Chapter 18 - CHRISTIAN WORSHIP, PART 1
In the early days of the Gospel, while the Christians were generally
poor, and when they were obliged to meet in fear of the heathen,
their worship was held in private houses and sometimes in burial-places
under-ground. But after a time buildings were expressly set apart
for worship. It has been mentioned that in the years of quiet, between
the death of Valerian and the last persecution (A D. 261-303) these
churches were built much more handsomely than before, and were furnished
with gold and silver plate and other rich ornaments (page 32). And
after the conversion of Constantine, they became still finer and
costlier. The clergy then wore rich dresses at service, the music
was less simple and the ceremonies were multiplied. Some of the
old heathen temples were turned into churches, but temples were
not built in a shape very suitable for Christian worship and the
pattern of the new churches was rather taken from the halls of justice,
called "Basilicas", which were to be found in every large
town. These buildings were of an oblong shape, with a broad middle
part, and on each side of it an aisle, separated from it by a row
of pillars. This lower part of the basilica was used by merchants
who met to talk about their business, and by all sorts of loungers
who met to tell and hear the news. But at the upper end of the oblong
there was a half circle, with its floor raised above the level of
the rest; and in the middle of this part the judge of the city sat.
Now if you will compare this description with the plan of a church,
you will see that the broad middle part of the basilica answers
to what is called the "body" or "nave" of the
church; that the side aisles are alike in each; and that the further
part of the basilica, with its raised floor, answers to the "chancel"
of a church; while the holy table, or "altar", stands
in the place answering to the judge's seat in the basilica. Same
of these halls were given up by the emperors to be turned into churches,
and the plan of them was found convenient as a pattern in the building
of new churches.
On entering a church, the first part was the Porch, in which there
were places for the catechumens (that is to say, those who were
preparing for baptism); for those who were supposed to be possessed
with devils, and who were under the care of the exorcists (page
81), and for the lowest kinds of those who were undergoing penance.
Beyond this porch were the "Beautiful Gates", which opened
into the "Nave" of the church. Just within these gates
were those penitents whose time of penance was nearly ended; and
the rest of the nave was the place for the "faithful"--that
is to say, for those who were admitted to all the privileges of
Christians. At the upper end of the nave, a place called the "Choir"
was railed in for the singers; and then, last of all, came the raised
part or "chancel", which has been spoken of. This was
called the "Sanctuary", and was set apart for the clergy
only. The women sat in church apart from the men; sometimes they
were in the aisles, and sometimes in galleries. Churches generally
had a court in front of them or about them, in which were the lodgings
of the clergy, and a building for the administration of baptism,
called the "Baptistery".
In the early times, churches were not adorned with pictures or
statues; for Christians were at first afraid to have any ornaments
of the kind, lest they should fall into idolatry like the heathen.
No such things as images or pictures of our Lord, or of His saints,
were known among them; and in their every-day life, instead of the
figures of gods, with which the heathens used to adorn their houses,
their furniture, their cups, and their seals, the Christians made
use of emblems only. Thus, instead of pretending to make a likeness
of our Lord's human form, they made a figure of a shepherd carrying
a lamb on his shoulders, to signify the Good Shepherd who gave his
life for his sheep (St. John x. 11). Other ornaments of the same
kind were--a dove signifying the Holy Ghost, a ship, signifying
the Church, the ark of salvation, sailing towards heaven; a fish,
which was meant to remind them of their having been born again in
the water at their baptism; a musical instrument called a lyre,
to signify Christian joy; and an anchor, the figure of Christian
hope. About the year 300, the Council of Elvira, in Spain, made
a canon forbidding pictures in church, which shows that the practice
had then begun, and was growing; and also that, in Spain, at least,
it was thought to be dangerous (as indeed it too surely proved to
be). And a hundred years later, Epiphanius, a famous bishop of Salamis,
in the island of Cyprus, tore a curtain which he found hanging in
a church, with a figure of our Lord, or of some saint, painted on
it. He declared that such things were altogether unlawful, and desired
that the curtain might be used to bury some poor man in, promising
to send the church a plain one instead of it.
Christians used to sign themselves with the sign of the cross on
many occasions, and figures of the cross were early set up in churches.
But crucifixes (which are figures of our Lord on the cross, although
ignorant people sometimes call the cross itself a crucifix) were
not known until hundreds of years after the time of which we are
now speaking.
PART II
The church-service of Christians was always the same as to its
main parts, although there were little differences as to order and
the like. Justin Martyr, who lived (as we have seen) about the middle
of the second century (see Chapter III), describes the service as
it was in his time. It began, he says, with readings from the Scriptures;
then followed a discourse by the chief clergyman who was present;
and there was much singing, of which a part was from the Old Testament
psalms, while a part was made up of hymns on Christian subjects.
The discourses of the clergy were generally meant to explain the
Scripture lessons which had been read. At first these discourses
were very plain, and as much as possible like ordinary talk; and
from this they got the name of "homilies", which properly
meant nothing more than "conversations". But by degrees
they grew to be more like speeches, and people used to flock to
them, just as many do now, from a wish to hear something fine, rather
than with any notion of taking the preacher's words to heart, and
trying to be made better by them. And in the fourth century, when
a clergyman preached eloquently, the people used to cheer him on
by clapping their hands, waving their handkerchiefs, and shouting
out, "Orthodox!" "Thirteenth apostle!" or other
such cries. Good men, of course, did not like to be treated in this
way, as if they were actors at a theatre; and we often find St.
Chrysostom and St Augustine (of both of whom you will hear by-and-by;
objecting to it in their sermons, and begging their hearers not
to show their admiration in such foolish and unseemly ways. But
it seems that the people went on with it nevertheless; and no doubt
there must have been some preachers who were vain enough and silly
enough to be pleased with it.
In the time of the Apostles the sacrament of the Lord's Supper
was celebrated in the evening, as it had been by our blessed Lord
Himself on the night in which He was betrayed. Thus it was, for
instance, when the disciples at Troas "came together upon the
first day of the week (Sunday) to break bread" (that is, to
celebrate the Lord's Supper), and "Paul preached unto them,
and continued his speech until midnight" (Acts xx. 7). In the
service for this sacrament there was a thanksgiving to God for His
bounty in bestowing the fruits of the earth. The congregation offered
gifts of bread and wine, and from these the elements which were
to be consecrated were taken. They also brought gifts of money,
which was used for the relief of the poor, for the support of the
clergy, and for other good and religious purposes. Either before
or after the sacrament, there was a meal called the love-feast,
for which all the members of the congregation brought provisions,
according as they could afford. All of them sat down to it as equals,
in token of their being alike in Christ's Brotherhood; and it ended
with psalm-singing and prayer. But even in very early days (as St.
Paul shows us in his first epistle to the Corinthians, xi. 21f),
there was sad misbehaviour at these meals; and besides this, such
religious feasts gave the heathen an excuse for their stories that
the Christians met to feed on human flesh and to commit other abominations
in secret (see page 7). For these reasons, after a time, the love-feast
was separated from the holy Communion, and at length it was entirely
given up.
In the second century, the administration of the Lord's Supper,
instead of being in the evening as at first, was added on to the
morning service, and then a difference was made between the two
parts of the service. At the earlier part of it the catechumens
and penitents might be present, but when the Communion office was
going to begin, a deacon called out, "Let no one of the catechumens
or of the hearers stay." After this none were allowed to remain
except those who were entitled to communicate, which all baptized
Christians did in those days, unless they were shut out from the
Church on account of their misdeeds. The "breaking of bread"
in the Lord's Supper was at first daily, as we know from the early
chapters of the Acts (ii. 46); but this practice does not seem to
have lasted beyond the time when the faith of the Christians was
in its first warmth, and it became usual to celebrate the holy Communion
on the Lord's day only. When Christianity became the religion of
the empire, and there was now no fear of persecution, the earlier
part of the service was open not only to catechumens and penitents,
but to Jews and heathens; and in the fifth century, when the Church
was mostly made up of persons who had been baptized and trained
in Christianity from infancy, the distinction between the "service
of the catechumens" and the "service of the faithful"
was no longer kept up.
The length of time during which converts were obliged to be catechumens
before being admitted to baptism differed in different parts of
the Church. In some places it was two years, in some three years;
but if during this time they fell sick and appeared to be in danger
of death, they were baptized without waiting any longer.
At baptism, those who received it professed their faith, or their
sponsors did so for them, and from this began the use of creeds,
containing, in few words, the chief articles of the Christian faith.
The sign of the cross was made over those who were baptized "in
token that they should not be ashamed to confess the faith of Christ
crucified, and manfully to fight under His banner against sin, the
world, and the devil, and to continue Christ's faithful soldiers
and servants unto their life's end." The kiss of peace was
given to them in token of their being taken into spiritual brotherhood;
white robes were put on them, to signify their cleansing from sin;
and a mixture of milk and honey was administered to them, as if
to give them a foretaste of their heavenly inheritance, of which
the earthly Canaan, "flowing with milk and honey" (Exod.
iii. 8, etc.) had been a figure. Other ceremonies were added in
the fourth century, such as the use of salt and lights, and an anointing
with oil in token of their being "made kings and priests to
God" (Rev. i. 6; 1 Pet. ii. 5-9), besides the anointing with
a mixture called "chrism" at confirmation, which had been
practised in earlier times.
The usual time of baptism was the season from Easter-eve to Whitsuntide;
but in case of danger, persons might be baptized at any time.
PART III
During the fourth century there was a growth of superstitions and
corruptions in the Church. Great numbers of converts came into it,
bringing their old heathen notions with them, and not well knowing
what they might expect, but with an eager desire to find as much
to interest them in the worship and life of Christians as they had
found in the ceremonies and shows of their former religion. And
in order that such converts might not be altogether disappointed,
the Christian teachers of the age allowed a number of things which
soon began to have very bad effects; thus, as we are told in the
preface to our own Prayer-book, St. Augustine complained that in
his time (which was about the year 400) ceremonies "were grown
to such a number that the estate of Christian people was in worse
case concerning that matter than were the Jews." Among the
corruptions which were now growing, although they did not come to
a head until afterwards, one was an excess of reverence for saints,
which led to the practices of making addresses to them, and of paying
superstitious honours to their dead bodies. Another corruption was
the improper use of paintings or images, which even in St. Augustine's
time had gone so far that, as he owns with sorrow, many of the ignorant
were "worshippers of pictures." Another was the fashion
of going on pilgrimage to the Holy Land, in which Constantine's
mother, Helena, set an example which was soon followed by thousands,
who not only fancied that the sight of the places hallowed by the
great events of Scripture would kindle or heighten their devotion,
but that prayers would be especially pleasing to God if they were
offered up in such places. And thus great numbers flocked to Palestine
from all quarters, and even from Britain, among other countries,
and on their return they carried back with them water from the Jordan,
earth from the Redeemer's sepulchre, or what they believed to be
chips of the true cross, which was supposed to have been found during
Helena's visit to Jerusalem. The mischiefs of this fashion soon
showed themselves. St. Basil's brother, Gregory of Nyssa, wrote
a little book expressly for the purpose of persuading people not
to go on pilgrimage. He said that he himself had been neither better
nor worse for a visit which he had paid to the Holy Land; but that
such a pilgrimage might even be dangerous for others because the
inhabitants of the country were so vicious that there was more likelihood
of getting harm from them than good from the sight of the holy places.
"We should rather try," he said, "to go out of the
body than to drag it about from place to place." Another very
learned man of the same time, St. Jerome, although he had taken
up his own abode at Bethlehem, saw so much of the evils which arose
from pilgrimages that he gave very earnest warnings against them.
"It is no praise," he says, "to have been at Jerusalem
but to have lived religiously at Jerusalem. The sight of the places
where our Lord died and rose again are profitable to those who bear
their own cross and daily rise again with Him. But for those who
say, 'The temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord,' (Jerem. vii.
4), let them hear the Apostle's words, 'Ye are the temple of God
and the Spirit of God dwelleth in you,' (1 Cor. iii. 16) The court
of heaven is open to approach from Jerusalem and from Britain alike;
'for the kingdom of God is within you'" (St. Luke xvii. 21).
There were, indeed, some persons who rose up to oppose the errors
of which I have been speaking. But unhappily they mixed up the truths
which they wished to teach with so many errors of their own, and
they carried on their opposition so unwisely, that, instead of doing
good, they did harm, by setting people against such truth as they
taught on account of the error which was joined with it, and of
the strong way which they took of teaching it. By such opposition
the growth of superstition was not checked, but advanced and strengthened.
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