And here followeth His Circumcision.
The day of the circumcision of our
Lord there be four things that make and show it to be holy and solemn. The
first is the utas of the Nativity. The second the imposition of a new name
bearing health. The third the effusion of his precious blood. The fourth the
signs of the circumcision. As for the first it appeareth, for the utas of
saints be solemn, by much more reason ought it to be of him that is the saint
of all saints. Now it seemeth that the Nativity of our Lord ought not to have
none utas. For the nativity tendeth to the death. And the decease of saints have
their utas because they be born of the nativity that stretcheth to life
perdurable, for to be after glorified in body. And by the same way it seemeth
that the nativity of the glorious Virgin Mary and of S. John Baptist, and of
the Resurrection of our Lord ought not to have utas, for the resurrection was
then done. Hereto we ought to consider, like as saith a doctor, that, in this
we should fulfil such things as we accomplished not in the principal day that
our Lord was born in. Of which of ancient time men were wont to sing at the
Mass: Vultum tuum domine, etc. to the honour of our Lady S. Mary. The other
octaves or utases as of Paske, Whitsuntide, the nativity of our Lady and S.
John Baptist be of devotion, as of other saints that men will honour for
singular cause or affection. And they may be said the octaves of figuration,
for they signify and figure the octave of the last resurrection perpetual,
which is the eighth age. And as to the second, this day was his name imposed to
him, and was named with the new name that the mouth of God named. This is the
name of which there is none other under heaven by which we may be saved, that
is Jesus. After S. Bernard: This is the name which in the mouth is honey, in
the ear melody, and in the heart joy; this is the name after that he saith, it
lighteth and shineth like oil. When it is preached it feedeth the soul, when it
is in the mind of the heart it is sweet, and it anointeth when it is called.
And as the evangelist saith, he had three names, that is to wit the Son of God,
Jesus, and Christus. He is called the Son of God insomuch as he is God of God
the Father; Christ insomuch as he is a man taken of a person divine and nature
human, and Jesus inasmuch as he is God united to our humanity. And of this
three manner of names, saith S. Bernard: Ye that lie in dust and powder arise
out of your sleep and awake ye and give praising to God. Lo here that our Lord
shall come unto your health, he cometh with unction, he cometh with glory.
Jesus cometh not without health, nor Christ cometh not without unction, nor the
Son of God without glory. For he is our health, our unction and our joy. And as
touching this treble name; before his passion, he was not perfectly known. As
touching the first he was somewhat known by conjecting, as of his enemies,
which said Jesu Christ to be the Son of God. And as to the second, of less or fewer
he was known for Jesu Christ. And as to the third, vocally, for as much as by
the voice he was called Jesus. But as to the reason of the name, he was not known.
For Jesus is as much to say as Saviour, and this understood not they. After the
resurrection, this treble was clarified and declared. The first to the
certainty, the second to the publication, the third to the reason of the name.
The first name is Son of God. And that these names be appropriate to him, Saint
Hilary in his book that he made of the Trinity saith thus: Vere filium Dei
unigenitum. In divers manners this name, Son of God, is known, as it is
witnessed of God. God the Father witnesseth it that he is his son. Apostles
preach it, the religious believe it, the fiends our enemies confess it. And
therefore we know our Lord Jesu Christ in his manners, by name, by nature, by
nativity, by puissance, and by his passion. The second name is Christus, which
is interpreted unction. For he was anointed with the oil of gladness before all
them that to him were party. And by that he is said anointed, it is showed that
he was a prophet, a champion, a priest and a king. These four persons sometime
were wont to be anointed. Jesu Christ was a prophet teaching the doctrine
divine, a champion in the battle against the devil whom he overcame, a priest
in reconciling the human lineage to God the Father, and a king in distributing
and rewarding every man. Of this second name we be all named, for of this name
Christ we be called christian men. Of which name S. Austin saith thus: Every
christian man ought to be c puissance or might is to him perdurable, the
second, of might of habitation, is to him sith the beginning of his conception,
like as the angel showed, and after that he hath puissance of deed and work. was
imposed to him of Joseph, because of his passion that was to against original
sin, the devil weened that he that received it were a sinner, and had need of
the remedy of circumcision. And for this cause Jesu Christ would that his
mother being alway a virgin should be married, because that by the sacrament of
matrimony his Incarnati purpose is for to leave sin and take the good, the
which is showed us by the son that dispended his good follily, and when he had
perceived that he had done evil and foolishly, he advertised himself and said:
I shall depart and return to my father, and shall pray that I may serve him,
and that he may receive me to mercy, and make me as one of his servants. The
third is shame of sin, whereof saith S. Paul to them that for their sins be in
pain and in torment: What fruit have ye founder in those sins in your life of
which now ye be ashamed? The fourth is dread of the coming judgment and doom,
whereof Job saith: I have feared and doubted God as men dread the waves of the
sea in their great rage and tempest. And S. Jerome saith thus: Sive comedam
sive bibam, etc. As oft as I eat or drink or that I do any other thing, alway
me seemeth that I hear the sound and the voice crying: Arise, ye dead men, and
come to the doom and the judgment. The fifth is contrition, whereof S. Jerome
saith: Give thy weeping and bitterness of that which thou hast angered thy God
by thy sin. The sixth is confession, whereof David saith: Dixi confitebor,
etc.: I have said and purposed in my heart that I shall confess me to God and
make knowledge of my sin. The seventh is hope of pardon, for if Judas had had
very repentance and hope, and had confessed his sin, he had had forgiveness and
pardon. The eighth is satisfaction and sacrifice, and then is the man verily circumcised,
not only from the sin, but also from pain. Where the two first days be for the
sorrow of sin that hath been done and the will for to amend it, the third day
we should confess the evil that we have done and the good deeds that we have
left. The other four days be orison, effusion of tears, affliction of body, and
alms given. Or otherwise by these eight days may be understood eight things, of
which the considerati the nativity of Jesu Christ that is called the day of
circumcision, we find that Jesu Christ said by the mouth of his saints: Non
veni legem solvere sed adimplere; I came not, said Jesu Christ, to break the
law, but to fulfil it. And he was that day circumcised and named Jesus, which
is as much to say as Saviour. And at the circumcision must he cut a little of
the skin at the end of the member or yard, and that is signified and shewed
that we ought to be circumcised, and cut and taken away from us the sins and
evil vices, that is to wit pride, wrath, envy, covetousness, sloth, gluttony, and
lechery, and all sins, and purge us by confession, by contrition, by
satisfaction, by almsdeeds, and by prayers, and to give for God’s sake of the
goods that he hath lent us. For we have nothing proper, but Jesu Christ hath
lent to us all that we have. Then it is well reason that we do give for him to
the poor of such goods as be his, for we be but servants, and we ought to give
to the hungry meat, to the thirsty drink, to the naked clothing, visit the
sick, and tofore all things to love God, and after, our neighbour as ourself;
and despoil ourself from sin, and clothe us with good works and virtues, and
follow the commandment of Jesu Christ. And in this manner we shall fulfil the
will of our father Jesu Christ, if we been so purged and thus circumcised. Then
let us pray unto the Lord of heaven that saith that he came not to break the
law but to fulfil it, that he give us grace in such manner to fulfil the law
and his will in this world, that we may come into his holy bliss in heaven.
Amen.
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