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may be virtuously brought up to lead a godly and a Christian life... Ye are to take care that this child be brought to the bishop to be confirmed by him, so soon as he can say the Creed, the Lord's Prayer, &c.

gatur,ut doceant infantem Pater Noster, et Ave Maria, et Credo in Deum, vel doceri faciant, et quod chrismale deferatur ad ecclesiam, et quod confirmetur quam citius episcopus advenerit circa partes per septem milliaria. (Manuale Sarisb.)

What may be the antiquity of this custom I know not. Nor have I observed a similar order in

any of the western offices, except in those of the English church, and in an ancient ritual of the church of Limoges in France, published by Mar

tene.

SECTION IX.

THE ADMINISTRATION OF PRIVATE BAPTISM.

The catholic church has always been accustomed to permit the private baptism of persons who are unable from sickness to receive that sacrament in public. In such cases of necessity baptism was administered with very few forms, and often consisted of nothing more than the affusion of water on the person baptized, with a repetition of the words of baptism. It is unnecessary for me to enter on the discussion relative to the proper ministers of baptism, which has been treated with his usual learning by Bingham, in his Scholastical History of Lay-Baptism. The church of England has not encouraged the practice of baptizing children by the hands of laymen or women, even in urgent cases. But it cannot with reason be apprehended, that infants who depart before baptism can be administered, are

9 Martene, tom. i. p. 208.

without the benefits of that sacrament; because the catholic church has always held that the wish to receive baptism is sufficient in a case of necessity; and if the church, who hath the power of administering this sacrament, be prevented by the visitation of God from fulfilling her intentions, her desire and wish are sufficient to remove apprehension. It is needless to make any lengthened observations on the practice of the church of England in the administration of baptism in private. The minister is directed to perform the office, by repeating the Lord's Prayer, and any other collects of the office of public baptism which the time permits. Amongst these it would certainly seem proper that the benedictions beginning "O merciful God, grant that the old Adam," &c. and the following prayer for the sanctification of the font of water, should be used. For we observe that in the ancient offices for the baptism of the sick in the church of Constantinople, and in the sacramentary of Gelasius, there is a short form for consecrating the water'. The rules of the English church, as to supplying that portion of the rites of baptism which was omitted in a case of private baptism, are nearly the same as those which prevailed before the reformation of our offices *.

The rubric informs us that we should "not doubt "but that the child so baptized is lawfully and suf"ficiently baptized, and ought not to be baptized "again." This is also a rubric in the manual of the

I Hooker, b. viii. 60.

s Goar, Rit. Græc. p. 370. Gelasii Sacramentar. Muratori,

tom. i. p. 595, &c.

t Manuale Sarisb. fol. 44.

church of Salisbury ". In case the child recovers, the rubric directs him to be brought into church; and if the minister himself baptized the child, he is directed to notify it to the congregation; but if he did not, he is directed to enquire whether the sacrament was rightly performed, and in like manner to notify to the congregation the validity of that baptism. This is also prescribed in the manual of the church of Salisbury, except the two cases of notification". After notifying to the congregation the validity of the private baptism, the priest is directed to perform the whole office of baptism, with the exception of the benediction and consecration of the water before mentioned: and the same directions occur in the manuals of Salisbury and York ".

In case the priest should doubt from the answers of those who bring the child, whether it was lawfully baptized, a form of proceeding is appointed, which is also prescribed by the ancient rubrics of the English churches.

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priest's questions, as that it cannot appear that the child was baptized with water, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, (which are essential parts of baptism,) then let the priest baptize it in the form before appointed for public baptism of infants; saving that at the dipping of the child in the font, he shall use this form of words:

If thou art not already baptized, N. I baptize thee in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.

tismi.

in forma debita fuerit baptizatus, vel non debet omnia perficere cum eo sicut cum alio quem constat sibi non baptizatum, præterquam quod verba sacramentalia essentialia proferre debeat sub conditione, hoc modo dicendo:

N. si baptizatus es, ego non rebaptizo te: sed si nondum baptizatus es, ego baptizo te in nomine Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti. Amen *.

Manuale Sarisb. fol. 44, 45. Eboracens. ad finem bap

CHAPTER VI.

CONFIRMATION.

SECTION I.

ANCIENT RITES OF CONFIRMATION.

THE rite of confirmation (which is sometimes called a sacrament by the Fathers, though not in the same high and peculiar sense as baptism and the eucharist) was regarded as an appendix to the sacrament of baptism. Not indeed that baptism was in any way imperfect or invalid without confirmation; but that the grace which the Holy Spirit communicated at baptism, for the remission of sins and regeneration, was increased and strengthened by confirmation. In primitive times, when many persons were baptized together on the vigils of Easter, Pentecost, and Epiphany, in the presence or by the hands of the bishop, the newly baptized, after ascending from the water, were immediately confirmed by him, with

a The Fathers gave the name of sacrament or mystery to every thing which conveyed one signification or property to unassisted reason, and another to faith. Hence Cyprian speaks of the " sacraments" of the Lord's Prayer, meaning the hidden meaning conveyed therein, which could only be appreciated by a Christian. The Fathers sometimes speak of

confirmation as a sacrament, because the chrism signified the grace of the Holy Ghost; and the imposition of hands was not merely a bare sign, but the form by which it was conveyed: see Bingham, book xii. c. i. sect. 4. Yet at the same time they continually speak of two great sacraments of the Christian church.

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