33.
It is also plain that the public prayers are not to be couched in
Greek among the Latins, nor in Latin among the French or English (as hitherto
has been every where practised), but in the vulgar tongue, so that all present
may understand them, since they ought to be used for the edification of the
whole Church, which cannot be in the least degree benefited by a sound not
understood. Those who are not moved by any reason of humanity or charity, ought
at least to be somewhat moved by the authority of Paul, whose words are by no
means ambiguous: "When thou shalt bless with the spirit, how shall he that
occupieth the room of the unlearned say, Amen, at thy giving of thanks, seeing
he understandeth not what thou sayest? For thou verily givest thanks, but the
other is not edified" (1 Cor. 14:16, 17). How then can one sufficiently admire
the unbridled license of the Papists, who, while the Apostle publicly protests
against it, hesitate not to bawl out the most verbose prayers in a foreign
tongue, prayers of which they themselves sometimes do not understand one
syllable, and which they have no wish that others should understand?2121French, "Qui est-ce donc qui se pourra assez
esmerveiller d’une audace tant effrenee qu’ont eu les Papistes et ont encore,
qui contre la defense de l’Apostre, chantent et brayent de langue estrange et
inconnue, en laquelle le plus souvent ils n'entendent pas eux mesmes une
syllabe, et ne veulent que les autres y entendent?"—Who then can sufficiently
admire the unbridled audacity which the Papists have had, and still have, who,
contrary to the prohibition of the Apostle, chant and bray in a foreign and
unknown tongue, in which, for the most part, they do not understand one
syllable, and which they have no wish that others understand? Different
is the course which Paul prescribes, "What is it then? I will pray with the
spirit, and I will pray with the understanding also; I will sing with the
spirit, and I will sing with the understanding also:" meaning by the
spirit the special gift of tongues, which some who had received it abused
when they dissevered it from the mind, that is, the understanding. The principle
we must always hold is, that in all prayer, public and private, the tongue
without the mind must be displeasing to God. Moreover, the mind must be so
incited, as in ardour of thought far to surpass what the tongue is able to
express. Lastly, the tongue is not even necessary to private prayer, unless in
so far as the internal feeling is insufficient for incitement, or the vehemence
of the incitement carries the utterance of the tongue along with it. For
although the best prayers are sometimes without utterance, yet when the feeling
of the mind is overpowering, the tongue spontaneously breaks forth into
utterance, and our other members into gesture. Hence that dubious muttering of
Hannah (1 Sam. 1:13), something similar to which is experienced by all the
saints when concise and abrupt expressions escape from them. The bodily gestures
usually observed in prayer, such as kneeling and uncovering of the head (Calv.
in Acts 20:36), are exercises by which we attempt to rise to higher veneration
of God.
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