liilliiiiliilliiiiliilill i'yiullSilltH|i!!!ll i.H, fKriHlTI] '■",aiij|,„'tif!i!i !r-.ii!l mm' mm j'fffil!:ii4 ¥mm a 1" '' 1 iliiii tiititlaitliii lUlir.iHii: ! ii J JAK ,5 192€ BV 176 .B697 1851 Boys, John. An exposition of the several offices DEDICATION OF THE AMERICAN EDITION. TO THE RIGHT REV. ALFRED LEE, D. D., BISHOP OF THE PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH IN THE DIOCESE OF DELAWARE. Rt. Rev. Sir, Allow me to dedicate to you. this reproduction of an old, valuable, and learned exposition of our offices for public worship. It treats of those rare and excellent virtues and graces, with which you are wont to adorn and char- aoterize your own public and i)rivate life. I remain, afiectionately yours, &e., K. J. Stewart. New Yorky Jon. \y 1851. ! AN i^^AK 15 me'' EXPOSITION OF THE SEYEEAL ^^lonin,. o.^W^'^ ADAPTED FOtt TAUIOUS OCCASIONS OF PUBLIC WORSHIP, TOGETHEa WITH THE EPISTLES AND GOSPELS FOR EACH SUNDAY AND FESTIVAL OF THE ECCLESL&.STICAL YEAR ; OOMriLED FROM THE WORKS OF (T(OYS, D. D., REV. JOHNIBOYS, D. D., DEAX OF CANTERBURY, A. D. M29. ANALYSIS OF THE LESSONS REV. KENSEY JOHNS ^EWART. A. M. "The King's daughter is all glorious within. Her clotliing is of wrought gold."— Psalm xlv. 13. NEW-YORK: STANFORD AND SWORDS, 137, BROADWAY, LEGE ET AGE ; VIVE ET VALE. ^obart lirrss : JOHN R. M'GOWIf, PKINTEK, 57 Aim-rrBSKT. A WORD TO THE READER. GrooJ books, like good wine, increase in value as they increase in years. The Bible is at once the oldest and the best of books ; and the Prayer Book, which, in its present form, has stood the test of se- veral centuries, commands the admiration of Christendom. As the Church is the pillar and ground of the truth, so the Prayer Book, being the mouth and voice of the Church, is the means of manifesting the truth, and of fostering pure devotion. Its offices are appropriate, simple, and sublime. Its platform is an open Bi- ble, an apostolic ministry, and a form of public worship, which is at once scriptural, catholic, and uniform. Scriptural in its lan- guage and teachings ; catholic in its objects, embracing all possi- ble subjects of prayer and praise ; and uniform in regulating the devotions of the Church the world over, })rotecting the people from the caprice of the eccentric and the neglect of the slothful, which might introduce folly, or omit matters of importance, in conduct- ing public worship. The influence of our Liturgy is becoming so considerable upon the popular mind, that our accessions from the ranks of the clergy and laity of other denominations professing Christianity around us are daily increasing, and render extremely useful and valuable all publications tending to illustrate the doctrines and discipline of the Church. The work, from which the following expositions are compiled, is possessed of sufficient merit to render recommendations unnecessary. In its teachings concerning the sinner's justification, it is clear and explicit ; in its exhibition of the value and authority of tho ministry and means of grace it occupies high ground, and main- tains it with " the two edged sword ;" in its exposition of the ri- diculous ceremonies and heretical dogmas of Papal Rome, it is bold and decided. In order to retain something of that inexpressible worth which is lost by changing the dress of these old authors, we shall givo the preface and a few other passagec without alteration. TO THE VIRTL'OUa AND WORTHY KNIGHT, SIR JOHN BOYS, OF CANTERBURY, MY VERY GOOD UNCLE, GRACE AND PEACE. * Sir : Yon did first plant my studies, Archbishop Whitegift, that president of piety, watered them, and Ood gave the increase. To God, as the fountain of all goodness, I consecrate all that I have ; to your happy memories, as to the conduites of much good, I dedi- cate this ensuing Postill, especially to your selfe surviving, as to my best patron in Cambridge, where the foundation of this worke was laid ; unto yourselfo, as to the chiefe procurer of that small benefice, where the frame was raised ; unto yourselfe, as to the lively patterne of that doctrine which is here delivered; Accept it as your owne, for it bears your name, and resembling you much, endeavours to honour you long ; so you shall encourage me daily to lessen my debt to the Church, and increase my obli- gations to your owne selfe. That living and dying I may continue your most bounden nephew, JOHN BOYS. THE SENTENCES. When the sentences are read by the officiating minister, the people rise, in token of their reverence for the word of Grod, and tliey remain standing during the following exhortation, out of respect for the sacred office of him, who addresses them in God'a name. There- is no part of the service which has more influenoo in promoting that decent behaviour, which distinguishes the congre- gations of the Episcopal Church from all others, than these sen- tences. It may be well to observe that it is the usage of the peo- ple of this Church to rise, and continue standing on three other occasions, viz. : 1st. The reading of the G-ospel. 2nd. Whenever the minister addresses them. 3rd. Whenever they participate in certain parts of the service, as the Psalter, the Creed, and the Psalms and Hymns in metre. " The Lord is in, his holy temple: . Let all the earth keep silence before him.'''' ^'■At ivhat time soever a sinner doth repent,'''' Sfc. All these texts of holy writ, premised, are (as it wore the bells of Aaron) to stir up devotion, and to toll all into God's house. . . . ^ Man's misery. Ihe whole ring consists of two notes : \ r^ ,, ^ I G-od s mercy. The which are two chief motives unto prayer, as wo find. Precept : Matt. vi. 9. " Pray ye after this manner, Our Father which art in heaven," admonishing us of our divine adoption " our father ;" and of our being strangers or wanderers on earth, " who art in heaven ;" that we may feel our need of aid, because pilgrims ; and at the same time have faith in seeking it, because we are sons of God. 6 THE CONFESSION OF SINS. And Pattern, Luke xv. Want and woe in the lewd son, pity and plenty in the good father, occasioned repentance, never re- pented of. Of the one, it is commonly said, " Oratio sine malis, est quasi avis sine alis :" (A prayer without ills, is like a bird without wings.) Of the other, " I will come into thine house even upon the multitude of thy mercy." Ps. v. 7. " To thee will I sing, because thou art my refuge, and merciful Grod ;" in the vulgar Latin, " Dens meus, misericordia mea." Whereupon Augustine " 0 nomen ! sub quo nemini desperan- dum est." (Oh name ! under which no one should despair.) Wherefore the minister, under a due consideration of both, ex- horteth the people in an Apostolical style, to confess their sins humbly to the Lord, who is able to hear, because " almighty," and willing to hear, because " most merciful." THE CONFESSION OF SINS. " Almighty and most merciful Father ! ive have erred,''^ Sfc. The matter and manner of which confession all other liturgies approve, both ancient (as the liturgies of St. James, of St. Basil, of the Syrians, of the Ethiopians,) and modern, (as the Scottish, Grenevan, English Admonitioner's set form of Common Prayer, Italian, Spanish and Dutch,) all which allot confession of sin a place and a principal place. The reason thereof is taken out of God's own book, Prov. xviii. 17, " Justus in exordio sermonis accu- sator est sui." (The just man in the beginning of his speech is an accuser of himself.) So read St, Ambrose, Sermon 4, on the 118th Psalm, and St. Hierom, lib. 1, contra Pelagian, and Me- lancthon in loc, and from the practice of Grod's own people, the Jews, as that noble gentleman, Philip Mornai, notes, lib. 1, de missa, caput 3. THE DECLARATION OF REMISSION OF SINS. ^'•Almighty God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who,^"* Sfc. In the conference at Hampton Court, January 14th, 1603, so much was gained as to have it in a more mild term, called " Re- mission of sins," which was afore termed " absolution of sins." Concerning absolution, see Gospel for 19th Sunday after Trinity. THE LORD'S PRAYER. 7 THE LORD'S PRAYER. " Our Fathe?' ! who art in heaven^ halloiued ie," Sfc. This prayer excels all others in many respects, as being the Oospel's Epitome, compiled by wisdom itself; so large for matter, so short for phrase, so sweet for order, as that it deserveth worthily to have both the best and the most place in our Liturgy : the first as guide to the rest ; the most^ as a necessary compliment to sup- ply whatever is wanting in other parts. Therefore it is used at the head of the litany, at the end of the communion, at the end of baptism, and at the end of other sacred actions, (as one fitly says,) as if it were the salt of all the divine offices. i A proeme, " Our Father," &c. It hath three parts : < A petition, " Hallowed be thy name," fce. ( A conclusion, " For thine is the kingdom," &e. 5n the first note these three things required in an absolute aa;ent : rpi , -ji J Because he is ours : for every one wisheth ' { well to his own. o, .7, ( Because a Father : '"'your father knoweth ' ( whereof you stand in need." Matt. vi. 8. p ( Because in heaven: " strength cometh from rower, I heaven." Matt. iii. 13. So, if we ask, we shall have ; if we seek, we shall find ; if we knock, it shall be opened to us, because Grod is a Father, our father, and our father in heaven. " Our," admonisheth us of mutual love, for without love, there i.s no true faith, no true prayer. Rom. xiv. 23. As the serpent doth cast up all his poison, before he drinks, so we must disgorge sour malice before we pray. " Father ; " used here rather essentially than personally, God is our Father in creation. Deut. xxxii. 6. in education. Is. i. 2. . , _ ,. \ inwardly, by his spirit. Rom. viiL 26. ' \ outwardly, by his preachers. Matt. x. 20. in compassion, Ps. ciii. 13. in correction. Heb. xii. 6. " Whosoever is excepted from the number of the scourged, is excepted from the number of the sons." in years. Dan. vii. 9, THE LORD'S PRAYER. But principally, a father in respect of his adoption. Rom. xv. 16. ( As Ambrose and Auuustine construe it in ) holy men of he *'In heaven," s Mvsticalhl ^ \w\y men of heavenly conversation, who ) are his proper temples, and houses in which ^ he will dwell. Jolufxiv. 23. ^ f A.?- others generally construe it. for although y Material \ ^^ ^^ present every where, yet he doth < manifest himself to the blessed angels ia / heaven, and to us in glory from heaven. Ps. ^ xix. 1 /Gen. xix. 24 : 1 thes. iv. 16. THE PETITION. The Petition hath six hranclles, whereof three concern our love^ wherewith we love God in himself, and three, wherewith we love ourselves in (lod : In sign thereof, the pronoun " thy " is affixed to the three first, " thjj name, thy kingdom, and thy will ; " but the pronouns " us and ours " to the rest ; " our bread, our tres- passes, and lead us not." Or as others divide it, \ ^recatio bonornm (prayer for ijood things.) » { UeprecatiQ malorum (deprecation oi ills.) I 1st. God's glory \ " [lallowed be thy name," A request for good things. <„, ^ „ . / '■'^'''T ''',''!''?'" *^^™^-'' , „ ^ ^ ° j 2u. Our good j Spintual, "Thy will be done." (. \ Natural, "Give us this day our daily bread." ,' Malum culp®, an evil * Past, " Forgive us our trespasses." A deprecation of evil of ) which is sin. ^ F«««rf," Lead us not into temptation." two sorts \ Malum culpw, punish- C Internal, A he-llish conscience. / mcnt lor sin, "deli- I iCx«fr?ia/, Bodily dangers. V ver us from evil." ( ii;tc7-7ia/, Everlasting death. In one word, from all that thou seest evil for us, be it pros- perity or adversity ; so we pray in the Litany, " good Lord I de- liver us in all time of our tribulation, in all time of our wealth,^' &c : for we are not as yet in that good place where we shall suffer no evil. Ramus hath observed that this prayer answereth to the Deca- logue. God is " our Father,''^ therefore we must have no other gods.. *' In heaven,,''^ therefore, no graven image.- " Hallowed be thy name," therefore take not that name in Vain.. " Tli-if kingdom come," ( Therefore we must sanctify tlie Sabbath and " Thxj will be done." ( worship liiin according to his word. « Give us this day our S "^'^.'^'fTrV^ll ''"°""''' ^^ ™"^, ''''.'^" (iailv bread " i t>e helpHil and honour our parents, than " ' ( hurtful by wroDging our neighbour, /■ "thou Shalt not kill, V thou Shalt not * r T., j„„j s steal, thou shall I In deed, \ ' ■. j , \ J not commit adul- i { tery." " thou shall not bear Imcord, i" thou shall not b THE LORD'S PRAYER. g That we covet not our neicfli- " Lead us not into temptation," ( hour s goods. " Forgive us our trespasses," therefore are we bound to keep the whole law : which occasioned Luther to say, " the Lord's prayer teaches that we are sinners every day, and all of our life is sor- row." All our life is nothing else but a lent, to prepare ourselves against the Sabbath of our death, and Easter of our resurrection. THE CONCLUSION. Tt r tn' • 1 1 -11 ( Private man, Now Uavid may be considered as a < t, , ,■ ' , j^ ■ ^ \ Public person, ( Prince, i Prophet. Here then is a threefold pattern in one ; an example for masters to stir up their family ; an example for preachers to exhort their people ; an example for princes to provoke their subjects unto the public worship of the Lord. It becometh great men to be good men ; as being unprinted statutes, and speaking laws unto others. This affection was in Abraham, Paul, Joshua, and ought to be in all, " exhorting one another while it is called to-day." You hold it a good rule in worldly business, not to say to your servants, come ye, go ye, arise ye : but, let us come, let us go, let us arise. Now shall the children of this world be wiser in their generation , than the children of light ? Do we commend this course in mundane affairs, and neglect it in religious offices ? As- suredly, if our zeal were so great to religion, as oiir love is towards the world ; Masters would not come to Church (as many do) with- out their servants, and servants without their masters ; parents without their children, and children without their parents ; hus- bands without their wives, and wives without their husbands : but, all of us would call one to another, as Isaiah prophecied ; " 0 come let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob : he will teach us his ways, and we will walk in his paths." And as David here practised, '■'■ 0 come let us sing to the Lord, let us heartily rejoice in the strength of our salvation." IIoi6\ First where ; before the Lord, " before his presence," verse 2, 6. God is every where ; " whither shall I go from thy spirit ? or whither shall I go from thy presence ?" God is a circle, whose circumference every where : he is said in holy Scripture to dwell in heaven, and to be present in his sanc- tuary more specially ; manifesting his glory from heaven, his grace in the church principally. For he said in the law, " In all places " VENITE EXULTEMUS DOMINO." 17 wh^rj I shall put the remembrance of my name, I will come unto thee :" and in the gospel, " where two or three are gathered to- gether in my name, there am I in the midst of them." Albeit every day be a Sabbath, and every place a Sanctuary for our pri- vate devotions, according to the particular exigence of our occa- sions ; yet God hath allotted certain times, and certain places for his public service, Levit. xix. 30. " Ye shall sanctify my Sab- baths, and reverence my Sanctuary." God is to be worshipped ever, and every where. Yet the sev- enth of our time, and the tenth of our living, must more specially be consecrated to that honour which he requires in the temple. And therefore Calvin is of opinion that David uttered this speech upon the Sabbath : as if he should say, come let us sing to the Lord, not in private only, but let us come before his presence with thanksgiving. As in the c. psalm : " Go your way into his gates, and into his courts with praise." The consideration of this one point, that God is in eveiy place by his general presence, in this holy place by his especial prescience, may teach all men to pray not hypocritically for fashion, but heartily for conscience ; not only formally to satisfy the law, but also sincerely to certify our love to the Lord our Maker, giving unto " Caesar the things which appertain to Coesaf, and unto God the things which belong to God." If Cicsar sought his image in the money, may not God seek his image in man? That we may not only praise where we should, but, as it followeth in the divi- sion "whereto" : "Let us sing to the Lord, let us rejoice in thj strength of our salvation, let us show ourselves glad in him." Every one in his merry mood will say ; come lot us sing, let ua heartily rejoice : Silence is a sweeter note than a loud, if a lewd sonnet. If we will needs rejoice, lot us (saitli Paul) "rejoice in the Lord:" if sing, said David, "let us sing to the Lord." Vain toys are songs sung to the world, lascivious ballads are songs sung to the flesh, satirical libels are songs sung to the devil ; only psalms and hymns, and spiritual songs are melody for the Lord. VENITE EXULTEMUS DOMINO. Let us worship and fall down, and kneel before the Lord our Maker : not before a crucifix, not before a rotten image, not 2 . 81 OFFICES FOR PUBLIC WORSHIP. before a fair picture of a foul saint : those are not our makersy we made them, they made not us. Our Grod, unto whom we must sing, in whom wo must rejoice, before whom we must worship, is a great King above all gods ; he is no god of lead, no god of bread, no brazen god, no wooden god ; we must not fall down and worship our lady, but our Lord ; not any martyr, but our Maker ; not any saint, but oar Saviour : "0 come let us sing unto the Lord, let us heartily rejoice in the strength of our salvation." YVherewith : with voice, "let us sing;" with soul, "let us heartily rejoice ;" with hands and knees, " let us fall down and kneel," with all that is within us, v/ith all that is without us ; he that made all must be vrorshipped with all, especially when wo come before his presence. Hero let us make a stand, and behold the wise choice of the Church, assigning this place to this Psalm, which exciteth us to come to the temple quietly and jointly, " come let us sing ;" and when wo are come, to demean ourselves in this holy place cheer- fully, heartily, reverently. I would fain know of those vrho despise our Canons, as not agreeable to the Canon of Holy Bible, whether their unmannoyly sitting in the time of divine .service be this ' ' kneeling' ;" whether their standing be this ^'■falling' down ;" whether they give Gfod their heart, when as they vrill not aflord liim so much as their hat ; whether their louring upon their brethren, be " singing to the Lord ;" vvhether their duty required here, bo to come in, to go out, to stay in the temple, without any respect of persons, or reverence to place. Thin'v of this ye that forget Grod, he will not be mocked, his truth is eternal, heaven and eaurth shall pass, but not one jot of his woyd sJiall pass : if an angel from heaven, or devil on earth, if any private spirit shall deliver unto you rules of behaviour in the cluirch, contrary to this Canon of Cxod's own Spirit, let him be accursed. Anathema. " Let xis sing, let us worship, let us," who fear God and honoxir tlio King, " fall down and kneel before the Lord our Maker." Thus much for David's exhortation to praise Clod. The reasons why wo should praise, follow. First briefly, (rod is our Creator, therefore " let us worship and fall dovm and kneel before the Lord our Maker." Ver. 6. He is our Redeemer, therefore " let us sing unto the Lord, let us heartily rejoice in the strength of our salvation." Ver, 1. VENITE EXULTEMUS DOMINO. 19 C Mercies in general. Secondly, more at large from his <^ Vor. 3, 4, 5. (^ Judgments. " For the Lord is a great God." Most mighty, almighty, able to do whatsoever he will, and more than ho will too. Sec the Creed. In himself so great, that the Heaven of heavens cannot contain him, much less any barren brain inwomb him : and therefore David here being not able to set down the least piece of his great- ness in the positive degree, comes to the comparative, showing what he is in comparison of others : "A great King above all gods." As being more excellent and mighty than any thing, or all things that have the name of God. Title. ( Aniiols in heaven. \\r\ ,^ .■L. \ ' ^ Princes on earth. \\ hether thcv ) ■ a i i • .i . ; i i it x , • •' < or r As irola is the covetous man s "oci ; belly- be ffocis in \ S 1 *i ■ ■ I ■ 1 r .1 '=' //-,•••' olieer the epicure s cfod : an ulol the super- V Opinion, j ,■,. '1 ^ • ( stitious man s god. IN^oAv the Lord is the King of all gods in title, for ho made them : of all gods in opinion, for he can destroy thoni. Angels are his messengers, and princes his ministers ; all power is of the Lord. The manner of getting kingdoms is not always of God, because it is sometimes by wicked means ; yet the power itself is ever from God, and therefore styled in Scripture the " God of gods," as the wise man saith, "higher than the highest:" for religion and reason tell us, that of all creatures in heaven, an angel is the greatest ; of all things on earth, an emperor is the greatest ; but the Lord (as you see) is greater than the greatest, as being absolute Creator of the one, and maker of the other. How great a God is ho that makes gods, yea, and mars them too at his pleasure, surely this is a great God, -and a great King above all gods. And therefore in what estate soever thou be, possess thy soul with patience, rejoice in God, be strong in the Lord, and in the power of his might, fear no juan, no devil, no other God, he that is greater than all these shall be thy defence ; he will perform whatsoever in his word he did promise concerning this life and the next. '• In his hand are all the corners of the earth." The most mighty Monarch on earth is king as it were but of a mole-hill, a lord of some one ano;le : but in God's " hand are all the corners of 20 OFFICES FOR PUBLIC WORSIIir. the earth, and the .streiiL'tli of the liills," i. c. of most puissant potentates, in eoniparison of whom all olhers arc low valleys ; the strength and height of the hills are his. Autiehrist doth extol himself ''above all that is called (jod," and the Pope doth make himself '' Lord of lords," usurping " the whole world for his ditn-ese : " yea he hath a triple kingdom, Qceording to liis triple crown ; Hupenial extended to heaven, in canonizing saints ; Infernal, extended to hell, in freeing souls out of purgatory ; Terrestrial, extended over the whole earth, as being universal Bishop of the Catholic Church. But alas, vain man, he is but a fox in a hole, many corners of the-earth are not his ; Eng- land (God be praised) is not his, Scotland, Holland, Denmark not his, a great part of France, the greatest part of Germany, none of his, many thousands in Portugal, Italy, Spain, none of his ; the great Cham, the Persian, the Turk, the least whereof is greater than himself, none of his. And albeit all the kings of the earth should be drunken with his abomination, yet should he be Pastor universal of the Church, but as the devil is prince of the M'orld ; not by his uwn might, but by others' weakness, as St. Paul said, " he is our master to whom nvc give ourselves as servants to obey." So likewise the gods of the superstitious heathen have not all the corners of the world : for, as themselves ingenuously confess, some W'cre gods of the water only, some of the wind, some of corn, some of fruit. As heretics have so many creeds as heads : so the gentiles (as Prudentius observed) had so many things for their god, as there were things that were good. So that " their gods are not as our God, even our enemies being judges." Others hold some jiarccls of the earth under him, and some lay claim to the whole by usurpation. But all the corners of the world are his by right of er(^ation, as it followeth in the next verse. " The sea is his, for he made it." An argument demonstrative, to show that all the world is subject to his power : and therefore in the creed, after "Almighty," followeth instantly. '* maker of heaven and earth." If any shall demand why David nameth here hrst and princi- pally the sea, before all other creatures : answer may be given out of Pliny ; "