of Lerins, who wrote in the year 434. A brief view of his system may, thereforr,, be useful in illustrating the principles, of the Church on thi* po> it. He sets out withinquiring how he must decide between truth and error ? His language is — " I have made frequent and earnest inquiries of a great number of holy and learned men, how I might discriminate, that is, what certain, and universal rule there was for discriminating between Catholio truth and heretical pravity ; ami I have ever received some thing like the following answer, that whether I myself, or any other private person, wished to detect the corruptions, and avoid the snares of heretics who were springing up, a;ul to remain sound and whole in the sound faith, there were two ways, by God's blessing, of preserving himself — first, by the authority of Scripture next by the teaching of. the Church Catholic. " » Art. xx. f Thus, Dr. Hawarden, in speaking of d.e Anans, uses this lan guage—" If they be allowed the pie* of all reformers, I mean, of ap pealing from, and against the present Catholic Church, to tlie times past, the controversy can never be ended, until the dead speak. " 2%' True Church of Christ, vol. ii. pref. p. 9. J Appendix tc Ri.hop Jebb's Sermons, p 366. illE TRlfl, CAfMflLlC t:i_UR(._iMAN. 2t§3 : But, he continues — ''Here some one, perhaps; will- de mand, since the Canon of Scripture is complete,1 arid in itself more than suffieient for all things, "why need I subjoin to it the authority of ecclesiastical opinion ? " To this objection, his answer is — " That the very depth of Holy Scripture pre vents its being taken by all men in one and the same sense, one man interpreting it in one way, one in another; so that it seems almost possible to draw from it as many opin ions as there are readers. Novatian, Photinus, Sabeliius, .OonatUs, Arius, Eunorhius, and Macedonius, Apollinaris, an.l Piiccillian, Jovianus, Pelagius, and Celestius, lastly Nes torius, each of those heretics has his own distinct hiterpre- -tafion of it. This is why it is so necessary, viz.. in order *o avoid the serious labyrinths of such various errors, to direct Ihe line of interpretation, both as to Prophets and Apostles. according to the sense ofthe Church and Catholic world." Having thus most conclusively proved the necessity for some rule of interpretation^ he proceeds to state that one which can always give us a sure direction — ¦' We must be peculiarly careful to hold that which hath been believed, in ttl-L PLACES, AT ALL TIMES, BY ALL THE FAITHFUL : Qt'OD DBIQUE, QUOD SEMPER, QUOD AB OMNIBUS CREDITDM EST. This is true and genuine Catholicism, as the very word means. comprehending all truths, every where, and truly; ami this will be ours, if we follow in our inquiries Universality, An tiquity, and Consent. We shall follow Universality, if we Confess that to be the one tiue faith, which is held by the Church all over the world -, Antiquity, if we in no respect ecede from tbe tenets Which were in use among our Holy Elders and Fathers ; and Consent, if, in consulting antiquity itself, We attach ourselves to such decisions and opinions as were held by all, or at lenst by almost all, the ancient Bi shops and Doctors." " What, then, will the Catholio Christian do, ir. a case ivhere any branch ofthe Chnrchhascut itself off from the com munion of the universal faith? What can he do but prefer (he general b»dy, which is sound, to the diseased and in fected member of it ? What if some novel contagion attaint with its plague-spots, not only a portion, but even the whole Cnurcb ? Then he will be careful to keep close to antiquity. which is secure from the possibility of being coi-:--.pt. _l by 2/J61 Tfii TRiiJ., cATiioLfi cifiincfiikiAN. new errors What if, even in antiquity itself, there be twc or three men, nay, one community, or even province, dis covered in error ? Then he will be careful to prefer to the rashness or ignorance of the few, (if so be,) the ancient de- ciees, (i. e. in Council,) dr the ttniversal Church. What if a case arises when nd such acts of the Church are found ? Then he will do his best to compare and search out the opin ions of the ancients ; that is, of those who, in various times and places, remaining in the faith and communion of the one Catholic Church, are the most trust worthy authorities ; and whatever, not one or two, but all alike, with one con sent, held, wrote, and taught, and that openly and per- severingly, that he vyill understand is to be believed with out any hesitation." Having thus laid down his rules. Vin- centius adds — "By these principles, faithfully, soberly, and diligently observed, we shall, with no great difficulty, de tect every noxious error, of all heretics, who may rise against the Church."* Such was the rule in the fifth century, and it is one by which the Church is even now guided. " I greatly mistake" — says the Rev. G. S. Faber — "if, in any one instance, the wise Reformers of the Church of England can be shown to have exercised an insulated private judgment. In fact, they possessed far too much theological learning, and far too much sound intellect, to fall into this palpable error. Omitting, then, the mere dogmatism of the Latin Church on the one hand, and the wanton exercise of illegitimate private judg ment on the other hand, the practice of those venerable and profound theologians who presided over the reformation of the Anglican Church, will teach us, that the most rational mode of determining differences is a recurrence to first prin ciples, or an appeal to that Primitive Church which was nearest to the times ofthe Apostles, "f In the " Necessary Doctrine," &c, which in 1543 was adopted by the whole Churcn of England, we are told— " All those things which were taught by the Apostles, and have been by a whole universal consent of the Church of Christ ever sith that time taught continually, and taker, mwiys for true, ought to be received, accepted, and kept, as * <'*.l_l who attacks him. Bishop Milner thus states this argument — " By what means have you learned what is the Canon of Scripture, that is tn, nay, what are the books which have been written by divine inspira tion ; or, indeed, how have you ascertained that any book, at all have been so written ? You cannot discover either of these things by your rule, because the Scripture, as your great authority Hooker .hows (Eccies. Pol. b. iii. sec 8,) and ChiUingworth allows, cannot bear tes timony to itself. . . . You have no sufficient authority for asserting that the sacred volumes are the genuine compositions of the holy personages whose names they bear, except the tradition and living voice of the Catholic Church ; since numerous apocryphal prophecie. and spurious gospels and epistles, under the same or equally venera ble names, were circulate 1 in the Church during its early ages. ... In deed, it is so clear that the Canon of Scripture is built on the tradition of the Church, that most learned Protestants, with Luther himself, have been forced to acknowledge it. " End of Controversy. Let ter ix. • Socinus boasted that he acknowledged no master; Sed Deum tanlumniodo proeceptorem habui, sacrasque literas. He accordingly denied the authority of the Fathers, Councils and Primitive Church, (Palmer's Treatise on Church, v. ii. p. 59.) It is said in the life iii Biddle, the founder of the English Socinians, that " he gave the Holy -v'riptiitv. a diligent reading; and made use of no other rule to deter ir.ine controversies about religion, than the Scrip'ures, and of nnotli.r w.l\\enl\c interpreter, if a scruple arose concerning the sense if Sciiptuie, than renwi." (Ibid. p. fit.) It wool 1 be easy to show, thit those who nbaiuloii the airhority of the fathers, generally erd by forsaking the truth The infidel Rationalists of Germany whi nave thus disowned lttfi TRUE, CATHOLIC CHURCHjiAf.. i 59 Why we turn to tne testimony of the Church. We find that, through all ages the great body Of the faithful have rendered, those passages as we now do, and bowed in rever unue to our Lord; as a Person of the Triune God. We will diecefore, be the inheritors of - their' faith, and With then: acknowledge — "This was the Son of God."* Again — we hear others denying the necessity of. infant baptism, and thus, in the words of our Lord, " forbidding little children to come to Him." We appeal once more tc the voice of the Church. We read the history of the pas'.. We discover that even from the Apostles' days, she has commanded her members thus to dedicate their children to Him who had redeemed them, and we are therefore content ed to walk in the footsteps of those who have gone before ns. When, too, the Romanist comes to us with his exclusive claims, we make the same appeal to antiquity. We show that our doctrines are older than his and adopt for our motto- tltat declaration of Bishop Ridley — " I prefer the antiquity of the Primitive Church to the novelties of the Church of l.orne."t all ancient authority, boast that they alter their belief " as often as any new views require it. " Rose's State of Protest, in Germany, p, 24. ' * ." Doctrines received through the medium of only two or three links fi;om the Apostles themselves, and with one consent declared by all the various Churches then in existence to have been thus received, cannot be false. Thus, for an instance, Irenseus, himself the pupil of I'ulyciirp the disciple of St. John, bears witness to the fact, that in his time, all the Churches in the world held the doctrine of our Lord's divinity ; each professing to have received it, through the medium of une or two or three links, from the Apostles ; and his testimony is corroborated by Hegesippus, who, about the middle of the second century, travelled fruto Asia to Rome, and found the same system of duclrine uniformly established in every Church. Facts of this de- Bcripiitui form the basis of the reasoning adopted by Irenas is and 1f|ti.lliaii ; and the conclusion which they deduce from it is, the moral impossibility of the Catholic system of theology being errone ous. " Fiber's Difficulties of Romanism^ p. 27. X iSee.au admirable sermon, entitled, " The Novelties of Roma nism, or Popery refuted by Tradition," by W. F. Hook, D. D., of Leeds. published in England in 1840, ind lately reprinted in this countr; by I). Dana. 20 John-street. New Fork S»GO THE TRUE, CATHOLIC CH-RCintA... Tius i. is that we decide on all disputes. LisleaJ di trusting to the feebleness of individual reason, we obey the command which our Lord gave when He said — "Hear the Chun h." We thus free ourselves from doubt. We lean upon the recorded wisdom and opinions of eighteen ceutii ries aid feel, that if we are wrong on these points, then must tie whole Church have been so through all her genu. rations Is not this, to say the least, the safest way to un. derstai d the Word of God ? Let us not, then, bring into the C lurch an arrogant, questioning, carping spirit, but rather that humility which Bishop Wilson shows in one of his pi tyers — "Grant, 0 Lord, that in reading Thy Holy Word, f may never prefer my private sentiments before thoso if the Church in the purely ancient times of Chris- tianit-. ."* Ac _in — the true Churchman is devoted in his attendance on th' services of the Church. To this, indeed, he will be pron rted by a regard for his own spiritual advancement. The Church knows the difficulty of leading your thoughts heai '.award in this worldly age, and therefore calls you often to join in her solemn rites. Yet not too often is this ?umr.,cns given. Oh, we may rather say, would that it Tere nore frequent, and men could be induced, as in the olden rime, to sanctify every day by devotion ; nor feel that I hey f. houid go forth to their worldly business, until they had li'st visited the house of God, there to gather spiritual strength for the coming hours. t But the times have become uit e« «ely worldly, and men now care for nothing but heap. * Sacra Privata, p. 93. . " fn foreign climes, mechanics leave their task . To breathe a passing prayer in the Cathedrals ; There they have week-day shrines, and no one asks, When he wculd kneel to them, and count his head rolls, Why are they shut ? Seeing them enter, sad and disconcerted, To quit tliose cheering fanes with looks of gladness— "low often have ny thoughts to ours reverted 1 How oft have I exclaimed, in tones of sadness, Why are they shut ?" Stanzas written oitside a country Church, By HoRAcr Smith. ' TIIF TRUK, CATHOLIC C IURCHMAN 261 tug Vii1 wealth, or gaining honors, or pirsuing pleasures, with as desperate an energy as if they weie to live here forever.. The Church, therefore, is scarcely able to enforce her rules of regular, systematic devotion in public services, and is often obliged to trust, that in private her members ivill use her daily lessons and solemn prayers, and thus there hall be unity of spirit among them all. But whenever her courts are open, her true children will feel, that nothing shall prevent their attendance there. All ve engaged in a fearful struggle against the world, the flesh, and the devil, and they realize it, although those about them do not. Happy are they, therefore, to break away even for" a single hour from the engrossing cares of business, here io refresh their spirits, where God dwelleth. They would thus strengthen their immortal hopes, that the bright yet transitory things around them may have no influence over their hearts. They would have solemn voices from the land of spirits sounding in their ears, that thus they may be in different to the siren-song of enchantment by which this irth seeks to mislead them. With him who has truly imbibed the spirit of ihe Church, rhe want of time is never urged as an excuse. He knows qat a willing mind can make time, and that if he will ittefnpt it, he can now and then snatch a single hour from this world to give to the next. He will not let the things which "perish with the using " hold him constantly captive, hut remembering that with him there must come a time to die, he is earnest to prepare himself for that solemn hour. Feeling that the next life is but a continuation of this, only on a higher stage of action, and with every feeling more fully developed, he realizes, that if he cau.iot rejoice in the wor ship of God's earthly sanctuary, he is not prepared to join in the services -of the Heavenly Temple — that temple above. not made with hands. But we may carry this farther. He will not only be re gular in his attendance on the services of the Church, bu1 will seek nolning beyond her ministrations. This is a duty which he owes to the Church herself. It is not a matte': ol mere feeling, but should become one of principle. If the Chinch furnish sufficient instruction, .\\ that is necessary for his spiritual welfare — and none suiely can say that she Still THE TRUE, CATHOLIC CHURCHMAM does not — then he should confine himself to her servicesraiid not be unsettling his mind and dissipating his thoughts by wandering elsewhere. And if he believe the truth she inciil nates, and which we have been endeavoring in previous lee lures to set Vfore you — the necessity of the Apostolic succession in tne ministry — then the appeal is made to bin) on still higher grounds, and the Church has a claim to be his authorized instructor, which none other can advance.* " But " — you may say in reply — " I am so well settled in ray principles that I cannot be injured by any teaching I may hear, even though it should conflict with the instructions of the Church. " This may indeed be the case, although • the influence which error exerts over the mind, is often' so insensible in its progress as to be almost unmarked until il gains the supremacy. Yet may not your example produce an effect upon others, who are not so well established ? Sup pose that the Churchman thinks there is but little harm in * Mr. Wilberforce is often quoted for liberality in his Church i iews. The following extracts, however, from his Diary, will show Jiat on principle he abstained from attending Dissenting meetings. We quote from Life of Wilberforce by his Sons. 5 vols. Lond. 1839. "In the year [1786] Mr. Wilberforce dissuaded a relation, who complained that in her place of residence she could find no religious instruction in the Church, from attending at the meeting-house. ' Its individual benefits' — he writes in answer to her letter of inquiry — 'are no compensation for the gene vol evils of Dissent. The increase of Dissenters, which always follows from ih-: institution of unsteepled places of worship; is highly injurious to ike interests of religion in the long run! " Vol. i. p. 248. "Mr. Hughes of Battersea dined with us — dissenting minister. lie is a sensible, well-informed, pious mail ; strongly dissenting in principle, but. moderate in manner. He confessed, not one in twenty of Doddridge's pupils but who turned either Sccinian, or tending that way; (he himself strictly orthodox;) and he said that all the old Presbyterian places of worship were become Socinian congregations. Vol. iii. p. 24. " L. off to Birmingham to hear [Robert] Hall preach to-morrow ; I should have liked it, but tlmught it wrong. In attending public tvorshiD we are not to be edified by talent, but by the Holy Spirit, and therefore we ought to look beyond the hurt «•_ agent. " Vol. » p. 140 THE TRUE, CA TH0L1C CHURCHMAN. g_3 yielding to his curiosity to hear a new voice, ai.d visit some other place of worship; may he not be giving a lesson ol ilregularity to numbers around him, who believe, that if A. will do so, they may also ? If he, who is suoposed to un derstand the principles and regulations of his Church, may in. dulge his taste for novelty, and wander about from place to place, his weaker brethren will conclude that they may with safety follow in his footsteps. Thus, he has the responsibility of countenancing what he knows to be error, and of spread ing abroad an influence which may keep others from the means of grace, or from listening, as they should, to the calls of the Gospel. His irregularity furnishes them with a ready argument for their remissness; and thus, when he sometimes wonders at seeing the seats aroui.d him untenanted, were the truth fully known, it would be found he had him self aided in producing that result. Those who wish not well to the Church can quote him in support of their views. and thus his moral influence is enlisted against her cause. Instead of quietly and silently aiding in training up those around him to a constant and devout attendance on her services, he is showing them that it is immaterial where they go. He cert.iinly cannot be said to be "steadfast, un- movable, always abounding in the work of the Lord. " Again, another characteristic of the true Churchman is — that he regards the Church, with her institutions, as the grand instrument for reforming the world. Look abroad over so ciety, and see its present slate of feeling with respect to benevolent enterprises. It is distinguished for outward activity and bustle. The followers of our Master seern to be ever engaged in furbishing up their armor, and in preparing to take part iu that great contest which is waging against sin. But we think it will be evident even to a casual ob server, that the lofty expectations formed are not realized— that the result is sadly disproportioned to the noise made iu the conflict. And the reason of the failuic is equally evident. It is because the strength ofthe Christian world is so much ivastedin visionary schemes, in which a little more wisdom would have taught .t never to engage. There is a degree of ill-directed earnestness abroad, which, while it produces no valuable fruits, at the same time prevents those exertions which might truly aid the great cause of mat-'s redemption y_4 THE TRUE, CATHOLIC CHURCHMAN. It is " a zeal of God, but not according to knowledge,' t>t_i which therefore is often running in the wrong channel. And even when the object is a good one, the manner in wliich the attempt is made, is often such as to defeat the lesired end. The hurry and bustle which mark every de partment of life, have been transferred also to the efforts of benevolence. If an evil is to be rectified, instead of having t done by the gradual progress of truth, tho community must at once be wrought up into a fever. The entire work musl be immediately accomplished. Ingenuity is exhausted in devising new and human means of triumphing over sin. A mighty machinery is set in motion. Men, becoming wiser than Scripture, and inproving on the example of their Lord, forget "in patience to possess their souls," and cannot wait for great principles to be inculcated, which are afterwards slowly yet surely to develop their influence. But mark the result. Behold it ou every side of us. Thus earnestly laboring without any guide but their own zeal, men begin to take distorted views of truth. They atlempt to act upon the prejudices of those around them by questionable motives and arguments ; for in their eager ness to attain the end, they forget to be scrupulous about the means. In this way, no matter how wild a scheme may be, or how evil and unhallowed are the passions which urge it on, they resort to the Word of God, that its sanction may seem to be given to their excess. Thus, Scripture is constantly perverted by ignorance and fanaticism; and the holiest subject — themes of which an Apostle could not speak without the deepest reverence — are flung before the multitude, to be jeered and scoffed at — to be fiercely deba ted by unhallowed lips — until every association of sanctity is lost, and the sublime mysteries of our faith are bias phemed with a recklessness which might make an angel weep.* The limits of human responsibility also seem lately to have disappeared. Few are contented to labor in the par ticnlar spheres in which Providence has placed them, but * For instance— tne discussions or, the subject of the Holy Com munion, growing out of the agitation of the Wine Question by thf Temperance Society THE TRUE, CATHOLIl. CHURCHMAN. 265 tne geteral rule of conduct is that every one must do every 'hing. Eyen woman, whose brightest ornament is that of .." a meek and quiet spirit," must step forth from, the domestic circle which God has made the sphere of her usefilness to seek ifor other and unauthorized fields of labor, Deserting „ the. bedside of the sick, and the lowly habitation of the poor, where when she came in her gentleness and meekness, she was welcomed as a. ministering angel, and sacrificing that shrinking delicacy which is her most beautiful attri bute,; she must lift up her voice asthe public teacher, or else gird on the armor of the Reformer, and be seen in the arena of strife. , The ..natural consequence of all this is, that a spirit of .Bitterness is engendered. The world is not going to be driven, ami some \yh° under different measures might have ,,l)een the advocates of these objects are forced, in stemming the current, to oppose them. Thus in reality the great cause of human well-being suffers bythe ill-directed zeal and ultraism of its friends. . Jfow what is the remedy for these manifold evils? I answer without hesitation, it is to return to the principles ,, inculcated by our Lord. The same forms of sin which now prevail, w*ere in the world when He was here, and yet He pnly founded His Church as the corrective for all. Here is the authorized channel, through which He appointed bless ings to be conveyed to fallen and apostate man. He en- „ flowed her with power for every situation in which she should be placed. He commissioned her to be a perpetual witness for hini in the earth — ceaselessly by her voice to reprive sin, and sustain the cause of godliness. She takes no partial view, but looks over' the whole field of human misery,, and in a spirit of love to the sufferer, yet with the voice of authority, rebukes the demon, of whatever kind it may be, and bids "he victim go free. Do you. wish, then, so to labor that you may discharge vour duty to your God, to the world, and to the interests of suffering 'humanity? The Church opens to you unnun.- „b<.red paths by which you may attain this object; while at "the same time she so guides you, that your zeal cannot but be directed aright. For instance, are your sympathies^ ex cited for the distant heathen— for 'he thousands ir your own J2 266 THS TRUE, CATHOLIC CHUR.HMAN. land wno are perishing for lack of knowledge — or even foi the temporal suffering which is around ? She instructs you in what way to relieve this wretchedness, or else herself acts as the almoner of your bounty. While, then, we are bound to strive for the diffusion of truth and purity, let us learn to " strive lawfully. " Let us look with some little reverence to the experience of eighteen centuries which have preceded1 us, and not imagine that light has now, in our day, for the first time-burst upon the earth. Once more, then, I would say to you, in the language of our Lord Himself — " hear the Church. " Be as earnest anc as active as you can in the cause of human benevolence — do all in your power to relieve a sinful ar.d apostate world — but let the Church guide you as to the manner in which your efforts are to be directed. Live as she bids you — pray in the spirit with which she would haive you — urge on the holy principles ofthe Gospel in the old way which she points out — and you need not fear being wrong. An excited world may revile you, but the rule is — "judge nothing before the time. " When the day of requital comes, it will be seen, that he acted not only with the truest wisdom, but also with .he best effect, who was willing to be an humble follower of that Church to which his Master committed the work of human reform — for which He shed His blood — and which an Apostle has called, " the Church ofthe Living God, the pil lar and ground ofthe truth." One other characteristic ofthe true Churchman which we would briefly mention is, that he walks worthy of his high call ing. We may not only most accurately understand, but also fully believe all that our Lord has taught, and be num bered among the members'of His Church ; yet if His religion has n»t performed its appropriate Wr rk upon our hearts, we shall be " as sounding brass, or a tink.ing cymbal. " To receive these sublime truths into the intellect will be nothing, unless they act also as a light to our feet, to lead us on in the way of holiness. To be enrolled in the Church on earth will be worse than useless, if we do not imbibe the spiril whic- she inculcates, and thus suffer her to discipline us for Heaven. Our Master designs, that by her constant services arid her solemn lessons, she should recall us from this fleet ing world, and make us remember what we are ar d what ve THE TRtJll, CATHOLIC CHURCHMAN. '}(*)'; may be Here is the standing, perpetual testimon. tl oui Cod, to train us up to be the children of immortal, ty. Her ordinances must be to us effectual signs ot giace not mere forms an 1 shadows. We must be temples of the h.iv Ghost, having in our faithful hearts the shrine winch the Snirit of firace may inhabit. The true Churchman, whi« worthily hears that holy name, will be ever looking up warn to the Cross as his source of safety and strength, and onward to eternity as his home and abiding-place. His religion must be "one of visible holiness and self-deniai, that willingly takes on itself the sorrows which to the multitude are inevitable, and lightens their suffering by its own pain and privation. " It must be a faith, whose aims are lofty — whose efforts are untiring — and whose spirit is evidently Ihat which our Lord would inculcate, when he declared — " Whosoever will lose his life for my sake, shall find it. " It is such that the Church needs for her followers. She asks not for those who are merely fascinated by her outward beauty, but recognize not her sterner features, and shrink from self-denial in her cause. She wishes not t._ose, who lelight to be with her in the hour of glory on the Mount ot Transfiguration, declaring, " It is good for us to be here, " but leave her side as soon as she descends to the conflicts of this iower world, or points to the Cross. Far different is the standard of devotedness to which the true Churchman, through God's Holy Spirit, must be trained. He must image forth in his life, the beauty of the faith in which he trusts. By partaking of that solemn ordinance, which is provided " for his spiritual food and sustenance" — by holy employments — by daily benevolence — by frequent prayer — he is to reveal Ihe sacredness of his profession, and let the world see that he is indeed a member of the Holy Catholic Church. I have thus concluded af-usiderationofthe topics, which T wished to bring be.bre yo- in this course of Lectures. For ten successive Sunday evenings I have addressed yov. on the distinctive features of the Church; and imperfectly and briefly as the subject has been brought forward, I still trust il will not be without its fruits, in causing you to under stand why you are Churchmen. At all events, if only tne spirit of inquiry is excited, it is all we asK. We court in vestigation, well knowing that the principles on which thft 268 THK TRUE, CATHOI IC rHuRCrtMAfl . Church is based, can stand the test, and comment! theitl pelves tj the reason. And now, before I close, let me ask you for a momenl ro look once more over the world around us. See how 'rouble is abroad — how earnest and restless the mind o? man has become, as with perfect "recklessness he rushes on from one experiment to another. The wisest are at fault, and confess themselves Unable to interpret the signs of the. times, or to prophesy whereunto all this will grow. Even the religious feeling of man is ever seeking some strange lbrm in which to develope itself, and each year gives birth to new sects, and untried ways of advancing the truth.* * Bishop De Lancey, in a note to his sermon preached in Boston, Jan. 1843, at the consecration ofthe Bishop of Massachusetts, makes the following statement : " As far as can be ascertained, there are now prevalent, among the leading denominations in the United States, as independent or ganiza tions — Baptists. Pbeseyterians. f.:il vinistic Baptists, Old-School Presbyterians, !''ree-Will Baptists, New-School Presbyterians, I'Yee-cominiinion Baptists, Cumberland Presbyterians, Seventh-day Baptists, Associate Presbyterians, Six-principle Baptists, Dutch-Reformed Presbyterians, -.mancipation Baptists, Reformed Presbyterians. Uimpbellite Baptists. congregationalists. M ethodists. Orthodox Congregationalists, Methodist-Episcopal, Unitarian Congregationalists, Protestant Methodists, Transcendental Congregationalista t'limitive Methodists, Universalist Congregationalists, Wesleyan Methodists, Associate Methodists. " No Christian man can contemplate the above statement, without feelings of sorrow. No Churchman can view it without feelings ol humble thankfulness, that the Providence of God has thus far pre served the unity of the Church, and overruled the occasional excite ments and diversities of opinion in it, to the prevention of am; d-sruption, or rending of the body of Christ. Among the thousand evils, whicl result from the endless subdivisions of Christian men into independent organizations, is a miserable waste of ministerial effi ciency, and augmented expensiveness in sustaining religion. In most ofour villages, one half the Church edifices and one half the clergy THR ThVZ, THOLIJ CHURCHMAN 269 The scene around us is shifting with the rapidily of adrima And we know from the history ofthe past, that so it miisl be, and these new creations which are thus constantly stall ing into existence, must live out their brief day, and then pass into nothingness. They contain within themselves no elements of perpetuity. Out of nearly one hundred sects wnich were flourishing in the days of Charles f , and whose names are recorded on the page of history, but two or three are now in existence, and these so altered, that they could not at present be recognized by their own founders. And thus it is, in this ever-changing world, that the Ecclesias tical writer of the next century will make the record of our day. Is there then nothing fixed and stable ? Is there no City or Refuge for those who are wearied with this strife of tongues ? Is there no Holy Ark to which the Christian may flee and be at peace, when over the broad earth he finds no resting place for the sole of his feet ? Yes — it is in the ancient Apostolic Church, to which we have pointed you. Unaltered in her doctrine arid ministry for eighteen cen turies, she passes calmly and quietly on her way, unaffected by the worldly changes around her. Other religious bodies endeavor to adapt themselves to the spirit ofthe times, and thus are drawn into the current; but the Church does not She has her own old paths, and goes forward unfalteringly, whatever the world may do. Around hei are the whirlwind and the storm, and the multitude, as they are swept along by every wind of doctrine, at times look up to her venerable towers and deride as antiq lated her time-honored services. But within her fold — cut (ff from all this excitement — hei children are quietly training up against the day of account, until one by one they pass from her courts to the Paradise of God, " meet to be partakers ofthe inheritance of thesainis in light." And thus, age after age, she alone remains unalter ed, while all else is changing. The Romanist falls otl'on one would supply ample accommodation and better instruction to the people, at less expense to them and with increased usefulness to th. eleigy. Is there any effectual cure for this waste of means, energy and talent, but a, return to the " one body of Christ ?" Surely. Christian men should ponder this sibject. " 27f> THE TRUE, CATHOLIC C__imC__MA.I. side,* and the Dissenter on the other, but she simply bears her Iiouble witness against them, and goes ou as of old. Learn then to prize your privileges as members of this Church, and live up to your high responsibilities. The con flict which she calls her children to wage is no trifling war fare, out " an earnest, endless strife. " It i.« in self-denial, ,iinl toil, and often in suffering, that she bids them accom plish their work, and thus form and mature those elements of Christian character, which in the coming world can alone fit them for immortality. Despise not, then, her instructions, for they are the words of holy wisdom which her Mastei hath taught. Shrink not from avowing your allegiance. alike in good report and evil report ; for you must suffei with the Church here, if you will reign with her in the hour of her triumph. You may be misunderstood and mis represented. A captious world may ridicule your adherence to the old customs of generations which have long since gone, and when arguments are wanting, bestow upon you * Palmer gives the following brief account of the begipning of the Roman schism in England. " The accession of the illustrious Queen Elizabeth was followed by the restoration of the Church to its fomer state The clergy generally approved of the return to pure religion, and retained their benefices, administering the sacra ments and rites according to the English Ritual. In 1562 the Synod ur Convocation of England published a formulary of doctrine, divided mto 39 articles, in which the doctrines of the Catholic faith were briefly stated, and various errors and superstitions of the Romanists and others were rejected. This formulary was again approved by the Convocation in 1571, and ordered to be subscribed by all the clergy. There was no schism for many years in England : all the ¦people worshipped in the same Churches, and acknowledged the sume pasiors. . . At last, in 1569, Pius V. issued a bull, in which he excommunicated Queen Elizabeth and her supporters, absolved hei subjects from their oaths of allegiance, and bestowed her dominions on the King of Spain. This bull caused the schism in England : foi the popish party, which hat. continued in communion with the Church of England up to that time, during the eleven past years of Elizabeth's reign, now began to separate themselves. Bedingfield, Cornwallis, ind Silyarde, were the first popish recusants ; and the date of the Romanists in England, as a distinct sect or community, may be fixed in the year .570. " Church History, p. 168. THE KEEPER OF THE TROTH. 27i *n opprobrious name. But what ofthis? Remembe;- the stirring words of the Martyr Ignatius—" Stand like a beaten anvil. Let not those who seem to be worthy of confidence, md teach other doctrine, put thee to confusion. It is a part of a great Champion to be stricken and conquer. "* How noble this destiny! "To be stricken and conquer. " To pass through life as if it were a battle-field — ever contend ing; earnestly for the truth — and then, when death comes, tc hi: a.Me to look back, and feel that the great end is attained, ihat the principles for which you waged the warfare are beginning to triumph ! And soon with all of us this con flict will be over. Soon, this fleeting life will melt away mto eternity, and the contest and the agonism passed, nothing will remain but the victor's reward. Then, the spiritual and the heroic, which here were formed in the breast by suffering and toil, shall be developed in their own heavenly shape, and brighter than the poet's dream shall be the living glory in which they are arrayed. Wait, therefore, until the end. Follow in the footsteps of your Master and His Apostles, leaving consequences to Him. In the word. uf one of the living poets ofour Mother Church in England, I would say to each one of you, ' Thy part is simple. Fearless still proclaim The truth 11 men who loathe her very name. And if thy night be dark — if tempests roll, Dread as the visions ot thy boding soul — Still, in thy dimness, watch, and fast, and pray; __ad wait the brulegroom's call — the burst of opening day- " Lyra Apostolica * ftpls. ad Polycarp, § 3. THE END. YALE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY 3 9002 08837 7735