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As for his fair lady Venus, whereby he meaneth his church of Rome, the Reservaworld seeth, and he himself knoweth, she hath been taken in open advoutry; and tion. Phoebus, the Son of God, with the heavenly beams of his holy word hath revealed it. O would to God we had no cause justly to say with the prophet Esay: Quomodo facta est meretrix civitas fidelis! "O how is that faithful city become Isai. i. an harlot!" Verily Momus shall not need now to reprove her slipper. He shall rather have cause to say: A planta pedis, usque ad verticem capitis, non est in ea sanitas: "From the sole of the foot to the top of the head there is no whole Isai. i. part in her." For so St Bernard complaineth of her miserable state in his Bernard. de time 14.

Conv. Paul.

[Diverse manners of keeping the blessed sacrament. H.A. 1564.]

would

M. HARDING. THE SECOND DIVISION.

Whereto we say that, if he, with the rest of the sacramentaries, agree to the keeping of the sacrament, then would we demand why that manner of keeping were not to be liked. And here, upon proofs made of default in this behalf, and a better way shewed, in so small a matter, conformity to the better would soon be persuaded. In other christian countries, we grant, it is kept otherwise, under lock and key, in some places at the one end or side of the altar, in some places in a chapel builded for that purpose, in some places in the vestry, or in some inward and secret room of the church, as it was in the time of Chrysostom at Constantinople 15. In some other places we read that it was kept in the bishop's palace near to the church, and in the holy-days brought reverently to the church, and set upon the altar, which, In Concil. Brac- for abuses committed, was by order of councils abrogated 16. caren. iii. can. 5. Thus in divers places diversely it hath been kept, every where reverently and surely, so as it might be safe from injury and villany of miscreants and despisers of it. The hanging up of it on high hath been the manner of England, as Lindwood noteth upon the Constitutions Provincial17; on high, that wicked despite might not reach to it; under a canopy, for shew of reverence and honour.

In Epist. ad Innocentium.

THE BISHOP OF SARISBURY.

Here M. Harding sheweth that this reservation of the sacrament in divers countries hath been diversely used, under lock and key, at the altar's end, in a chapel, in the vestry, in the bishop's palace. And all this of the usage of late years; for of antiquity, saving only the epistle of Chrysostom to Innocentius, which also, as it shall appear, maketh much against him, he toucheth nothing. But amongst all these diversities of keeping, he hath not yet found out his canopy. And touching that he allegeth of the reservation of the sacrament in the bishop's palace, it seemeth very little to further his purpose. For, whereas the sacrament was reserved only in the bishop's custody, it followeth necessarily that there in other parish churches and chapels was no such reservation. Chrysostom's Chrysost. ad epistle to Innocentius is good witness that the sacrament was reserved to be received of the people at the communion the next day, or in very short time after. For it was reserved in both kinds 18, as it appeareth plainly by his words. But it is clear, both by the judgment of reason, and also by their own cautels in De Consecr. that behalf 19, that the wine in such sort and quantity cannot be kept any long Presb. in time without souring. And the manner in Græcia was, during the time of Lent, In Sexta to consecrate only upon the Saturdays and Sundays, and yet nevertheless to com

[14 Bernard. Op. Par. 1690. In Conv. S. Paul. Serm. i. 3. Vol. I. Tom. III. col. 956; where ad verticem non est sanitas ulla.]

[15 Chrysost. Op. Par. 1718-38. Ad Innoc. Epist. i. Tom. III. p. 519. See before, page 241, note 11.] [16 Concil. Brac. III. cap. 5. in Crabb. Concil. Tom. II. p. 273. The particular abuse here noted is the following: Agnovimus quosdam de episcopis, quod in solennitatibus martyrum ad ecclesiam progressuri, reliquias collo suo imponant, ut majoris

Innoc.

Dist. 2.

Gloss.

Synod.Const.
can. 52.
τῇ 20 θεία
λειτουργία
τῶν προη

fastus apud homines gloria intumescant, et quasi yaoμévwv.
ipsi sint reliquiarum arca, Levitæ albas induti, in
sellulis eos deportent.]

[17 See below, page 557, notes 11, 12.]

[18 See before, note 15.]

[19 Sed sanguinem non præcipitur servare, quia &c.-Corp. Jur. Canon. Lugd. 1624. Decret. Gratian. Decr. Tert. Pars, De Consecr. Dist. ii. Gloss. in can. 93. cols. 1963, 4.]

[20 1611 omits T.]

Canopy municate of the same upon the other week-days1. For the end of this reservanot com- tion in old times was, not that the sacrament should be adored, but that it should menda- be received of the people; and specially that persons excommunicate, for whose sake it was reserved, being suddenly called out of this life, upon their repentance might at all times receive the communion, and depart with comfort, as the members of the church of God.

ble.

Hieron. in
Vit. Malch.

But methinketh M. Harding doth herein as Apelles the painter sometime did in setting out king Antigonus' physiognomy. For, understanding that Antigonus was blind of the one side, he thought it best to paint him out only with half face, and so he cunningly shadowed the deformity of the other eye. Even so M. Harding sheweth us certain variety of keeping the sacrament, and other small matters of like weight; but the danger of idolatry, and other like horrible deformities, he dissembleth cunningly and turneth from us. Loth I am to use the comparison, but St Hierome saith it: Diabolus nunquam se prodit aperta facie: "The devil never sheweth himself openly with his whole face."

In the old times, when the sacrament was kept in chests, in napkins, in baskets, and in private houses, there was no danger of adoration. But under the canopy we see not only that the effect hath fallen out far otherwise, but also that the very cause thereof was at the first to the contrary. For so saith Linwood himself: Citius repræsentatur nostris aspectibus adoranda3: "It is the rather offered unto our sights to be worshipped." If there were no cause else, yet is this itself cause sufficient to abolish this new order of hanging up the 2 Kings xviii. sacrament under a canopy. For therefore the king Ezechias took down the brasen serpent and brake it in pieces, notwithstanding God had specially commanded Moses to erect it up; because he saw it abused to idolatry.

Gul. Linw. Lib. iii. de Custod. Euch. &c.

Again, they themselves, upon smaller considerations, have utterly abolished the manner of reservation that was used in the primitive church. For they will not now suffer neither lay people nor women to keep it in their houses; nor boys Euseb. Lib. to carry it to the sick, as then the boy did to Serapion*; nor infidels, or men not

vi. cap.

xliii. Ambros. de

christened, to wear it about them, as then did St Ambrose's brother Satyrus". I Obit. Satyr. leave the rust, the mould, the canker, and the breeding of worms, whereby that holy and reverend mystery of Christ's death is oftentimes made loathsome, and brought into contempt. They themselves do testify that such things not only may happen, but also have often happened. It is said that Alphonsus the king of Arragon, for the preservation of his honour and safety, so long kept the sacrament about him, that at last it putrefied, and bred worms; which when they had eaten up and consumed one another, in the end there remained only one great Gers. contr. worm, that was the last, and had eaten all his fellows. In such cases they command that the worms be burnt, and the ashes buried in the altar. The gloss itself upon the decrees saith thus: "It is not necessary to keep the wine." And DiConsecr. the reason is this: Quia opus esset nimia cautela3: “Because we should need to Gloss. have too much ado with the keeping of it.”

Floret. Lib.

iv.

Concil.
Aurel.

Presb. in

Concil. Lat.

In the council of Lateran it is confessed, that the sacrament so kept hath III. can. 20. been abused ad horribilia et nefaria facinora: "to work horrible and wicked

sub Innoc.

[1 Concil. Quinisext. can. 52. in Concil. Stud. Labb. et Cossart. Lut. Par. 1671-2. Tom. VI. cols. 1166, 7. See before, page 129, note 6.]

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[2 numquam diabolum aperta fronte se pro-
dere. Hieron. Op. Par. 1693-1706. Vit. Malch.
Monach. Tom. IV. Pars II. col. 91.]

[3 Lyndew. Provincial, seu Const. Angl. Antw.
1525. Lib. III. De Custod. Euch. fol. 179. 2.]
[Euseb. in Hist. Eccles. Script. Amst. 1695-
1700. Lib. VI. cap. xliv. p. 200.]

[5 Ambros. Op. Par. 1686-90. De Excess. Fratr.
Satyr. Lib. 1. 43. Tom. II. col. 1125. See before,
page 554, note 12.]

[This story may be found Ant. Panorm. de Dict. et Fact. Alphons. Basil. 1538. Æn. Silv. Comm. Lib. 1. 39. p. 251. But the king does not there say that such a thing occurred to himself: Vas aureum

aperuit quispiam in quo ante mensem eucharistiam condiderat, nihil ibi præter vermiculum reperit.]

[ Sed quæritur quid fiendum, si ex illis speciebus generentur vermes. Solu. Dicendum est quod vermes debent comburi et cineres intra altare recondi.Floret. Lib. Lugd. 1499. Lib. IV. fol. 99. 2.

Ex Concil. Aurel. capp. 5, 6. in Burchard. Decret. Lib. xx. Par. 1549. Lib. v. capp. 1. li. foll. 140, 1.]

[8 Corp. Jur. Canon. Lugd. 1624. Decret. Gratian. Decr. Tert. Pars, Dist. ii. Gloss. in can. 93. cols. 963, 4.]

[9 Statuimus...ut chrisma et eucharistia sub fideli custodia clavibus adhibitis conserventur, ut non possit ad illa temeraria manus extendi, ad aliqua horribilia vel nefaria exercenda.-Concil. Lat. sub Innoc. III. cap. 20. in Crabb. Concil. Col. Agrip. 1551. Tom. II. p. 953.]

deeds." And M. Harding himself confesseth that, for certain like abuses, the Canopy same reservation was in some part abolished in the council of Bracara 1o.

10

not com

Concil.

can. 5.

To be short, touching the canopy, Linwood himself findeth fault with it, as it mendappeareth in the Provincial. For thus he writeth: Dicitur, quod in loco mundo able. et singulari debet servari11: “It is said, the sacrament ought to be kept in a clean several place sequestered from other.” Whereunto he addeth thus: Ex hoc Brac. III. videtur, quod usus observatus in Anglia, ut... in canopœo pendeat,... non est com- Extr. de Cel. mendabilis 12: "Hereby it appeareth that the order that is used in England, of Gul. Linw. hanging up the sacrament in a canopy, is not commendable." Here M. Harding Custod. hath causes, both in general, why all manner such reservation ought to be misliked, and also in special, why the canopy cannot be liked.

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13

Missar. Sane.

Lib. iii, de

Euch.

and seventytruth. For saith: "In

non verum

If princes be honoured with cloth of estate, bishops with solemn thrones in their churches, and deans with canopies of tapestry, silk, and arras (as we see in sundry cathedral churches), and no man find fault with it; why should M. Jewel mislike the canopy that is used for honour of that blessed sacrament, (172) wherein is contained The hundred the very body of Christ, and, through the inseparable joining together of both second unnatures in unity of person, Christ himself, very God, and very 13 man? With what Chrysostom face speaketh he against the canopy used to the honour of Christ in the sacrament, vasis sanctis that, sitting in the bishop's seat at Sarisbury, can abide the sight of a solemn canopy corpus made of painted boards spread over his head? If he had been of counsel with Moses, Christ; sed David, and Salomon, it is like he would have reproved their judgments, for the great corporis honour they used, and caused to be 15 continued towards the ark, wherein was con- tinetur," tained nothing but the tables of the law, Aaron's rod, and a pot full of manna. [2 Sam. vii. H.A. King David thought it very unfitting, and felt great remorse in heart, 1.564.] that he dwelt in a house of cedars, and the ark of God was put in the midst of skins, that is, of the tabernacle, whose outward parts were covered with beasts' skins.

mysterium

Christi con

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modesty be

men.'
." Phil.

And now there is one found, among other monstrous and strange forms of "Let your creatures, manners, and doctrines, who, being but dust and ashes, as Abraham said known to all of himself, promoted to the name of a bishop, and not chosen, I ween, to do high iv. service of a man according to God's own heart, as David was, thinketh not himself unworthy to sit in a bishop's chair under a gorgeous testure or canopy of gilted boards, and cannot suffer the precious body of Christ, whereby we are redeemed, to have, for remembrance of honour done of our part, so much as a little canopy, a thing of small price. (173) Yet was the ark but a shadow, and this the body; that The hundred the figure, this the truth; that the type or sign, this the very thing itself. As third unI do not envy M. Jewel that honour, by what right soever he enjoyeth it, so I both are cannot but blame him for* bereaving Christ of his honour in this blessed sacra

ment.

THE BISHOP OF SARISBURY.

and seventy

truth. For

figures, both
types, both
signs. Nazian.
saith: "Fi-
gura figuræ."
De Pas-

chate 16.
• Christ will

Matt. xv.

Princes use to sit under a cloth of estate; bishops and deans under say, "In vain ye worship painted thrones, or cloth of arras; ergo, (saith M. Harding), the sacrament me," e. ought to be hanged up under a canopy. I trow, it is not lawful for all men to use such arguments. In such sort Durandus reasoneth: "The ark of the cove- Durand. nant was carried by the Levites; ergo, the pope must be carried aloft upon the deacons' shoulders 17." And again, they seem by practice further to reason thus:

[10 Concil. Brac. 111. cap. 5. in eod. Tom. II. p. 273. See before, page 555, note 16.]

[" Lyndew. Provincial. seu Const. Angl. Lib. III. De Custod. Euch. fol. 179; where singulari mundo et signato debet. See Corp. Jur. Canon. Decretal. Gregor. IX. Lib. 111. Tit. xli. cap. 10. col. 1378.] [12 Id. ibid.]

[13 H. A. 1564 omits very.]

[14... in quibus non est verum corpus Christi, sed mysterium corporis ejus continetur.-Chrysost. Op.

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Exod. xxv. & xxvii.

Sam. vii.

1 Chron. xxviii.

Isal. lv.

Rom. i.

Gen. xxxi. Chrysost. in Gen. Hom. 57.

"The pope is carried upon men's shoulders; ergo, the sacrament must be carried before him, whithersoever he go, upon a fair white jennet."

And whereas it liketh M. Harding thus merrily to sport himself with bishops sitting under painted boards; certainly, I reckon it much fitter for the church of God to have painted boards than painted bishops, such as he is that claimeth to be the bishop of all bishops, and yet doth not indeed any part of the office of one bishop. The bishop's chair or stall was appointed at the first as a place most convenient for him to read and to preach in. But what needeth more? Such vanity of words should not be answered.

For the rest, God himself commanded Moses to make the tabernacle, and also shewed him in the mount in what order and form it should be made. Neither durst Moses, or his workmen, to add, or to minish, or to alter any one thing of their device, or to do any thing more or less, otherwise than God had appointed him. When David of his devotion would have built a temple unto God, God forbade him by the mouth of his prophet Nathan, and said: "Thou shalt build me no temple." Afterward Salomon set upon to build the temple; not when he would himself, but only when God had so willed him. Neither followed he therein any part of his own fantasy, but only that self-same plat and proportion that God had given to his father. For so saith David himself: "All this pattern was sent to me in writing by the hand of the Lord, which made me understand all the workmanship of the pattern."

Here mark, good christian reader, in every of these examples, God hath bridled our devotion, and hath taught us to worship him, not in such sort as may seem good in our eyes, but only as he hath commanded us. Yet can M. Harding by his cunning apply every of these same examples to prove thereby, that we may honour God in such sort as we of ourselves can best devise.

This was evermore the very root of all superstition. And therefore Almighty God saith: "My thoughts be not as your thoughts, nor my ways as your ways. Who ever required these things at your hands?" M. Harding would fain, in all that he taketh in hand, be called catholic; and yet nevertheless maintaineth a mere particular devotion, only used within this realm, and that only within these few late years, and never either used or known in any other christian country else, and therefore such as can in no wise be called catholic.

But he saith: "There is now found one among other monstrous and strange forms," &c. This, I trow, is not that sobriety and modesty that was promised at the beginning. Such eloquence would better become some other person than a man professing learning and gravity. Herein I will gladly give place to M. Harding. It is rather a testimony of his impatience and inordinate choler than good proof of the cause.

Certainly, if the sacrament be both God and man, as here, I know not how godly, it is avouched, then is this but a very simple honour for so great a majesty. Undoubtedly this is a very strange and monstrous doctrine, to teach the people, that Christ, being both God and man, and now immortal and glorious, may canker and putrefy and breed worms. The time was, when whoso had uttered such words of blasphemy had been reckoned a monster among the faithful. But this is the just judgment of God. He giveth men up "into a reprobate mind, to turn God's truth into a lie, and to worship and serve a creature, forsaking the Creator, which is God blessed for ever."

I trust, our doctrine abridgeth not any part of Christ's glory. We adore him, as he hath commanded us, sitting in heaven at the right hand of the power of God. And therefore, O M. Harding, ye have burnt your brethren, and scattered their bones upon the face of the earth, and wrought upon them what your pleasure was, only because they would not be traitors unto God, and give his glory unto a creature.

Chrysostom, expounding the complaint of Laban against Jacob for stealing away of his gods, writeth thus: Quare deos meos furatus es? O excellentem insi

propositionis, et vasa tabernaculi deportare... Hinc
etiam diaconi cardinales mensam Lateranensis altaris
...deportant... Ipsi quoque semper summum pontifi-

cem velut arcam fœderis deportant.-Durand. Rat. Div. Offic. Lugd. 1565. Lib. 11. cap. ix. 2. foll. 55, 6.]

pientiam! Tales sunt dii tui, ut quis eos furari queat? Non erubescis dicere, Quare furatus es deos meos1? "Wherefore hast thou stolen away my gods?' O what a passing folly is this! Be thy gods such ones, that a man may steal them? And art thou not ashamed to say, 'Wherefore hast thou stolen away my gods?"" This matter needeth no farther application. Verily, the thing that M. Harding calleth God and man may soon be stolen away, with pix, and canopy, and all together. If Chrysostom were now alive, he would say to M. Harding, as he said to Laban: "Art thou not ashamed," &c. And, touching the honouring of Christ, he saith: Discamus.... Christum, prout ipse vult, venerari. Honorato Chryзost. ad namque jucundissimus [est] honor, quem ipse vult, non quem nos putamus. Nam Hom. 60. et.... Petrus eum honorare putabat, cum sibi pedes eum lavare prohibebat: sed non erat honor, quod agebat, sed contrarium2: "Let us learn to honour Christ, as he hath willed us. For to him that is honoured that honour is most pleasant that he himself would have, not that we imagine. For Peter thought to honour Christ, when he forbade him to wash his feet: howbeit, that was no honour unto Christ, but, contrariwise, it was dishonour."

To conclude, whereas M. Harding, in the impatience of his heat, demandeth of us, with what face we can find fault with the hanging up of the sacrament under a canopy, we may easily answer him thus: Even with the same face wherewith Linwood found fault with the same; and with the same face wherewith all Christendom, England only excepted, hath evermore refused to do the same.

Pop. Ant.

M. HARDING. THE FOURTH DIVISION.

Now concerning this article itself, if it may be called an article, wherein M. Jewel thinketh to have great advantage against us, as though nothing could be brought for it* (though it be not one of the greatest keys, nor of the highest • Before it mysteries of our religion, as he reporteth it to be, the more to deface it), of the honouring of God: now it canopy what may be found, I leave to others, neither it forceth greatly. But is no great key of reli

[Hanging up
of the sacra-
ment in a pix
over the altar
is ancient.
H. A. 1564.]

was the

ish fable

name of Am

of the hanging up of the sacrament over the altar, we find plain men- gion. tion in St Basil's life, written by Amphilochius, that worthy bishop of A vain childIconium; who telleth that St Basil at his mass, having divided under the the sacrament in three parts, did put the one into the golden dove philochius. (after which form the pix was then commonly made) hanging over the altar. His words be these: Imposuerunt3 columbæ aureæ pendenti super altare1. And for further evidence that such pixes, made in form of a dove in remembrance of the Holy Ghost that appeared like a dove, were hanged up over the altar, we find in the acts of the general council holden at Constantinople, that the clergy of Antioch accused one Severus, an heretic, before John the patriarch and the council there, that he had rifled and spoiled the holy altars, and molted the consecrated ressels, and had made away with some of them to his companions: Præsumpsisset etiam columbas aureas et argenteas in formam Spiritus sancti, super divina Here be doves lavacra et altaria appensas, una cum aliis sibi appropriare, dicens, non opor- no mention tere in specie columbæ Spiritum sanctum nominare5. Which is to say, that ment.

"he had presumed also to convert to his own use, beside other things, the golden and silver doves made to represent the Holy Ghost, that were hanged up over the holy fonts and altars, saying, that no man ought to speak of the Holy Ghost in the shape of a dove."

Neither hath the sacrament been kept in all places and in all times in one manner of vessels. So it be reverently kept for the voyage-provision for the sick, no catholic man will maintain strife for the manner and order of keeping. Symmachus, a very worthy bishop of Rome, in the time of Anastasius the emperor,

[Chrysost. Op. Par. 1718-38. In cap. xxxi. Gen. Hom. Ivii. Tom. IV. p. 556.]

[ Id. Op. Lat. Basil. 1547. Ad Pop. Ant. Hom.

lx. Tom. V. col. 398; where prohiberet.]

[ Imposuerit, H. A. 1564.]

[ Amphiloch. Op. Par. 1644. In Vit. S. Basil. pp. 175, 6. See before, page 188.]

[ Suppl. Cler. Ant. ad Joan. Patr. contr. Sever. in Concil. Constant. sub Menna, Act. v. in Concil. Stud. Labb, et Cossart. Lut. Par. 1671-2. Tom. V. col. 160. See also Crabb. Concil. Col. Agrip. 1551. Tom. II. p. 34.]

[ Sylvern, 1565, and H. A. 1564.]

indeed, but

of any sacra

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