[CHAPTER V]
Divine Service
[1]. Duty of clergy as to uniformity of service—Divergence by lawful authority—Liberty under Act of 1872. [2]. Morning and Evening Prayer—Litany—Bishop 0.5em;">may order two full services, and a third service, with sermon. [3]. Notices during Divine service—Notices on church door—Banns. [4]. Offertory—Other collections in a church or chapel—Duty of incumbent as to money entrusted to him. [5]. Questions as to the legality of various church ornaments, vestments, and ceremonies—Legal decisions as to (A) Stone Holy Table—Crucifix—Cross—Candlesticks—Flower-vases—Pictures—Sculptures—Credence table—Second Holy Table—Chancel gates—Baldacchino—Voice of parishioners in vestry—(B) Attire of clergy at Holy Communion—Surplice—Hood—Albe—Vestment or chasuble—Tunicle—Stole—Chaplain's scarf—Biretta—Black gown—(C) Incense—Processions with lighted candles—Lighted candles at Holy Communion—Mixed chalice—Wafers—Agnus Dei and other hymns—Position of minister—Genuflexions—Elevation—Sign of the Cross—Ablutions—Reservation. [6]. Baptism not to be refused—Time for the ceremony—Private baptism in urgent cases—Godparents—Reception in church after private baptism—Conditional baptism—Immersion or affusion—Notice to bishop in cases of adult baptism—Deacon may baptize—Lay baptism. [7]. Times for and notice of Holy Communion—Communion not to be unlawfully refused—Who are to be repelled from it—Procedure in such cases—Jenkins v. Cook—Persons coming from other parishes—Persons attending dissenting places of worship—Persons baptized in another communion and not confirmed. [8]. Sermons and homilies—Provisions of rubrics, Canons, and Acts of Parliament. [9]. Catechising. [10]. Churching of womenpages [80-99]
[CHAPTER VI]
Marriage
[1]. Duty of minister to solemnise marriage between persons legally competent—Unlawful solemnisation, when a felony—Marriage, when void. [2]. Original places for banns and marriages—Churches of new parishes—Licences for banns and marriages in chapels—Parishes having no regular services in parish church—Where parish church is being rebuilt or repaired—No reconsecration necessary where church is rebuilt or enlarged and position of Holy Table altered. [3]. Persons legally competent to intermarry—Religion or absence of religion of the parties no ground for refusal to solemnise marriage. [4]. Minimum age—Consent of parents or guardians in case of unions—Marriage without consent, in absence of notice—Marriage below lawful age. [5]. Marriage of lunatic or non compos, void. [6]. Absence, unheard of, for seven years—Relief from punishment for bigamy—Invalidity of remarriage. [7] Divorce abroad—Divorce in England under Act of 1857—Remarriage of divorced persons. [8]. Marriage of foreigners—Requirements of laws of foreign States—Precautions to be observed. [9]. Prohibited degrees of kindred and affinity. [10]. Publication of banns—Time and form—Seven days' notice—Publication and marriage without notice and due inquiry—Publication where parties dwell in different parishes or districts—Where one dwells in Scotland, or in Ireland—What constitutes dwelling—Correct names to be published—Status need not be published—Publication to be from book and signed—Forbidding of banns. [11]. Marriage, with consent of minister, on registrar's certificate—Not permitted on registrar's licence. [12]. Marriage on licence of bishop or Archbishop of Canterbury—Grant of bishop's licence—Previous affidavit before surrogate—Duty of minister on production of licence—Names in licence—Grant of licence a favour and not a right. [13]. Marriage, where and when to be solemnised—Priest or deacon may marry—Penalty for solemnising marriage at improper place or time. [14]. Reading of service after marriage at a registry office—Second solemnisation of marriage. [15]. Fees for banns, certificate of banns, and marriage. [16]. Marriage register books—Certificate of marriage. [17]. Presumption of marriage of persons coming to Holy Communion—Proof of no marriage—Validity of marriage governed by law of place of solemnisation—Capacity to contract marriage governed by law of domicile—-Marriage between British subjects in a foreign country or on board shippages [100-120]
[CHAPTER VII]
Burial
[1]. Right of burial by clergyman of the parish where death occurs—Bells to be rung—Burial in case of death in another parish—Relief in case interment is refused—No right to particular hour or spot of burial—Incumbent or churchwardens cannot sell or grant grave-spaces in perpetuity or brick graves—Reservation of exclusive right of burial on grant of addition to churchyard—Faculty for exclusive grave space in other cases—Burial of non-parishioners not dying within the parish. [2]. Burial of bodies cast up by the sea or tidal or navigable water. [3]. Burial of person dying unbaptized or excommunicate and of felo de se—Burial of child of dissenter or person who has received lay baptism—Interment cannot be required without convenient warning. [4]. Bringing of corpse into church and burial under church. [5]. Fees—Prepayment not enforceable—Customary amount—On burial of non-parishioners—Tables of fees—Special fees for brick graves, iron coffins, and other extras—Fees and rights of burial where new ecclesiastical parish has its own burial ground. [6]. Use of Burial Service in unconsecrated ground—Use of special form—Permission of burial without Church rites and with or without some other service on notice under Act of 1880—Day and time for burial—Fee. [7]. Delivery of registrar's certificate of death or order of coroner at funeral. [8]. Fees on interments in cemeteries under Cemeteries Clauses Act, 1847. [9]. Burial Acts—Consecrated and unconsecrated parts of burial grounds—Chapels—Fees of incumbents, clerks, and sextons—Sale of rights to vaults and monuments—Burial Act, 1900—Tables of fees—Restrictions on future fees to incumbents, churchwardens, and sextons—Commutation of fees. [10]. Cremation—Burial of cremated remains. [11]. Faculty for removal of body from one unconsecrated place of interment to another—Licence of Home Secretary for removal in other cases pages [121-134]