The grand sacrilege of the Church of Rome, in taking away the sacred cup from the laiety at the Lords Table: detected, and conuinced by the euidence of holy Scripture, and testimonies of all ages successiuely from the first propagation of the catholike Christian faith to this present: together with two conferences; the former at Paris with D. Smith, now stiled by the Romanists B of Calcedon; the later at London with M Euerard, priest: by Dan. Featly, Doctor in Diuinity.

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Title
The grand sacrilege of the Church of Rome, in taking away the sacred cup from the laiety at the Lords Table: detected, and conuinced by the euidence of holy Scripture, and testimonies of all ages successiuely from the first propagation of the catholike Christian faith to this present: together with two conferences; the former at Paris with D. Smith, now stiled by the Romanists B of Calcedon; the later at London with M Euerard, priest: by Dan. Featly, Doctor in Diuinity.
Author
Featley, Daniel, 1582-1645.
Publication
London :: Printed by Felix Kyngston for Robert Milbourne, and are to be sold in Pauls Churchyard at the signe of the Greyhound,
1630.
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Subject terms
Smith, Richard, 1566-1655.
Everard, Thomas, 1560-1633.
Catholic Church -- Controversial literature -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A00597.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The grand sacrilege of the Church of Rome, in taking away the sacred cup from the laiety at the Lords Table: detected, and conuinced by the euidence of holy Scripture, and testimonies of all ages successiuely from the first propagation of the catholike Christian faith to this present: together with two conferences; the former at Paris with D. Smith, now stiled by the Romanists B of Calcedon; the later at London with M Euerard, priest: by Dan. Featly, Doctor in Diuinity." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A00597.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 5, 2024.

Pages

SECT. X. The testimonies of the practise of the Church from 900. to 1000.

ARistole rightly obserueth, that it so y 1.1 falleth out in the descent of families, as it doth in diuers grounds, in which sometimes wee haue great plentie, sometime as great scarsitie: so, saith he, some families haue afforded store of noble personages; at other times scarse any of note or eminence. So it fareth here with vs in the last Age wee had plentifull store of testi∣monies for the truth, but in this we are like to haue Penury. Although (if wee consider a∣right) this scarsity may be imputed rather vn∣to the iniury of the time, and want of Records of History, which happily being extant might haue afforded vs no lesse plentie of Testimo∣nies, then the former Ages, as well in this, as in other points in question. The Poet wisely ob∣serued: Vixere fortes ante Agamemnona Multi,

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sed omnes vrgentur ignoti longâ Nocte: carent quia vate sacro. Dan. Chamier. after much inquiry can bring notice but of one witnesse, and him hee dares scarse avow. z 1.2 Bellarmine brandeth with a note this ninth Age, as being the most ob∣scure and darke, that the Sunne euer cast his beames vpon: yet euen in this Age wee haue somewhat to shew for the right of Gods people to the holy Chalice of the Lords Table.

Anno 910.

a 1.3 Rodolphus Tongrensis testifieth, that the people in his time tooke the sacred body of Christ, and drank a blessed draught of his blood.

Anno 920.

The Abbot of Prumes Regino teacheth vs, * 1.4 that what Rodolphus witnesseth of the practise of the people in his age, was not an abuse, or disorder in the people, but done in obedience to the sacred discipline of the Church, whose Canon he mentioneth: Let the soules of the weake be refreshed, and strengthned with the body and blood of our Lord.

Anno 950.

b 1.5 Stephanus Edvensis; saith These gifts or benefits are dayly performed vnto vs, when the body and

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blood of Christ is taken at the Altar.

Anno 990.

c 1.6 Vincentius writes of Elgifa, an old Matrone in this age, who being ready to giue vp the ghost, tooke the body and blood of our Lord.

Anno 995.

Aelfricus, first Abbot of Saint Albons, and af∣ter Archbishop of Canterbury, in his epistle to Woulfinus, and in his sermon translated of late out of the Saxon in die. S. Paschae, is as ful for the entire Communion, as hee is against Transub∣stantiation: the Howsell, or Hoste, saith he, is Christs body, not bodily, but Ghostly; not the body, which he suffered in, but the body of which he spoke, when hee blessed bread and wine to Howsel, ep. ad Wolfin. and in his sermon: Without, they be seene bread and wine, both in figure and in taste: and they be truly Christs body and blood after there halowing through ghostly mystery as a pledge and a figure. And a little after: All our fathers dranke the same ghostly drinke of the stone, which followed them, which stone was not bodily Christ, who calleth to vs, to all beleeuing and faithful men: Whosoeuer thirsteth, let him come and drinke that heauenly liquor, which had signification of Christs blood. Now it is offered daily in Gods Church; it was the same, which we now

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offer not bodily, but ghostly.

I finde no answer made by any Romanist to the testimonies in this Age, which yet are very full and pregnant, both for the precept and pra∣ctise of communicating in both kinds, both by men and women. If any except against the Au∣thors in the words of the Orator, haurimus de foece, we draw out dregs and lees: I answer, where learning ran so low, as it did in this Age, we could do no other wise: yet the Rea∣der may see, that out of these lees wee haue ex tracted some Aqua-vitae, whereof, though he hath but a taste now, he shal haue a ful draught in the next Age.

Notes

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