[395] Cf. Professor Milligan, The Resurrection of Our Lord, Lect. vi. Pt. i. § c.
[396] Bright's Ancient Collects, p. 152.
[397] C. Gore, Roman Catholic Claims, p. 170.
[398] S. Th. iii. Qu. LXV. Art. 1, 4, 3.
[399] Calv. Inst. IV. xiv. 20.
[400] Conc. Trident. Sess. VII. Can. iii.
[401] Richard Baxter, Confirmation and Restauration pp. 88, 89; Ecclesiastical Cases of Conscience, Qu. 99. Cf. J. S. Pollock, Richard Baxter on the Sacraments, § 58.
[402] Hooker V. lvi. 9: cf. E. B. Pusey, University Sermons, p. 11, 'This is (if we may reverently so speak) the order of the mystery of the Incarnation, that the Eternal Word so took our flesh into Himself, as to impart to it His own inherent life; so then we partaking of it, that life is transmitted on to us also, and not to our souls only, but our bodies also, since we become flesh of His flesh, and bone of His bone, and He who is wholly life, is imparted to us wholly. The Life which He is, spreads around, first giving its own vitality to that sinless flesh which He united indissolubly with Himself, and in it encircling and vivifying our whole nature, and then, through that bread which is His flesh, finding an entrance to us individually, penetrating us, soul and body and spirit, and irradiating and transforming us into His own light and life.'
[403] J. B. Mozley, Lectures and other Theological Papers, p. 204.
[404] Hooker V. lxvii. 11; S. Irenaeus iv. 18.