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Piedmont, where they joined the Waldenses; another, above six hundred in number, with a bishop and several ecclesiastics at their head, fled into Corsica, and implored the protection of the Republic of Genoa against the violence of the inquisitors.

The Maronites have a patriarch who resides in the monastery of Cannubin, on Mount Libanus, and assumes the title of patriarch of Antioch, and the name of Peter, as if he seemed desirous of being considered as the successor of that apostle. He is elected by the clergy and the people, according to the ancient custom; but, since their re-union with the church of Rome, he is obliged to have a bull of confirmation from the pope. He keeps a perpetual celibacy, as well as the rest of the bishops, his suffragans: as to the rest of the ecclesiastics, they are allowed to marry before ordination; and yet the monastic life is in great esteem among them. Their monks are of the order of St. Anthony, and live in the most obscure places in the mountains, far from the commerce of the world.

and built up, the world peopled with inhabitants; it prevents incontinence and fornication, and, where the various duties of it are attended to, renders life a blessing.

The laws of revelation, as well as most civilized countries, have made several exceptions of persons marrying who are nearly related by blood. The marriage of parents and children appears, at first view, contrary to nature, not merely on account of the disparity of age, but of the confusion which it introduces into natural relations, and its obliging to inconsistent duties; such as reverence to a son, and the daughter to be equal with the father. Nor can the son or daughter acquit themselves of such inconsistent duties as would arise from this unnatural union. The marriage of brothers and sisters, and of some other near relations, is likewise disapproved by reason on various accounts. It frustrates one design of marriage, which is to enlarge benevolence and friendship, by cementing various families in a close alliance. And, farther, were it allowed, young persons, instead As to their faith, they agree in the of entering into marriage upon mature main with the rest of the Eastern consideration, with a settled esteem and church. Their priests do not say mass friendship, and a proper concern and singly, but all say it together, standing provision for the support and education round the altar. They communicate in of children, would be in danger (through unleavened bread: and the laity have the intimacy and affection produced by hitherto partaken in both kinds, though their near relation, and being bred tothe practice of communicating in one gether) of sliding in their inconsiderate has of late been getting footing, having years into those criminal familiarities been introduced by little and little. In which are most destructive of the great Lent they eat nothing, unless it be two ends of marriage. Most nations have or three hours before sun-rising: their agreed to brand such marriages as other fastings are very numerous. highly criminal, who cannot be supposed to have derived their judgment from Moses and the Israelites. It is probable God expressly prohibited these marriages in the beginning of mankind, and from the first heads of families the prohibition might be transmitted as a most sacred law to their descendants. See INCEST.

MARRIAGE, a convenant between a man and a woman, in which they mutually promise cohabitation, and a continual care to promote the comfort and happiness of each other. By Grove thus: "A society formed between two persons of different sexes, chiefly for the procreation and education of children." This union is very near and strict, and Some have supposed from those pasindeed indissoluble but by death, ex- sages, 1 Tim. iii. 2. Tit. i. 6. that bishops cepting in one case; unfaithfulness in or pastors ought never to marry a sethe one or the other by adultery or for-cond wife. But such a prohibition would nication, Rom. vii. 2. Matt. v. 32. It is to be entered into with deliberation at a proper age, and with mutual consent, as well as with the consent of parents and guardians, under whose care single persons may be. It is a very honourable state, Heb. xiii. 4. being an institution of God, and that in Paradise, Gen. ii. Christ honoured marriage by his presence, and at such a solemnity wrought his first miracle, John ii. Moreover, it is honourable, as families are formed

be contrary to natural right, and the design of the law itself; neither of which was ever intended to be set aside by the Gospel dispensation. It is more probably designed to guard against polygamy, and against divorce on frivolous occasions; both of which were frequent among the Jews, but condemned by our Lord, Matt. xix. 3—9.

The duties of this state are on the part of the husband, love, superior to any shown to any other person; a love

of complacency and delight, Prov. v. 18, 19. Chaste and single. Provision for the temporal good of the wife and family, 1 Tim. v. 3. Protection from abuse and injuries, Ruth iii. 9. 1 Sam. Xxxv. 5, 18. Doing every thing that may contribute to the pleasure, peace, and comfort of the wife, 1 Cor. vii. 33. Seeking her spiritual welfare, and every thing that shall promote her edification and felicity. The duties on the part of the wife are, reverence, subjection, obe⚫dience, assistance, sympathy, assuming no authority, and continuance with him, Eph. v. 32, 33. Tit. ii. 5. 1 Tim. v. 11, 12. Ruth. i. 16. See articles DIVORCE, PARENT. Grove's Mor, Phil. vol. ii. p. 470; Paley's Mor. Phil. ch. viii. vol. i. p. 339; Bean's Christian Minister's Advice to a New-married Couple; Guide to Domestic Happiness; Advantages and Disadvantages of the Marriage State; Stennett on Domestic Duties; Jay's Essay on Marriage; Doddridge's Lect. 225, 234, 265. vol. i.

oct. ed.

MARTYR, is one who lays down his life or suffers death for the sake of his religion. The word is Greek, pag rug, and properly signifies a "witness." It is applied by way of eminence to those who suffer in witness of the truth of the Gospel.

The primitive Christians believed that
the martyrs enjoyed very singular pri-
vileges; that upon their death they
were immediately admitted to the be-
atific vision, while other souls waited for
the completion of their happiness till
the day of judgment; and that God
would grant to their prayers the has-
tening of his kingdom, and shortening
the times of persecution. Perhaps this
consideration might excite many to court
martyrdom, as we believe many did. It
must be recollected, however, that mar-
tyrdom in itself is no proof of the good-
ness of our cause, only that we ourselves
are persuaded that it is so. "It is not
the blood, but the cause that makes the
martyr." (Mead.) Yet we may consi-
der the number and fortitude of those
who have suffered for Christianity as a
collateral proof at least of its excel
lency; for the thing for which they suf-
fered was not a point of speculation, but
a plain matter of fact, in which (had it
been false) they could not have been
mistaken. The martyrdom, therefore,
of so many wise and good men, taken
with a view of the whole system of
Christianity, will certainly afford some-
thing considerable in its favour.

The churches built over the graves of the martyrs, and called by their names, in order to preserve the memory of their sufferings, were distinguished by the title martyrium confessio, or memoria.

ist, and gave alms to the poor; which, together with a panegyrical oration or sermon, and reading the acts of the martyrs, were the spiritual exercises of these anniversaries.

The Christian church has abounded with martyrs, and history is filled with surprising accounts of their singular constancy and fortitude under the cruel- The festivals of the martyrs are of est torments human nature was capa- very ancient date in the Christian ble of suffering. The primitive Chris- church, and may be carried back at tians were accused by their enemies of least from the time of Polycarp, who paying a sort of divine worship to mar- suffered martyrdom about the year of tyrs. Of this we have an instance in Christ 168. On these days the Christhe answer of the church of Smyrna tians met at the graves of the martyrs, to the suggestion of the Jews, who, at and offered prayers and thanksgivings the martyrdom of Polycarp, desired the to God for the example they had affordheathen judge not to suffer the Chris-ed them: they celebrated the euchartians to carry off his body, lest they should leave their crucified master, and worship him in his stead. To which they answered, "We can neither forsake Christ, nor worship any other; for we worship him as the Son of God; but love the martyrs as the disciples and followers of the Lord, for the great affection they have shown to their King and Master." A like answer was given at the martyrdom of Fructuosus in Spain; for when the judge asked Eulogíus, his deacon, whether he would not worship Fructuosus, as thinking, that, though he refused to worship the heathen idols, he might yet be inclined to worship a Christian martyr, Eulogius replied, "I do not worship Fructuosus, but him whom Fructuosus worships."

Of the sayings, sufferings, and deaths of the martyrs, though preserved with great care for the above purpose, and to serve as models to future ages, we have but very little left, the greatest part of them having been destroyed during that dreadful persecution which Dioclesian carried on for ten years with fresh fury against the Christians; for a most diligent search was then made after all their books and papers; and all of them that were found were committed to the flames. Eusebius, indeed, composed a martyrology, but it never reach

ed down to us; and those since compiled are extremely suspected. From the eighth century downwards, several Greek and Latin authors endeavoured to make up the loss, by compiling, with vast labour, accounts of the lives and actions of the ancient martyrs, but which consist of little else than a series of fables: nor are those records that pass under the name of martyrology worthy of superior credit, since they bear the most evident marks both of ignorance and falsehood.

MARTYROLOGY, a catalogue or list of martyrs, including the history of their lives and sufferings for the sake of religion. The term comes from μęTMp "witness," and Aey, dico, or yw colligo. The martyrologies draw their materials from the calendars of particular churches, in which the several festivals dedicated to them are marked; and which seem to be derived from the practice of the ancient Romans, who inserted the names of heroes and great men in their fasti, or public registers.

year 845; that of Noker, monk of St. Gal, was written about the year 894. The martyrology of Ado, monk of Ferriers, in the diocese of Treves, afterwards archbishop of Vienne, is a descendant of the Roman, if we may so call it; for Du Sollier gives its genealogy thus:-The martyrology of St. Jerome is the great Roman martyrology; from this was made the little Roman one printed by Rosweyd; of this little Roman martyrology was formed that of Beda, augmented by Florus. Ado compiled his in the year 858. The martyrology of Nevelon monk of Corbie, written about the year 1089, is little more than an abridgment of that of Ado: father Kircher also makes mention of a Coptic martyrology, preserved by the Maronites at Rome.

We have also several Protestant martyrologies, containing the sufferings of the reformed, under the Papists, viz. an English martyrology by J. Fox; with others by Clark, Bray, &c. See PERSECUTION.

The martyrologies are very numerous, and contain many ridiculous and even contradictory narratives; which is easily accounted for, if we consider how many forged and spurious accounts of the lives of saints and martyrs appeared in the first ages of the church, which the legendary writers afterwards adopted without examining into the truth of them. However, some good critics, of late years, have gone a great way towards clearing the lives of the saints and martyrs from the monstrous heap of fiction they laboured under. See ar-ology, signifying a work on the Bible, ticle LEGEND.

Martyrology is also used in the Romish church for a roll or register kept in the vestry of each church, containing the names of all the saints and martyrs both of the universal church, and of the particular ones of that city or mo| nastery.

Martyrology is also applied to the painted or written catalogues in the Roman churches, containing the foundations, orbits, prayers, and masses, to be said each day.

MASORÁ, a term in the Jewish the

performed by several learned rabbins to secure it from any alterations which might otherwise happen.

The martyrology of Eusebius of Casarea was the most celebrated in the ancient church. It was translated into Their work regards merely the letter Latin by St. Jerome; but the learned of the Hebrew text, in which they have agree that it is not now extant. That first fixed the true reading by vowels attributed to Beda in the eighth century, and accents; they have, secondly, numis of very doubtful authority; the names bered not only the chapters and sections, of several saints being there found who but the verses, words, and letters of the did not live till after the time of Beda. text: and they find in the Pentateuch The ninth century was very fertile in 5245 verses, and in the whole Bible martyrologies; then appeared that of || 23,206. The masora is called by the Florus, subdeacon of the church at Ly- Jews, the hedge or fence of the law, beons; who, however, only filled up the cause this enumeration of the verses, chasms in Beda. This was published &c. is a means of preserving it from beabout the year 830, and was followed by ing corrupted and altered. They have, that of Waldenburtus, monk of the dio-thirdly, marked whatever irregularities cese of Treves, written in verse about the year 848; and this by that of Usard, a French monk, and written by the command of Charles the Bald, in 875, which last is the martyrology now ordinarily used in the Romish church. That of Rabanus Maurus is an improvement on Beda and Florus, written about the

occur in any of the letters of the Hebrew text; such as the different size of the letters, their various positions and inversions, &c. and they have been fruitful in finding out reasons for these mysteries and irregularities in them. They are, fourthly, supposed to be the authors of the Keri and Chetibh, or the

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marginal corrections of the text in our Hebrew Bibles.

they could make it. The eastern Jews have followed that of Ben Naphtali, and the western that of Ben Asher: and all that has been done since is to copy after them, without making any more corrections, or masoretical criticisms.

The Arabs have done the same thing by their Koran that the Masorites have done by the Bible; nor do the Jews deny their having borrowed this expedient from the Arabs, who first put it in practice in the seventh century.

There is a great and little masora printed at Venice and at Basil, with the Hebrew text in a different character. Buxtorf has written a masoretic commentary which he calls Tiberias.

The text of the sacred books, it is to be observed, was originally written without any breaks or divisions into chapters or verses, or even into words: so that a whole book, in the ancient manner, was but one continued word: of this kind we have still several ancient manuscripts, both Greek and Latin. In regard, therefore, the sacred writings had undergone an infinite number of alterations; whence various readings had arisen, and the original was become much mangled and disguised, the Jews had recourse to a canon, which they judged infallible, to fix and ascertain the reading of the Hebrew text; and this rule they call masora; "tradition," from DD, tradit, as if this critique were nothing but a tradition which they had received from their forefathers. Accordingly they say, that, when God gave the law to Moses at Mount Sinai, he taught him first the true reading of it; and, secondly, its true As the mass is in general believed to interpretation; and that both these were be a representation of the passion of our handed down by oral tradition from ge- blessed Saviour, so every action of the neration to generation, till at length they priest, and every particular part of the were committed to writing. The form-service, is supposed to allude to the parer of these, viz. the true reading, is the ticular circumstances of his passion and subject of the masora; the latter, or death. true interpretation, that of the mishna and gemera.

According to Elias Levita, they were the Jews of a famous school at Tiberias, about five hundred years after Christ, who composed, or at least began, the masora; whence they are called masorites and masoretic doctors. Aben Ezra makes them the authors of the points and accents in the Hebrew text, as we now find it, and which serve for vowels.

MASS, Missa, in the church of Rome, the office or prayers used at the celebration of the eucharist; or, in other words, consecrating the bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ, and offering them, so transubstantiated, as an expiatory sacrifice for the quick and the dead.

Nicod, after Baronius, observes, that the word comes from the Hebrew missach (oblatum ;) or from the Latin missa missorum; because in the former times the catechumens and excommunicated were sent out of the church, when the deacons said, Ite, missa, est, after sermon and reading of the epistle and Gospel; they not being allowed to assist at the consecration. Menage derives the word from missio, "dismissing;" others from missa, "missing, sending;" because in the mass the prayers of men on earth are sent up to heaven.

The general division of masses consist in high and low. The first is that sung by the choristers, and celebrated with the assistance of a deacon and subdeacon: low masses are those in which the prayers are barely rehearsed with

The age of the masorites has been much disputed. Archbishop Usher places them before Jerome; Capel, at the end of the fifth century; father Morin, in the tenth century. Basnage says, that they were not a society, but a succession of men; and that the masora was the work of many grammarians, who, without associating and communicating their notions, composed this col-out singing. lection of criticisms on the Hebrew text. There are a great number of different It is urged, that there were masorites or occasional masses in the Romish from the time of Ezra and the men of church, many of which have nothing the great synagogue, to about the year peculiar but the name: such are the of Christ 1030: and that Ben Asher and masses of the saints; that of St. Mary Ben Naphtali, who were the best of the of the Snow, celebrated on the fifth of profession, and who, according to Bas- August; that of St. Margaret, patronnage, were the inventors of the masora, ess of lying-in-women; that at the feast flourished at this time. Each of these of St. John the Baptist, at which are published a copy of the whole Hebrew said three masses; that of the Innotext, as correct, says Dr. Prideaux, ascents, at which the gloria in excelsis

and hallelujah are omitted, and, it being || lical; and that the latter is driven oat a day of mourning, the altar is of aby prayer. From those words of our violet colour. As to ordinary masses, Lord, "Labour not for the meat that some are said for the dead, and, as is perisheth," it is said, that they consupposed, contribute to fetch the soul cluded they ought not to do any work to out of purgatory. At these masses the get their bread. We may suppose, says altar is put in mourning, and the only Dr. Jortin, that this sect did not last decorations are a cross in the middle of long; that these sluggards were soon six yellow wax lights: the dress of the starved out of the world; or, rather, celebrant, and the very mass-book, are that cold and hunger sharpened their black; many parts of the office are wits, and taught them to be better interomitted, and the people are dismissed preters of Scripture. without the benediction. If the mass be said for a person distinguished by his rank or virtues, it is followed with a funeral oration: they erect a chapelle ardente, that is, a representation of the deceased, with branches and tapers of yellow wax, either in the middle of the church, or near the deceased's tomb, where the priest pronounces a solemn absolution of the deceased. There are likewise private masses said for stolen or strayed goods or cattle, for health, for travellers, &c. which go under the name of votive masses. There is still a further distinction of masses, denominated from the countries in which they were used: thus the Gothic mass, or missa mosarabum, is that used among the Goths when they were masters of Spain, and which is still kept up at Toledo and Salamanca; the Ambrosian mass is that composed by St. Ambrose, and used only at Milan, of which city he was bishop; the Gallic mass used by the ancient Gauls; and the Roman mass, used by almost all the churches in the Romish communion.

Mass of the fresanctified (missa præsanctificatorum) is a mass peculiar to the Greek church, in which there is no consecration of the elements; but, after singing some hymns, they receive the bread and wine which were before consecrated. This mass is performed all Lent, except on Saturdays, Sundays, and the Annunciation. The priest counts upon his fingers, the days of the ensuing week on which it is to be celebrated, and cuts off as many pieces of bread at the altar as he is to say masses; and after having consecrated them, steeps them in wine, and puts them in a box; out of which, upon every occasion, he takes some of it with a spoon, and, putting it on a dish, sets it on the altar.

MASSACRE, a term used to signify the sudden and promiscuous butchery of a multitude. See PERSECUTION.

MASSALIANS, or MESSALIANS, a sect which sprung up about the year 361, in the reign of the emperor Constantinus, who maintained that men have two souls, a celestial and a diabo

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MASTER, a person who has servants under him; a ruler, or instructor. The duties of masters relate to the civil concerns of the family. To arrange the several businesses required of servants; to give particular instructions for what is to be done, and how it is to be done; to take care that no more is required of servants than they are equal to; to be gentle in our deportment towards them; to reprove them when they do wrong, to commend them when they do right; to make them an adequate recompense for their services, as to protection, maintenance, wages and character.-2. As to the morals of servants. Masters must look well to their servants' characters before they hire them; instruct them in the principles and confirm them in the habits of virtue; watch over their morals, and set them good examples.-3. As to their religious interests. They should instruct them in the knowledge of divine things, Gen. xiv. 14. Gen. xviii. 19. Pray with them and for them, Joshua xxiv. 15. Allow them time and leisure for religious services, &c. Eph. vi. 9. See Stennett on Domestic Duties, ser. 8; Paley's Moral Phil. vol. i. 233, 235; Beattie's Elements of Moral Science, vol. i. 150, 153; Doddridge's Lec. vol. ii. 266.

MATERIALISTS, a sect in the ancient church, composed of persons, who, being prepossessed with that maxim in philosophy, "ex nihilo nihil fit," out of nothing nothing can arise, had recourse to an eternal matter, on which they supposed God wrought in the creation, instead of admitting Him alone as the sole cause of the existence of all things. Tertullian vigorously opposed them in his treatise against Hermogenes, who was one of their number.

Materialists are also those who maintain that the soul of man is material, or that the principle of perception and thought is not a substance distinct from the body, but the result of corporeal organization. There are others called by this name, who have maintained that there is nothing but matter in the universe.

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