^ ( KD JL&^6S-^ •^ , University of California. c^ip'^r OF •4^ -tT> <> ZL/U^ THE HISTORY, OBJECT, AND PROPER OBSERVANCE OF THK HOLY SEASON OF LENT: BY THE Rt. Rev. W.m. INGRAHAM KIP, d. d. BISHOP OF CALIFORNIA, ilTTnoR OF "the double -witness of the ciiuRcn;" "the early conflicts Of CHRISTIANITY ; " ETC., ETC. " Tie" wort"i 18 wRxing stirong, i. The day is hoLJ^i^-Oigbt is lofifj TT 1 i/TT^5erUbretfbir5Bt."~ A b 11 W »^ * Rev./F . W. Fabkr. " LKT US PB^^N T^fCWKCa, WITH THE CHURCH, AJVD ^K THE CHURCH." ^f ^, I D- Mart. Lc'treri, Coiluq, ifent, ch. STtoHft!) sS&ition. NEW YORK: E. & J. B. YOUNG & CO., COOPER UNION, FOURTH AVENUE. 1881. Copyrighted bt E. & J. B. YOUNG & CO. 1881. Tkow's prikting and bookbinding compant, 201-213 East Txcelfih Street, NKW YORK. I>\ \ ><5( INSCRIBED TO THE EIGHT EEVEEEND WILLIAM riEATHCOTE DELANCEY, H. D. LL. D., -- BISHOP OF WESTEEN NEW TOKK, AS A StIGUT TESTIMONY OF EESPBCT ANT5 AFFECTIONATE EEGAKD BY THE AUTHOR. O every where we find our sufiering God, And where he trod May set our steps : the Cross on Calvary Uplifted high Beains on the martyr host ; a beacon light In open fight. To the still wrestlings of the lonely heaii" He doth impart The virtue of his midnight agony, When none was nigh, Savt Vjtod and one good angel, to assuage The tempest's rage. Mortal ! if life smiles on thee, and thou find All to thy mind, Thmk, who did once from Heaven to Hell descend Thee to befriend: So shalt thou dare forego, at His dear call. Thy best, thine all. K£BIi& THE LENTEN FAST. PREFACE. FoK some years past eacli return of Lent lias been, we believe, regarded with additional inter- est. Many wlio were not trained iix» within the pale of the Church, are looking to lier fold as a refuge more fixed and stable than a ay they < can find elsewhere. They of course eagerly in- quire into the History, Object, and Proper Ob- servance of the Holy Seasons which are set forth in her Calendar. Among those, too, who have been educated to attend her services, there seems to be a growing appreciation of their beauty, and a wish to know more of their origin. They ap- pear to be turning away from the empty, boast- ful professians of this age of novelties, and to be viii PREFACE. more inclined to adopt as a settled principle, that golden decision of the Council of Mce, e&ti app^aia xpareirw, LeT ANCIENT USAGES PREVAIL. In this state of things, the writer has frequent- ly sought — but without success — for something, which in a small compass might contain the ne« cessary information with respect to the Lenten Fast. He could only find, a few pages by one author — a sermon by another — or perhaps some brief tracts, which, although excellent in them- selves, did not attempt to discuss the whole sub- ject. Having waited therefore for several years in vain, in the hope that the desired work would be furnished by some one better able to do it jus- tice, he has at length ventured himself to under- take the task. After the following pages were prepared for the Press, there was accidentally brought to his no- tice, a treatise by Dr. Gunning (afterwards Bishop of Chichester), entitled, " the Paschal or Lenten PREFACE. ix Fast," wMcli fills a quarto volume of between five and six hundred pages, published about the year 1670. Its size, however, together with the style in which it is written, would render it at the present day useless to any but the theologian or the scholar. The author has also confined his attention principally to one single point, owing to the circumstances under which he wrote. The work was prepared after the Restoration, when in consequence of the rule of the Puritans for so many years in England, the observance of Lent had been almost entirely discontinued. The ob- ject of Dr. Gunning is, therefore, to revive in the minds of men a reverence for this ancient season by proving its Apostolical authority ; and the argument he presents is rendered most conclusive by extracts from every prominent writer who treats of the subject during the first seven centu- ries of the Church. It is evident however that this truth, if sustained by quotations from the X PREFACE. first tliree centuries, is as well established as if tlie testimony of tlie remaining four was added. The present writer found therefore, that even if he had met with this treatise at an earlier period, from its being thus narrowed down to a single topic, it would have afforded him but little assist- ance. He mentions it however in this place, as it is the only work with which he is acquainted devoted to this subject, and because he was hap- py to find in its numerous quotations, a full con- firmation of the statement he had made with regard to the origin of the Lenten Fast. It would of course have been easy, after once commencing the investigation, to have entered more deeply into the subject and expanded this volume to twice its present size by multiplying quotations from the early writers. In refraining from doing so, and in turning aside from many tempting paths of historical inquiry which opened before him, the writer (although acting contrary PREFACE. xi to the opinion of some of his friends), has been influenced by the consideration, that to have yielded, would entirely have changed the char- acter of the work. It is intended, not for the clergy (for they must be professionally familiar with all it contains), but for those among the laity whose daily avocations prevent them from searching the early records of the Church and to whom information conveyed in this form is sometimes acceptable and useful. The object has therefore been, to quote from the ancient Fathers, merely enough to sustain and illustrate the different points brought forward. It was for a similar reason that advantage was taken of the subject of Easter Even, to introduce a discussion of the intermediate state. Those arguments we already have, able as they are, seem rather too controversial and theological in their character to be adapted to general readers. An attempt has therefore been made, to present xu PREFACE. this important subject in a more simple and popular form. Perhaps excej)tion may be taken by some, to the adoption of Bishop Horsley's rendering of 1 Peter, iii. 19, 20. If so, the writer can only say, that some years ago he himself thought differently, but after frequently studying this difficult point with all the help he could de- rive from the learned labor of others, he was finally obliged to settle down upon this interpre- tation, as giving the most natural explanation of the passage. It is the one adopted by Dr. Bloomfield and other eminent Biblical critics of the day. If, however, this passage should be entirely withdrawn from the argument the loss would not materially weaken it. There is, even without it, abundant Scripture evidence to prove the doctrine. In conclusion then the writer would say, that it is with unfeigned diffidence he commits this little volume to the Press, Occupied with the PREFACE. Xlll engrossing cares of a parish, he has been obliged to prepare these pages almost entirely after the regular duties of the day were over, at night; and in times redeemed from sleep. Yet while engaged in the work, he has felt that such silent hours, when the noise and din of the busy city around had subsided into quietness, seemed an appropriate season in which to turn over those writings, bequeathed to us by the ages of a dim antiquity, and which we may well style — in Milton's eloquent language — " the precious life- blood of so many master sjDirits, embalmed and treasured up on 23urpose to a life beyond life." Their words, coming down through the mist and haziness of fifteen centuries, appeared to be gifted with a more touching emphasis when read in that still and solemn time, while the outward world, wrapped in slumber, gave no token of existence. To him therefore this labor has al- ready brought its own reward. It has deepened ^y PREFACE. his love and reverence for the Churcli at whose altars he is permitted to minister, and whose services he has here endeavored to illustrate. It has taught him to realise more fully than ever before, the beauty of her ancient ritual, in which the solemnities of religion are performed — to use the words of Edmund Burke — "with modest splendor, with unassuming state, with mild ma- jesty, and sober pomp." If then the perusal of this little work should strengthen these feelings in the mind of any mem- ber of our Holy Apostohc Church, or awaken mthin one single soul which in uncertainty is "sounding on its dim and perilous way," the wish to turn to her as an Ark of safety, the writer will be most richly recompensed for all that he has done. If it can not thus aid the cause of truth and holiness, let it be like " the arrow shot into the air, which strikes no mark, creates no noise, leaves no track behind it, acd PREFACE. XV is discovered after a little space, lying idly on tlie ground." But lie hopes tliat this humble effort will not prove entirely in vain, and sends it forth therefore with the earnest prayer, that in some way it may be permitted to advance the glory of that Lord, whose blessed Passion the Church would solemnly commemorate on earth, while in Heaven a remembrance of its benefits will through all eternity furnish the theme for her noblest, loftiest anthem. Ash Wednesday, :\rDcccxLni. CONTENTS. PAQIh THE OBJECT OF THE PRIMITIVE CHURCH IN INSTI- TUTING THE HOLY SEASON OF. LENT 21 THE PROPER OBSERVANCE OF LENT 65 THE WEEK-DAT PRAYERS 105 HOLY WEEK 141 GOOD FRIDAY 161 EASTER EVEN 191 ! O LOKD, WHO FOR OUR SAKE DIDST FAST FORTY DATS AND FORTY NIGHTS ; GIVE US GRACE TO USE SUCH ABSTINENCE, THAT OUR FLESH BEING eUBDUED TO THE SPIRIT, WE MAY EVER OBEY THY GODLY MOTIONS IN RIGHTEOUSNESS AND TRUE HOLINESS, TO THY HONOR AND GLORY, WHO LIVEST ^ND REIGNEST WITH THE FATHER AND THE HOLY GHOST, ONE GOD, WORLD WITH- OUT END. AMEN. COLLECT FOR THE FIRST SUNDA.T IN LENT. VEE C'y^ 47.rt:^A-:*&^^ THE OBJECT OF THE PRIMITIVE CHURCH IN INSTI TUTmG THE HOLY SEASON OF LENT. Welcome, dear feast of Lent ! who loves not thee, He loves not temperance, or authority. But is composed of passion. The Scriptures bid us fast; the Church says now/ Give to thy mother, what thou wouldst allow To every corporation. " The Churchj'' by BLert.ert. I. OBJECT OF THE PKIMITIYE CHURCH 1:N" mSTITUTmO THE HOLY SEASON OF LENT. At length tlie clianging months have brought us to another division of our ecclesiastical year. We have again entered on that solemn season, in which the Church commands her children to " turn unto the Lord with all their hearts, and with fasting, and with weeping, and with mourn- ing,"^ — " worthily lamenting their sins, and acknowledging their wretchedness, that they may obtain of Him who is the God of all mercy, perfect remission and forgiveness, through Jesus Christ, their Lord."^ Her services now give ut- terance to the language of sorrow and abase- ^ Passage appointed for the Epistle for Ash- Wednes- day. 2 Collect for Ash- Wednesday. 22 THE LENTEN FAST. ment, as we prepare for tlie solemn commemora- tion of our Lord's agony and death. It is inter- esting therefore to look back to the records of he early Church in her holiest day, that as we see the origin of this season, and the object for which it was appointed, we may be enabled to decide, whether we are so observing it, that it shall answer for us its high and important pur- poses. The fast of Lent (a Saxon word, signifying the Spring) is of forty days continuance, during the six weeks which precede Easter. As how- ever the Sundays are Festivals, and must there- fore be excepted, only thirty-six days are left. To make ujd this deficiency, four days are added at the beginning, commencing with Ash- Wed- nesday,^ which derives its name from the ashes which in the ancient Church were at this time thrown upon the penitents, whose sins had de- barred them from a participation in her services. '' On the first day of Lent," says Gratian, in de- scribing this ceremony, '' the penitents were to ^ It is uncertain by whom this addition was made. Most writers, however, ascribe it to Gregory the Great. (See Bingham's Orig. Ecdes., Ub. xxi., ch. 1, section 5). OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION. 23 present themselves before the Bishop, clothed with sackcloth, with naked feet, and eyes turned to the ground ; and this was to be done in the presence of the principal of the Clergy of the Diocese, who were to judge of the sincerity of their repentance. These introduced them into the Church, where the Bishop, all in tears, and the rest of the Clergy, repeated the seven peni- tential psalms. Then, rising from prayers, they threw ashes upon them, and covered their heads with sackcloth ; and then with mournful sighs declared to them, that as Adam was thrown out of Paradise, so they must be thrown out of the Church. Then the Bishop commanded the offi- cers to turn them from the Church doors."* Severe indeed this discipline may seem ; yet in an age when the minds of men were reached only by striking appeals to the outward senses, we can not tell how mucK these ceremonies may have availed to keep alive the purity of the Church, and to impress upon the careless multi- tude, the value of admission to her services. An allusion to this ancient form is still pre- * TVheatly on Common Prayer^ p. 233. 24 THE LENTEN FAST. served in tlie " Commination, or denouncing of God's anger and judgment against sinners," wliicli in tlie service of the Cliurcli of England k commanded " to be used on the first day of Lent." After Litany the Priest is directed to say: " Brethren, in the Primitive Church there was a godly discipline, that, at the beginning of Lent, such persons as stood convicted of notorious sin were put to open penance, and punished in this world, that their souls might be saved in the day of the LoED ; and that others admonished by their example, might be the more afraid to offend. " Instead whereof (until the said discipline may be restored again, which is much to be wished), it is thought good, that at this time (in the pres- ence of you all) should be read the general sentences of God's cui^ing against impenitent sinners, gathered out of the seven and twentieth chapter of Deuteronomy and other places ot ScrijDture ; and that ye shall answer to every sentence. Amen ; To the intent that, being ad monished of the great indignation of God against sinners, ye may the rather be moved to earnest OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION. 25 and true repentaDce ; and may walk more wari- ly in these dangerous days ; fleeing from sucli vices, for wliich ye affirm with your own mouths, the curse of God to be due." Then follow the anathemas, to which the peo- ple respond. This form has been omatted in the Liturgy of the Church in America, w^ith the ex- ception of the three concluding prayers, which on Ash- Wednesday are directed ''to be said im- mediately before the General Thanksgiving." All record of the precise time in which this season first originated, is lost in the dim obscu- rity of the early ages of the Church. We may therefore speak of its services, in the words with which the ancient tragic poet represents Anti- gone as defending those sacred precepts of her faith, which had come down upon the traditions of a remote antiquity : Ou yap ri vuv ys xa-)(Psg olKK^ ccsi -ttots ^7] raura x'ovSsig ol5sv i^ orou oclvyj.^ The Lenten fast is however frequently referred ^ Not now, nor yesterday, but always thus These have endured, their ancient source unknown. Soph. Antigone, 462. 2 26 THE LENTEN FAST. to by writers of primitive days as au established and well known custom, whicli bad been sanc- tioned by Apostolical autbority. The probability is, that even from tbe first — fi-om the time in which " the Bridegroom was taken away " — His followers thus in sorrow kept the anniversary of His Passion, although the duration of this sea- son, and the rules by which its observance was regulated, may not have been definitely settled until the age immediately succeeding that of the Apostles. Philo, who was cotemporary with the early disciples, and is even said " to have had familiar conversation with Peter at Rome, whilst he was proclaiming the Gospel to the inhabitants of that city,"* refers to this season in his descrip- tion of the Christians at Alexandria, who were converted by St. Mark. " This author " — says Eusebius, in his history composed about a. d. 324 — " has accurately described and stated in his w^ri tings, the exercises performed by them," (i. e. the Christians of Alexandria in the days of St. Mark), " which are still in vogue among us at the present day, and especially at the festival of our Saviour'^ s jpassion^ wliicli we are accus* « Eusebius' Eccles. Hist.^ liber ii., chap. 17, p. 66. OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION. 2^ ^omed to J9a^^ in fasting and watching, and in the study of the divine word. These are the same customs that are observed by us alone at the present day, particularly the vigils of tJie Great Festival!!'''^ meaning by this the Passion Week, called by the Greek Fathers the Great Week. It is also mentioned incidentally by Irenaeus, who lived but ninety years after the death of St. John, and was trained up under the martyr Polycarp, who had himself been a disciple of that last surviving Apostle. When alluding to a difference of opinion with regard to the time in which it should be kept, he shows that the custom itself was ancient, even in his day. His words are : "This diversity existing among those that, observe it, is not a matter that has just sprung up in our time, but long ago, among those before us."® Tertullian too, who lived within one hundred years of the Apostle St. John's departure, has unwittingly as it were, recorded his testimony to the general belief of the Church in the Apostol- ^ EusEBius' Eecles. Hist., lib. ii., chap 17, p. 68. 8 Ibid^ lib. v., chap. 24, p. 210. 28 THE LENTEN FAST. ical Autlionty of this season. Having erred from the ftiith, and embraced the heresy of the Montanists, he found the voice of the Church against him, when he endeavored to introduce the new fasts which Montanus had commanded. Thus therefore he argues against her authority, in defence of his party. ''They" (i. e. the Ca- tholic Christians) " accuse us that we observes fasts of our own, peculiar to oui'selves. They object therefore unto us novelty, and prescribe against the unlawfulness of that, saying, it is either to be judged Heresy, if presuming as men, we so dogmatize, or we are to be pronounced false prophets, if we inculcate these fasts, as from the Spirit ; whilst on either hand we hear them denounce an anathema against us. For as to what pertains to fast, they argue, tliat tlieve are certain days constituted hy God. They surely thinh^ that in the Gospel those days are deter- tnined for fasts^ in lohich the Bridegroom xoas tahen aioay^ and that those days only are now the legitimate days of Christian fasts, all legal and prophetical old observances being antiquated or abolished. Therefore as to other fasting, it is to be indifferent, according to every man's occa- OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION. 29 eions and causes, at his own judgment, not of command." (That is, as Montanus inculcated the necessity of the fast, by pretended command from God.) ''^ And tJiat thus the Apostles ob- served the rule of fasting^ imposing no other yoke of certain or set fasts to be kept of all in com- mon. And ye prescribe against us, that the soUmn times for this matter, are to he helieved already constituted in tlie Scriptures^ or in the tradition of our Elders, and that no further ob- servance is to be superadded, for the unlawful- ness of innovation."* The first Christian Emperor, Constantine, im- mediately after the meeting of the earliest general council of the Church — that held at Nice, a. d. 325 — and which was composed, to use his own words, " of all the Bishops, or the greater part of them at least, assembled together," wrote a letter to all the Churches, on the necessity of observing Easter upon the same day. His argu- ment is, that unless this uniformity exists, some will be rejoicing in that Festival, while others are still mourning in the fasts which precede it. ^ Tertullian De Jejuniis^ chap. 1, 2, 13. 80 THE LENTEN FAST. " It is fit therefore " — he says — " that we should perpetuate to all future ages the celebration of this rite, which we have heptfiwn the first day of our Lord's passion even to the present times. . For the Saviour has bequeathed to us one festal day of our liberation, that is, the day of His most holy passion ; and it was His pleasure that His Church should be one ; the members of which, although dispersed in many and vavious places, are yet nourished by the same Spirit, that is, by the will of God. Let the sagacity of your holiness only consider how painful and indecorous it must be, for some to be experiencing the rigors of abstinence^ and others to be unbending their minds in convivial enjoy- ments on the same day ; and after Easter, for some to be indulging in feasting and relaxation while others are occupied in the observance of the prescribed fastsP^^ To give a single reference more — and they might be multipied to a great extent — this' sea- son is mentioned in the Apostolic Canons, a code of laws which certainly dates its authority from i^EusEB. De Vit. Constantin. lih. iii., c. 17, 18. Socea- TES, lib. i.. chapter 6. Theodoret, lib. i., ch. 10. OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION. s\ a very early age. " If" — says the 61st Canon^ " any Bishop, Priest, Deacon, Reader, or Singer, do not keep the holy fast of Lent, forty days be- fore Easter, or the Wednesdays and Fridays, let him be deiDosed, if he be not hindered by some bodily infirmity ; but if he be a layman, let him be suspended from communion."^^ Thus, we perceive, that this custom took not its rise amidst the corruj^tions of the Dark Ages, but began in times of light and holiness. We " Patres Ajyos. Cotp:l. vol. 1, p. Abl^edit. 1724. These CanoDS have usually passed by the name of St. Clement. Bellarmin, Baronius, and others, assert them to be the genuine Canons of the Apostles. Cotelerius however ob- serves, that the internal evidence is against this view of their antiquity {Jud. de Cmion Apos., vol. 1, p. 429). Hincraar, De Marca, and Beveridge give, what is the most probable account, that they were framed by the Bishops who were the disciples of the Apostles, in the end of the 2d and beginning of the 3d centuries. See Beveridge Jud, de Can. Apos. in Cotel. vol. 1, p. 436. See also, Lard- ner's Works^ vol. 4, p. 354. Jortin's Hem. on JEccles. Hist.., vol. 1, p. 278; Cayb''s Jlist. Zit., vol. 1, p. 29. Even Mosheim acknowledges that " they exhibit the principles of discipline received in the Greek and Oriental Churches, in the 2d and 3d centuries." [JEccles. Hist., vol. 1, p. 90, 224). We give these authorities merely to show, that in the lowest view taken of these Canons, they are good evi- dence of the practice of the Church at a very early age. 32 THE LENTEN FAST. received it not from the Komish Clinrcli, when it had fallen from ancient purity, bnt it comes down to ns from Primitive days. It was sanc- tioned by Apostolical authority, or certainly at least by those who lived before the example and instruction of Apostles had been in any respect forgotten. The early Christians, as we have al- ready seen stated by Tertullian, considered our Divine Master as referring to the observance of some such season, when he said : " Can the chil- dren of the bride-chamber mourn, as long as the bridegroom is with them? but the days will come, when the bridegroom shall be taken from them, and then shall they fast." At first, the time of its observance varied in different Churches and among different individuals, although all agreed in the necessity of thus commemorating, in some way, their Lord's sufferings and death. At leno-th, however, its duration was fixed at forty days, which has since, through all the inter- vening centuries, continued to be the uniform custom of the Church.^^ The number forty seems 12 The question as to the length of Lent, at its first in- stitution, is one which has caused much discussion among learned men. The Greeks called this season TsCtfapaxotfrii, OBJECT OF ITS DsSTITUTIOlT. 33 very anciently to have been appropriated to sea- sons of repentance and fasting. ^'This quadra- gesimal number" — says St. Ambrose, in liis 36tli sermon — " is not constituted of men, but consecra- ted from God." For this term of years were the children of Israel disciplined in the wilder- ness, to prepare them for the promised land. For forty days did Moses fast on the Mount — Elijah in the Wilderness — and the Ninevites, when they would avert the judgments prophesied by Jonah. It was this length of time that our Lord himself was pleased to fast, during His temptation in the desert, and from his example was this period probably fixed, "that," — as St. Augustine says — " we might, as far as we are able, conform to Christ's practice, and suffer and the Latins Quadragesima, hoih of wMch words denote forty. But the inquiry has been, whether this applied to days or hours ? By some, it was argued, that it always had been forty days. By others, that it at first extended only through forty hours, which were of entire abstinence, beginning about 12 on Friday, (the time of our Saviour's falling under the power of death), and contuiuing until Sunday morning, the time of His resurrection, and that afterwards it was extended by the Church to the same number of days. The reader will find this subject discus- sed in Bixgham's Orig. Ecdes., lib. xxi., chap. 1 84 THE LENTJ'^N FAST. witli Him here, tliat we may reiga with Him hereafter." And we may learn too from a single passage in St. Basil's Second Homily on Fasting, how universal throughout the world was the attention of the early Christians to this solemn portion of the Ecclesiastical year. " In this time of Lent, there is no island nor continent of the earth, no city, nor nation, no extreme corner of the world, where the Edict of this Fast of Lent was not heard. Yea, whatsoever armies, merchants, trav- elers, or mariners are abroad, this fast comes unto them all, and with joy they all receive it. This composes every house, every city, and every people, in sobriety and quiet and concord. This stills the late clamors, contentions, and noises of the town. Let no one, therefore, exempt himself from the number of the fasters, in which every degree, nation and age almost of men, and all of all dignities whatsoever are engaged." How safe then are we, in yielding our ready obedience to this regulation of the Church ! How much better, to tread in the footsteps of martyrs and confessors of former times, than to OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION. 3i set at naught all tlie customs wliicli they found conducive to their spiritual benefit, and to deter- mine — despising the wisdom of the past, and the recorded experience of eighteen centuries — to " walk every one in the ways of his own heart ! " It becomes therefore an inquiry of in- terest to us, gleaning from those ancient writers whose works have survived the ravages of bar- barism and the waste of time, to investigate the reasons which induced the Church in Primitive days to institute this Holy Season, and then through all succeeding ages, to insist so strongly upon its observance. The first reason was — that having the sub- ject OF THEIR Lord's sufferings thus brought MORE vividly BEFORE THEM, THEY MIGHT BE INDUCED TO MOURN HIS LOSS WITH GREATER EARNESTNESS. There is a tendency in the human mind to disregard a duty, to the performance of which no specific time is allotted. Thus, if the whole year were given us, during which we were com- manded at some period to meditate seriously on our Lord's death, we should probably either neglect the obligation entirely, or, at least, fulfill 36 THE LENTEN FAST, it but imperfectly. It is for tliis reason tliat tlie early Cliurcli set apart definite times, for con- sidering in order each of the grand doctrines of tlie Christian faith, as the Ecclesiastical year rolls round. And in this practice we now con- tinue. " Yes, if the intensities of hope and fear Attract us still, and passionate exercise Of lofty thoughts, the way before us lies Distinct with signs — through which in fixed career, As through a zodiac, moves the ritual year Of England's Church — stupendous mysteries ! Which, whoso travels in her bosom, eyes As he approaches them, with solemn cheer." i* Beautiful indeed is that arrangement of her services, which, as the months go by, brings in succession before her Children, each scene in their Lord's eventful life, and each cardinal truth which he taught ! We celebrate with joy and gratitude the Festival of His Nativity, and after- wards follow Him on, step by step, through all the glories and the trials of His earthly pilgrim- age, until amid the solemnities of Passion Week we mourn His agonies and death. Then come ^^ Wordsworth's Ecdes. Sonnets^ XV. OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTIOT. zl in meet succession, the other Festivals — that of Easter, when He triumphed over the grave — of the Ascension, when He returned to " the glory which He had with the Father before the world was" — and of Whitsunday, when His promise was fulfilled, that the Comforter should be given, and His Apostles, by the visible descent of the Holy Ghost, were prepared to be " lights to lighten the world." Thus it is, that in a far higher and nobler sense than the Poet ever dreamed in his loftiest imaginings — *' The rolling year is full of Him." Acting then on this principle, and endeavoring to render the views of her members clear and distinct, how naturally did it happen, that one of the first seasons of solemn remembrance insti- tuted by the Primitive Church, was that which commemorated her Lord's sufferings and death, while her children were summoned in an especial manner to lament those sins which brought Him to the Cross ! " ^^ " The days had come, when the ^* " It seemed good to the Church to fix a stated time, in which men might enter on the great work of their re- pentance. And what time could have been selected with 38 THE LENTEN FAST. Bridegroom was taken from tliem, and therefore did they &st." The memory of His love and kindness was still freshly imprinted on their hearts. The history of all that He endured, came not to them, as it too often does to us, like " a thrice-told tale," to which we have listened so often that it has lost its interest. The glad news of the Gospel bursting upon them in an age ol moral degradation and darkness, had not yet ceased to thrill their hearts with joy. They had either " known Christ after the flesh," when in person he mingled with his fellow men, or at least those Apostles who sat at his sacred feet, forming His little household as He wandered through Judea; and with eager ears they list- ened to the recital from their lips, of all that they greater propriety than tliis ' Lenten ' or Spring Season, when universal Nature, awakening from her wintry sleep, and coming out of a state of deformity, and a course Ox penance, imposed for the transgression of man, her Lord and Master, is about to rise from the dead ; and, putting on her garments of glory and beauty, to give us a kind of prelude to the renovation of all things ? So that the whole creation most harmoniously accompanieth the voice of the Church, as that sweetly accordeth to the call of the Apostle, ' Awake, thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light.'" — Bishop Horne. OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION. 39 had heard and witnessed. Probably too, the tradition of many a deed which is now lost for- ever, came down to them, and contributed to heighten their estimation of that Perfect Char- acter, from whom they were separated by but a short interval of time.^^ How well then could they meditate upon His bitter agonies endured for them ! How forcibly did they feel themselves called, once at least in each year, in an especial manner to chasten their souls by prayer and fast- ing, that they might thus be compelled to realize the nature of His earthly existence, who was truly. "a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief ! " But if this was necessary for them, how much more so is it for us ! Educated from the earliest dawn of reason, to hear the story of redeeming love, and the fearful manner in which our salva- tion was wrought out, these themes become to us, as we before remarked, subjects too well ^^ It is strange that the only one of these traditionary sayings of our Lord, which was afterwards recorded by an inspired writer, is intended to inculcate a truth, the most difficult for human nature to learn. St. Paul savs — " Remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how he said ; It is more blessed to give than to receive." — Acts xx. 35 40 THE LENTEN FAST. known to excite attention. It is inclispensaLle^ therefore, tliat the mind should be directed and fixed upon them. And how admirably is this done by the appointed service of the Church ! Week after week, we are led in her prayers and lessons to contemplate these solemn mysteries, until when Passion Week arrives, the recital is each day repeated. We witness the bitter ago- ny of the Son of God, in the garden of Gethse- mane. We stand by the patient sufferer's side, w^hen arraigned in the hall of Pilate. We fol- low Him to Calvary, as he painfully toils along amidst the scoffs and jeers of an infuriated mob. We gather around the Cross, and hear that last expiring cry, which shrouded the heavens in darkness, and startled even the sleeping dead in their tombs. Hard, indeed, must be that heart — yes, utterly "past feeling" — which, amid scenes like these, is not awakened to gratitude and de- votion. He can be no true follower of the Lord, whose spirit does not " burn within him " as he thus contemplates the mighty price at which his redemption was purchased, or whose resolution is not strengthened, to live for that Master who died a death of shame for him. OBJECT OF ITS IXSTITUTI02T. 41 Anotlier reason with the Primitive Church for the institution of this season was, to aid her MEMBERS IN PRESERVIJN^G THE HIGH STAI^DARD OF CHRISTIAN CHARACTER IN ITS EARLY PURITY. For a time, the followers of our Lord were subjected to the most painful persecutions. The lonely valleys of Judea furnished no place of security to the Hebrew Christians, for even thither penetrated their bigoted enemies, ready, "if they found any of that way, whether they were men or women, to bring them bound to Jerusalem." And when the f^iitti left its earliest dwelling-place in " Holy Asia,"^^ and went forth 1^ ^SCHYLUS' Prom. Yinct. 415, a^vajACjacr. This is the happy epithet used by the first, and may we not say, the loftiest of the Greek tragic poets ? On this single point there is agreement between the Christian of every age, and the believer m that antique and poetical mythol- ogy which furnishes its inspiration to the muse of Homer, and both called into being, and imparted its dark coloring to the solemn and intellectual drama of the Athenian stasre. Both alike look back with reverence to that re- gion which was the birth-place of our race, the scene of Its first revelations, and where " the Lord talked with man face to face." Even to this day, there is a tradition among the Arabs, that to the earliest places of human worship, there clings a guardian sanctity — that there the wild bird alights not and the wild beast may not wander — but the eye of God rests on them as hallowed spots. 42 THE LENTEN FAST. to otner lands, it found a world arrayed in hos- tility against it. The ancient, sensual Paganism, and the proud systems of a scoffing philosophy, united at once to crush that holy creed, which disclaimed all fellowship with them. The endur- ance of its adherents was tried by every expe- dient of cruelty their enemies could devise. Some died in agony at the stake. Some ascend- ed to their reward from the burning flames, while " their ashes flew, no marble tells us whither." Some " butchered to make a Roman holiday," poured out their blood on the sands of the amphi- theatre, welcoming even the wild beasts, whose fury released them from their sufferings. And the survivors felt, that they also were each hour in jeopardy of life, and might at any time be called in like manner to seal their profession. Yet these things only added a depth and fervor to their devotion. Like their Divine Master, they " were made perfect by sufterings." The timid and wavering, either refrained from uniting with them, or else soon apostatized from their profession. The true-hearted were therefore left alone, reduced indeed in numbers, yet " stead- fast, unmovable," and holding themselves ready, OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION. 43 if needs be, to win tlieir crown by suffering the pains of martyrdom. " Every hour, They stood prepared to die, a people doomed To death ; old men, and youth, and simple maids." The world looked coldly on them, even when it did not openly persecute, and had therefore nothing in it to enlist their affections. Life with them was one long Lenten period of abstinence and prayer, while they were continually chasten- ing their spirits, to make ready for that parting hour, which might suddenly overtake them. But when security came, and the world began * to smile upon them, then was the time of peril. The faith which had been strengthening in the storm of persecution, drooped and withered in the sunshine of Imperial favor. The multitude insensibly declined from their Apostolic devotion, and thought too much of the cares and riches of a world they had vowed to renounce. Their affections began to cling to it, forgetting that here they were only strangers and pilgrims " having no continuing city." It was at this time proba- bly that this fast, commenced in an earlier age, 44 THE LENTEN FAST. was more accurately defined and inculcatf/i^ by the regulations of the Church, that her mem7 ^rs might be recalled from their secular cares to Loly works, and thus hj the necessity of a law, com- pelled to dedicate one tenth of the year, in a peculiar manner to their God.^® Therefore it is, that an ancient writer declares — " Whilst men are distracted about the cares of this life, their religious hearts must needs be defiled with the dust of this world ; and therefore it is pro^dded by the great benefit of this Divine institution, that the purity of our minds might be rej^aired by the exercise of these forty days, in which we may redeem the failings of other times, and do good works, and exercise ourselves in religious fasting."^^ But has this necessity in our day ceased ? Is there now so great a deadness in the world, that we need not such a season, to recall us to our duty ? Is not the very reverse true, and the dan- ger now tenfold greater than it Avas in that early dcxy ? Since all around us have made a nominal *8 Cassian, in Bingham Orig. JEJcdes. lib. xxi. ch. 1, sec. 10. ^^ Leo, Serm. iv., de Quadrageshna^ in Bingham, lib. xxi. OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION. 45 profession of Christianity, tlie Church has been too much mingled with tke world. The barrier between them has been somewhat broken down, and there is comparatively but little of the out- ward Cross to be borne. But the effect of this is, to authenticate low views of Christian duty — • to render religion earthly — to withdraw all attention from self-denial — to cause us to forget our Master's lesson, that though in the world we are not of the world — and to induce *those about us to suppose that the " strait gate " has been widened, and the ''narrow way" become broad. They look in vain for those exhibitions of a liv- ing faith which distinguished the early Christians, and are therefore tempted to believe, that the days of self-discipline are over, and an easier en- trance found into God's holy kingdom. The very proofs too of Christian character — the marks by which we should ascertain our spiritual state — are in this age of novelties so perverted and mystified, that it is often diflicult for an inquirer to decide, whether or not he has a right to those promises of the Gospel which are made to the contrite and believing. With some, every thing rests upon abstract notions of 46 THE LENTEN FAST. faith, as if the last Great Judgment would only be a trial of tlieir orthodoxy. With others, all religion is resolved into a matter of mere feeling. Forgetting that the degree of excitement depends upon the power of the imagination, or the pecu- liar constitution of the mind, they are continually - striving to elevate themselves to a greater intens- ity of emotion, and thus make this, intangible as it is, their test of religious character. The latter form of delusion indeed we may characterize as being in an especial degree, the popular one of the day. This awakening of the sensibilities and of the imagination, is substituted in the place ot that calm, settled, decided resolution to obey the will of our Master, which alone can be an effi- cient rule of conduct in this evil world. These unearthly paroxysms of devotion, which soon pass away and leave behind them no abiding holiness, are trusted to, instead of that " patient continuance in well doing," which alone can lead us on to ^' eternal life." How necessary is it then, that there should be times of reflection, when we may realize what are the true evidences of having passed from spiritual death, to the light and liberty of God's OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION". 47 own cliildren ! And it is to the standard of pure religion, that the Chnrch at this time endeavors to recall us. A perpetual witness for the faitn, her voice is heard " through the ages all along, publishing truths of which an evil world would willingly lose sight, and pointing her memhers to the bright examples of those who, in earlier, purer days, " fought the good fight," and " inher- ited the promises." From her we learn, that reli- gion consists, not in talking much and eloquently on the subject — not alone in striving to feel spirit- ually — not even in being warm and earnest in aiding the progress of the Church. An individual may do all these things, and yet be only like " sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal." That faith of the heart by which we " believe unto righteousness," is no wavering impulse. It is a fixed, steadfast habit of the mind, shown by our renouncing the spirit of the world — subduing our own evil tempers — living "soberly, righte- ously, and godly" — "crucifying the flesh, with the affections and lusts " — and actino^ in truth as the self-denying followers of that Master of whom it is recorded, that He " pleased not Himself." And while the Church thus defines the evi- 48 THE LENTEN FAST. dences of spiritual life, and declares the Christian conflict to be " an earnest, endless strife,"^^ she at the same time most sternly rebukes the compro- mising spirit of the day. She summons her children to come out from a sinful and apostate world. She bids them not live as other men do, in ease and idleness, when so much is to be ac- complished for their Lord. She inquires how they can be " delicate on the earth," when they are called by their Master to " di'ink of the cup of which He drank," and to be conformed to Him alike in His sufferings and His life. And it is by the abstinence and self-mortification of this solemn season, -"hat she strives to impress these lessons. If therefore they listen to her teaching, and tread this scene of mists and shadows beneath their feet, each returning year will endow them with added strength, while they travel onward to that world of light, to which she points them as their eternal home. They will learn to despise 20 " One only way to life ; One faith delivered once for all ; One lioly band, endowed with Heaven's high call ; One earnest^ endless strife — This is the Church th' Eternal framed of old." Lyra Apostolica. OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION 49 the fleeting and the perishable, and even while still imprisoned in this tabernacle of clay their spirits will yearn for communion wdth the Endu- ring and the Infinite. Another reason for the institution of this season in Primitive times w^as — with eefeeence to TWO CLASSES OF INDIVIDUALS WHO WERE THEN TO BE RECEIVED INTO THE ClIURCH. One class was that of the Catechumens^ who had been preparing for BajDtism. As Easter was the fixed and solemn time for their admission to this rite,^^ the Church fasted with them as a pre- paratory step to their commencing a religious life. Thus Justin Martyr in the second century declares — "As many as are persuaded, and do ' believe that the things taught and said by us are true, and promise to live accordingly, they are instructed to pray, and with fasting to beg of God remission of sins, w^e praying and fasting 21 The most celebrated time for Baptism iii the early- Church, was Easter ; next to that, Pentecost^ or Whit- suntide, and then Epiphany. The Church however still allowed her members the liberty to anticipate these times, if either Catechumens were great proficients, or in danger of death by disease or any sudden accident. — Bingham's Orig. Eccles., lib. xi., ch. 6, sec. V. 3 50 THE LENTEN FAST. togetlier with tliem. Then they are brought to the place v^liere water is, and are regenerated after the same manner of regeneration as we were regenerated before them."^^ In the same manner, Cyril of Jerusalem thus addresses the Catechumens: "The present season is a season of confession; all worldly cares are to be laid aside, for you strive for your souls. You that have been busy about the things of the world, and troubled in vain for many years, will ye not bestow forty days in prayer for the salvation of your souls ? " And again, he says — " there is a large time given you. You have the Penance before you of forty days, sufficient space and opportunity to put off the old garments and put on the new."^ Upon this account all candidates^ for baptism w^ere obliged to give in their names, forty days before the administration of the rite. Such was the interest the early Christians took in those who were to be united with them in the fellowship of the Church. They were jealous for the honor of their Master, and the purity of the faith. They were earnest that those about to 22 Bingham, lib. xxi., ch. 1, sec. 12. 28 Bingham, lib. xxi., ch. 1, sec. 12. 1 OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION. 5] avow His name should not walk unworthy of th(nr calling, and therefore through all this season, they prayed and fasted with them. They felt a zeal for the whole body of tlie faithful, and an ardent desire that no stain should rest upon the •eligion they professed. They realized, that they were a little band, surrounded by a world which loved them not. Beyond their own little circle they could exjDect no sympathy, but lived isolated and apart from those among whom they dwelt. When therefore, as was always done by tlie Apostles, they were addressed as '' brethren," a chord was struck, which vibrated through every heart. They knew that they were " heirs together of the grace of life.*' May we. not therefore take "shame and con- fusion of face" to ourselves, because we are so deficient in this feeling ! In this age of cold and selfish worldliness, we have almost ceased to regard the "communion of Saints" as a reality. And yet, though we think not of it, the tie is a most holy one, which unites those who are disci- ples of the same faith. They are looking upward to a common Master, invisible indeed to the eye of sense, yet whose presence they every 52 THE LENTEN EAST. wlieie lecognize in the occurrences of daily life Combatants in the same warfare, they are ex- posed to equal dangers — are contending against common enemies — share in the same hopes and fears — aud when the hour of victory comes, ex- pect to join in one triumph, and rejoice in the same bright reward. It is no imaginary bond, therefore, which unites in fellowship the faithful in Christ Jesus. It is a community of interest in all that men should count most valuable. They are members of one great fraternity, which gathers out its chosen ones from every genera- tion, and includes the just who have already passed into the promised Canaan, and those who are still toiling onward in the wilderness. In the beautiful words of one of our own hymns — " Angels, and living saints, and dead, But one communion make ; All join in Christ, their vital Head, And of His love partake." And the reason why this great truth is now so little appreciated, is obvious. It is because heresy and schism have entered " the consecrated host of God's elect," rending it asunder, tearing in pieces " the body of Christ, which is His OBJECT OF ITS IXSTITUTIOiT. 53 Clivircli," and arraying the followers of tlie same Lord against each other in hostile bands. Every strange form of error which the intellect of fallen man could engraft upon the Gospel, is rife around us, until the pure Faith stands like Milton's per- sonification of Chastity, amidst " the rout of monsters" who composed the crew of Comus. The Church herself is as a beleaguered city, and the countless j)arties by which she is encircled, " have pitched their tents all about the holy camp, like the mixed multitude that followed the true Israel of God from out the land of Egypt." And the result is, that men become accustomed to the sight of discord and the cry of disunion. They even forget the " fellowship " which should subsist between those who " continue steadfastly in the Apostles' doctrine, and in breaking of bread, and in prayers." Party names fill the earth, and individuals withdraw themselves into their own little circles, and send forth no sym- pathy and love to the millions who are without, though their faith may be the same. But how different is this from the feeling w^hich prevailed in ancient times ! Then, when the fold of Christ was one and her prayers in every place the 54 THE LENTEX FAST. same, laer members, wherever they were in the earth, felt that they were among brethren, and recognized in every hneament the same Church which had existed " in their father's days, and in the old time before them." Then, in the remote East, and in Northern Africa, as well as in West- ern Europe, they were all united in " one Loi^d, one faith, one baptism." Touching indeed is the illustration given of this truth, by the feehngs awakened in the mind of a celebrated Venetian traveler of those days, when a wanderer from his home, in one of the cities of distant England, he met a funeral train I " There was nothing new, or strange, or singular, about the burial procession, particularly calculated to excite the attention of Marco Polo. The De Profundis of the stoled priest spake the universal language, adopted by the most sublime of human compositions, the Liturgy of Western Christen- dom. Yet, though no objects appeared which could awaken any lively curiosity in the traveler, there was much in their familiarity to excite the sympathy of the wanderer in a foreign land. With an altered tone he said to the friar, ' Sad- dened is the spirit of the pilgrim, by the dying OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION. 5S twilight and the plaining Vesper hell. But he who braves every danger for himself, may feel his heart sink within him when the pageant ot triumphant death brings to his mind the thought, that those from whom as he weened, he parted for a little time only, may have been already borne to the sepulchre. Yet there is also a great and enduring comfort to the traveler in Christen- dom. However uncouth may be the speech ot the races amongst whom the pilgrim sojourns, however diversified may be the customs of the regions which he visits, let him enter the portal of the Church, or hear, as I do now, the voice ot the minister of the Gospel, and he is present with his own, though Alps and oceans may sever them asunder. There is one spot where the pilgrim always finds his home. We are all one people when we come before the Altar of the Lord.' "^ How beautiful is this picture! and how sad does it make the change which now we witness ! What a dejection of spirit often comes over the Christian, as he is reminded of this subject in repeating the Confession — "I believe in one Catholic and Apostolic Church ! " Is there not 24 Sir Francis Palgrave's Merchant and Friar ^ p. 138. 56 THE LENTEN FAST. reason, then, at this Holy season, when the Uni- versal Church is every where at the same time prostrating herself before the Lord, that we should pray for a return of those golden days when the faithful were one in heart and name ? Yes — though oceans may roll between, and we never meet face to face on earth, we have still an interest in each one who is united with the Church, wherever he may be, for we are all " members of one another." Let us then petition our Common Father, that he will grant us more of that spirit which distinguished the Christian host in earlier and better days, until we realize, that He '' has knit together his elect in one com- munion and fellowship, in the mystical body of His Son Christ our Lord."^^ The other class of persons, who were preparing at this time to be received into the Church, were the Penitents^ who had once been cut off for their sins, but after having completed their Canon- ical time of probation, during which they were excluded from her services, were generally ab- solved and readmitted at the time of the Easter Festival. Some of them for flagrant sins had 26 Collect for All Saints' Day. OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION. 57 been kept under tliis penitential discipline for years, until by evident humility and earnestness, they had given the fullest proof of their contrition and amendment.^^ It is to this that an ancient Bishop refers, when he says — " The Anniversary solemnity of Easter, was not only the time of re- generating Catechumens, but of begetting those again to a lively hope, who had forfeited it by their sin, but were desirous to regain it by re- pentance and conversion from dead works, to walk again in the paths of life."^^ Cyprian also in his Epistles, speaks of Easter as the great and solemn time of readmitting Penitents. These indeed were the days of rigid discipline 26 The discipline was far from being nominal. It was often such as nothing but the deepest feelings of contrition could have induced them to bear. In some cases, they were obliged to appear in sackcloth, with ashes on their heads — the men to cut off their hair, and the women to go veiled, as a token of sorrow and mourning — to abstain from feasting, and even the innocent diversions of life — to practice abstinence, mortification and fasting, in private, as well as to observe the public fasts of the Church -r- to show their liberality to the poor in an eminent degree — and in some Churches to exercise their humihty by taking upon themselves the office and care of burying the dead. See BixGHAM, lib. xviii., ch. 2, sec. 4. ^ Gregory Nyssen. (Bingham, lib. xxi., ch. 1, sec. 13.) 3* 68 THE LENTEN FAST. in the Church, when the ofiender was obliged to make his confession and his repentance aa open as his sin, that no stain might rest upon the purity of the faith. And in enforcing these rules, no immunity was granted to rank or powei*. Look, for example, at the case of the Emperor Theodosius. Having ordered a massacre by his troops at Thessalonica, in which several thousand lives were sacrificed, St. Ambrose, the Bishop of Milan, at once charged him with his guilt, and refused to hold intercourse with one thus stained with innocent blood. The doors of the Church were closed against the Master of the world, and he was commanded to bow to that authority which is above all earthly rule. The subordina- tion of the civil to the ecclesiastical j^ower was clearly proclaimed in that emphatic sentence — " The Emperor is of the Church, and in the Church, but not above the Church." Having desired, even on the Festival of the Nativity, to attend its services, he was met at the entrance of the sanctuary by the intrepid prelate, who boldly rebuked him for his want of humility, and ordered him not to pollute the temple with his presence until he had been absolved from his iniquity. OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION. ' 59 Thus, for eight months, he was ignoininiously excjkided from those holy offices of the Church which were freely afforded to the meanest of his subjects — even to the beggar and the slave. Theodosius pleaded in his defence the example of David. " Since then you have imitated his offence" — replied the Bishop — " imitate also his penitence." At length, on his public humiliation, »St. Ambrose consented to admit the Emperor, not into the Church itself, but into the outer porch, the place for the public penitents. There, prostrate on the pavement, stripped of his impe- rial ornaments, beating his breast, and watering the ground with his tears, the master of the Homan Empire, and the legislator of the world, received his hard wrung absolution. Thus it was that the Church then stood forth as the cham- pion of the oppressed, and extended her penalties over the mightiest of the earth .^ But how imposing must have been this peni- tential discipline, so rigorously enforced ! *' The Chui'ch was not then divided into separate inde- pendent bodies, holding no communication with *s MiLMAN's History of Christianity^ vol. ii., p. 230. (50 THE LENTEN FAST. each other, which might enable an offender when expelled from one to attach himself to another, ^ and thus maintain, in defiance of his condemners, an outward union with Christ. He might as well have endeavored to escape the penalties of rebellion against the head of the Koman Empire by removing from one province to another. So spotless too was her innocence, so bright her holiness, that none dared question for a moment the justice of her decisions; and her sentence, however rigorous it might be, was deemed to be ratified in Heaven ; to be cut off from her, was effectually to be cut off from Christ. Thus, both her blessinscs and her censures were an outward expression, an earthly type, by which men were warned of what judgment was proceeding in Heaven upon their conduct of life, and her slow- ness of forgiveness, and the fiery 2:)robation to which she submitted the penitent, were well calculated to dispel those hurtful notions which men now so generally entertain of the ease and the speed of the process of forgiveness of sins."^' The multitude, often but partially reclaimed from 29 Rectory of Vcdehead^ p. 164. OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTIOK Qi barbarism, wlio could be restrained by no worldly motives, and over whom tlie civil autliority of tlie land exerted but little j)ower wlien it came into conflict with their passions, were obliged to trem- ble as the awful denunciations of the Church fell upon their ears. To them there was a fearful yet salutary lesson taught, by the public shame of the penitent — his deep humiliation — the bitterness and intensity of his remorse. It was with these individuals, then, whose probation had been so severe, but who were now again to be received into the body of the faithful, that the Church at this season prayed and fasted, that their sins might be washed away, and the comfortable hope which once they had forfeited be again restored. And if the evil days on which we have fallen, prevent the Church in this age from enforcing with a wholesome severity, her primitive disci- pline, is there not double reason why her mem- bers should bewail their sins, and pray God not to visit upon them the recompense of their offences ? Should not their petition be — " Spare thy people, good Lord, and let not thine heritage be brought to confusion?" And in harmony 62 THE LENTEN FAST. with such convictions, we find that all the sei vices of Lent breathe an evident feeling of con- trition — that we every where present ourselves n the attitude of humility, and pray our merciful Father to grant us " perfect remission and for- giveness." Let us strive then to partake of the spirit of these petitions: and when we look around us and remember how far, as a Church, we have wandered from the path of primitive holiness, how lukewarm is our devotion, and how feeble our faith compared with what it should be, we shall realize that there is reason for that deep and searching penitence which our Master seeks to kindle up within us, and the expression of which is heard so often in our Liturgy. These, then, are the reasons which induced the early Church to institute this Holy Season, thus exercising the power entrusted to her, " to decree rites and ceremonies."^^ It is with her sanction that we are summoned to its observance. It is impressed upon us by the solemn voice which comes down from the years of a distant and dim antiquity. In these services many gen- 80 Article xx. Of the Authority of the Church—'' The Church hath power to decree rites or ceremonies." OBJECT OF ITS INSTITUTION". 63 erations have already joined, and thus gathered strength for the journey which lay before them. They have long since passed away, leaving to us not only their bright exaroples, but also the record of their experience. We stand in their places. We are the honored guardians of all those rites and institutions which they in their day found useful in the Church, and then be- queathed to such as should come after them. Solemn indeed is the trust — may we never be- tray it ! May we always remember that we are " baptized for the dead " — inheriting their re- sponsibilities — enjoying the fruits of theu' labors — and that we must commit this sacred heritage undiminished to our successors. Let us never then be willing to give up these ancient services, which were used by the holy dead, whose mem- ory we love, or to substitute in their place the novelties of an age '' emulous of change." Let us be content to tread the path which still gleams brightly with the steps of those who for Christ's sake and the gospel's " counted not their lives dear unto themselves." Let us strive, as they did, against an unholj' world — lo^dng with a true devotion, the Church for which they died — and 64 THE LENTEN FAST. seeking to imbibe tbe spirit wliicli reigns in lier courts. And then, wlien " life's fitful fever " is over, we sliall be admitted with tlie just wliom we liave followed on earth, to the Paradise of Q-od — to "the general assembly and Church of tlie first-born, which are written in Heaven." THE PROPER OBSERYAXCE OF LENT. Nor wonder that the widow'd Church should sound Of sadness ; there are mourners Christ hath blest, Who watch with her their annual, weekly round, And in obedience fir d the promis'd rest. The Cathedral II. THE PKOPEE OBSEKYAKCE OF LE:N^T. We are told, that in one of the darkest periods of Jerusalem's apostacy, and when her ruin by a powerful invader was just at hand, another reprieve was granted, and one more summons to repentance sent forth. " And in that day did the Lord God of Hosts call to weeping, and to mourning, and to baldness, and to girding with sackcloth ; and behold, joy and gladness." Thus it was, that her people scorned the prophet's message, and turned as usual to their worldly pleasures. But the decision of God upon their conduct, is thus given by Isaiah: "And it was revealed in mine ear by the Lord of Hosts, Surely this iniquity shall not be purged from you till ve die, saith the Lord God of Hosts."^ ^ Isaiah xxii., 12, 13, 14. gg THE LENTEN FAST. And thus, by the voice of His Church, is God at this season calling us also " to weeping and mourning." So comprehensive too is the sum- mons, that none who bear the Christian name can plead exemption. The command is — Blow the trumpet in Zion, sanctify a fast, call a solemn assembly, gather the people, sanctify the congre- gation, assemble the elders, gather the children, and those that suck at the breasts ; let the bride- groom go forth of his chamber, and the bride out of her closet ; let the priests, the ministers of the Lord, weep between the porch and the altar, and let them say. Spare thy people, O Lord, and give not thy heritage to reproach.^ In this way it is, we are directed, by chastenmg our spirits, to pre- pare to celebrate our Lord's solemn sacrifice — that mysterious passion and agony which the world can never fully comprehend, and to the history of which it can only listen, with an awful reverence. How then shall we keep this holy season ? How can we most fully enter into the spirit of its services — availing ourselves of these opportunities to approach our God — afflicting the 2 Scripture appointed for the Epistle for Ash-Wednes- day. ITS PROPER OBSERVANCE. ^ 69 soul now, that hereafter it may be saved forever ? In answer to these inquiries, and that we may know how to carry out the design of the Church for our spiritual benefit, let us look at some of the methods in which we may best observe this solemn period of our Ecclesiastical year. Abstinence from avorldly Amusements, is one particular which most naturally occurs to us. In the early Church, not only was the attendance of her members on all public games and shows forbidden during the season of Lent, but the prohibition was even extended to the celebration of marriages, and the anniversaries of birth days, because these took place with feasting, and tokens of joy and pleasure, inappropriate to a season which should be devoted to deep humiliation and mourning.^ St. Chrj'sostom, in his Lent sermons, inveighs with liis usual zeal, against any violation of these salutary rules. In the midst of his sharp invectives against 'those who had attended the Circus at this time, he says : " When I consider, how at one blast of the devil ye have forgotten all my daily admonitions and continued discourses, and run to that pomp of Satan, the horse-race in 2 See BixGHAM's Ori(/. Secies., lib. xxi., ch. 1, sec. 21. 70 THE LENTEN FAST. the Circus, with what heart can I think of preach- ing to you again, who have so soon let slip all that I said before ? This is what chiefly raises my grief, yea my anger and indignation, that together with my admonition ye have cast the reverence of this holy season of Lent out of your souls, and thrown yourselves into the nets of the devil. What profit is there in your fasting! What advantage in your meeting together so often in this place?"* And again, in another Homily, while in a pathetic manner exhibiting to them the moral influence of this conduct, his language is — '' Subdue, I beseech you, this wicked and pernicious custom. And consider, that they who run to the Circus, not only do much harm to themselves, but are the occasion of great scan- dal to others. For when the Jews and Gentiles see you, who are every day at Church to hear a sermon, come notwithstanding to the horse-race, and join with them in the Circus, will they not reckon our religion a cheat, and entertain the same suspicion of us all? They will sharpen their tongues against us all, and for the offences of a few condemn the whole body of Christians. * St. Cheys., torn, ii., p. 49, Horn. 6, iii Gen. ITS PROPER OBSERVANCE. 71 Neither will they stop here, but rail at our Head, and for the servant's fault blaspheme our com- mon Lord, and think that a sufficient apology and excuse for their own errors, that they have something to object to the life and conversation of others."* And if worldly amusements have in this age changed their form, still their nature and influ- ence are the same. A ceaseless struggle for our affections is going on, and the choice Ave make determines our state, not only in this life, but through all the wasteless ages of our immortality. The tempter still arrays before the Christian, the glare and gaudiness of tliis fleeting scene, that his attention may be distracted, and his progress towards Heaven impeded. On the other hand, it is the object of our faith, to cause him to look away beyond " things seen and temporal " to those which are '^ unseen and eternal." We must live in this lower world, as pilgrims whose ho]3es and affections are not here — who beai; about with them the consciousness that this is not their home, but that they are only journey ers through the wilderness, toiling onward to the promised land. 5 St. ChPwYs., torn, ii., p. 61, Horn. 7, in Gen. 72 THE LENTEN FAST. "We are to be like St. Paul, " crucified witli our Lord to tlie world, and tlie world to us " — gazing on its pleasures witli the same unconcern witli wliicli the dying man would from the Cross — putting it from us, and leaving untried no means which may avail, to destroy the witchery of its enchantments, and to break its power over our hearts. We are even to give up its lawful com- forts and its innocent enjoyments, when called to this sacrifice for any worthy end ; for there may come occasion to the follower of the Lord to "take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions, in distresses for Christ's sake." Thus, in striving to be more conformed to his Master, or more entirely to be disentangled from this scene of temptation, he may be obliged to offer upon the altar of Christian duty, all those affections which twine most closely about the heart, " losins: his life for Christ's sake and the Gospel's, that he may save it." " Sweet fs the smile of home ; the mutual look When hearts are of each other sure ; Sweet all the joys that crowd the household nook, The haunt of all affeetions pure ; Yet in the world even these abide, and we Above the world our calling boast ; ITS PROPER OBSERVANCE. 73 Once gain the mountain top, and thou art free ; Till then, who rest, presume; who turn to look, are lost." 6 It was to escape the unholy influence of this worlcVs fascinations, that the followers of our Lord were accustomed, in the olden time, to flee from this scene of trial, and in the solitary her- mitage, or the desert waste, where no man was, to pass their lives in communion with their God, and in making ready for their last account. But no precept of Scripture authorized them to rend the ties of duty, and for a selfish motive, to burst the chains which bound them to home and kin- dred. "It is a wretched righteousness " — says Luther, in one of his letters to Spenlein — " which will not bear with others, because it deems them evil, and seeks the solitude of the desert, instead of doing good to such, by long suflfering, by prayer, and example. If thou art the lily and the rose of Christ, know that thy dwelling-place is among thorns." Nor did they by this desertion attain theii* object. The piety at which they aimed, was tinged with dreamy reveries, and evaporated in ^ Keble's Christian Year. First Sunday in Lent. 4 74 THE LENTEN FAST. contemplation of an imaginary purity. The pjis- sions in their breasts which they had hoped to root out, turned inward, and centered in tliem- selves, and they found tliat if they could escape from the world without, they must still carry with them that little world within, in subduing which the conflict chiefly consists. They had cast from them the weapons of their warfare, and fled from the strife, leaving an ungodly world to roll on to destruction, unrebuked and unaided, and they reaped their retribution. They deprived themselves of all those* high and ennobling feel- ings, which purify the heart, while they animate men to exertion. Their selfishness recoiled upon themselves, and the dreamy enthusiast who wished to be wiser than Scripture, and to improve upon the example of his Lord, found that he had not added to the fortitude of his virtue. He had sacrificed his happiness, and become but too often only a gloomy misanthrope.^ T These remarks will of course apply only to the solita- ries. While their cells were the very nurseries of super- stition, they were said, in the language of Alcujn, "to lead an angelical life." Archbishop Leighton, however, much more truly describes an angelical life, as " a life spent be- tween ascending in prayer to fetch blessings from above, ITS PROPER OBSERVANCE. 75_ '^^* The true trial of our life here is to m^etg^t^.^ evil, and yet by God's grace to overcome it — to be m the world, and yet so to trample it under our feet as to show, that we are not of the and descending to scatter them among men." The monas- tic institutions were free from many of those difficulties of which we have spoken, and ui the purer days of the Church rendered essential service to the cause of religion, when society around w^as m a rude and almost barbarous state. The monks were often learned and industrious — the pat- terns of active virtue — the liberal dispensers of charity — and the zealous promoters of learning and the useful arts. " It was a great benefit, that there should be places of education, where the young might be trained for the ser- vice of the Church or State : it was well that there should be places of retirement where the aged might end their days in penitence and prayer ; and places of refuge, where the orphan and friendless might find support and protec- tion." {QiiJjuTo^''s JEarly Eng, Chi(rch^\).\04c. See chap. V, vi.) They who in the reign of Henry VIII. were grasp- ing at the wealth of monasteries, eagerly united to villify their occupants, and succeeding generations have quietly received their report, with scarcely the trouble of a doubt. But the true history of the monastic institution is yet to be written, by one, Avho with a philosophical eye can read its influence on the spirit of the age and the character of society, and, who is ready with an unprejudiced, impartial feeling to acknowledge its benefits, w^hile he points out the evils to which it ultimately gave birth. It is probably not known to many of our readers, that there are in the kingdom of Hanover, eleven Protestant convents, or (to give them a better name) " religious houses." They Y6 THE T.ENTEN FAST. world — to liave its fascinations around us, and yet to turn from them. Its Circean song may float sweetly to our ears, but yet it must not beguile us to pass over into tlie land of its en- cliantments. It is in the fiery ordeal of temp- tation, and amidst the din and struggle of the conflict, that man learns to know himself, and to estimate aright his own spiritual powers. His hopes become more clear after every conquest which he makes — his reliance upon things unseen and eternal is strengthened — and his whole Chris- tian character is matured and perfected. '' This is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith." There is true wisdom indeed in the eloquent words of Milton, w^hen he says — " He that can apprehend and consider vice with all her baits and seeming pleasures, and yet abstain, and yet distinguish, and yet prefer that which is are asylums, to which respectable females " when thrown out upon the world by the dissolution of their families, can retire, without experiencing those mortifications which are BO frequently attendant upon adversity." (Dwigiit's Ger- many^ p. 100.) An English lady has of late years founded a similar house, at Clifton, near Bristol (Chueton's Early Erig. Church, p. 382.) The inmates of none of these institutions, however, are bound by those ensnaring vows which produced much of the evil in the Romish Church. ITS PROPER OBSERTANCE. 77 truly better, lie is tlie true wayfaring Christian. I cannot praise a fugitive and cloistered virtue, unexercised and unbreatlied, that never sallies out and sees her adversary, but slinks out of the race, where that immortal garland is to be run for, not without dust and heat. That which puri- fies us is trial, and {rial is by what is contrary. Which was the reason why our sage and serious poet Spencer, describing true Temperance imder the person of Gruion, brings him in with his Palmer through the cave of Mammon, and the bower of earthly bliss, that he might see and know, and yet abstain." Yet it is evident, on the otlier hand, that a temporary retirement from the bustle and tumult of this busy life, is requisite to enable the spirit to shake off the worldliness which has been in- sensibly growing upon it, and to plume its wings again for Heaven. It is necessary, that man should now and then withdraw within himself, think of his eternal interests, and examine with peculiar care, his account with God. " We must retire inward " — says St. Bernard, — ^' if we would ascend upward." It is with this view, therefore, that the Church from the earliest age, 78 THE LENTEN FAST. has yearly in the season of Lent, recalled her children from the absorbing cares of time, and gathered them into her own bosom, to meditate and pray. The question — how much under ordinary cir- cumstances, we may mingle in the gayeties and amusements of the world — is one which each individual must determine for himself. He knows their effect upon his own heart, and the influence of his example upon those around him, and must act accordingly. If after having in baptism solemnly renounced " the pomps and vanities of this wicked world," he still thinks it right to de- vote himself to them, he must be guided by his own conscience in this important decision. If he thinks it fit, that on Sunday his friends should see him kneeling at the altar, professing to for- sake the world, and then on the week day, meet him in all its frivolities and gayeties, until they suspect that his religion is only intended to be put on in Church, his is the responsibility, and his must be the retribution. To his own Master he must stand or fall. But the hour is rapidly coming, when from the bed of death and the bar of judgment, each one will be forced to look back ITS PROPER OBSERVANCE. V9 upon tliese scenes, and decide whetlier he actc^.d well and wisely while life was going on.^ Yet there are times and seasons, when there can be no mistake on this subject, and when the 8 One of the most common charges against the Church is, that her members are permitted to mingle in the gay- eties of the world in a manner inconsistent ^Wth the Chris- tian character, and particularly to frequent theatrical amusements. This is no place, of course, to discuss the question, whether they do so more than those who are connected with the different denominations around them. We can only say, that when Churchmen are found in this situation — thus bringing discredit on their profession — it is in utter violation of the rules of the Church, and at variance with the spirit she endeavors to inculcate upon them by every one of her services, from the comprehen- sive Baptismal Vow, even to that last solemn prayer in the Visitation of the Sick, which commends the departing soul to the mercy of its God. As conclusive evidence of the sense of the Church on this point, we can give the highest authority — that of the House of Bishops in General Con- vention. It stands thus recorded on their Journal : " Tuesday, May 21th, 1817. Resolved, That the fol- lowincT be entered on the Journal of this House and be sent to the House of Clerical and Lay Deputies, to be read therein : " The House of Bishops, solicitous for the preservation of the purity of the Church, and the piety of its members, are induced to impress upon the Clergy the important duty, with a discreet but earnest zeal, of warning the people of their respective cures, of the danger of an indul 80 THE LENTEX FAST. Churcli lias decided tliat lier cliildren must retire, in a peculiar raanner, from tliis world, to think of that which is to come. Such, for instance, is the week which precedes the administration of the Holy Communion. It is with reference to this, that her ministers are commanded, " to give gence in those Avorldly pleasures which may tend to with- draw the affections from spiritual things. And especially on the subject of gaming, of amusements involving cruelty to the brute creation, and of theatrical represeyitations^ to which some pecuhar circumstances have called their atten- tion — they do not h(,'sitate to express their unanimous opinion, tJiat these amusements^ as well from their licen- tious tendency, as from the strong temptations to vice which they afford, ought not to he frequented. And the Bishops can not refrain from expressing their deep regret at the information that in some of our large cities so little respect is paid to the feelings of the members of the Church, that theatrical representations are fixed for the evenings of her most solemn Festivals." — Jour, of Gen. Con. 1817, page 46. Any one acquainted with the regular steps of degrada- tion through which the theatre has passed during the last twenty-five years, will acknowledge that if it had " a licentious tendency "in 1817, that demoralizing influence is doubly powerful in this day. Let not then occasional inconsistencies of members of the Church — inconsistencies, we believe, becoming each year more rare — be brought forward as any illustration of the spirit of the Church. These are the exceptions, and their conduct is looked upon by their fellow members with sorrow and shame. ITS PROPER OBSERYANCE. 81 warning for its celebration upon tlie Sunday or some holy day immediately preceding." And at tlie same time it is made tlieir duty to their hearers, " to exhort them in the mean season, so to search and examine their own consciences, that they may come holy and clean to such a heavenly feast, in the marriage garment required by God in Holy Scripture, and be received as worthy partakers of that holy table." Now unless this appeal is a mere formality, and means nothing, surely we are expected in the interval to prepare ourselves for uniting in that solemn mystery, and no one needs this preparation more than the individual who loves this world so well that he finds it hard to obey the injunction. But is this to be done, amidst the bustle and excite- ment of worldly pleasure ? Ko — it is not there that God is accustomed to meet us, with the influences of His grace, or the rich aids of His Spirit. Let us not then endeavor, thus to mmgle earth with Heaven, or to come to our Master's solemn feast with thoughts distracted by frivolity and amusement. Let us walk entirely as " chil- dren of the light," or not attempt to worship at the altars both of Christ and Belial. 82 THE LENTEN FAST. Such a season, again, is that of Lent. Listeii to the tones of earnest repentance which the ser- vices of the Church breathe forth, and then say, whether after giving utterance to these, we can rush at once into the embraces of a world, from which we have just prayed to be delivered. But are there any, who feel that six weeks is too long a time to withdraw from earthly pleasures? What — we would ask in reply — what must be the state of that spirit — what its preparation for Heaven — in which such thoughts conld be en- tertained? This cleaving to the objects of our earthly worship — this miserable hankering after pleasures we profess to have abandoned — pro- claim but too clearly a self-deceived heart, still unbaptized by the Spirit from on high. Such an one has reason to fear, lest the day of solemn trial find him without the wedding garment. When at this season then, God calls to '' weeping and mourning," shall it be said of us, " behold, joy and gladness ? " Self-Examination is another obvious duty which we must perform during the period of Lent. This naturally follows from what has been already advanced. If we withdraw from ITS PROPER OBSERVANCE 83 the world, it is not that we may spend our time in listless idleness, but that we may employ ourselves in girding up our loins anew, and trim- ming our lamps, to be ready for our Lord's appearing. It is that we may " commune with our own hearts and be still." It is, that we may review the past, and as we compare our actions with the law of God, decide whether or not we are walking in the way of His command- ments. And who that knows the deceitfulness of the human heart — who that has ever read our Mas- ter's repeated warnings that we should '' watch " — will say that this is unnecessary ! We go forth to the world, with our decision made to serve the Lord, and our Christian hopes burning brightly ; but as one day after another passes by, insensibly we lose the simplicity of our religious character, and become at last " of the earth earthly," before we even suspect that we have departed from the fervor of our earliest love. " The gold becomes dim, and the fine gold changed." Our thoughts are drawn off from our Master and his cause, until the excitements and allurements which are around produce their 84 THE LENTEN FAST. natural result, and we begin to be willing to take our portion with those wliom we bad profiissed to leave. We learn to persuade ourselves, to yield in things which a more tender conscience would have taught us to refuse, until our ser\n.ce becomes partial and worldly, and we are no longer heartily devoted to the Lord. Now, how many tbus pass through life ? At times, the monitor within utters its voice, and they are forced to doubt, whether or not they are in the faith. Yet they at once dispel these disagreeable thoughts. From a natural indolence of disposition, they shrink from the task of inves- tigating their own hearts. They seem willing to live along, trusting that it may in the end be well with them. They postpone. to the last day, the decision of the most solemn question this world can furnish, although then it will be too late to rectify an error. Is it not therefore well for us, at times to stop in our worldly career, and settle this point ? Many are the lessons of solemn caution which our Master gave, to guard against this very danger. The rich man who thought not of death — the servants who ate and di^ank, but remembered not their Lord's ITS PROPER OBSERVANCE. 85 return — and tlie virgins who slept when the bridegroom was at hand, and then awoke only to bitter disappointment — are all set forth for our warning. And how miserable would be our state, should the summons thus be heard when we expect it not, and then for the first time the full consciousness burst upon us, that we have been deceiving our own hearts, and ser\^ng the world! Let us therefore watch and examine ourselves, that as time passes by, there may grow no rust upon our souls, and no habitual sin darken the mirror on which the pure light of Heaven should be reflected. Let us not, when once we have girded on our armor, lay it aside or be found sleeping at our post. Li the solemn day of our Master's appearing, when " all kindreds of the earth wail because of Him," let us be found among those chosen ones, whom the Church has gathered into her fold, trained in every holy work, and purified for her Lord, that they might be found ready when His marriage hour should come. There is one more way, by which we should peculiarly mark this season as one of penitence- it is by FASTmo. On the morning of Ash-Wed- 86 THE LEITTEN FAST. nesday, we prostrate ourselves before our God and say — " Be favorable, O Lord, be favorable to tliy people, who turn to Thee in weeping, fasting and praying." And yet by how many, have we not reason to fear, are these words uttered, who shrink from the Christian duty of which they speak ! It is much more easy to offer unto God the tribute of our lips, than to chasten and discipline the body. We believe it is for this reason, that in these days when men seek their own comfort, this practice which has prevailed through all ages of the Jewish and Christian Churches, has fallen so much into disuse. Yet take up the word of God, and what duty is spoken of more decidedly, or the performance of which is more frequently followed by a bless- ing I Joshua and the elders of Israel, when de- feated by the men of Ai, kept a solemn fast, as they remained all day, " until the even-tide," prostrate on the earth before the ark, with dust upon their heads, in humihatiori and prayer. And the result was, that victory again attended them. David fasted as well as prayed, when he humbled himself before God after his sin against ITS PROPER OBSERVANCE. 8"i [Iriali, and althongli deprived of his child, yet Ms hiiquity was forgiven. The inhabitants of Nine- veh, in fear of judgments obeyed the decree of their King, when ho proclaimed — " Let neither man nor beast, herd nor flock, taste any thing ; let them not feed nor drink water ; but let man and beast be covered with sackcloth, and cry mightily unto God" — and their city was spared. The devoted Ezra, when setting out for Jerusa- lem, assembled the returning captives at the river Ahava, and there '' proclaimed a fast, that they miirht afflict themselves before God, and seek of Him a right way for themselves and their little ones, and for all their substance " — and he ob- tained the blessino: he asked. And thus we might go through the Old Testament, and show that on every important occasion, the ancient saiats under the former dispensation not only prayed but fasted also. And so it continued to be, when the Gospel dawned upon the earth. *Anna was " serving God with fastings and prayers, night and day,^' when her petition was answered, and she saw her Saviour. Our Lord himself, before he entered on His public ministry, passed through a long period 88 THE LENTEN FAST. of preparatory fasting. The Apostles did so, before every solemn act in wliich they engaged. They were '' in fastings often." St. Paul fre- quently refei's to the use of this means of grace. He declares, that he " approves himself a minister of God," as in other things, so " in fastings also ;" and he writes to the Corinthians — " Give your- selves to fasting and prayer." Cornelius, " the devout centurion," was engaged in fasting, when the angel announced to him, that his alms and prayers had " come up for a memorial before God." St. Peter was fasting, when that wonder- ful vision revealed to him the admission of the Gentiles into the Church of God, and commis- sioned him to be to them, the earliest herald o:^ the Gospel. The Church at Antioch was fasting, when the Holy Ghost said, '' separate me Barna- bas and Saul." ISTeither can it be argued, that this was not expressly commanded by our Lord. He found the practice in use, and spake of it as one which should be continued. He gave directions to His disci]3les, how they ought to fast, and promised that they should be recompensed for the right performance of this duty. " But thou, when thou ITS PROPER OBSERYAXCE. 89 fastest, anoint thine head, and wash thy fa batli." (that is Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath,) " tliroughout, eating nothing till the cock-crow- ing in the morning. But if any can not join both days together in one continued fct, let him how- ever keep the Sabbath a fast, for the Lord speak- ing of Himself said, ' when the Bridegroom shall be taken away from them, in those days shall they fast; "^ The night of this day, (as we learn from the next chapter of the Apostolic Constitutions,) was spent as a solemn Vigil, when they assembled together for the performance of divine service, reading the Scripture, prayer, and preaching. There they continued until midnight, and many even remained until the cock-crowing. " It was a tradition among the Jews " — says St. Jerome — " that Christ would come at midnight, as He did upon the Egyptians at the time of the Passover. Thence, I think, the Apostolical Custom came, not to dismiss the people on the Paschal Vigil before midnight, expecting the coming of Christ ; after which time presuming on security, they keep ^ P aires Apos.^ Cotel vol. i., p. 325. - EASTER EVEN. 199 the day a festivMl."^ At a later period, ^vlien tlie Clmrcli had vanquished the j)ower of ancient Paganism, and begun to put on her robes of power, this Vigil was kept with great pomp. Constantine — as Eusebius tells us, in his life of that emperor — " set up lofty pillars of wax to burn as torches all over the city, and lamps burn- ing in all places, so that the night seemed to out- shine the sun at noon-day." The Church has therefore still continued to command the observance of this day, although the state of society and the forms of life in this age requii'e that the manner in which it is done should be modified.^ The services which have been provided, are marked by the same wisdom which can be discerned in all the arrangements 2 Bingham's Orig. Eccles.^ lib. xxi., chap. 1, sec. 32. ^ The writer has been accustomed for several years, to hold the last Lent service on Easter Even, at 5 p. m., and believes that not one among the Treek-day services of the Church is better calculated to arrest the attention. That Vesper hour of quiet, when the cares of the busy week are over, in the Avaning twilight, as the day is softly fliding into darkness, seems naturally to harmonize with our feel- ings of devotion. Then, in solemn meditation we can look back at the services which are gone, and forward to the gr(;at Festival of the morrow. 200 THE LENTEN FAST. of our venerable Clinrcli. In the beautiful Col- lect for the day, we offer up our humble petitions, " that as we are baptised into the death of our blessed Saviour Jesus Christ, so by continual mortifying our corrupt affections, we may be buried with him ; and that through the grave and gate of death we may pass to our joyful resurrec- tion, for His merits, who died and was buried, and rose again for us, Jesus Christ our Lord." The Epistle, from St. Peter, containing that mys- terious passage concerning our Lord's " preach- ing unto the spirits in prison," seems evidently selected by the Church as referring to the con- dition of His soul during this period ; while the Gospel clearly describes His burial, and the care that was taken to " make the sepulchre sure, sealing the stone, and setting a watch." With the future history of our Lord's body, we are all well ac(\aainted. We know how on the next morning He burst the bands of death, and came forth from the tomb, and then after mingling with His disciples for forty days as- cended up visibly into Heaven. But the ques- tion, W^here was the human soul of our Master during this period ? is one which most of His fol- EASTER EVEN. 201 lowers are not so well prepared to answer. We reply therefore, it was in the esttermediate si ate, and to a discussion of this subject we intend to devote the remainder of these pages. We have selected it, because although one most important to us, there is probably no truth asserted in the Creed, which is so little understood. The faith of the Church then with respect to the doctrine is briefly this — that while the hour of death decides irreversibly the condition of the spirit, so that " they which are holy will be holy still," and for the wicked there will remain no more sacrifice for sin, neither can it be purged away by offering for ever, yet the just do not at once enter into Heaven, nor do the lost descend immediately to their eternal prison. They go to an intermediate state, where they await the last judgment. There indeed the righteous are in happiness, and the wicked in misery, through all the ages which intervene ; yet the one can not have " the fullness of joy," nor the other suffer the extremity of their destined misery, until their souls are once more united to their bodies. This takes place at the second coming of our Lord. A.t that time, the spiritual and earthly parts of 202 THE LENTEN FAST. our nature will be again brouglit into union, and the miglity army of the dead gather before the Great White Throne. Then, the Books will be opened — the final sentence be pronounced — the gates of Heaven, and the dreary prison house of the lost, unclose to receive their appointed occu- pants — and the spirits of all who have ever lived, commence the travel of Eternity. In eudeavoring to state the proofs on which we rest our belief in this doctrine, we naturally turn first to tlie inspired tvord of God. For, as Lord Bacon has well remarked — '' A knowledge of the soul must in the end be bounded by reli- gion, or else it will be subject to deceit and delu- sion: for as the substance of the soul in the creation was not extracted out of the mass ot Heaven and earth by the benediction of a ' pro- ducat,' but was immediately inspired by God, so it is not possible that it should be othei'wise than by accident, subject to the laws of Heaven and earth, which are the subject of philosophy; and therefore the true knowledge of the nature and state of the soul, must come by the same insj)i- ration that gave the substance."* * Advancement of Learning. Bacon's Works, vol. ii., p. 170, Montague's edit. EASTER EVEN. 203 "We learn then most plainly from Scripture, tliat tlie souls of tlie just do not (as some in all ages have vainly imagined,) sleep with their bodies in utter insensibility, until the morning oi the resurrection. Every intimation there given us with regard to our spiritual nature, confirms the truth which reason teaches, that " conscious- ness must be a necessary attribute of a spirit in a disembodied state." Samuel was summoned up from his place of repose, evidently returning reluctantly to the cares of this world, and his inquiry was — *' Why hast thou disquieted me, to bring me up ! " Every circumstance of the nar- rative too shows, that the spirit of Samuel was truly evoked. Saul evidently believed it, and the sacred j)enman records it, as if stating an actual occurrence. " And Saul " — says he — " perceived that it was Samuel," and " Samuel said," etc. The son of Sirach also, who is thought to have written two centuries before the Christian era, expresses himself on this topic with the same unhesitating confidence. After giving a briei account of Samuel's life and character, he adds — " And after his death he prophesied and showed the King his end, and lift up his voice from the 204 THE LENTEN FAST. earth in prophecy, to blot out the wickedness of the people."^ Josephus too in relating the story, does not betray the slightest suspicion that it was not in truth the soul of Samuel conversing with Saul.^ "We are warranted therefore from this circumstance, not only in drawing an infer- ence that the souls of the departed are in a state of consciousness, but also that this was an article in the popular creed of the Jewish nation. In the same way Moses and Elias appeared on the Mount of Transfiguration, and " talked with our Lord," •as being spirits evidently endowed with all those powers which reason teaches us must belong to them. The same truth is taught by the Apostle Paul, when he asserts — " We are confident, I say, and willing rather to be absent from the body, and to be present," (or conversant) " with the Lord." And again he declares — " For I am in a strait betwixt two, having a desire to depart, and to be with Christ ; which is far better." He thus plainly shows us, that the righteous when " absent from the body," are not in a state of insensibility, ^ JEccles. xlvi. 20. * Antiq. lib. vi., ch. 15. EASTER EYE^N". 205 but conversant with their Lord — in a situation where they enjoy a degree of communion with Him which they can not have while still in this state of probation. The Apostle did not indeed mean, that at death his spirit should at once pass into that Heaven to which his Lord had ascended, for in another place he speaks of " the crown of righteousness " being " laid up for him," not to be bestowed until that Great Day when his Master should sit as " the righteous Judge," and he should receive it in company with " all them also that love His appearing." " The word ev(57],ar)tfa» should be rendered " — says Dr. Bloomfield — " not to he present witli^ but (agreeably to the metaphor,) to he at home tvitli^ implying communion with Him." Even while St. Paul was alive, he was with Christ, and Christ was with him, but the felicity for which he hoped at death was a nearer access to Him, and a greater communication of His favor. He should behold His glory, though not in that full brightness wherein it shall be seen at the day of His final appearing. This brings us then to the question we would investigate. If the soul is to be in a state of consciousness when it has left the body, whither 206 THE LENTEN FAST. does it go ? Wliere is its place of abode ? Tliia inquiry is best answered by considering the cir- cmnstances connected with our Lord's death, since we are to follow in the same path in which He trod. Whither then did His soul depart 'i Can we believe (as Calvin asserted,) that He went down to the place of torment, and there endured the pains of a reprobate soul in punish- ment.^ The mind shrinks back with horror at the thought, unsujDported as the notion is by any intimation in Scripture, and directly refuted by our Lord's own declaration to his penitent com- panion in suffering. Did His sjoirit ascend at once to Heaven, and remain there during the '' " It was necessary for him to contend with the powers of hell and the horror of eternal death Therefore it is no wonder, if he be said to have descended into hell, since he suifered that death which the wrath of God inflicts on transgressors The relation of those sufferings of Christ, which were visible to men, is very properly followed by that invisible and incompre- hensible vengeance which he suffered fi'om the hand of God ; in order to assure us that not only the body of Christ was given as the price of our redemption, but that there was another greater and more excellent ransom, since he suffered in his soul the dreadful torments of a person con- demned and irretrievably lost." — Institutes, Book ii., chap, xvi., sec. 10. EASTER EVEN. 207 three days wliich intervened before His resurrec* tion ? This eonld not be, for He afterwards said explicitly to Mary Magdalene — " Touch me not, for I am not yet ascended to my Father." He remained forty days with His disciples upon the earth, before He departed visibly into Heaven. The necessary conclusion therefore to which we must come, is that He went to some place en- tirely distinct either from the Heaven of rest, or the prison of final torment. That place was Paradise, as He declared to the penitent thief — " To-day shalt thou be with me in Paradise." What then did the Jews understand by Para- dise ? We reply — with them it primarily refer- red to the Garden of Eden, where Adam dwelt in his state of innocence. But as this was a type of all that was pleasant and delightful, they used the same word also symbolically to repre- sent that place of happiness in which the just await their resurrection. " Paradise " — says Parkhurst — " is in the ISTew Testament, apphed to the state of faithful souls between death and the resurrection." Hence it was the solemn good wish of the Jews, (as we learn from the Talmudists,) concerning a departed friend, " Let 208 THE LENTEN FAST. his soul be in the Garden of Eel en," or " Let his soul be gathered into the Garden of Eden." And in their prayers for a dying person, they were accustomed to say, " Let him have his por- tion in Paradise, and also in the world to come." In this form " Paradise " and " the world to come," are plainly referred to, as being two separate places and states of existence.® The same distinction is also made by St. Paul, when in speaking of different visions and revelations he had received, he mentions one in " the third Heaven," and another in " Paradise."* Dr. Doddridge, the celebrated Presbyterian divine, in his Family Expositor, thus paraj)hrases this passage — " Such an one, I say, I did most inti- mately know, who was snatched u]) into the third Heaven, the seat of divine glory and the place where Christ dwelleth at the Father's right hand, having all the celestial principalities and powers in humble subjection to him. ..... And 1 know that having been entertained with these visions of the third Heaven, on which good men ire to enter after the resiirrection, lest he should 8 Bishop Bull's Works, vol. i., p. 98. » 2 Cor. xii., 4, 6. EASTER EVEK 2C9 be impatient under the delay of his part of the glory there, he was also caught up into Paradise, that garden of God, which is the seat of liappij spirits in the intermediate state^ and during their separation from the hodyP To this place then it was that our Lord's spirit went, and there He promised that His suffering companion on the Cross should be also. " Where'er thou roam'st, one happy soul, we know, Seen at thy side m woe, Waits on Thy triumph — even as all the blest With him and Thee shall rest. Each on his cross, by Thee we hang awhile, Watching Thy patient smile. Till we have learn'd to say, "T is justly done. Only m glory, Lord, Thy sinful servant own.' "i<* In the same way, while Paradise denotes that portion of the intermediate state which was allot- ted to the just, there was also a part in whicl> the condemned awaited in misery the coming ot the day of doom. This was knoAvn by the name of Tartarus. The general term for both these places was the Hebrew word Sheol^ or as it is in the Greek, Hades^ while the word Gehenna was used to signify the place of eternal torments ^^ Keble's Easter Eve, 210 THE LENTEN FAST. aft(n' tlie iTriuTection.^^ By translating Had&s therefore by tlie English word Hell in oni* Bibles, we often entirely obscure the meaning.^^ Such is the case with that passage in the sixteenth Psahn which refers prophetically to onr Lord — " For thou wilt not leave my soul in Hell," (that is in Hades^ or the intermediate state,) " neither wilt thou suffer thy Holy One to see corruption." This text indeed shows so plainly, that while our Lord's body was in the grave. His soul was in some place called Hades, " that none but an infidel " — saith St. Augustin — " can deny it." It is in Hades that Isaiah has placed that strange ^1 As the object of the writer is to give, if possible, a simple and popular view of this subject, which is so little understood, a critical investigation of the meaning of these words would be out of place in these j^ages. The reader will find this examination carried out in Bishop Hobart's '^ork on the State of the Departed. ^2 " It is a great pity," — says Wall, {Hist. Inf. Sap.., part II., chap, viii.,) — " that the English translators of the Creed and of the Bible, did not keep the word Hades in the translation, as they have done some original words which had no English words answering to them. By translating it Hell., and the English having no other word for Gehenna (which is the place prepared for the devil and the damned,) than the same word Hell likewise, it has created a confusion in the understanding of English readers." EASTER EVEN. 211 dramatic scene, which is found in the fourteenth chapter of his prophecies. As Homer in the Odyssey (lib. xxiv.) sends the souls of the suitors to Hades, where they meet the spirits of Achilles, Agamemnon, and the other Grecian heroes they had known in life, the Hebrew prophet with the higher inspiration of truth, has given a descrip- tion which for its inimitable grandeur nothing in the pages of classical antiquity can equal. He shows the proud King of Babylon, after he had been brought to the grave, entering Slieol^ while the monarchs of the earth who had preceded him to the land of spirits, are poetically represented as rising from their seats at his appi'oach, greet- ing him with bitter scorn — *' Hades (Sheol) from beneath is moved because of thee, to meet thee at thy coming : He roused up for thee the mighty dead, all the great chiefs of the Earth : He maketh to rise up from theii* thrones, all the kings of the nations. All of them shall accost thee, and shall say unto thee : Art thou, even thou too, become weak as we ? Art thou made like unto us ? Is then thy pride brought down to the grave ; the sound of thy sprightly instruments ? Is the vermin become thy couch, and the earthworm thy covering ? 212 THE LENTEN FAST. How art thou fallen from Heaven, O Lucifer, son of tLe mornins:? Art cut down to earth, thou that didst subdue the nations ?"^^ It is in Tartarus that the fallen angels also await their sentence. St. Peter tells iis — " God spared not the angels that sinned, but cast them down to Hell (^lltrtarus^) and delivered them into chains of darkness, to be reserved unto judg- ment." And St. Jude says — " The angels which kept not their first estate, but left their own habitation, he hath reserved in everlasting chains under darkness unto the judgment of the great day." In Tartarus too was the rich man, while Lazarus was in Paradise. Dr. Campbell, another learned Presbyterian divine, and formerly Prin- cipal of Marischal College, Aberdeen, says — " There is no inconsistency in maintaining that the rich man, though in torment, was not in Gehenna^ but in that part of Hades called Tar- tarus^ where we have seen already that spirits reserved for judgment are detained in darkness. According to this explication, the rich man and Lazarus were both in Hades ^ though in ^3 Bishop Lowth's translation. EASTER EVEN. 213 very different situations, the latter in the man- sions of the happy, and the former in those of the wretched."^* 1* Prelim. Dis. vi., part 2. As the charge is often made against the Church, that she retains this Popish doctrme, we quote occasionally from distinguished Presbyterian writers, showing that they also have been forced to acknowledge its truth. On this point, no one is more explicit than President Dwight of Yale College. In his system of Theology, [Sermon clxiv.) he says — " There can^ J apprehend^ he no reasonable doiibt concerning an inter- mediate state. St. Peter says of the angels that sinned, that ' God cast them down to Hell, and delivered them into chains of darkness, to be reserved unto judgment.' St. Jude also declares them ' to be reserved,' in like man- ner, ' unto the judgment of the great day.' From these declarations it is manifest, that fallen angels have not yet received their final judgment, nor, of course, their final reward. This, indeed, seems evident from the phraseology used by St. Peter, as well as by the declarations of both him and St. Jude. The word which is rendered from St. Peter, ' cast them down to Hell,' is in the Greek TapTapwtfaj ; literally rendered, ' cast them down to Tartarus.' While this phraseology plainly declares a place of punishment, it indicates directly a different state from that, which is taught by the word /sswa, [Gehenna^ the appropriate name of Hell in the Scriptures. After the rich man died and was buried, it is said by our Saviour, ' he lifted up his eyes in Hell, being in torments ; in the Greek, sv rw a^^yj, in Hades The state, in which Lazarus Avas placed, is denoted elsewhere by the word Paradise. ' To-day,' said pur Saviour to the thief on the cross, ' thou shalt be 214 THE LENTEN FAST. The manner in wMcli the general judgment is always mentioned, may well confirm our belief in the doctrine of an intermediate state. When is there to be " rendered to every man according to his works ? " When, in other words, is each one to reap his full retribution ? Is it the mo- ment he has passed the gates of death and put off this mortal body ? This would be by no means in accordance with the declarations of Holy Writ. If we examine its promises, we shall meet with no offer of perfect blessedness which is to be ful- filled before our Lord's second coming. He him- self on one occasion declared — ^' Thou shalt be recompensed " — when ? " at the resurrection of the just." The final reward of the righteous is with me in Paradise.' But Ave know from our Saviour's own declaration, that when he gave up the ghost on the cross, his spirit went not to Hell, but to Hades or Sheol. The thief therefore went to the state which is denoted by this word, and not to that which is denoted by Heaven^ unless this Avorld is supposed to include Heaven." We might also bring forward the opinions of distin- guished divines of other denominations. For example, John Wesley, the founder of the Methodist Society, avows the doctrine clearly in his Notes on the New Testament, See on Luke xxiii., 43. 2 Cor. xii., 4. Rev. i., 18. Rev. XX., 15. So also one of his followers, Dr. Adam Clark, See in his Commentary on Heb. xi., 4(i. Rev. xv., 13. 14. EASTER EYEK 21£ always referred to the last day, at " the glorious ajDpearing of the great God, and our Saviour Jesus Christ " — " when Christ who is our life shall appear " — " when the Son of Man shall come in the glory of His Father, Avith His holy angels." Then it is that He shall recognize His faithful followers before an assembled universe, and receive them to reign with Himself in glory. It is not indeed until the solemn scenes of the judgment are over, that His own chosen Apostles will be admitted to that place, where they shall enjoy in its fullness, the presence of Him in whose footsteps they followed on earth. His declaration was — " I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto myself, that where I am there you may be also." But the time of His promised return has not yet arrived. His follow- ers have not yet entered into their final rest, nor will they, until He " comes again to receive them unto Himself" Still stronger is the inference to be drawn from that declaration of St. Paul — " For this we say unto you by the word of the Lord, that we which are alive and remain unto the coming of 216 THE LENTEN FAST. the Lord shall not prevent them which ai'e asleep. For the Lord himself shall descend from Heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God ; and the dead in Christ shall lise first. Then we, which ai'e alive and remain, shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air : and so shall we ever be with the Lord."^^ Here is an explicit account of the order in which each event shall take place at the last judgment. We learn from it then, that none have as yet entered into Heaven. If it were not so, but the just, as each individual soul jjassed from the earth, had gone at once to that place of glory, what mean- ing would there be in the Apostle's declaration, that " they which are alive and remain unto the coming of the Lord shall not prevent," that is, anticipate, or go into Heaven before, " them that are asleep," that is, the dead ! This assurance certainly would be useless, if the departed at the hour of death, had each entered into his final rest. But the Lord must first descend from Heaven — then, the dead in Christ shall be raised — then, those who are at that time living on the earth, 16 1 Thess. iv., 15, 16, 17. EASTER EVEN. 217 shall be caught up to meet their Judge — and then the army of the ransomed shall together go in to their reward. " And so," that is, after all these things have taken place, " shall be ever with the Lord." What can be more clear than the order in which these events are here laid down. In the Apocalyptic Vision, St. John represents the ancient martyrs as resting in the Paradise of God, awaiting' their reward until their brethren from the earth have joined them, that together they may enter the celestial city.- " I saw under the altar, the souls of them that were slain for the Avord of God, and for the testimony which they held : and they cried with a loud voice, saying. How long, O Lord, holy and true, doSt thou not avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth ? And white robes were given unto every one of them ; and it was said unto them, that they should rest yet for a little season, until their fellow servants also and their brethren, that should be killed as .they were, should be ful- filled."^^ Their happiness was incomplete. They are " under the altar " — not in the full presence i«i?ev. vi., 9, 10, 11. 218 THE LENTEN FAST. of God, but in a safe and holy place. Their por- tion is not yet that of perfect bliss, but only ot tranquility and peace. They are not serving God actively, as do the angels, but are at rest, await- ing their call to judgment and to Heaven. Anx- iously do they look forward to the day which is to introduce them into the joy of their Lord, and therefore their inquiry is, " How long, O Lord, holy and true ?" But they are told, that they must " rest yet for a little season," until the circle of the martyrs is completed, and the number of the elect gathered in ; that thus, in the harvest time of the earth, all who had suffered in the great cause of man's redemption — the sowers and the reapers in the world's wide field — might all rejoice together. Yet in the meanwhile, to comfort them in this state of expectation, and as some little earnest of the promise, " white robes were given unto every one of them."^^ It is singular, that exactly the same idea is given in the Apocryphal Book of Esdras, where after the writer had mada inquiry of the angel with regard to the mysteries of the world to ?ome, he receives this reply — '^ Did not the souls ^'^ See Newman's Sermon on this passage, vol. iii., p. 399, EASTER EVEK 219 also of the rigliteous ask question of these things in their chambers, saying, How long shall I hope on this fashion ? When cometh the fruit of the floor of our reward? And unto these thinsfs Uriel the archangel gave them answer, and said, Even when the number of seeds is filled in you " — that is, when the number of the elect is accom- plished.^^ 13 Esdras^ iv., 35, 36. Dr. Macknight, another cele- brated Presbyterian divine, supports the same views. For instance, in his commentary on Heb. xi., ;>9, 40, he says — " The Apostle's doctrine, that believers are all to he reicarded together aiid at the same thne, is agreeable to Christ's declaration, who told His disciples that they were not to come to the place He was going away to prepare for them, till He returned from Heaven to carry them to it (John xiv., 3.) Further, that the righteous are not to be rewarded till the end of the world, is evident from Christ's words (Matt, xiii., 40, 43.) In like manner St, Peter hath told us, that the righteous are to be made glad with their reward at the revelation of Christ (1 Pet. iv., 13.) John also tells us, that when He shall appear, we shall be made like Him, for we shall see Him as He is (1 John iii., 2.) This determination, not to reicard the ancie?its loithout us, is highly/ proper, because the power and veracity of God will be more illustriously displayed in the view of angels and men, by raising the whole of Abra- ham's seed from the dead at once, and by introducing them i'^to the heavenly country in a body, after the public acquittal at the judgment ; than if each were made perfect separately at their deaths 220 THE LENTEN FAST. Another strong proof from Scripture is fonnd in that mysterious dedaration of St. Peter, with regard to our Lord — " Being put to death in the flesh, but quickened by the Spirit ; by which also. He went and preached unto the spirits in prison, which sometime were disobedient, when once the long suffering of God waited in the days of Noah." Many attempts have been made to ex- plain away this text, yet when carefully analyzed, its natural rendering seems to present a full con- firmation of the doctrine of an intermediate state. The most masterly discussion of it is given by Bishop Horsley,^* where he proves conclusively, that in its interpretation by the ancient Church, it was always referred to the descent of our Lord into the place of departed spirits. Let us then as briefly as possible follow his train of reasoning in the explanation of this verse. The meaning of the whole passage turns upon the interpretation we give to the words " spirits in prison." " The invisible mansion of departed spirits " — says Bishop Horsley — " though cer- tainly not a place of penal confinement to the good, is nevertheless in some respects a prison, ^ HoRSLEY's Sermons, vol. ii., p. 86, Serm. xx. EASTER EYEN. 22] It is a place of seclusion from the external world^ a place of unfinislierl happiness, consisting in rest, security, and hope, rather than enjoyment. It is a place which the souls of men never would have entered, had not sin intr.oduced death, and from which there is no exit by any natural means for those who have once entered. The deliver- ance of the saints from it is to be effected by our Lord's power. As a place of confinement, there- fore, though not of punishment, it may well be called a prison. The original word however in this text imports not of necessity so much as this but merely a place of safe keeping : for so this passage might be rendered wdth great exactness. He went and preaclied to the spirits in safe Iceep- ing. And the invisible mansion of departed spirits is to the righteous a place of safe keeping, where they are preserved under the shadow of God's right hand, as their condition sometimes is described in Scripture, till the season shall arrive for their advancement to future glory; as the souls of the wicked, on the other hand, are reserved in the other division of the same place, unto the judgment of the great day. Now if Christ went and preached to souls of men thus 222 THE LENTEN FAST. in prison, or in safe keeping, surely He went to tlie prison of those souls, or to the'j^lace of their custody ; and what place that should be but the Hell of the Apostles' Creed, to which our Loi'd descended, I have not met with the critic that could explain. The souls in custody, or in prison, to whom our Saviour went in His disembodied soul and preached, were those which formerly were disobedient. The ex])YQ^^\on formerly were, or one while had been disobedient, implies, that they were recovered from that disobedience, and, before their death, had been brought to repent- ance and faith in the Redeemer to come. To such souls He went and preached." The meaning of the sentence, " being put to death in the flesh, but quickened by the Spirit," must also claim our attention. The word " Spirit," is here used in antithesis to the one translated " flesh." If therefore the latter refers, as it ne- cessarily does, to that part of our Lord's nature on which alone death could take effect, that is, his body ; the former must refer to that part over which the Destroyer had no power, that is, his Boul. And as the word " quickened " is often used to signify, not merely a restoration of life EASTER EYEK ' 223 i^hich has been extinguishecl, but the preserva- tion of life wliicli then subsists, the Apostle's words may be well rendered — " Being put to death in the flesh, but quick in the Spirit," that is, surviving in His soul the stroke of death which His body had sustained, " by which," or rather " in which," that is, in which surviving soul, " he went and preached to the souls of men in safe keeping." Such is the rendering given by Mr. Polwbele in his Essay on the State of the Soul after Death. '' The original words " — he says — " are very strong and decisive. Literally sig- nifying, ' dead in His body ' — ' lighted up with new life in His soul.' Escaped from the burden of His mortal body, His soul was animated with a more ardent vivacity — was rendered capable of more powerful energies, and with a life thus kindled into a brighter flame, He went and preached to the spirits whose bodies had perished in the deluge." Another jDoint with reference to this text re- mains to be inquired into — why are the ante- diluvians especially mentioned as being those to whom this preaching was addressed ? Were not the souls of all who since their day had died in 224 THE LENTEN FAST. penitence, equally interested in our Lord's mea- sage ? " To tliis I can only answer " — saya Bishop Horsley — " that I think I have observed, in some jDarts of Scripture, an anxiety, if the ex- pression may be allowed, of the sacred writers to convey distinct intimations that the antedilu- vian race is not uninterested in the redemption and the final retribution It may be conceived, that the souls of those who died in the dreadful visitation of the deluo^e mio:ht from that circumstance have peculiar apprehensions of them- selves, as the marked victims of divine vengeance, and might peculiarly need the consolation which tbe preaching of our Lord in the subterranean regions afforded to these prisoners of hope." Did He then publish those lofty doctrines of the Gospel, which now form the themes of His earthly ministers — the obligation of repentance and faith, by which the children of tins world are summoned to their Lord ? AVe answer, no — • for He was not offering a new period of proba- tion to the generation which died " in the days of Noah." Their condition for Eternity was set- tled, when the rushing flood overwhelmed them and they perished amid the ruins of the Elder EASTER EVEN. 225 world. Yet miglit He not liave proclaimed to those, wlio having died in penitence, had been thus waiting and watching for ages, that at length the mighty sacrifice was offered up — that He had finished the work of redemption — and was now going to plead as their Intercessor before His Father's throne ? Might He not thus give assurance to the hope, to which for so long a time they had been cleaving ? We see nothing improbable in the idea. Such then is the analysis and rendering of this passage, in which the most celebrated divines agree. If they have interpreted it aright, it proves most conclusively the fact of the descent into Hades. And through many ages of the Church, this text was relied upon as a principal foundation of this Catholic doctrine. St. Austin is stated to have been the first writer who ven- tured to doubt that this was the literal sense of St. Peter's declaration. In the Articles of Keli- gion adopted at the Convention held in 1552, the sixth year of Edward VI., and published by the King's authority in the following year, the third article is in these words — " As Christ died and was buried for us, so also it is to be believed 228 THE LENTEN FAST. that He went clown into Hell ; for the body lay in the sejDulchre until the resurrection, but His ghost departing from Him, was with the ghosts that were in prison, or in Hell, as the place of St. Peter doth testify." When however, ten years later, in the fifth year of Queen Elizabeth, the Thirty-nine Articles were adopted in their present form, while Christ's descent into Hell was still asserted, the proof of it from this text of St. Peter was omitted.^^ We think however, that the Church by setting forth this passage in the Epis- tle for Easter Even, seems to imply that it should be rendered as referring to our Lord's soul, par- ticularly as it is follow^ed by the Gos]3el, which describes so clearly the condition of the other part of His nature. We will present one more passage from Scrip- ture. In Pev. XX., 13, 14, we find this description given of the conclusion of all things earthly — the final triumph of the human race over death — • and the abandonment forever of the intermediate state. " And Death and Hell {Hades) delivered ap the dead which were in them ; and they were judged every man according to their works. ^ Bishop HoKSELEY, vol. ii., p. 99 EASTER EVEN. • 227 And Deatli and Hell {Hade-s) were cast into the lake of fire. This is the second death." By this sublime personification it is clearly stated, that Death shall deliver up the bodies, and Hades the spirits which were subject to their dominion, and that then the latter shall be destroyed. Di Thos. Scott in his Commentary, thus paraphrased this passage — " The grave, and separate state, will give up the bodies and souls contained in them, so that the whole multitude, which shall have lived upon earth shall experience a reunion of their souls with their bodies. Then Death and Hell, the grave and the separate state (represented as two persons,) will ' be cast into the lake of fire ;' that is, they shall subsist no longer, to receive the bodies and souls of men ; there shall be no death in Heaven ; and all the wicked will be cast into the place of torment, in which death and the separate state will be swal- lowed up : for ' this is the second death,' the final separation of sinners from God, without hopes of being restored to His favor, or dehvered froni His wrath." Dr. Campbell (the same Presbyte- rian divine from whom we have already quoted,) thus renders it — " The death which consists in 228 . THE LEXTEN FAST. the separation of the soul- from the body, and the state of souls intervening between death and judgment shall be no more. To the wicked, these shall be succeeded by a more terrible death, the second death, the damnation of Gehenna, Hell properly so called. Indeed, in this sacred book, the commencement, as well as the destruction of this intermediate state, are so clearly marked, as to render it impossible to mistake them. In chap, vi., 8, we learn that Hades follows close at the heels of death. ' And I looked, and behold, a pale horse, and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell {Hades) followed with him.' From this passage, in chap, xx., we learn also, that both are involved in one common ruin at the uni- versal judgment." Such is a brief statement of the Scripture argu- ment for this doctrine. We now pass on to the consideration, tliat it lias always^ even from Pri- mitive Times^ been an Article of Faith in tJie Catholic Cliurch, The learned Bingham expli- citly declares it to have been the belief of the early Church, that " the soul is but in an imper- fect state of happiness till the Eesurrection, when the whole man shall obtain a complete EASTER EVEK 229 victory over deatli, and by the last judgment be establislied in an endless state of consummate happiness and glory."^^ St. Clement, of whom the Apostle Paul speaks as his " fellow laborer, whose name is in the Book of Life," thus writes in -his Epistle to the Corinthians — " All the ^fenerations from Adam to this day are past and gone, but they that have finished their course in charity, according to the grace of Christ, j)ossess the region of the godly, who shall be manifested in the visitation of the kingdom of Christ. For it is written, * Enter into thy chambers, for a very little while, till my wrath and fury be passed over, and I will remember the good day, and will raise you again out of your graves.' "^^ Justin Martyr, who lived about the middle of the second century, in his dialogue with Trypho, among the Catholic doctrines taught him when he first became a Christian, delivers this for one — "That the souls of the godly, (after death till the resurrection,) remain in a certain better region, and unrighteous and wicked souls in an 2^ Orig. Ecdes.^ lib. xv., chap. 3, sec. 16. ^ Patres Apos. Cotel^ vol. i., p. 276. 230 THE LENTEN FAST. evil one." And in the very same book lie con- demns as an error in the Gnostics, their holding the belief — " That as soon as they die, their souls are received up into Heaven."^ Similar to this is the testimony of Irenseus, who lived also in the second century. In argu- ing against some ancient heretics, who held, that when they died their souls went at once to Heaven, he urges against them the example of * our Saviour, " who," says he, " observed in Him- self the law of dead persons, and did not pre- sently after His death go to Heaven, but stayed three days in the place of the dead Whereas then our Lord went into the midst of the shadow of death, where the souls of deceased persons abode, and then afterwards rose again in the body, and was after his resurrection taken up to Heaven, it is plain that the souls of His disciples, for whose sake the Lord did these things, shall go likewise to that invisible place appointed to them by God, and there abide till the resurrec- tion, waiting for the time thereof; and afterward receiving their bodies, and rising again perfectly, i. 6. in their bodies as our Lord did, shall so «8 Bishop Bull, vol. i., p. 110. EASTER EVEN. 231 come to the sight of God.''^^ Again, in his fifth Book, he expressly distinguishes Paradise trom the Kingdom of Heaven, and reckons it a lower degree of happiness ^' to enjoy the delights of Paradise," than " to be counted worthy to dwell in Heaven." But yet he acknowledges that the Saviour shall be seen in both, '' according as they shall be worthy or meet who see Him." And he concludes the chapter with the declaration, " that those that are saved shall proceed by degrees to their perfect beatitude." That is, that they shall, as St. Ambrose says, " through the refreshments of Paradise, arrive at the full glories of the Hea- venly kingdom."^^ Tertullian, who lived at the close of the second century, calls Paradise, " a place of divine plea- santness, appointed to receive the spirits of the saints."^^ He says also, " Heaven is not yet open to any, the earth, or Hell, being yet shut, but that at the end of the world, the Kingdom of Heaven shall be unlocked." Again — " All souls are in Hell (Hades,) that there are both punish- 24 Wall on Inf. Bap.^ part ii., chap. 8. 25 Bishop Bull, pp. Ill, 112. 26 Ibid. p. 112. 232 THE LENTEN FAST. ments and rewards, tliat botli Dives and Lazarus are there, tliat tlie soul is botli punished and comforted in Hell {Hades^ in expectation of the future judgment."^"^ And even after he had fallen into the heresy of the Montanists, he was obliged to admit this to be a Catholic doctrine, " that the good souls in that subterranean region, do enjoy a happiness not to be despised, that they do in the bosom of Abraham receive the comfort of the Resurrection to come, that is, that they are at present in a state of rest and happiness, and live in a sure and certain hope of a greater happiness at the resurrection."^^ In the same way, the author of Questions and Answers to the Orthodox, (who is supposed to have lived in the fourth century,) in his reply to the seventy-fifth question, having said that in this life there is no difference as to worldly concerns, between the righteous and the wicked, imme- diately adds — '' But after death, presently the righteous are separated from the unrighteous. For they are carried by angels into their meet places. And the souls of the righteous are con- 27 Lord King's Hist, of Apos. Creed, p. 114. 28 Bishop Bull, p. 113. EASTER EVEN. 233 veyecl into Paradise, where tliey enjoy the con- versation and sight of Angels and Archangels, and of oar Saviour Christ also by way of vision: according to what is said, when we are absent from the body, we are present with the Lord. Bat the souls of the uni'ighteous are carried to the infernal regions, &c. And they, (that is, both sorts of souls,) are kept in their meet places till the day of the Resurrection and recom- pense.''^^ Novatian, in the tliird century, says — " Those places Avhich lie under the earth, are not empty of distinguished and ordered powers ; for that is the place whither the souls both of the godly and ungodly are led, receiving the forejudgment of their future doom." Lactantius, of the same century, says — "None should think, that soulg were immediately judged after death; for they are all detained in one common custody, till the time shall come when the greatest Judge shall examine their respective merits." Hilary, in the middle of the fourth century, says — " It is the necessary law of nature, that bodies should be buried, and that souls should descend into hell^ 29 Bishop Bull, p. 123. 234 THE LKXTKN FAST. where they are reserved for an entrance into the Heavenly kingdom by the custody of the Lord, to wit, in the bosom of Abraham, unto which a great gulf hinders the wicked from approach- ing."^^ Such indeed is the uniform testimony of the Fathers of the early Church. They believed not that the departed had already entered into the perfect bliss of Heaven, but, (in the words of St. Chrysostom,) " that they will not be crowned before us, God having appointed one time of cor- onation for all." On this doctrine also were founded those Commendatory Prayers for the dead, which were used in the ancient Liturgies. These, known by the names of St. Peter's, St. James's, St. Mark's, (or St. Cyril's,) and St. John's Liturgy, w^ere used in the Oriental Churches, and, as has been shown by Mr. Palmer, in his Antiquities of the English Ritual, are undoubtedly the four original forms from which all the Liturgies in the world have been taken. '' They resemble one another too much to have grow^n up independently, and too little to have been copied from one another." ^ Quoted in Lord King's Jlisti of Ajws. Creed^ p. 2]4- 215-216. EASTER EVEN. ' 235 One point of correspondence is, that eaeli of thero has a prayer in the Communion Service, " for the peace of all those who have departed this life in God's faith and fear," concluding with a petition for communion with them. A portion of this prayer was in these words — " We commend unto Thy mercy, O Lord, all other Thy servants, which are departed hence from us with the sign of faith, and now do rest in the sleep of peace : grant unto them, we beseech Thee, Tliy mercy and everlasting peace ; and that at the day of the general resurrection, we, and all they which be of the mystical body of Thy Son, may altogether be set at His right hand, and hear that His most joyful voice, ' Come unto me, O ye that be blessed of My Father, and possess the kingdom which is prepared for you from the beginning of the world.' Grant this, O Father, for Jesus Christ's sake, our only Mediator and Advocate." This prayer was retained in the Liturgy in " Edward VI.'s 1st Book," but altered in the 2d, at the instigations of Bucer and Calvin. This was pro- bably done, as Mr. Palmer conjectures, because these prayers were so connected in the minds of the common people with the idea of purgatory, 236 THE LENTEIlT FAST. that tlieir continuance would have invoh^ed the risk of propagating this pernicious error. As remodeled, the prayer in our service now stands thus — " And we also bless Thy holy name for all Thy servants de])arted this life in Thy faith and fear, beseeching Thee to give us grace to follow their good examples, that with them we may be partakers of Thy heavenly kingdom. We do not pretend to discuss the proj)riety of these prayers ; we only mention their existence in the ancient Liturgies, as furnishing a proof of the belief of the Church in the state of Paradise after death. '^ This custom" — said the learned Bishop Collier — " seems to have gone on the principle that supreme happiness is not to be expected till the resurrection ; and that the inter- val between death and the end of the world, is a state of imperfect bliss."^^ Thus it is then that the Church has inherited this truth, and so she has retained it. Her third Article is — ^''As Christ died for us, and was buried, so also it is to be believed, that He went down into Hell ; " while in her creed she teaches 81 Eccles. Hist, of Great Britain^ Part II., Book IV., o 257. EASTER EYEN. 237 her cliilclren ever to confess — " He descended into Hell ; " inserting in the margin by way of explanation, " He went into the place of departed spirits." In the same way she recognizes the doctrine of the intermediate state in all her pubhc • offices. She never speaks of the fullness of joy as something to be attained by the ^Christian immediately after death, but looks forward to it with hope, as a consummation to follow the second coming of our Lord, the resurrection of the dead, and the judgment of the last day. Thus in the collect for the first Sunday in Advent, we pray, that '' when Christ shall come again in His glorious majesty to judge both the quick and dead, we may rise to the life immortal." In the Burial Service, as we might naturally expect, we find a plain distinction made between the rest we are to inherit at death, and that which is to be our portion at the last day. For instance, in one of the concluding prayers, we entreat the Father, " that when we shall depa]-t this life, we may rest in Him ; and that at the general resurrection in the last day, we may be found acceptable in His sight, and receive that blessing which His well beloved Son shall then 238 THE LENTEN FAST. pronounce to those who love and fear Hnn, say- ing, Come, ye blessed children of my Father, receive the kingdom prepared for you from the beginning of the world." Here, two sepai*ate times and two distinct rewards are mentioned.. In the same way, in one of the otlier prayers, after speaking of " those who have finished their course in faith," as " now resting from their labors," we are taught to look forward to a still higher stage of felicity to which they may reach, and therefore pray — " And we beseech Thee, that we, with all those who are departed in the true faith of Thy holy name, may have our per- fect consummation and bliss, both in body and soul, in Thy eternal and evei'lasting glory."^* Again — another argument in support of this doctrine is derived from its heing so evidently in accordance with reason. A belief indeed in the immediate entrance of the soul into its full reward 32 This prayer in the service of the Church of England is even more explicit, where the petition is oiFered to God, " of His gracious goodness shortly to accomplish the num- ber of His elect, and to hasten His kingdom : that we, with all those that are departed in the true faith of His holy name, may have our perfect consummation and bliss both in body and soul." EASTER EVEN. • 239 or punisliment is one wliicli necessarily leads us into inextricable difficulties. Each individual passes tlirougli his probation here, a compound being, the earthly and the spiritual united by a chain, the links of .which we can not discover, though we daily and hourly feel the influence of one part of our nature upon the other. The material and the immaterial sin and suffer together. Tempting and being tempt- ed, they go through life — the spirit by its imag- inings urging on its sluggish partner to action, while the body by the outv\^ard sense trammels down the soul, to become " of the earth, earthly." Participating in the same acts, and deserving of the same recompense, should they not be united before they fully enter on that state of bliss or woe which is to be unchanged through eternity ? Can we indeed conceive of any retribution which will fitly reward man for all his doings here, if it does not act upon both parts of his nature ? Can he fully rejoice or suffer, while existing as a purely spiritual being, in this state of separation ? Can we believe therefore that he will receive his final sentence — or that there will be any use in pro- nouncing it — until he stands before the throne, 240 THE LENTEN FAST. tlie same he was in every resj^ect, wliile living a probationer here ? "Why then shonlcl he enter into his final state before that hour arrives ? ^gain — supposing that he does pass at once into Heaven or Hell, judgment in that case must be pronounced upon him as soon as his spirit leaves the body. Must not then the process of finally acquitting or condemning the disembodied souls which each hour are winging their flight to the eternal world, be ceaselessly going on ? This would indeed entirely set aside the general judg- ment of the last day, unless we can suppose the absurdity, that now the spirit is judged, but then the body alone will stand up for retribution. For what could it be but an empty show, to recall from Heaven the countless tribes of the just after they have been glorified there for ages, and then once more to return them to that abode, with the sentence, " Enter ye into the joy of your Lord ! " Bishop Sherlock, in his '' Practical Dis- course concerning a Future Judgment," sums up this argument in a single sentence — '' And the truth is, if all men have a final sentence passed on them as soon as they go into the other world, it is very unaccountable, why Christ at the last EASTER EVEN. 241 day sliall come with sucli a terrible pomp and solemnity to judge and condemn those, who are judged, and condemned, and executed already as much as they can ever be." But the plain teaching of Scripture is, that there should be a day at the end of the world, when not only the unnumbered multitudes of the human race, but also the apostate angels who are " reserved in chains " against that solemn hour, sliall together receive the sentence Avhich all eternity can not reverse.. Our Lord is now represented, standing as Mediator before the throne of His Father, and not until the mighty drama of this world is entirely concluded, will He ascend the tribunal of judgment. l^either, on the other hand, can it be argued, that this admission to a state of rest merely and imperfect bliss, would in any way forestall the judgment of the last day, or that the solemnities of Christ's tribunal would be rendered vain by that previous knowledge of our destiny, which must be gained from our intermediate state. " The condition of one who dies in his sins, and awakes to a sense of the retribution that awaits him, may, not inaptly, be compared to that of a 242 THE LENTEN FAST. criminal wlio is cominitted to a gaol for trial j witliout the slightest hope of escaping conviction. It could hardly be said of such a person, that his fear and anguish there would forestall the solem- nities of justice, and render nugatory the subse- quent administration and execution of the law. The forms and proceedings of earthly justice do not indeed, provide a precisely similar illustration to the case of those who have persevered in well doing; but nevertheless, we are unable to com- prehend, why the analogy should not likewise be extended to them. What is there unreasonable in the surmise, that a righteous man may awaken from death to that full assurance of acquittal and acceptance which some have affirmed to be at- tainable even in the present life ? Why may he not be placed in a state of which the enjoyment shall consist in the knowledge that his trials and agitations are at an end, that the forgiveness of his sins is finally sealed, and that a reward will at some period be assigned him, proportioned to his faithfulness, by the infallible wisdom and goodness of his Judge f'^ How natural then seems the order of events, ® British Critic^ No. 17. EASTER EVEN". 243 when we adopt the belief of an intermediate state ! New light is thus poured upon many a passage of Scripture, while every difficulty which was suggested by the reason, at once passes away. There we behold the departed, resting in their separate mansions, through all the ages which intervene between the hour of death and the final consummation of all things. In peace the just repose, for the cares and sorrows of tliis lower world have passed away for ever, and in the full assurance of hope they look forward to tliat hour, when their ^' Lord shall be revealed from Heaven," and they be admitted to the full- ness of joy, in the " place which he hath prepared for them." There also, yet separated by " a gulf which they can not pass,"^* are the wicked. The I'ecord of a wasted life is ever before them, for already conscience has commenced her work, and they feel the gnawings of that worm which dieth not for ever. In trembling and fear there- fore, they await the revolution of that cycle of ao:es, and the comino; of that day of decision, when they shall be forced to descend to a deeper, more awful state of torment. Thus it is, that the ®* Zuke, xvi., 26. 244 THE LENTEN >\iST. general judgment becomes, as Scripture repre sents it, the winding up of tliis world's hLstory There, the descendants of Adam, of " every kin dred, and tongue, and people, and nation," meet for the last time — they are "judged for their works " — the final separation is made — and they pass away, to begin their endless retribution.^^ A single question more remains to be answered. ^^ It will be at once perceived, that this doctrine is widely different from the belief of the Romanists in Pur- gatory. Their doctrine is, (as given in their own words) — " Some there are, though I fear but few, that have before their death so fully cleared all accounts with the Divine Majesty, and washed away all their stains in the blood of the Lamb, as to go straight to Heaven after death; and such as those stand not in need of our prayers! Others there are, and their numbers are very great, who die in the guilt of deadly sin, and such as these go straight to Hell, like the rich glutton in the Gospel, St. Luke, xvi., and therefore cannot be bettered by our prayers. But besides these two kinds, there are many Christians, who, when they die, are neither so perfectly pure and clean, as to exempt them from the least spot or stain, nor yet so unhappy as to die under the guilt of unrepented deadly sin. Now such as these the Church believes to be, for a time, in a middle state, which we call Purgatory; and these are they who are capable of receiving benefit by our prayers." — The Catholic Christian Instructed. By the Most JRev^ Dr. Challoner. EASTER EVEN. 246 It is the inquiry, What vja-s the object of our Lord's descent into the place of departed Spirits f ' One end answered by it was, that in this respect also He conformed Himself to the lot oftliose ivhose nature He had assumed. When He left " the glory which He had with the Father before the world was," it seems to have been His purpose to become " like unto us in all things, sin only ex- cepted." He passed through every trial to which frail humanity is subjected. His were the feeble- ness and pains of wailing infancy — the cares which gather around the years of manhood — the shrink- ins: of nature at the sicrht of death — and the last convulsive struggle which bursts the prison-house of clay. And even when He entered the gates of the grave. He continued to tread the same path in which each one of us — His brethren after the flesh — must one day walk. His body was c(mimitted to the tomb, after a time to be awak- ened again as an incorruptible and spiritual body, freed from all human infirmities, and then to pass into the Heavens. And for the same reason must His soul also abide in the resting place of those He came to redeem, until the hour in which it was to be once more united with His body. Thus 246 THE LENTEN FAST. it was. tnat the humiliation of the Son of God was not confined to this world. It did not end with the agonies of the Crucifixion. It continued even after he had passed the veil which separates the living from the dead. As a disembodied spirit, He found that He must still acknowledge brother- hood with mortals from the earth. Again — our Lord thus proved to us the cer- tainty of our victory over Hades. We point to the resurrection, and say, " Thus it is that we know we also shall triumph over the grave. He hath burst the band of death asunder, and with the like power shall His people also be gifted." This it is, which sheds a glory around the tomb, and lights up its gloomy caverns with a celestial radiance. But would not the work have been incomplete, if no pledge had been given us of the Spirit's victory in the invisible Avorld — if our Master had neglected to point out the path it also was to tread, in the interval between " death and the re- surrection ? " But " He hath done all things well." Nothing was left unaccomplished. His grace was displayed even in the mansions of the departed, and to us therefore they are divested of all ter- EASTER EVEN. 241 ror. " His soul was not left in Hades," neither shall His children be forever detained there. He now " has the keys of Hell {Hades) and of Death," and shall release them when the appointed hour comes, that they too may ascend as He did, to tlie " fullness of joy." And may we not add also, that another object of His descent was, tliat He might there proclaim the news of His redemjJtion to the spirits which ivere in safe Iceejying f We have already alluded to this, when discussing that difficult passage in St. Peter, and stated what must have been the manner of His preaching. There, the righteous had rested for ages, in anticipation of that future atonement which was to be wrought out by the Son of God. Is there any thing strange then in the idea, that when that ransom had been paid, which secured their salvation, and the power of their great Enemy was forever broken, He should descend and unfold these glorious tidings to the countless myriads of the redeemed ? While on earth, they had looked forward with the anticipa- tion of hope, and "rejoiced to see that day" even through the mist of intervening centuiies ; 248 THE LENTEN FAST. but now, these visions were realized and tlie Messiah Himself proclaims, that " it is finished." "The passage in St. Peter, which speaks of Christ as having ' preached to the spirits,' gives, we think" — says an eloquent living writer — ''something of foundation to the opinion, that whilst His body was in in the sepulchre, Christ preached to sj^irits in the separate state, opening up to them, probably, those mysteries of redemp- tion into which even angels, before-time, had vainly striven to look. The kings, and the pro- phets, and the righteous men, who had desired to see the things which appostles saw, and had not seen them, and hear the things which they heard, and had^ not heard them — unto these, it may be, Christ brought a glorious roll of intelli- gence ; and we can imagine Him standing in the midst of a multitude which no man can number, who had all gone down to the chambers of death with but indistinct and far-off glimpses of the promised Messiah, and explained to the eager assembly the beauty, and the stability of that deliverance which He had just wrought out through obedience and blood-shedding. And, oh, there must then have gone forth a tide of the EASTER EVEK 2i9 very loftiest gladness tlirougli the listening crowds of the separate state ; and then, perhaps, for the first time, admiration and extacy summoning out the music, was heard that anthem, whose rich peal rolls down the coming eternity, 'Worthy, worthy, worthy is the Lamb.' Then, it may be, for the first time, did Adam embrace all tli-e mag- nificence of the promise, that ' the seed of the woman should bruise the serpent's head ;' and x\braliam understand how the well-being of the human population depended on one that should spring from his own loins ; and David ascertain all the meaning of mysterious strains, which, as prefiguring Messiah, he had swept from the harp- strings. Then too, the long train of Aaron's line, who had stood at the altar, and slain the victims, and burnt the incense, almost weighed down by a ritual, the import of whose ceremo- nies was but indistinctly made known — then, it may be, they were suddenly and sublimely taught the power of every figure, and the ex]3ression of every rite ; whilst the noble company of prophets, holy men who ' spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost,' but who, rapt into the future, uttei'ed much wbicli only the future could deve]o23 — these, 250 THE LEXTEN FAST. as tliougli starting from the sleep of ages, sprang into the centre of that gorgeons panorama of truth which they had been commissioned to ont^ line, but over whose spreadings there had rested the cloud and the mist ; and Isaiah thrilled at the glories of his own saying, ' unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given ;' and Hosea grasped all the mightiness of the declaration, which he had poured forth whilst denouncing tlie a2:)osta- cies of Samaria, ' O Death, I will be thy plagues ; O Grave, I will be thy destruction.' " AYe know not why it may not thus be consid- ered that the day of Christ's entrance into the separate state w^as, like the Pentecostal day to the Church upon earth, a day of the rolling off of obscurity from the plan of redemption, and of showing how ' glory, honor and immortality,' were made accessible to the remotest of the world's families ; a day on which a thousand types gave place to realities and a thousand predictions leaj^ed into fulfillment ; a day therefore, on which there circulated through the enormous gatherings of Adam and his elect posterity, already ushered into rest, a gladness which had never yet been reached in all the depth of their beatifical repose. EASTER EVEK 251 And neitlier, then, can we discover cause why Christ may not be thought to have filled the office of preacher to the buried tribes of the righteous, and thus to have assumed that character which he has never since laid aside, that of ' a ministcir of the sanctuary, and of the true tabernacle which the Lord pitched, and not man.' ''^^ This then is the doctrine of the Intermediate state. Comfortable indeed to man in his feeble- ness is the thought, that even in this respect his Lord hath prepared the way for him ! The j^ath which connects this world of toil and sorrow with one of songs and gladness, has been clearly pointed out. It is still radiant with his Master's footsteps, and His followers may tread it with- out fear. And if, when all things are bright before him, he realizes this but feebly, yet to him also there must come " a time to suffer and be silent," when spiritual promises alone will be able to satisfy the intense longings of his soul. As man journeys onward through an evil world, the glory of this lower life fades away — its hues of beauty disappear — and are lost at last as the clouds gather around his setting sun. Beautifully ^ Melyill's Sermons^ vol. i., p. 49. 252 THE LENTEN FAST. indeed does one of England's Christian poeta portray this change which passes over all things, thus weaning the Spirit away from this earth, and disposing it to look to Heaven. " Heaven lies about us iu our iftfaucy ! Shades of the prison-house begin to close Upon the growing Boy, j But he beholds the light, and whence it flows, He sees it in his joy; The Youth, who daily farther fi'om the east Must travel still, is Nature's Priest, And by the vision splendid Is on his way attended ; At length the man perceives it die away. And fade into the light of common day."^"^ Such is truly the sorrowful process of man's life. One by one the objects in which he had garnered up his affections pass away, until often in the gray twilight of his days he is left alone and desolate. Then indeed if he look around for sympathy, from the busy, earnest world about him there comes forth no response. Orestes-like he seeks for peace with a deeper yearning than that suppliant in the ancient Grecian Drama,*^ ^"^ Wordsworth's Ode — " Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood." ^s -^SCHYL. Eumen. EASTER EVEN. 253 yet he seeks in vain. The flowers of his earthly Paradise are faded, and its cisterns broken. Memory lifts up her voice within him, like the archangel's trump, summoning from their forgot- ten graves, thoughts and scenes which long since had passed away. Their images rise up mourn- fully, as it were to mock him, for he knows that the reality can never return. For him is reserved only the lonely night, which stealing insensibly on, is ever deepening its shadows about his path. When therefore this world thus vanishes away and life by its own vicissitudes has taught him the lesson of his vanity — when nothing but evils seem to " choke Time's groaning tide " — how cheering is the thought, that the future yet re- mains to be his certain heritage ! He raises his eyes above the gathering darkness and the clouds which surround him, and beholds beyond them, that land which is always radiant with a celestial glory. The past, with its sorrowful memories, is forgotten, and he lives only in the anticipations of the future. He is not driven forward to the coming world without " knowing the things that shall befall him there." He is sustained by the " hope which maketh not ashamed." And thug 254 THE LENTEN FAST. he passes along througli the remaining days of his pilgrimage, sharing in that spirit which the old artists attempted to embody in their delinea- tions of Faith when they represented her tread- ing a rugged and thorny road, yet clasping the Cross to her heart, and her eyes intently fixed upon the calm, clear Heavens above. He feels that Death shall only come like the Angel to the Apostles, bursting the bars of his prison- house, and leading him forth to the light and to the day. His spirit pines within him for the sweet waters of the River of Life. The voices of the dead too, who have gone before, come solemnly to his ears, as they urge him to press onward to the promised land. There, his wan- derings shall end, and the pilgrim staif be forever cast aside. There he shall be at peace in the mansions of rest, with the mighty army of patri- archs and apostles, and confessors and martyrs, who have already slept in the faith. Cheered by a brighter manifestation of his Master's pre- sence than can be his lot in this world, he shall await his full reward, and the crown which shall be given him at the last day. With what un- EASTER EVEN. 255 wavering confidence may he tlien look up and say— f > . '• Soon wilt Thou take us to Thy tranquil bower To rest one little hour, Till Thine elect are number'd, and the grave Call Thee to come and save : Then on thy bosom borne shall we descend, Again with earth to blend, Earth all refin'd with bright supernal fires, Tinctur'd with holy blood, and wing'd mth pure desires. Meanwhile, with every son and saint of Thine Along the glorious line. Sitting by turns beneath Thy sacred feet We '11 hold communion sweet. Know them by look and voice, and thank them all For helping us in thrall. For words of hope, and bright examples given To show through moonless skies that there is light in Heaven."^^ Thus ages shall glide by, until the history of this world is completed, and the namber of the elect made np. Then our long expected Lord shall descend with a shout — the dust of each one of the saints be collected from the four winds, united again to its former partner, as the spirit comes forth from its resting-place, and all shall ^ Keble's Easter Eve. 2 56 THE LENTEN FAST. gather around the throne of Him whom they followed while on earth, ready to receive the sen- tence — "Well done, good and faithful servants, enter ye into the joy of your Lord." This shall be the Great Easter of the Earth. THE END. 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