A SERMON ABOUT Frequent Communion, Preached before the UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD, August the 17th. 1679.

By Tho. Smith, D. D. and Fellow of St. Mary Magdalen College, Oxon.

LONDON, Printed for Samuel Smith, at the Prince's Arms in St. Paul's Church-yard. 1685.

[...]

REVERENDISSIMO in Christo Patri ac Domino, D. GULIELMO, Divinâ Providentiâ Archiepiscopo CANTƲARIENSI, Totius Angliae Primati & Metropolitano, Serenissimae Regiae Majestati à Sanctioribus Consiliis: Ecclesiae CATHOLICAE, Primaevae Antiquitatis, ECCLESIASTICAE HIERARCHIAE Strenuo Vindici & Adsertori: ECCLESIAE ANGLICANAE, Sub optimo & benignissimo REGE, Prudentissimo Moderatori, Magno Literatorum PATRONO. T. S. Hanc de frequenti Communione Concionem, coram Academicis Oxoniensibus habitam, humillimè & cum omni debita veneratione offert.

A SERMON ABOUT FREQUENT COMMUNION.

1 Epistle to the Corinthians, ch. 11. v. 26.

For as often as ye eat this Bread, and drink this Cup, ye do shew the Lord's death till he come.

WHatever doth happen extraordinarily, and above the usual and established course of Nature, doth mightily affect our minds and fansies at first, and surprize and fill us with won­der; but as soon as we are grown a little familiar with it, our thoughts are at rest, and notwithstanding our former transports and heats, we quickly grow cool, and the impressions which it made upon us wear away by degrees, and we care not to make any farther re­flexions upon it.

[Page 2]And the like is to be said of great and extraordinary Favours, in the moral state of things, as well as of ex­traordinary events in the natural; when they are first conferred, they draw our minds hugely after them; nothing doth or can insinuate it self more kindly into our affections. Greatness may make it self be feared and respected too; (for who will dare to affront armed Power, or chuse to be defective in those points of Cere­mony and Honour, which are due to the person, of­tentimes merely for the sake of his character?) But then there is a secret hatred mixed with that fear, and the respect is outward and forced, and if it be not, it is but the effect of a civil and prudent behaviour, and of a wise compliance. Whereas we are naturally en­clined to applaud, to admire, to love such as have done any publick good, and especially if we have any share in it. Interest, and a particular concern for our selves, heighten our esteem and our affections, and our resent­ments hereupon become more pleasing and ravishing. But all this, for the most part, is but a fit of Passion, and a mere scene and representation of Fancy, arising from the present sense of the benefit; for the longer we enjoy it, we become less and less sensible. So for­getfull are we of every thing but our selves, whom we could be content onely to love and admire for ever. Whether this arises from an impatience of fixing our thoughts too long upon the same thing, or from the natural Pride which every man carries about him, as if the remembrance and acknowledgment of a favour were a tacit upbraiding us of our want, and of the in­felicity of our former condition; yet so it is, and we need continually to be put in mind of our Devoirs and Obligations. It is but a piece of ordinary Justice, for instance, and what we cannot deny without the impu­tation [Page 3] of Rudeness, as well as the guilt of Ingratitude, that such as have sacrificed their dearest Interests for their Countrey, as have out of an Heroick Principle of meriting of the Publick, exposed themselves to all the Misfortunes, and Hardships, and Adversities of hu­mane life, and have redeemed the Lives of Thousands with the generous loss of their own, should have their Names mentioned with honour: they deserve at least, as a reward of all their labours and sufferings, that their memories be held dear and pretious by their surviving Friends and Country-men: this common gratitude ob­liges us to do; and especially if the benefit be perpe­tual, the remembrance of it should be perpetual also.

Now what greater benefit could possibly be done to the Sons of men, than the redemption of them from the slavery of Sin and Hell, and from the wrath and indignation of an offended God, by the Sufferings and Death of our blessed Saviour? This Victory he ob­tained for us, but not without much Sweat and Bloud, whereby he has restored Liberty to the World, and put an end to the Usurpations and Tyranny of the De­vil, who had enlarged his Conquest, and spread his Empire far and wide, and held the greatest part of Mankind in a dismal and miserable Bondage. This certainly deserves everlasting Acknowledgments, and an eternal Triumph. This ought to be continually and for ever fresh in our Memories. Who is not ama­zed at this new and strange way of Conquest, that through death he should destroy him, who had the power of death, that is, the Devil? Heb. 2.14. that he should triumph over the evil Spirits in the Grave, the place where they used to erect their Trophies over the ru­ines of Mankind, and where the direfull effects of their Power, and Malice, and Revenge, were most seen, [Page 4] and lastly, that the end of his Life should be the be­ginning of his Glory and Exaltation? And then who is not equally, or rather, more amazed at the great­ness of his Condescension and Love, that he should come down from his glory, and assume the nature of a Man, with all the natural Infirmities and Imperfecti­ons of it, undergo the Malice, and Slanders, and Fury of an enraged Multitude, who by their restless impor­tunity got him sentenced to die as an Impostor and Malefactor, and submit to the Torments and Ignomi­nies of the Cross, and endure with so great patience the revilings and contradictions of these impious and unrighteous Men, even while he hung upon the cursed Tree, which must needs add to the anguish and pain, which the violent extension of his Nerves caused in his tender Flesh; and all this for our sakes, who were the Enemies of God, and lost to all sense of goodness, and who deserved no pity? This was the effect of his ten­der Compassion and Love to Mankind; 'twas this that made him even relish that bitter Cup; and though as Man, he had just apprehensions of the Horrours of Death, and the Wrath and Justice of God, which he as our Surety, and as in our stead, was to undergo and satisfie; yet this alleviated his passion, and made him submit willingly to the hard condition of dying.

This indeed which he hath done and suffered for us men, and for our Salvation, cannot be forgotten without monstrous baseness and unpardonable ingratitude, and without making our selves unworthy of the blessed ef­fects and consequences of his passion. And our Blessed Saviour himself would have the Memory of it perpetu­ated to all Ages and Generations; and to assist our Weakness, and sustain our Faith, which has need of such supports, and to make it impossible that it should [Page 5] ever be forgotten; He has instituted the blessed Sacra­ment of his Body and Bloud, as a perpetual and visi­ble representation of it. He still presents himself be­fore us, as hanging upon the Cross, his Body rent and torn with wounds, and his pretious Bloud gushing in a plentifull stream out of his side. Thus he is evident­ly set forth before our eyes, crucified among us still, (Gal. 3.1.) as it were in Effigie. These memorials he has left us of himself till his second coming, to put us con­tinually in mind, how much he suffered for us. This was the grand Reason of the Institution, the better to imprint it on our minds, that we might always have before our Eyes a lively Image and Figure of his Suf­ferings; the mysterious Rites used in the celebration being for this very end and purpose, and the whole Action solemn and fully significant. For as often as ye eat this bread, and drink this cup, ye shew the Lord's death till he come.

I shall comprize the full sense of these words in these four following Propositions:

I. That the holy Elements, after Consecration, re­tain their own proper Essence and Nature, without any Physical and Substantial Change made of them. It is Bread that we eat, and Wine that we drink; but with a distinction and note of Dignity and Honour; it is this Bread, and this Cup, that is, of ordinary and common they become mystical and sacramental; they are altered and changed, as to their use, and effect, and condition; and not onely a divine Signification, but a divine Virtue is imprinted upon them.

II. That the blessed Sacrament of the Body and Bloud of our Lord doth very fitly and fully represent and set forth his death.

[Page 6]III. That it is of perpetual Use and Observation, and to be continued till the end of the World; ye shew forth the Lord's death till he come, that is, till he come to judge the World at the last day, and to put an end to the present state of things.

IV. That all who profess their Belief in a crucified Saviour, and exspect the saving benefits of his Passion, are obliged to a frequent celebration of this holy and tremendous Mystery; which is here plainly supposed, as often as ye eat this bread, and drink this cup. Which last Proposition I intend to make the Argument of my Discourse at this time. Now the Reason and Necessity of the Obligation will appear, if we consider these two things:

I. The End and Design of the Institution of the ho­ly Sacrament.

II. The blessed Consequences and Effects of frequent Communion.

1. The End and Design of the holy Sacrament is, that it might be an everlasting Memorial of the Death and Passion of our Lord and Saviour. He was pleased after the Consecration of both Elements to add parti­cularly and distinctly, not in the way of Advice, to be followed, if we think fit our selves, but in the way of a peremptory and absolute Command, v. 24. This doe in remembrance of me, and v. 25. This doe ye, as often as ye drink it, in remembrance of me. It is cer­tain, that we ought to remember the Death of our Blessed Saviour at other times; as when we are upon our knees at our Prayers. He gave himself for us an [Page 7] offering and sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour, Ephes. 5.2. by virtue of which, our Prayers wing'd with a lively Faith in his Bloud, and with Zeal, as­cend like a Cloud of Incense into the Holy of Holies, and find acceptance with God. We cannot employ our Thoughts and Meditations better, when we are upon our Beds, or when we are in private, and espe­cially upon our Days of Fasting and Penitence, when God onely is witness to these spiritual Exercises. No Argument can make us more and better sensible of the defiling and damning nature of Sin, than the conside­ration of a crucified Saviour, that his Bloud was shed on purpose to expiate and attone it. This will make us reflect upon our sins with a hearty sorrow and re­gret, which brought the Son of God to so sad and shamefull an end. How ought I to abhor and loath my self, when I consider that the sins which I have committed, though so many hundred years after, con­tributed to his dying, and make me an accessory of the guilt of the Jews, who were the cruel Instruments of his Murther? Nothing can more and better inflame our Zeal and Love to God and to Christ, than frequent Meditation on our Saviour's Death; that God should contrive this admirable way of our Redemption by the Death of his onely Son, whom he sent out of his own bosome on purpose to be a Sacrifice for Sin, and whom he set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his bloud, for the remission of sins that are past through the forbearance of God, Rom. 3.25. and that Christ should willingly undergo all this for our sakes. O blessed Saviour, how can we recompense this thy infinite Love towards faln Man! Jesu God! I cannot doe, I cannot suffer enough in the way of a just acknowledg­ment of thy inexpressible Kindness and Pity to my [Page 8] poor Soul, which thou hast redeemed from the nether­most Hell, and from the Wrath of God, which would have been the more intolerable. The reading also of the Narrative and History of our Saviour's Sufferings and Death, as they are recorded in the holy Gospels, together with a reflexion on the several circumstances of them must needs leave deep impressions upon our memories. This tragical sto­ry wherewith the Heathen (a) Thus did the Emperour Trajan in his discourse with St. Ignatius, for that seems to be the meaning of his words, Sub Pontio Pilato crucifixum dicis: V. [...] Martyrii S. Ignatii, Editionis Usserianae, [...] Simplicius, a Roman Judge of Tarsus, un­der Diocletian and Maximinian, to Bonifatius, [...]; V. passionem S. Bonifatii ex Edit. E. Bigotii, p. 319. which seems to me to be a Translation out of the La­tine, first publisht at Rome by Holstenius. Arnobi­us adv. Gentes; lib. 1. Caecilius in Minucius Fe­lix, hominem summo supplicio pro facinore pu­nitum: nempe colunt. See also Lactantius divinar. Institut. lib. 4. cap. 16. Lucian, de morte Pere­grini, [...] [...], as the Wretch blasphemed. The most usual reproach was, Deus vester patibulo affixus est; or, hominem colitis, hominem Palaestinum, cru­cifixum adoratis pro Deo. of old used to upbraid the Christians, as Votaries and Worshippers of a crucified God, was so universally diffused throughout the World, that it was impossible that it should be forgotten; and the sight of a (b) Thus Eusebius says of the Emperour Con­stantine, de vita ipsius, lib. 3. cap. 1. [...]. And in his Oration, de laudibus Con­stantini, [...]. cap. 9. p. 6 [...]8. Ex Edit. Valesii. Cross (which assoon as the Roman Empire turned Christian, became an Ensign and Trophy of Honour, eve­ry where to be met with, (c)V. Euseb. de vita Constantini, lib. 1. c. 31. in their Banners, and up­on their (d)Cap. 21. [...] [...]. S. Hiero­nymus ad L [...]tam, Ep. 7. Vexilla militum cru­cis insignia sunt, Regum purpuras & ardentes di­adematum gemmas patibuli salutaris pictura con­decorat. Bucklers and Helmets, upon the Diadems of the Emperours, upon their Medals, upon their Churches and Spires of their Towers, and in their solemn Processi­ons,) would quickly refresh their memories, and put them in mind of the great Saviour of the World, whose Hands and Feet were nailed to it, [Page 9] and his Armes extended upon it, to receive and em­brace all, who fly to him for refuge, from the assaults and pursuits of offended Justice. But Christ who knew the best and most effectual method to keep alive for ever the Memory of his Passion and Death, has ordained this holy Sacrament, as the most proper Instrument to make us truly and really sensible and mindfull of it.

It is not then a matter of mere indifference, whe­ther we will receive the Sacrament or no: we can­not with any pretence or shew of Reason, take a li­berty of dispensing with this Law of our Religion, as if it were wholly in our power to come and abstain as we please. For certainly all Laws were given with an intent that they may be observed and obeyed. If they oblige to a Duty, and require any thing to be done, the Omission is culpable, and is more or less aggrava­ted, and admits of greater or lesser degrees of guilt, determinable by the variety of circumstances that at­tend it: and in this case especially when the Law-gi­ver, to make our Obedience more ready and yielding, has been pleased to superadd to the express Declarati­on and Determination of his Will, Considerations of its agreeableness and reasonableness, as well to encou­rage as to command our Obedience, which he might otherwise justly claim as an Acknowledgment of our Dependence upon him. So that from what Principle soever our Non-performance proceeds, whether from Obstinacy and Pride, or from Carelesness and Neglect, we throw off and reject the Authority that imposed it, as if that did not oblige, or that we were not to be commanded.

Now Christ has commanded us to commemorate his Passion and Death, by participating the Symbols [Page 10] of his holy Body and Bloud; and if we admit him to be our Lord as well as our Saviour, we can doe no other than obey; nor can we question his Power and Authority even in the more difficult Duties of taking up his Cross, of Self-denial and Mortification, or of sacrificing our Interests and our Lives in the propaga­ting and defence of his Truth. For no difficulty in the thing to be performed can warrant or excuse the not doing of it, where the Obedience is necessary: and especially if we consider, that the End of the Institu­tion of this holy Sacrament is highly agreeable to Rea­son; that the Sufferings of the Cross might never be forgotten, that our thoughts of it be not slight or transient, a cold reflexion upon it, as upon a sad and lamentable accident, the reading of which may trou­ble and move us a little, and incline us to pity or melancholy for a time, but that they be composed and serious, and often sixt upon the Object of a dying Sa­viour, who doth so well deserve them, and at last be raised up to a due pitch and height, to which this ho­ly Solemnity is so conducing. For if it be our Duty, as most certainly it is, to meditate on the Death of Christ, to reflect, and that seriously, and with due in­tention of Mind, on the dolours of his Passion, if this be to be done often (for who can reflect too much or too often upon the effects of infinite Love and Conde­scension, the greatest that could possibly be shewn?) and if Christ has prescribed us a way how it may be done most effectually, that is, in the Sacrament, the consequence is easie, and just, and natural, that we are to communicate often; this being the most likely means to attain that end, the solemn commemoration of his Passion and Death. So that the design of the In­stitution makes frequent Communion necessary.

[Page 11]Now that this was the mind of Christ, will appear demonstratively from the practice of the Apostles, who may be presumed to know and understand it best, and of their first Converts, of whom we read, Acts 2.42. they continued stedfastly, [...], were very assiduous and diligent, in the Apostles Doctrine and fellowship, or rather, [...], communication, and so may refer either to their presents and gifts of Bread and Wine, and Fruits for the use of the Sacrament, and Love-Feast, which followed, or to the liberal di­stribution of the good things, with which God had blessed them, in a way of Charity and Benevolence, for the support and sustenance of the poorer sort of Christians: it follows, and in breaking of bread and in prayers, that is, in receiving the Sacrament, and in joint and publick Devotions. This was their constant practice, and it was universal too. For it takes in the whole number of Christians, which then began to encrease mightily, no less than Three Thousand ha­ving been converted to the Faith of Christ by Saint Pe­ter's Sermon, v. 41. of all which this is expresly af­firmed. So great was the Faith, and Piety, and Zeal of these new Converts, that they communicated eve­ry day. For Saint Luke is punctual in relating this material circumstance, v. 46. And they continuing dai­ly with one accord in the Temple, and breaking bread from house to house, For that [...] is in the writings of the new Testament, sometimes the same with [...], is fully and clearly proved by the excellent Dr. Hammond, in his Annot. on Act. 1.13. [...], in, or at the house where they used to make their resort, did eat their meat with gladness and singleness of heart: the meaning of which words seems to be plainly this, that as ma­ny of the Christians as could with convenience, met every day in a certain upper Chamber, adjoining to the Temple, or not far from it, and there celebrated the blessed Sacrament, and afterwards very chearfully and [Page 12] heartily entertained one another with Feasts of Love and Charity: This upper room being the same with that in which our blessed Saviour eat the Passover with his Disciples, and instituted the Sacrament, af­terwards called The Oratory of Sion, Mark 14.15. Luke 22.12. according to a tradition which passes current among the Christians of the *V. Eurychii Patriarchae Alexandrini Annales, part. 1. pag. 322. Josephum Aegyptium in codice Arabico Concilio­rum titulo Canonum Apostolicorum, Li­brum Constitutionum Syriacarum Eccle­siae Maroniticae, à Davide Archiepiscopo ante sexcentos annos, Arabicè scriptum apud Abrahamum Ecchellensem, de Ori­gine Nominis Papae, p. 225. Romae 40.1 [...]. Et Petrum D D. Basilii & Grego­rii fratrem, Episcopum Sebastes in ope­re Arabicè translato, quod inscribitur [...] Liber Demon­strationis, apud eundem p. 236. Sancti Ja­cobi Liturgiam, in 2. vol. Bibliothecae Patr. editionis Parisiensis [...], p. 15. Geographi­am Nubiensem climate 3. parte 5. p. 113. Claudium Regem Aethiopiae in confessio­ne sidei, ab eruditissimo viro D. Ludolfo editâ, num. 4. Epiphanium de ponderi­bus, sect. 14 ubi de Hadr ano Impera­tore dicit, quod itinere suscepto sanitatis causà, Aegyptum & Palaestinam petiit, Hierosolyma lustrandi cupidus, ubi nihil serè relictum erat, [...]. Joannem Damas­cenum de fide orthodoxa, l. 4. c. 14. Jo­annis Pho [...] [...], &c. pag. 20. East. For that which is al­ledged by some, Mr. Gregory in his Observations upon some passages of Scripture, p. 9. that the former part of the verse may refer onely to their daily resort to the Temple at the hours of Prayer, that is, that they went and prayed in the mixt Assemblies of the Jews, for so they must be understood, if they speak consonantly to them­selves; but that they brake bread from house to house, that is, at their particular homes, is of little force; because the words have an intimate connexion and depen­dence one upon another, and seem to contain the reason of their con­tinuing daily with one accord in the Temple, which was to re­ceive the Sacrament in a particu­lar place in it, or near it: as [...] may very fitly be rendred. For if they render the words di­stributively from house to house, what hinders but that upon this supposition it may be inferred, that the Sacrament was celebrated in every Christian house of Jerusalem apart: which is against the un­doubted [Page 13] practice of those first Christians, who used to meet in great numbers [...]. Act. 2.1. [...]. Act. 2.44. [...]. Cor. 11.20. together, for this sacred pur­pose at a certain place, if it were wide and large e­nough to receive them.

But to let this pass onely as a probability, that there was a constant weekly Communion, that is, eve­ry Sunday, is certain beyond all possibility of excep­tion. Act. 20.1. upon the first day of the week when the disciples came together to break bread, Saint Paul preached unto them, &c. This was at St. Paul's being at Troas, which was two or three and twenty years after the Ascension; variety of practice, as to these and the like circumstances, being allowed at different times, and in different places, and what they did here weekly, might formerly have been done daily by the Apostles and Disciples at Jerusalem. I do not urge their example, as if all Christians were obliged to fol­low it in these punctualities and circumstances, or as if we were guilty of a horrid neglect, if we do not re­ceive the Sacrament daily, at least every Lords-day: but I onely mention it as an instance of their piety and zeal, and of the great sense which they had of the ob­ligation which lay upon them, of celebrating the Eu­charist frequently from the command of Christ.

But this perchance might be the peculiar glory and excellency of those times, wherein devotion was at the highest pitch, and Christianity flourisht in its perfec­tion and purity.

Let us therefore in the next place enquire into the practice and behaviour of their successors, and see whe­ther they fell short of, or how nigh they came up to their example.

[Page 14]That the Christians had their private Meetings at night, and in the morning before the light appeared, that they might serve God and Christ, and perform all the solemnities of their Worship with less disturbance, could not but be taken notice of by their prying and idolatrous neighbours, among whom they lived, who envied them these happy opportunities; and the go­vernment was at last alarm'd with the number and frequency of these religious conventions: and the whole world then knew how they were reproached and abused for it by the opprobrious name of latebrosa & lucifugax natio: and what cursed slanders past upon them among the credulous Heathen, from the mis-un­derstanding of their solemn receiving of the Sacra­ment at such times, and the Love-feast after: dicimur sceleratissimi, says Tertullian in the 7th chap. of his Apology, de sacramento infanticidii & pabulo, inde & post convivium incesto: which scandalous stories they diffused abroad with equal subtility and malice, and enlarged upon with particular circumstances, that they might with the greater hope of success blacken the great credit and reputation of the Christian Religion, which it gained every where, and hinder its progress. But that this was the pure invention of the Devil and his Instruments, the Heathen Priests, their Temples being thin of Votaries, and their Altars reeking no longer with the bloud of sacrifices, one of their wri­ters, and a Proconsul in the lesser Asia, at least V. inscriptio­nem apud Onu­phrium Pauvini­um in commen­tario in [...]astos ad annum DCCCLIII. a Pro­praetor with Consular power, in Epist. l. 10. ep. [...]. a letter, which he sent to the Emperour Trajan, who would have been glad to have found these stories verified, doth fully prove. For he upon a diligent, and severe enquiry (for to some, particularly to two Deaconnesses, he gave [Page 15] the question, and put them upon the rack, quid esset veri & per tormenta quaerere, to know for certain, what their behaviour was in private) could onely make this discovery, that they met, stato die, on a set day, that is, undoubtedly on a Sunday, to sing an hymn to Christ, as to their God, that they then obli­ged themselves by Oath, that is, upon their solemn receiving of the Sacrament, to abstain from all sorts of dishonesty and baseness, and that they met again, and entertained one another with ordinary and inno­cent food; which is an irrefragable confutation of the [...] or devouring the raw flesh of an Infant im­puted to them by their Enemies, which might in pro­bability, partly, if not chiefly, arise from their gross and unnatural conception of the sacramental rites.

Indeed these were times of persecution and great danger and bloudy decrees were oftentimes signed by the Emperors for their execution and slaughter. They were outlawed, and proscribed, and hunted after with violence, and drag'd before Tribunals, and in hourly danger of their lives. They saw that the profession of Christianity was made a capital crime, no less than Treason against the State; their Enemies out of an impious zeal for their Idolatry mad at them, inexora­ble, and void of all pity; their malice and their cru­elty were insatiable and knew no bounds. They be­held what great wasts the sword, the wheel, the cross and the flames had already made of their fellow-Christians, and, for ought they knew, their turn was next, and that they should have the honour, and be counted worthy, not onely to suffer reproach, but death for the name of Christ: They were so far from being wrought upon by fear to fly for it, that they seemed ambitious of dying, and willingly profered [Page 16] themselves to the Heathen Judges. This did not dis­compose or distract their thoughts, but rather height­ned their zeal and their devotion: every day was to them their dying day, because they had not the least moral assurance, that they should live to the end of it. Yet they were men still, though they seemed to act above the power of humane nature, and had need of a continual support to bear them up against so fierce and great opposition of men and devils. They lookt up to Jesus the Author and finisher of their faith, who for the glory, that was set before him, endured the cross, and despised the shame.

The contemplation of his death, and in the Sacra­ment especially, where it was so livelily set forth, inspi­red them with more than humane courage. They re­ceived the Sacrament as often as they had opportunity, to fortifie their resolutions of dying for his name. They were fit for it every day, and therefore they might, and probably did, actually receive it every day, and so might we, if our affections were as pure and vigorous, and our lives as mortified and as holy.

Sometime indeed there was a suspension of these san­guinary rescripts, and several acts of grace were past in behalf of the poor Christians. The Emperors, notwithstanding those sudden fits and paroxysms of fu­ry and madness, had their lucid intervals, and saw clearly, that it was against all laws of humanity and equity, and against reason of state, to depopulate the Empire of such usefull subjects, and to butcher and massacre such a vast number of men, whose onely fault was their religion.

During this uncertain state of things, the Christians relaxed nothing of their piety and ancient discipline; they went on in the same course, and followed the [Page 17] footsteps of their Predecessors in the faith. Nobis, saith Contra Psy­chicos. cap. 14. Tertullian in his Book de Jejuniis, certè omnis dies etiam vulgatâ consecratione celebratur. But when they foresaw a storm of persecution arising, then the Bishops and the Christian people under them had S. Cyprian Epist. 58. Edit. Oxon. Plebi Thibari consistenti, milites Christi, considerantes iccirco se quotidie calicem sanguinis Christi bibere, ut possint ipsi propter Christum sanguinem fundere. p. 120. De oratione Dominica, Euchari­stiam quotidie ad cibam salutis accipere. p. 147. daily Sacraments, and at such times they abated the ri­gour of the Church-Canons, and admitted the lapsed persons to the Communion, which otherwise was not allowed them but sub ictu mor­tis, as |Epist. 54. Edit. Rigatlianae quae est Epist. 57. Edit. Oxon. p. 118. He had said before, p. 117. ut quos excitamus & hortamur ad praelium non inermes & nu­dos relinquamus, sed protectione sanguinis & corporis Christi muniamus: & cum ad hoc fiat Eucharistia, ut possit accipienti­bus esse tutela, quos tutos esse contra ad­versarium voluimus, munimento Domini­cae saturitatis armemus. St. Cyprian speaks, who tells us, in that excellent Epistle to Cornelius, of his daily offering up this Sacrifice, and justifies his dea­ling thus mercifully with his pe­nitents, or rather triumphs and glories in it. Episcopatus nostri honor grandis & gloria est, pacem dedisse martyribus, ut Sacerdotes, qui sacrificia Deo quo­tidie celebramus, hostias Deo & victimas praeparemus. Nor did this zeal and devotion cool of a sudden, as soon as the flames were extinguisht: devout persons kept up the custome of receiving often in the flourish­ing times of Christianity, when it was favoured and cherished by the Civil power: and S. Basil. ad Caesariam Pa­triciam, epist. 289. [...]. St. Basil com­mends daily communion as usefull and pious, and says of himself, that he communicated four times a week, and also upon the memorials of the Martyrs: Though it must be most sadly confessed, that a general decay of piety came in afterwards, and luxury eat out the vi­tals of Religion, and these holy duties, which had been the great comfort and desire of their souls in the day of their afflictions, became to be neglected, and the plea­sures [Page 18] and vanities of the World had dull'd their appe­tite, that they no longer relished this heavenly food, this bread of Angels, and if they came to the Sacra­ment, it was onely at the solemn times of the year, as at Christmas and Easter out of respect to the Law of the Church, and the custome of the place where they lived, that they might not be guilty of a scandalous omission of a duty so necessary, rather than out of a thirsty desire and longing after it.

But if we can have the patience to compare the for­wardness and zeal of the first Christians, with the dul­ness and stupidity of this age, how ready and desirous they were to embrace all opportunities of commemo­rating the death of Christ according to his own institu­tion and appointment, and how willing most of us are to decline them, and that upon very slight and often­times unreasonable pretences, if we dare compare their mortifications and severities in order to a due prepara­tion, with our slight and perfunctory performances, how we are forced to doe that twice or thrice in a year, which they earnestly long'd for almost every day, it will make us tremble to consider, how much we are degenerated, and are faln short of those glorious exam­ples which those ancient worthies set us, and how lit­tle of the power of Christianity is to be found at this time among Christians, notwithstanding all that great noise and profession which is made of it. Our Scho­lastical disputes and quarrels about the Sacrament have destroyed and swallowed up our devotion, and our cha­rity; and that which was designed by Christ for an in­strument of uniting mens minds together in Christian Communion and love, is now become an occasion of difference and irreconciliation. They were not trou­bled with those hot debates, which have since so mise­rably [Page 19] distracted the Peace of Christendom: they con­tented themselves with a simple belief of the mystery, without busying their thoughts about nice and curious speculations: whole Churches were not then excom­municated for not assenting to a monstrous opinion contrary to common sense and reason, and the univer­sal experience of Mankind; they did not, under a pre­tence of exalting the mystery, destroy the nature of a Sacrament, as now is done in the Roman Church. It must now no longer be a representative, but a real pro­pitiatory sacrifice for the living, and for the dead, and Christ's natural body must be brought down from hea­ven upon a thousand Altars at once, and there really broken, and offered up again to God the Father, and his Bloud actually spilt a thousand times every day, and mixing it self with ours. Nor did they on the o­ther side degrade it into a bare empty sign, and enter­tain slight notions of it, or approach it without a due and becoming reverence, or abstain from it upon fri­volous excuses, as the manner of some is. For had we that high value for the blessed Sacrament as we ought, did we believe it necessary to receive it often, not one­ly necessitate proecepti, but medii too, did we believe seriously and consider, of what great use and benefit it would be to our Souls, we would be more diligent and conscientious in the use of it, and think our selves un­der an indispensable obligation of frequent Communi­on; which arises also from a consideration of the bles­sed effects and consequences of it; which is my second particular. And of these I shall name onely three.

1. By it we gain a close and intimate communion and conjunction with Christ; hereby we are one with Christ, and Christ with us; that is, upon our humble [Page 20] and penitent, and devout receiving of the Sacrament, he descends into our hearts by the sweet influences of his Grace; he is really present with us by his Spirit, and the life, which we now live in the flesh, we live by the faith of the son of God, who loved us, and gave him­self for us, and still gives himself to us in these holy my­steries. For we must not fansie an immediate and perso­nal union; he indeed was pleased by assuming the hu­mane nature to unite the word to it, whereby he became God and Man; which wonderfull union is therefore called Hypostatical; because he had the two natures fully, with all their natural and essential qualities con­curring in his own proper single person. But the uni­on of Christ with the devout soul is purely spiritual; not an union of his personal excellencies and endow­ments, but a communication of his Grace and Spirit, whereby the soul is exalted above its natural capacity, and is transformed from glory to glory, and is made partaker of the divine nature, that is, filled with love and purity, and such God-like qualities. By this we are joyned and united to him, as members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones, that is, of his mystical bo­dy, the Church, as the Apostle explains himself, Col. 1.18. and not of his natural body, on account of a con­corporation, or assimulation, or conversion of the Sa­crament into our bodily substance. Thus as the Apo­stle St. John speaks, we have communion with the Fa­ther, and with his son Jesus Christ. By virtue of Christ's pretious bloud shed upon the cross, we are re­conciled to God; he has entred into a new Covenant with us, which Christ has solemnly ratified by his death, and is willing to receive us to mercy and fa­vour, upon the conditions of hearty sorrow for our sins, wherewith we have offended the eyes of his glo­ry, [Page 21] and of a holy life; and through faith in his Son we can put up our prayers to him with some assurance, that he will hear us, and communicate his favours and blessings to us, so far as he in his infinite wisdom sees fit, and give us of his Spirit: and the same communion we have with Christ; the soul is ravished with the con­templation of his infinite love and goodness to lost man, and to it self in particular, and is filled with astonishing reflexions of the merits of his death, as much as if he were personally present upon Earth again. This in­deed is better understood than exprest, words being too scanty, and the imagination not able to reach and comprehend what the pious soul knows by experience. And if this be the blessed effect of our devotion and me­ditation; if when we are upon our knees, and are em­ployed in holy thoughts, we then seem to be out of our bodies, and rapt into heaven, and there lie pro­strate before the throne and the Lamb; how much more, when we are kneeling before the Altar, and are admitted to the participation of the body and bloud of our Saviour, and are performing the most solemn part of the Christian worship, exerting with all possible vigour and intention of mind, (for so we ought to be affected) acts of holy love and zeal, and uniting our souls to Christ by faith. There is no need of fansying the bread to be substantially changed into the natural body of Christ, that so by this mean we may be really united to it, which is one of the colourable pretences made use of by Petrus de Marca, and others, for the Doctrine of Transubstantiation, and Christ naturally be and remain in us. It is enough, that Christ took our nature upon him, and united it inseparably to his divinity, that he was made up of flesh and bloud, and a humane soul, and that he doth communicate himself, that is, his bo­dy [Page 22] and bloud, in the Sacrament; for so the Elements really and truly are, after consecration, but without departing from their natural state, and without loosing their bodily substance. For this is all, I humbly con­ceive, that our Church means by the doctrine of the real Presence, which it acknowledgeth and maintai­neth: that is, by the power of God, and the instituti­on of our Saviour, and the descent and supervening grace of the Spirit, the elements of bread and wine, after consecration by a Priest, rightly ordained and constituted, become the body and bloud of Christ Mystically and Sacramentally: and so the Sacra­ment is more than a bare figure and representation, more than a mere Symbol or external rite, as were the types and shadows of the law: because it does exhibite and communicate Christ really and truly to us. Thus Saint Paul hath expresly deter­mined, the bread which we break, is it not the com­munication of the body of Christ? the cup of blessing, which we bless, is it not the communication of the bloud of Christ? 2 Cor. 10.16. Now were this seriously laid to heart, that in the Sacrament we meet with Christ, and receive him, how should we long for these blessed opportunities! As the Hart panteth after the water-brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God; my soul thirsteth for God, for the living God, when shall I come to appear before God? Can we be weary of his blessed presence, or complain of too frequent entertainments and communications? It will be the unspeakable glory and happiness of the other world, to be in the presence of God, and with Christ for ever. Here on earth he vouchsafes to be with us, in the Sacrament especially; here we may find him, whom our soul loveth: here we may em­brace [Page 23] him. Why then are we so unprepared? Why are we so backward? Why doe we this so sel­dom?

2. By a frequent participation of the body and bloud of our Saviour, we are more and more confir­med in our purposes of holy living, and strengthened in grace and goodness. We are daily exposed to a thousand temptations, by reason of the frailty of our na­ture, temperament of body, which has too too often a sad and fatal influence upon the mind, allurements of sense, and evil example, and the like. There is a continual strife between the dictates of right rea­son, which incite us to doe our duty, by arguments drawn from the obligations we owe to God, and the agreeableness of it to our nature, and the insi­nuations of appetite, which suggests a present plea­sure, if we strain a little, and cease to be so scrupulous, till at last the directive and commanding faculties are impaired and captivated, and reason dethroned, and lust domineers in the soul, and the miserable per­son, who has lost his power over himself, is at the command of every extravagant passion. Which evil effects and consequences are prevented by a frequent and conscientious receiving of the blessed Sacrament. This being the true Physick of the soul, which not onely cleanses it from the defilements of sin, but for­tifies it against all infection for the future. As often as we find any ill humour growing upon us, we en­deavour carefully to prevent it. When we are sick, the tediousness and uneasiness which our distemper brings upon us, and the fear of death force us to seek out medicines to restore our health, and prolong our lives. The soul has its distempers, for the pre­vention [Page 24] or removal of which, there cannot be a more sovereign remedy than the frequent devout receiving of the Sacrament. For there is such a divine efficacy in the holy Sacrament, and the blessing of God does so accompany this holy institution of our Religion, that, as a moral instrument, it conveys grace into the heart of the Communicant, if his approach be with due preparation and reverence, and if he does not wilfully and obstinately resist and hinder the kind­ly influences of it. If there went such a virtue out of Christ's natural body, when he was upon Earth, that great cures were wrought thereby: ( If I may but touch his garment, said the woman, who had a bloudy issue, Math. 9.21. I shall be whole.) What a great blessing must the receiving of it in the Sacra­ment bring along with it, to the devout soul, that addresses to him with a lively faith, that he is able and willing to heal us? But we sin, after we have recei­ved the Sacrament, and we do not find these blessed effects of it within our selves: To which several things are to be replied.

1. That the Sacrament does not work physically and necessarily, but in the way of moral efficacy, to which we our selves must concur and contribute some­what.

2. That these blessed effects are producible and vi­sible in others, and have been in all ages; so that the fault is wholly our own, and no defect can be impu­ted to this mean and instrument of grace, why it is not equally effectual to us: And therefore,

[Page 25]3. That we did not either receive it with due pre­paration, that is, our hearts were not purified by re­pentance and faith, and inflamed with love and cha­rity, but we might break in upon the Altar without awe and reverence, merely out of formality, in complyance with the custome of the place, and onely for fear that our absence should be censured; or else we are not carefull after we have received it, to per­form those vows and obligations, which we laid up­on our selves, when we were partakers of the Lords table; which is the general fault: we are seemingly strict before, as if this were enough, and could satis­fie the Conscience to receive Christ, without any far­ther care of walking in him.

4. That this is as far from being an objection against frequent communion, as it is against our daily Prayer, for do we not, every morning privately on our knees, beg of God the assistence of his grace, that we may not be led into temptation, but may be powerfully defen­ded from it, and preserved in it? and do we not as often, at least we should, publickly and in the con­gregation, beseech him, that he would vouchsafe to keep us the remaining part of the day without sin, and defend us by his mighty power, that we may not fall into it? But God knows our weakness, and we can­not but acknowledge it with shame and sorrow of heart, that the corruptions of our nature are often­times too strong for us, and baffle our purposes and resolutions. This drives us upon our knees again, and we pray God not to leave us to our selves, and by de­grees we gain greater measures of strength, and in some sort get the mastery over the inclinations of cor­rupted [Page 26] nature. This holds much more in the Sacra­ment, when we go to it with fresh desires, and more vigorous resolutions of living a holy and truly Chri­stian life, and when we reflect upon our failings and miscarriages, since our last receiving, with deep hu­miliation and sorrow. Thou, O Lord God, art full of compassion and mercy, long suffering, plenteous in good­ness and truth, O turn thee unto me, and have mercy upon me; give thy strength unto thy servant, and help the son of thy hand-maid. We need no invitations to satisfie the natural desires of the body, which is nou­rished and cherished, and oftentimes pampered by us. Nature has laid upon us a necessity of daily food, for the preservation of life, to repair those decays, which we daily suffer: without this, we consume and dye. Now if we believe the blessed Sacrament to be the food of the Soul, that we grow and are strengthened in grace by this bread of life, the true spiritual man­na, that comes down from heaven, that is designed by God for this purpose, and conveys his blessing and sanctifying graces to all worthy receivers; that by vir­tue of this nourishment, we either retain or recover our vigour and healthfulness of mind, and that with­out it we languish and decay in the inward man, there would be no keeping us from this heavenly banquet at the Lord's table, where there can be no fear of a fur­feit, where we eat and drink health and salvation, and where Christ himself is the entertainer, and the enter­tainment 100. For thou, O Christ, as the Greek Priest prays in the Liturgy of St. Chrysostome, just before the [...], when they carry the gifts from the Prothesis to the Altar, where he consecrates, [...], thou offerest, and yet art offered up: thou [Page 27] receivedst the Elements into thy holy hands, and yet at the same time thy body and bloud are distributed; thou, O Christ, makest this bread in the Sacrament to be thy flesh mystically, which thou still givest for the life of the World. Can we eat too much, or too often of this bread of life, whereby we are nourished to im­mortality, the holy Elements being the [...], for so St. Clement in his former Epistle to the Corinthi­ans must be understood, that is, not of the doctrine of our blessed Saviour, for that is mentioned in the following clause, [...], much less of the [...], or things pertaining to our bodily sustinance, and things of this life, as Junius thought fit to explain, but of the divine viaticum of the Sacra­ment, that we may not faint in the journey, which we are taking to the other world? [...], that is, [...], for it immediately follows, [...], (to which there can be no other relative but [...], (which express testimo­ny of this Apostolical writer for the Divinity of our blessed Saviour, I could not but observe by the bye, to help to confound the arrogance and blasphemy of that profest Arian, Sandius) so that these words seem clearly to relate to the Sacrament, where the sufferings of Christ are so livelily represented to our sight.

3. By frequent receiving of the Sacrament we are more and more made partakers of the benefits, and blessings, and merits of Christ's holy passion and death. It is the great artifice of the Roman Church to keep up the credit of their private Masses, to which antiquity is a mere stranger, to make the people believe, that the Priest hath a power of applying the efficacy and me­rit of Christ's sacrifice to their particular benefit, for [Page 28] whom he intends it; so they contribute somewhat in the way of charity or gift, and are but present in the time of the celebration. But 'tis certain, that before superstition, and corruption of Doctrine had overspread that Church, and before they had perverted this most solemn part of the Christian worship into a mere piece of pageantry and theatrical shew, all that was anci­ently designed by the mentioning the names of the li­ving, to say nothing at present of the commemoration of the dead, at that time, as is clear from the Canon of the Mass still in use, was onely by way of intercession, that God would be pleased, for the merits of his Son's death, which they were then commemorating, to have mercy on them, to forgive them their sins, and to pour down of his grace abundantly upon them, and not one­ly upon them, but upon the whole number of Christi­an people throughout the world.

But this cannot yield such peace and quiet, and sa­tisfaction to my conscience, as my own particular ap­plication of the merits of Christ's sufferings to my self; what another does for me, cannot be my act, when I am obliged to do it in my own person, and not by my representative. I am to eat his flesh in the Sa­crament, and drink his bloud, if I would live in him, and by him. Now Christ by his death hath satisfied the divine Justice, and reconciled us to the Father, who no longer imputes our sins to our charge and condemna­tion: the bloud, that he spilt upon the cross, is the seal of an everlasting covenant; for this cause he is the medi­atour of a new covenant, that by means of death, for the redemption of the transgressions, that were under the first covenant, they which were called, might receive the pro­mise of an everlasting inheritance. Heb. 9.15. So that now heaven and salvation are made over by God, by [Page 29] virtue of this expiatory Sacrifice, to all that truly be­lieve in his Son's name. This Sacrifice was made once for all upon the Altar of the Cross; but the merit reaches backward to the first being and original of things, and looks forward to the end of the world, and to eternal ages. It is, as to the fruit and efficacy of it, as pre­sent to God, as if Christ were born every day into the world again, and really every day offered up, or as if it were but yesterdy, or but just now offered; it being all-sufficient, and of infinite value, and fully accepted by God, as a just price and ransome. Now that he suffered this bitter and cursed death upon the cross for me, and that I may apply all the saving bene­fits of his passion to my self, he assures me by giving me his body and bloud. Every time we receive the Sa­crament worthily, there is a new confirmation of our pardon; the spirit of God beareth witness with our spirit, that we are his children, and reinstated in his grace and favour. 'Tis an infallible pledge of our immortality, and that he will raise us up at the last day, as much as if his natural flesh and bloud were eaten and drunk by us, and converted after the ordinary way of digestion, into our bodily substance. We have this assurance in his holy word, but much more in the holy Sacrament, because here is a more lively, sensible and particular representation of it; that is, though I acknowledge and believe this to be one of the fundamental truths of the Gospel, that Christ died for our sins, that he appeared once in the days of his flesh, to put away sin by the sa­crifice of himself, and that at his ascension he entred in his humane nature into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption for us; my faith grows stronger yet, when I receive the sacred symbols into my hands, and convey them to my mouth. For then if I come with [Page 30] a due preparation, it is, as if I received from Christ him­self, and as if he still pronounced the same words to me, as he did to the Apostles at the institution. Now can we have too great, too full an assurance of the favour of God, of the pardon of our sins, of our living for ever in the presence of God in the other world! God knows, we forfeit our hopes by our gross and scandalous re­lapses: we lose the favour of God by our presumptuous disobedience; we miss the sight of heaven by reason of the thick mists of our sins: our onely comfort and sup­port is, that God upon our hearty repentance and a­mendment will be reconciled to us. Here it is, that we may recover our selves, that God restores us to the joy of his salvation, and upholds us with his free Spirit. Here it is, that the weary and heavy laden with the bur­then of their sins may find rest and peace to their souls. Here it is, that Christ not onely commands, but invites us to come; and how can we but accept of such an invi­tation? so that were the thing wholly arbitrary and in­different, yet the benefit and advantage is so great, that this should prevail with us to come, and to come often.

To draw to a conclusion, with particular reference to this reverend and learned Audience. If this obligati­on lies upon all in general, how much more upon us, who have the honour to wait at the Altar, and admi­nister in holy things, and upon You, who are de­signed to the same honour? This was the pious intent of our munificent and glorious Founders and Benefac­tors, in erecting and endowing these structures, which are the envy and admiration of all foreigners, and in providing so liberally for us several ages before we were born; that being here trained up in severe exercises of piety, and in the studies of sound and usefull learning, we may the better be fitted to do God service in the [Page 31] Church, defend the truth of our religion against all its sub­tile and malitious opposers, keep up the belief and practice of Christianity in the minds and lives of the people, be a credit to the Countrey and Age we live in, and approve our selves not unworthy of the bounty and maintenance which we so happily enjoy. Both God and man expect it from us, that we especially should shew forth an ex­emplary piety, to which nothing can conduce more, than a frequent and devout receiving of the Sacrament. This would take off our minds from idleness and vani­ty, and confine us more to our selves, and our studies, and make us reflect on the true end of living in a Col­lege, and the particular duty of the Priestly sunction. This would confound all the scandalous imputations cast upon the Universities of late by Mr. Hobbs, and his Atheistical Gallants, by the Papists and Fanaticks in their scurrilous libels and Pamphlets, who make it their business to bring a discredit and a disreputation up­on us. We cannot but be sadly sensible of the great contempt that is poured out upon Church-men; and we justly esteem it, as we have highest reason so to do, an infallible mark and proof of the Atheism, of the irreligion, of the debauchery of the age. But are we not too too much wanting to our selves? would we retrieve and recover the honour due unto the Priest­hood, which seems in a manner forfeited at present? there cannot be a better or more effectual expedient, than this, than to make others sensible by our exam­ple of this great duty of our Religion, and of the ne­cessity first, and then of the blessed effects and benefits of frequent communion. Such an exemplary strictness would help to re-establish and bring back the true Chri­stian temper and spirit, which are almost lost and shut out of the world.

[Page 32]I will not take upon me to prescribe precisely, how often the blessed Sacrament is to be received. Every one is best able to resolve himself in this case. The Church of England out of the great care, which she has of the souls of all such, as live within her communion, does oblige them to communicate three times at least in the year, of which Easter to be one; and this I find expresly determined in a Ca [...] 18. Se­culares, qui Na­tale Domini, Pascha & Pente­costen non com­municaverint, Catholici non credantur, nec inter Catholicos habeantur. Council held at Agatha, a City in the south of France, under Caesarius, Archbishop of Arles, in the year of Christ 506, with this farther addition, that they who did not comply with this Canon, should not be reputed Christians. But this limitation respected secular persons onely, and he is not generously pious, that does but just come up to the bare letter of the Law, which forbids, that it should be longer neglected, but is supposed to encourage the willing to more frequent approaches. But we are under higher and more indis­pensable obligations. The Persons concerned in the late disturbances, and who by their furious preachments helpt to pull down the Hierarchy of the Church, can­not but reflect, one would think, with shame and hor­rour enough, upon the sad effects of their pretended Re­formation: how the giddy people, whom they had in­satuated, were broken into many factions and sects, and lost their reason and their religion, and grew enthusi­astical and mad. It is but a sorry excuse to say, that the hand of the Jesuite was in all this: for they by their unreasonable schism, and discontent, and factious con­venticling, though coloured over with pretensions of godly zeal against the Papists, as at this day, where­in they are playing over the same game, had created unjust prejudices in their minds; had shaken them in their judgments from the established doctrine and ser­vice of the Church, and had sitted them to be wrought [Page 33] upon by their subtile artifices, and insinuations. What a sensible decay was there of true Christian piety and devotion! the blessed Sacrament being seldom admi­nistred. Those Intruders, who called themselves the University of Oxon. from the bloudy and fatal year of 1648, to the King's happy restoration, did not think fit so much as once to celebrate the communion toge­ther in this Church, and a publick Sacrament was not seen in several College Chapels during the same space of time. This was the holy discipline of those times: and indeed men of such divided hearts and interests, having once separated from the Church, soon grew weary of one another's company: pride, and conceit­edness, and passion, had embittered their Spirits; and they would not communicate but in private chambers, and with their own beloved party, refusing to make use of the publick places of worship, which they had usurpt, and were then possessed of. How much does it concern us to have a better and greater esteem of these venerable and holy mysteries, and accordingly how ought we to take care, that our approaches be frequent, and that we make all due and necessary pre­paration! otherwise we eat and drink damnation, not considering the Lord's body. If we believe, that we ought not to come to the Sacrament without due pre­paration, why do we not prepare our selves? why are we not in a continued readiness? If we do at any time forbear, let it not proceed from supine negli­gence, or slighting; or from a false and deceitfull colour and pretension of our unworthiness, but out of reverence and humility, and that we may come with greater measures and degrees of repentance and devo­tion. For where there is an heart inflamed with the love of God and Christ, where there is purity and in­nocence [Page 34] of life, where there is a zeal to promote the glory of God, and the good of others, where there is a hearty sorrow for sins past, and a serious resolution and endea [...]ur of pleasing God for the time to come, by an entire obedience to his commands, and where there is not the least indulgence or continuance in any known sin; where there are these qualifications, there cannot be any just scruple. I shall conclude therefore with that excellent and well known advice of De Sacramen­tis, lib. 5. cap. 4. St. Am­brose, Accipe quotidie, quod quotidie tibi prosit: sic vi­ve, ut quotidie merearis accipere. Receive daily, that which will be of daily, nay of everlasting use and be­nefit to us: at least, let us so live, that we may be sit to receive every day, that so having here on earth communion with our blessed Saviour in the holy Sa­crament by faith, we may hereafter be admitted to an everlasting communion with him in person in the highest heavens. Amen.

FINIS.

This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal. The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission.