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A32989 Constitutions and canons ecclesiastical treated upon by the Bishop of London, president of the convocation for the province of Canterbury, and the rest of the bishops and clergy of the said province, and agreed upon with the King's Majesty's licence in their synod begun at London Anno Domini 1603, and in the year of the reign of our Sovereign Lord James, by the grace of God, King of England, France, and Ireland the first, and of Scotland the thirty seventh : and now published for the due observation of them, by His Majesty's authority, under the great seal of England. Church of England.; Bancroft, Richard, 1544-1610. 1678 (1678) Wing C4101; ESTC R40829 53,888 80

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be thereunto admitted unless he first consent and subscribe to the three Articles before mentioned in the presence of the Bishop of the Diocess wherein he is to Preach Read Lecture Catechise or Administer the Sacraments as aforesaid XXXVIII Revolters after Subscription censured IF any Minister after he hath once subscribed to the said three Articles shall omit to use the Form of Prayer or any of the Orders or Ceremonies prescribed in the Communion-Book let him be suspended and if after a Month he do not reform and submit himself let him be excommunicated and then if he shall not submit himself within the space of another Month let him be deposed from the Ministery XXXIX Cautions for Institution of Ministers into Benefices NO Bishop shall institute any to a Benefice who hath been Ordained by any other Bishop except he first shew unto him his Letters of Orders and bring him a sufficient Testimony of his former good Life and Behaviour if the Bishop shall require it and lastly shall appear upon due Examination to be worthy of his Ministery XL. An Oath against Simony at Institution into Benefices TO avoid the detestable sin of Simony because buying and selling of Spiritual and Ecclesiastical Functions Offices Promotions Dignities and Livings is execrable before God therefore the Arch-Bishop and all and every Bishop or Bishops or any other Person or Persons having Authority to Admit Institute Collate Install or to Confirm the Election of any Archbishop Bishop or other Person or Persons to any Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Function Dignity Promotion Title Office Jurisdiction Place or Benefice with Cure or without Cure or to any Ecclesiastical Living whatsoever shall before every such Admission Institution Collation Installation or Confirmation of Election respectively minister to every Person hereafter to be Admitted Instituted Collated Installed or Confirmed in or to any Archbishoprick Bishoprick or other Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Function Dignity Promotion Title Jurisdiction Place or Benefice with Cure or without Cure or in or to any Ecclesiastical Living whatsoever this Oath in Manner and Form following the same to be taken by every one whom it concerneth in his own Person and not by a Proctor IN. N. do swear That I have made no Simoniacal Payment Contract or Promise directly or indirectly by my self or by any other to my Knowledge or with my Consent to any Person or Persons whatsoever for or concerning the Procuring and Obtaining of this Ecclesiastical Dignity Place Preferment Office or Living respectively and particularly naming the same whereunto he is to be Admitted Instituted Collated Installed or Confirmed nor will at any time hereafter perform or satisfie any such kind of Payment Contract or Promise made by any other without my knowledge or consent So help me God through Jesus Christ. XLI Licences for Plurality of Benefices limited and Residence enjoined NO Licence or Dispensation for the keeping of more Benfices with Cure than one shall be granted to any but such only as shall be thought very well worthy for his Learning and very well able and sufficient to discharge his Duty that is who shall have taken the Degrce of a Master of Arts at the least in one of the Universities of this Realm and be a publick and sufficient Preacher Licensed Provided always That he be by a good and sufficient Caution bound to make his personal Residence in each his said Benefices for some reasonable time in every year And that the said Benefices be not more than thirty miles distant asunder and lastly that he have under him in the Benefice where he doth not reside a Preacher lawfully allowed that is able sufficiently to teach and instruct the People XLII Residence of Deans in their Churches EVery Dean Master or Warden or chief Governour of any Cathedral or Collegiate Church shall be resident in his said Cathedral or Collegiate Church fourscore and ten days Conjunction or Divisim in every Year at the least and then shall continue there in Preaching the Word of God and keeping good Hospitality except he shall be otherwise let with weighty and urgent Causes to be approved by the Bishop of the Diocess or in any other lawful sort dispensed with And when he is is present He with the rest of the Canons or Prebendaries resident shall take special Care that the Statutes and laudable Customs of their Church not being contrary to the Word of God or Prerogative Royal The Statutes of this Realm being in force concerning Ecclesiastical Order and all other Constitutions now set forth and confirmed by his Majesty's Authority and such as shall be lawfully enjoyned by the Bishop of the Diocess in his Visitation according to the Statutes and Customs of the same Church or the Ecclesiastical Laws of this Realm be diligently observed and that the petty Canons Vicars choral and other Ministers of their Church be urged to the Study of the Holy Scriptures and every one of them to have the New Testament not only in English but also in Latin XLIII Deans and Prebendaries to Preach during their Residence THE Dean Master Warden or chief Governour Prebendaries and Canons in every Cathedral and Collegiate Church shall not only Preach there in their own Persons so often as they are bound by Law Statute Ordinance or Custom but shall likewise Preach in other Churches of the same Diocess where they are Resident and especially in those Places whence they or their Church receive any yearly Rents or Profits And in case they themselves be sick or lawfully absent they shall substitute such licensed Preachers to supply their turns as by the Bishop of the Diocess shall be thought meet to Preach in Cathedral Churches And if any otherwise neglect or omit to supply his Course as is aforesaid the Offender shall be punished by the Bishop or by him or them to whom the Jurisdiction of that Church appertaineth according to the Quality of the Offence XLIV Prebendaries to be resident upon their Benefices NO Prebendaries nor Canons in Cathedral or Collegiate Churches having one or more Benefices with Cure and not being Residentiaries in the same Cathedral or Collegiate Churches shall under colour of their said Prebends absent themselves from their Benefices with Cure above the space of one Month in the Year unless it be for some urgent Cause and certain time to be allowed by the Bishop of the Diocess And such of the said Canons and Prebendaries as by the Ordinances of the Cathedral or Collegiate Churches do stand bound to be Resident in the same shall so among themselves sort and proportion the times of the Year concerning Residence to be kept in the said Churches as that some of them always shall be personally Resident there and that all those who be or shall be Residentiaries in any Cathedral or Collegiate Church shall after the days of their Residency appointed by their local Statutes or Customs expired presently repair to their Benefices or some one of them or to some other charge where the
Law requireth their Presence there to discharge their Duties according to the Laws in that Case provided And the Bishop of the Diocess shall see the same to be duly performed and put in Execution XLV Beneficed Preachers being Resident upon their Livings to Preach every Sunday EVery Beneficed man allowed to be a Preacher and residing on his Benefice having no lawful Impediment shall in his own Cure or in some other Church or Chappel where he may conveniently near adjoyning where no Preacher is preach one Sermon every Sunday of the Year wherein he shall soberly and sincerely divide the Word of Truth to the glory of God and to the best Edification of the People XLVI Beneficed men not Preachers to procure monthly Sermons EVery Beneficed man not allowed to be a Preacher shall procure Sermons to be Preached in his Cure once in every Month at the least by Preachers lawfully Licensed if his Living in the Judgment of the Ordinary will be able to bear it And upon every Sunday when there shall not be a Sermon preached in his Cure he or his Curate shall read some one of the Homilies prescribed or to be prescribed by Authority to the intents aforesaid XLVII Absence of Beneficed men to be supplied by Curates that are allowed Preachers EVery Beneficed man Licensed by the Laws of this Realm upon urgent Occasions of other Service not to reside upon his Benefice shall cause his Cure to be supplied by a Curate that is a sufficient and Licensed Preacher if the worth of the Benefice will bear it But whosoever hath two Benefices shall maintain a Preacher Licensed in the Benefice where he doth not reside except he preach himself at both of them usually XLVIII None to be Curates but allowed by the Bishop NO Curate or Minister shall be permitted to serve in any Place without Examination and Admission of the Bishop of the Diocess or Ordinary of the Place having Episcopal Jurissdiction in Writing under his Hand and Seal having respect to the greatness of the Cure and meetness of the Party And the said Curates and Ministers if they remove from one Diocess to another shall not be by any means admitted to serve without Testimony of the Bishop of the Diocess or Ordinary of the Place as aforesaid whence they came in Writing of their Honesty Ability and Conformity to the Ecclesiastical Laws of the Church of England Nor any shall serve more than one Church or Chapel upon one day Except that Chapel be a Member of the Parish Church or united thereunto and unless the said Church or Chapel where such a Minister shall serve in two places be not able in the Judgment of the Bishop or Ordinary as aforesaid to maintain a Curate XLIX Ministers not allowed Preachers may not Expound NO Person whatsoever not examined and approved by the Bishop of the Diocess or not Licensed as is aforesaid for a sufficient or convenient Preacher shall take upon him to Expound in his own Cure or elsewhere any Scripture or matter of Doctrine but shall only study to read plainly and aptly without glossing or adding the Homilies already set forth or hereafter to be published by Lawful Authority for the Confirmation of the true Faith and for the good Instruction and Edification of the People L. Strangers not admitted to Preach without shewing their Licence NEither the Minister Church wardens nor any other Officers of the Church shall suffer any man to preach within their Churches or Chapels but such as by shewing their Licence to Preach shall appear unto them to be sufficiently authorized thereunto as is aforesaid LI. Strangers not admitted to Preach in Cathedral Churches without sufficient Authority THE Deans Presidents and Residentiaries of any Cathedral or Collegiate Church shall suffer no Stranger to Preach unto the People in their Churches except they be allowed by the Archbishop of the Province or by the Bishop of the same Diocess or by either of the Universities And if any in his Sermon shall publish any Doctrine either strange or disagreeing from the Word of God or from any of the Articles of Religion agreed upon in the Convocation House Anno 1562. or from the Book of Common Prayers the Dean or the Residents shall by their Letters subscribed with some of their Hands that heard him so soon as may be give notice of the same to the Bishop of the Diocess that he may determine the Matter and take such Order therein as he shall think convenient LII The Names of Strange Preachers to be noted in a Book THAT the Bishop may understand if Occasion so require what Sermons are made in every Church of his Diocess and who presume to preach without Licence the Church-wardens and Side-men shall see that the Names of all Preachers which come to their Church from any other Place be noted in a Book which they shall have ready for that Purpose wherein every Preacher shall subscribe his Name the Day wherein he preached and the Name of the Bishop of whom he had Licence to Preach LIII No Publick Opposition between Preachers IF any Preacher shall in the Pulpit particularly or namely of purpose impugn or confute any Doctrine delivered by any other Preacher in the same Church or in any Church near adjoyning before he hath acquainted the Bishop of the Diocess therewith and received Order what to do in that Case because upon such publick and Dissenting and contradicting there may grow much Offence and Disquietness unto the People the Church-wardens or Party grieved shall forthwith signifie the same to the said Bishop and not suffer the said Preacher any more to occupy that place which he hath once abused except he faithfully promise to forbear all such matter of Contention in the Church until the Bishop hath taken further Order therein who shall with all convenient Speed so proceed therein that publick Satisfaction may be made in the Congregation where the Offence was given Provided That if either of the Parties Offending do appeal he shall not be suffered to preach pendentelite LIV. The Licences of Preachers refusing Conformity to be void IF any man Licensed heretofore to Preach by any Archbishop Bishop or by either of the Universities shall at any time from henceforth refuse to conform himself to the Laws Ordinances and Rites Ecclesiastical established in the Church of England he shall be admonished by the Bishop of the Diocess or Ordinary of the Place to submit himself to the Use and due Exercise of the same And if after such Admonition he do not conform himself within the space of one Month We determine and decree That the Licence of every such Preacher shall thereupon be utterly void and of none effect LV. The Form of a Prayer to be used by all Preachers before their Sermons BEfore all Sermons Lectures and Homilies the Preachers and Ministers shall move the People to joyn with them in Prayer in this Form or to this effect as briefly as conveniently they may Ye shall
said Arch-Bishop Bishop or Suffragan shall for Parchment Writing Wax Sealing or any other respect thereunto appertaining take above ten shillings under such pains as are already by Law prescribed CXXXVI A Table of the Rates and Fees to be set up in Courts and Registries VVE do likewise constitute and appoint That the Registers belonging to every such Ecclesiastical Judge shall place two Tables containing the several Rates and Sums of all the said Fees one in the usual place or Consistory where the Court is kept and the other in his Registry and both of them in such sort as every man whom it concerneth may without difficulty come to the view and perusal thereof and take a Copy of them the same Tables to be so set up before the Feast of the Nativity next ensuing And if any Register shall fail to place the said Tables according to the Tenour hereof he shall be Suspended from the execution of his Office until he cause the same to be accordingly done And the said Tables being once set up if he shall at any time remove or suffer the same to be removed hidden or any way hindered from sight contrary to the true meaning of this Constitution he shall for every such offence be Suspended from the exercise of his Office for the space of six Months CXXXVII The whole Fees for shewing Letters of Orders and other Licences due but once in every Bishops time FOrasmuch as a chief and principal cause and use of Visitation is that the Bishop Arch-Deacon or other assigned to Visit may get some good knowledge of the State Sufficiency and Ability of the Clergy and other persons whom they are to Visit We think it convenient that every Parson Vicar Curate Schoolmaster or other person Licensed whosoever do at the Bishops first Visitation or at the next Visitation after his Admission shew and exhibit unto him his Letters of Orders Institution and Induction and all other his Dispensations Licences or Faculties whatsoever to be by the said Bishop either allowed or if there be just cause disallowed and rejected and being by him approved to be as the custom is signed by the Register and that the whole Fees accustomed to be paid in the Visitations in respect of the Premisses be paid only once in the whole time of every Bishop and afterwards but half of the said accustomed Fees in every other Visitation during the said Bishops continuance Apparitors CXXXVIII The Number of Apparitors restrained FOrasmuch as we are desirous to redress such abuses and aggrievances as are said to grow by Somners or Apparitors We think it meet that the multitude of Apparitors be as much as is possible abridged or restrained Wherefore we decree and ordain That no Bishop or Archdeacon or their Vicars or Officials or other inferior Ordinaries shall depute or have more Apparitors to serve in their Jurisdictions respectively then either they or their Predecessors were accustomed to have thirty years before the publishing of these our present Constitutitions All which Apparitors shall by themselves faithfully execute their Offices neither shall they by any colour or pretence whatsoever cause or suffer their Mandates to be executed by any Messengers or Substitutes unless it be upon some good cause to be first known and approved by the Ordinary of the place Moreover they shall not take upon them the Office of Promoters or Informers for the Court neither shall they exact more or greater Fees than are in these our Constitutions formerly prescribed And if either the number of the Apparitors deputed shall exceed the fore said limitation or any of the said Apparitors shall offend in any of the Premisses the Persons deputing them if they be Bishops shall upon Admonition of their Superiour discharge the Persons exceeding the number so limited If inferiour Ordinaries they shall be suspended from the execution of their Office until they have dismissed the Apparitors by them so deputed and the Parties themselves so deputed shall for ever be removed from the Office of Apparitors and if being so removed they desist not from the exercise of their said Offices let them be punished by Ecclesiastical censures as persons contumacious Provided that if upon experience the number of the said Apparitors be too great in any Diocess in the judgment of the Archbishop of Canturbury for the time being they shall by him be so abridged as he shall think meet and convenient Authority of Synods CXXXIX A National Synod the Church Representative WHosoever shall hereafter affirm that the sacred Synod of this Nation in the Name of Christ and by the KING's Authority assembled is not the true Church of England by representation let him be Excommunicated and not restored until he repent and publickly revoke that his wicked Error CXL Synods conclude as well the absent as the present WHosoever shall affirm That no manner of person either of the Clergy or Laity not being themselves particularly assembled in the said sacred Synod are to be subject to the Decrees thereof in causes Ecclesiastical made and ratified by the Kings Majesties supream Authority as not having given their voices unto them let him be Excommunicated and not restored until he repent and publickly revoke that his wicked Error CXLI Depravers of the Synod censured WHosoever shall hereafter affirm That the sacred Synod assembled as aforesaid was a company of such persons as did conspire together against godly and religious professors of the Gospel and that therefore both they and their proceedings in making of Canons and Constitutions in causes Ecclesiastical by the Kings Authority as aforesaid ought to be despised and contemned the same being ratified confirmed and enjoyed by the said Regal Power Supremacy and Authority let them be Excommunicated and not restored until they repent and publickly revoke that their wicked Error WE of our Princely inclination and Royal care for the maintenance of the present Estate and Government of the Church of England by the Laws of this our Realm now settled and established having diligently with great contentment and comfort read and considered of all these their said Canons Orders Ordinances and Constitutions agreed upon as is before expressed and finding the same such as We are perswaded will be very profitable not only to our Clergy but to the whole Church of this our Kingdom and to all the true members of it if they be well observed Have therefore Us our Heirs and lawful Successors of our special Grace certain Knowledge and meer Motion given and by these presents do give our Royal Assent according to the form of the said Statute or Act of Parliament aforesaid to all and every of the said Canons Orders Ordinances and Constitutions and to all and every thing in them contained as they are before written And furthermore We do not only by our said Prerogative Royal and supream Authority in Causes Ecclesiastical ratifie confirm and establish by these our Letters Patents the said Canons Orders Ordinances and Constitutions and all and
CONSTITUTIONS AND Canons Ecclesiastical TREATED UPON By the BISHOP of LONDON President of the CONVOCATION FOR THE Province of CANTERBURY AND The rest of the Bishops and Clergy of the said Province AND Agreed upon with the King's Majesty's Licence in their Synod begun at London Anno Domini 1603. And in the Year of the Reign of our Sovereign Lord JAMES by the Grace of God King of England France and Ireland the First and of Scotland the Thirty seventh AND Now Published for the due Observation of them by His Majesty's Authority UNDER THE Great Seal of England LONDON Printed for Samuel Mearne Stationer to the King 's most Excellent Majesty and Robert Pawlet 1678. JAMES by the Grace of God King of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. To all to whom these Presents shall come Greeting Whereas our Bishops Deans of our Cathedral Churches Archdeacons Chapters and Colledges and the other Clergy of every Diocess within the Province of Canterbury being summoned and called by Virtue of our Writ directed to the most Reverend Father in God John late Archbishop of Canterbury and bearing Date the 31. Day of January in the First Year of Our Reign of England France and Ireland and of Scotland the 37. to have appeared before him in our Cathedral Church of St. Paul in London the 20. Day of March then next ensuing or elsewhere as he should have thought it most convenient to treat consent and conclude upon certain difficult and urgent Affairs mentioned in the said Writ Did thereupon at the time appointed and within the Cathedral Church of St. Paul aforesaid assemble themselves and appear in Convocation for that purpose according to Our said Writ before the Right Reverend Father in God Richard Bishop of London duly upon a second Writ of Ours dated the 9. Day of March aforesaid authorized appointed and constituted by reason of the said Archbishop of Canterbury his Death President of the said Convocation to execute those things which by Virtue of Our first Writ did appertain to him the said Archbishop to have executed if he had lived We for divers urgent and weighty Causes and Considerations Us thereunto especially moving of Our especial Grace certain Knowledge and meer Motion did by Virtue of our Prerogative Royal and Supreme Authority in Causes Ecclsieastical give and grant by Our several Letters Patents under Our Great Seal of England the one dated the 12. Day of April last past and the other the 25. Day of June then next following full free and lawful Liberty Licence Power and Authority unto the said Bishop of London President of the said Convocation and to the other Bishops Deans Archdeacons Chapters and Colledges and the rest of the Clergy before mentioned of the said Province That they from time to time during Our first Parliament now Prorogued might confer treat debate consider consult and agree of and upon such Canons Orders Ordinances and Constitutions as they should think necessary fit and convenient for the Honour and Service of Almighty God the good and quiet of the Church and the better Government thereof to be from time to time observed performed fulfilled and kept as well by the Archbishops of Canterbury the Bishops and their Successors and the rest of the whole Clergy of the said Province of Canterbury in their several Callings Offices Functions Ministeries Degrees and Administrations as also by all and every Dean of the Arches and other Iudge of the said Archbishop's Courts Guardians of Spiritualties Chancellors Deans and Chapters Archdeacons Commissaries Officials Registers and all and every other Ecclesiastical Officers and their inferiour Ministers whatsoever of the same Province of Canterbury in their and every of their distinct Courts and in the order and manner of their and every of their Proceedings and by all other Persons within this Realm as far as lawfully being Members of the Church it may concern them as in our said Letters Patents amongst other Clauses more at large doth appear Forasmuch as the Bishop of London President of the said Convocation and others the said Bishops Deans Archdeacons Chapters and Colledges with the rest of the Clergy having met together at the time and place before mentioned and then and there by Virtue of Our said Authority granted unto them treated of concluded and agreed upon certain Canons Orders Ordinances and Constitutions to the end and purpose by Us limited and prescribed unto them and have thereupon offered and presented the same unto Us most humbly desiring Us to give Our Royal Assent unto their said Canons Orders Ordinances and Constitutions according to the Form of a certain Statute or Act of Parliament made in that behalf in the 25. Year of the Reign of King Henry the Eighth and by Our said Prerogative Royal and Supreme Authority in Causes Ecclesiastical to ratifie by Our Letters Patents under Our Great Seal of England and to confirm the same the Title and Tenour of them being word for word as ensueth Constitutions and Canons ECCLESIASTICAL Treated upon by the Bishop of London President of the Convocation for the Province of Canterbury and the rest of the Bishops and Clergy of the said Province and agreed upon with the King's Majesty's Licence in their Synod begun at London Anno Dom. 1603. And in the year of the Reign of our Sovereign Lord JAMES by the Grace of God King of England France and Ireland the First and of Scotland the Thirty seventh Of the Church of ENGLAND I. The King's Supremacy over the Church of England in Causes Ecclesiastical to be maintained AS our Duty to the King 's most Excellent Majesty requireth We first decree and ordain That the Archbishop of Canterbury from time to time all Bishops of this Province all Deans Archdeacons Parsons Vicars and all other Ecclesiastical Persons shall faithfully keep and observe and as much as in them lieth shall cause to be observed and kept of others all and singular Laws and Statutes made for restoring to the Crown of this Kingdom the Ancient Jurisdiction over the State Ecclesiastical and abolishing of all Foreign Power repugnant to the same Furthermore all Ecclesiastical Persons having Cure of Souls and all other Preachers and Readers of Divinity Lectures shall to the uttermost of their Wit Knowledge and Learning purely and sincerely without any colour or dissimulation teach manifest open and declare four times every Year at the least in their Sermons and other Collations and Lectures That all usurped and Foreign Power forasmuch as the same hath no Establishment nor ground by the Law of God is for most just Causes taken away and abolished and that therefore no manner of Obedience or Subjection within His Majesty's Realms and Dominions is due unto any such Foreign Power but that the King's Power within His Realms of England Scotland and Ireland and all other His Dominions and Countries is the Highest Power under God to whom all men as well Inhabitants as born within the same do by
God's Laws owe most Loyalty and Obedience afore and above all other Powers and Potentates in Earth II. Impugners of the King's Supremacy censured WHosoever shall hereafter affirm That the King's Majesty hath not the same Authority in Causes Ecclesiastical that the godly Kings had amongst the Jews and Christian Emperours of the Primitive Church or impeach any part of His Regal Supremacy in the said Causes restored to the Crown and by the Laws of this Realm therein established Let him be Excommunicated ipso facto and not restored but only by the Archbishop after his Repentance and Publick Revocation of those his wicked Errors III. The Church of England a true and Apostolical Church WHosoever shall hereafter affirm That the Church of England by Law established under the King's Majesty is not a true and an Apostolical Church teaching and maintaining the Doctrine of the Apostles Let him be Excommunicated ipso facto and not restored but only by the Archbishop after his Repentance and Publick Revocation of this his wicked Errour IV. Impugners of the Publick Worship of God established in the Church of England censured WHosoever shall hereafter affim That the Form of God's Worship in the Church of England established by Law and contained in the Book of Common Prayer and Administration of Sacraments is a corrupt superstitious or unlawful Worship of God or containeth any thing in it that is repugnant to the Scriptures Let him be Excommunicated ipso facto and not restored but by the Bishop of the Place or Archbishop after his Repentance and Publick Revocation of such his wicked Errors V. Impugners of the Articles of Religion established in the Church of England censured WHosoever shall hereafter affirm That any of the Nine and thirty Articles agreed upon by the Archbishops and Bishops of both Provinces and the whole Clergy in the Convocation holden at London in the Year of our Lord God One thousand five hundred sixty two for avoiding diversities of Opinions and for the establishing of Consent touching true Religion are in any part superstitious or erroneous or such as he may not with a good Conscience subscribe unto Let him be Excommunicated ipso facto and not restored but only by the Archbishop after his Repentance and publick Revocation of such his wicked Errors VI. Impugners of the Rites and Ceremonies established in the Church of England censured WHosoever shall hereafter affirm That the Rites and Ceremonies of the Church of England by Law established are wicked Antichristian or superstitious or such as being commanded by lawful Authority men who are zealously and godly affected may not with any good Conscience approve them use them or as occasion requireth subscribe unto them Let him be Excommunicated ipso facto and not restored until he repent and publickly revoke such his wicked Errors VII Impugners of the Government of the Church of England by Archbishops Bishops c. censured WHosoever shall hereafter affirm that the Government of the Church of England under His Majesty by Archbishops Bishops Deans Archdeacons and the rest that bear Office in the same is Antichristian or repugnant to the Word of God Let him be Excommunicated ipso facto and so continue until he repent and publickly revoke such his wicked Errors VIII Impugners of the Form of consecrating and ordering Archbishops Bishops c. in the Church of England censured WHosoever shall hereafter affirm or teach That the Form and manner of making and consecrating Bishops Priests and Deacons containeth any thing in it that is repugnant to the Word of God or that they who are made Bishops Priests or Deacons in that Form are not lawfully made nor ought to be accounted either by themselves or others to be truly either Bishops Priests or Deacons until they have some other calling to those Divine Offices Let him be Excommunicated ipso facto not to be restored until he repent and publickly revoke such his wicked Errors IX Authors of Schism in the Church of England censured WHosoever shall hereafter separate themselves from the Communion of Saints as it is approved by the Apostles Rules in the Church of England and combine themselves together in a new Brother-hood accompting the Christians who are conformable to the Doctrine Government Rites and Ceremonies of the Church of England to be prophane and unmeet for them to joyn with in Christian Profession Let them be Excommunicated ipso facto and not restored but by the Archbishop after their Repentance and Publick Revocation of such their wicked Errors X. Maintainers of Schismaticks in the Church of England censured WHosoever shall hereafter affirm That such Ministers as refuse to subscribe to the Form and manner of God's Worship in the Church of England prescribed in the Communion Book and their Adherents may truly take unto them the Name of another Church not established by Law and dare presume to publish it That this their pretended Church hath of long time groaned under the Burthen of certain Grievances imposed upon it and upon the Members thereof before mentioned by the Church of England and the Orders and Constitutions therein by Law established Let them be Excommunicated and not restored until they repent and pulickly revoke such their wicked Errors XI Maintainers of Conventicles censured WHosoever shall hereafter affirm or maintain That there are within this Realm other Meetings Assemblies or Congregations of the King 's born Subjects than such as by the Laws of this Land are held and allowed which may rightly challenge to themselves the Name of True and Lawful Churches Let him be Excommunicated and not restored but by the Archbishop after his Repentance and Publick Revocation of such his wicked Errors XII Maintainers of Constitutions made in Conventicles censured WHosoever shall hereafter affirm That it is lawful for any sort of Ministers and Lay-persons or of either of them to joyn together and make Rules Orders or Constitutions in Causes Ecclesiastical without the King's Authority and shall submit themselves to be ruled and governed by them Let them be Excommunicated ipso facto and not be restored until they repent and publickly revoke those their wicked and Anabaptistical Errors Of Divine Service and Administration of the SACRAMENTS XIII Due Celebration of Sundays and Holy-days ALL manner of Persons within the Church of England shall from henceforth celebrate and keep the Lord's Day commonly called Sunday and other Holy-days according to God's Holy Will and Pleasure and the Orders of the Church of England prescribed in that behalf that is in hearing the Word of God read and taught in private and publick Prayers in acknowledging their Offences to God and amendment of the same in reconciling themselves charitably to their Neighbours where displeasure hath been in oftentimes receiving the Communion of the Body and Blood of Christ in visiting of the poor and Sick using all godly and sober Conversation XIV The prescript Form of Divine Service to be used on Sundays and Holy-days THE Common Prayer shall be said or sung
in outward Reverence as otherwise regarded for the Worthiness of their Ministery did think it sit by a prescript Form of decent and comely Apparel to have them known to the People and thereby to receive the Honour and Estimation due to the special Messengers and Ministers of Almighty God We therefore following their grave Judgment and the ancient Custom of the Church of England and hoping that in time new-fangleness of Apparel in some Factious Persons will die of it self do constitute and appoint That the Archbishops and Bishops shall not intermit to use the accustomed Apparel of their Degrees Likewise all Deans Masters of Colleges Archdeacons and Prebendaries in Cathedral and Collegiate Churches being Priests or Deacons Doctors in Divinity Law and Physick Batchellors in Divinity Masters of Arts and Batchellors of Law having any Ecclesiastical Living shall usually wear Gowns with standing Collars and Sleeves strait at the Hands or wide Sleeves as is used in the Universities with Hoods or Tippets of Silk or Sarcenet and square Caps And that all other Ministers admitted or to be admitted into that Function shall also usually wear the like Apparel as is aforesaid except Tippets only We do further in like manner ordain That all the said Ecclesiastical Persons above mentioned shall usually wear in their Journeys Cloaks with Sleeves commonly called Priests Cloaks without Gards Welts long Buttons or Cuts And no Ecclesiastical Person shall wear any Coife or wrought Night-cap but only plain Night-caps of black Silk Satten or Velvet In all which Particulars concerning the Apparel here Prescribed our meaning is not to attribute any Holiness or special Worthiness to the said Garments but for Decency Gravity and Order as is before specified In private Houses and in their Studies the said Persons Ecclesiastical may use any comely and Scholar-like Apparel provided that it be not cut or pinckt and that in publick they go not in their Doublet and Hose without Coats or Cassocks And that they wear not any light coloured Stockings Likewise poor Beneficed men and Curates not being able to provide themselves long Gowns may go in short Gowns of the Fashion aforesaid LXXV Sober Conversation required in Ministers NO Ecclesiastical Person shall at any time other then for their honest Necessities resort to any Taverns or Alehouses neither shall they boad or lodge in any such Places Furthermore they shall not give themselves to any base or servile Labour or to drinking or Riot spending their time Idlely by day or by night playing at Dice Cards or Ta●les or any other unlawful Game But at all times convenient they shall hear or read somewhat of the Holy Scriptures or shall occupy themselves with some other honest Study or Exercise always doing the things which shall appertain to Honesty and endeavouring to profit the Church of God having always in Mind that they ought to excel all others in Purity of Life and should be examples to the People to live well and Christianly under Pain of Ecclesiastical Censures to be inflicted with Severity according to the qualities of their Offences LXXV Ministers at no time to forsake their Calling NO man being admitted a Deacon or Minister shall from thenceforth voluntarily relinquish the same nor afterward use himself in the Course of his Life as a Lay-man upon pain of Excommunication And the Names of all such Men so forsaking their Calling the Church-wardens of the Parish where they dwell shall present to the Bishop of the Diocess or to the Ordinary of the Place having Episcopal Jurisdiction School-Masters LXXVII None to teach School without Licence NO Man shall teach either in publick School or private House but such as shall be allowed by the Bishop of the Diocess or Ordinary of the Place under his Hand and Seal being found meet as well for his Learning and dexterity in Teaching as for sober and honest Conversation and also for right understanding of Gods true Religion and also except he shall first subscribe to the first and third Articles aforementioned simply and to the two first Clauses of the second Article LXXVIII Curates desirous to teach to be Licensed before others IN what Parish Church or Chappel soever there is a Curate which is a Master of Arts or Batchelor of Arts or is otherwise well able to teach Youth and will willingly so do for the better increase of his Living and training up of Children in Principles of true Religion We will and ordain That a Licence to teach Youth of the Parish where he serveth be granted to none by the Ordinary of that place but only to the said Curate Provided always That this Constitution shall not extend to any Parish or Chappel in Countrey Towns where there is a publick School founded already In which case we think it not meet to allow any to teach Grammar but only him that is allowed for the said publick School LXXXIX The Duty of School-Masters ALL School-Masters shall teach in English or Latin as the Children are able to bear the larger or shorter Catechism heretofore by publick Authority set forth And as often as any Sermon shall be upon Holy and Festival days within the Parish where they teach they shall bring their Schollars to the Church where such Sermon shall be made and there see them quietly and soberly behave themselves and shall examine them at times convenient after their return what they have born away of such Sermons Upon other days and at other times they shall train them up with such Sentences of holy Scriptures as shall be most expedient to induce them to all Godliness and they shall teach the Grammar set forth by King Henry the Eighth and continued in the times of King Edward the Sixth and Queen Elizabeth of noble Memory and none other And if any School-Master being Licensed and having subscribed as aforesaid shall offend in any of the premisses or either speak write or teach against any thing whereunto he hath formerly subscribed if upon admonition by the Ordinary he do not amend and reform himself let him be suspended from teaching School any longer Things appertaining to Churches LXXX The great Bible and Book of Common Prayer to be had in every Church THE Church-wardens or Quest-men of every Church and Chappel shall at the charge of the Parish provide the Book of Common Prayer lately explained in some few points by his Majesties Authority according to the Laws and his Highness Prerogative in that behalf and that with all convenient speed but at the furthest within two months after the publishing of these our Constitutions And if any Parishes be yet unfurnished of the Bible of the largest Volume or of the Books of Homilies allowed by Authority the said Church-wardens shall within convenient time provide the same at the like charge of the Parish LXXXI A Font of Stone for Baptism in every Church ACcording to a former Constitution too much neglected in many places we appoint That there shall be a Font of Stone in every
Church and Chappel where Baptism is to be ministred the same to be set in the Ancient usual places In which only Font the Minister shall baptize publickly LXXXII A decent Communion Table in every Church VVHereas we have no doubt but that in all Churches within the Realm of England convenient and decent Tables are provided and placed for the celebration of the holy Communion we appoint that the same Tables shall from time to time be kept and repaired in sufficient and seemly manner and covered in time of Divine Service with a Carpet of Silk or other decent stuff thought meet by the Ordinary of the place if any question be made of it and with a fair Linen cloth at the time of the ministration as becometh that Table and so stand saving when the said holy Communion is to be administred At which time the same shall be placed in so good sort within the Church or Chancel as thereby the Minister may be more conveniently heard of the Communicants in his Prayer and Ministration and the Communicants also more conveniently and in more number may Communicate with the said Minister and that the Ten Commandments be set upon the East-end of every Church and Chappel where the people may best see and read the same and other chosen Sentences written upon the walls of the said Churches and Chappels in places convenient and likewise that a convenient Seat be made for the Minister to read Service in All these to be done at the charge of the Parish LXXXIII A Pulpit to be provided in every Church THE Church-wardens or Quest-men at the common charge of the Parishioners in every Church shall provide a comely and decent Pulpit to bo set in a convenient place within the same by the discretion of the Ordinary of the place if any question do arise and to be there seemly kept for the Preaching of Gods word LXXXIV A Chest for Alms in every Church THE Church-wardens shall provide and have within three months after the publishing of these Constitutions a strong Chest with a hole in the upper part thereof to be provided at the charge of the Parish if there be none such already provided having three Keys of which one shall remain in the custody of the Parson Vicar or Curate and the other two in the custody of the Church-wardens for the time being which Chest they shall set and fasten in the most convenient place to the intent the Parishioners may put into it their Alms for their poor Neighbours And the Parson Vicar or Curate shall diligently from time to time and especially when men make their Testaments call upon exhort and move their Neighbours to confer and give as they may well spare to the said Chest declaring unto them That whereas heretofore they have been diligent to bestow much substance otherwise then God commanded upon superstitious uses now they ought at this time to be much more ready to help the poor and needy knowing that to relieve the poor is a sacrifice which pleaseth God And that also whatsoever is given for their comfort is given to Christ himself and is so accepted of him that he will mercifully reward the same The which Alms and Devotion of the people the keepers of the Keys shall yearly quarterly or oftner as need requireth take out of the Chest and distribute the same in the presence of most of the Parish or six of the chief of them to be truly and faithfully delivered to their most poor and needy neighbours LXXXV Churches to be kept in sufficient reparations THe Churchwardens or Questmen shall take care and provide that the Churches be well and sufficiently repair'd and so from time to time kept and maintained that the Windows be well glazed and that the Floors be kept paved plain and even all things there in such an orderly and decent sort without dust or any thing that may be either noysome or unseemly as best becometh the House of God and is prescribed in an Homily to that effect The like care they shall take that the Church-yards be well and sufficiently repaired fenced and maintained with Walls Rails or Pales as have been in each place accustomed at their charges unto whom by Law the same appertaineth but especially they shall see that in every meeting of the Congregation peace be well kept and that all persons Excommunicated and so denounced be kept out of the Church LXXXVI Churches to be surveyed and the decays certified to the High Commissioners EVery Dean Dean and Chapter Archdeacon and others which have Authority to hold Ecclesiastical Visitations by Composition Law or Prescription shall survey the Churches of his or their Jurisdiction once in every three years in his own person or cause the same to be done and shall from time to time within the said three years certifie the High Commissioners for causes Ecclesiastical every year of such defects in any the said Churches as he or they do find to remain unrepaired and the names and sirnames of the parties faulty therein Upon which Certificate we desire that the said High Commissioners will ex officio mero send for such parties and compel them to obey the just and lawful Decrees of such Ecclesiastical Ordinaries making such Certificates LXXXVII A Terrier of Glebe-lands and other Possessions belonging to Churches WE Ordain That the Archbishops and all Bishops within their several Diocesses shall procure as much as in them lieth that a true Note and Terrier of all the Glebes Lands Medows Gardens Orchards Houses Stocks Implements Tenements and portions of Tythes lying out of their Parishes which belong to any Parsonage or Vicarage or rural Prebend be taken by the view of honest men in every Parish by the appointment of the Bishop whereof the Minister to be one and be laid up in the Bishops Registry there to be for a perpetual memory thereof LXXXVIII Churches not to be Prophaned THe Church-wardens or Quest-men and their Assistants shall suffer no Plays Feasts Banquets Suppers Church-ales Drinkings temporal Courts or Lets Lay-jurys Musters or any other prophane usage to be kept in the Church Chappel or Church-yard neither the Bells to be rung superstitiously upon Holy-days or Eves abrogated by the Book of Common Prayer not at any other times without good cause to be allowed by the Minister of the place and by themselves Church-wardens or Quest-men and Side-men or Assistants LXXXIX The choice of Church-wardens and their accompt ALL Church-wardens or Quest-men in every Parish shall be chosen by the joynt consent of the Minister and the Parishioners if it may be But if they cannot agree upon such a choice then the Minister shall chuse one and the Parishioners another and without such a joynt or several choice none shall take upon them to be Church-wardens neither shall they continue any longer then one year in that Office except perhaps they be chosen again in like manner And all Church-wardens at the end of their year or within a month after
Licensed before others 36 79 The Duty of School-Masters ib. Things appertaining to Churches 80 THe great Bible and Book of Common Prayer to be had in every Church 36 81 A Font of Stone for Baptism in every Church 37 82 A decent Communion Table in every Church ib. 83 A Pulpit to be provided in every Church 38 84 A Chest for Alms in every Church ib. 85 Churches to be kept in sufficient reparation ib. 86 Churches to be surveyed and the decays certified to the High Commissioners 39 87 A Terrier of Glebe-lands and other Possessions belongin to Churches ib. 88 Churches not to be Prophaned 40 Church-wardens or Quest-men and Side-men or Assistants 89 THe choice of Churchwardens and their accompt 40 90 The choice of Sidemen and their joynt Office with Church-wardens ib. Parish Clerks 91 PArish Clerks to le chosen by the Minister 41 Ecclesiastical Courts belonging to the Archbishops Jurisdiction 92 NOne to be cited into divers Courts for probate of the same Will 41 93 The rate of Bona notabilia liable to the Prorogative Court 43 94 None to be cited into the Arches or Audience but dwellers within the Archbishops Diocess or Peculiars ib. 95 The Restraint of double Quarrels 44 96 Inhibitions not to be granted without the subscription of an Advocate ib. 97 Inhibitions not to be granted until the Appeal be exhibited to the Iudge 45 98 Inhibitions not to be granted to factious Appellants unless they first subscribe ib. 99 None to marry within the Degrees prohibited 46 100 None to Marry under xxi years without their Parents Consent ib. 101 By whom Licences to Marry without Banns shall be granted and to what sort of persons ib. 102 Security to be taken at the granting of such Licences and under what Conditions 47 103 Oaths to be taken for the Conditions ib. 104 An Exception for those that are in Widdowhood ib. 105 No Sentence for Divorce to be given upon the sole confession of the Parties 48 106 No Sentence for Divorce to be given but in open Court ib. 107 In all Sentences for Divorce Bond to be taken for not marrying during each others life ib. 108 The penalty for Iudges offending in the Premisses 49 Ecclesiastical Courts belonging to the Jurisdiction of Bishops and Arch-Deacons and the Proceedings in them 109 NOtorious Crimes and Scandal to be certified into Ecclesiastical Courts by Presentment 49 110 Schismaticks to be presented ib. 111 Disturbers of Divine Service to be presented 50 112 Not Communicants at Easter to be presented ib. 113 Ministers may persent ib. 114 Ministers shall present Recusants 51 115 Ministers and Churchwardens not to be sued for Presenting ib. 116 Churchwardens not bound to present oftner than twice a Year 52 117 Churchwardens not to be troubled for not presenting oftner then twice a year ib. 118 The old Church-wardens to make their Presentments before the new be sworn 53 119 Convenient time to be assigned for framing Presentments ib. 120 None to be cited into Ecclesiastical Courts by Process of Quorum nomina 54 121 None to be cited into several Courts for one Crime ib. 122 No Sentence of Deprivation or Deposition to be pronounced against a Minister but by the Bishop 55 123 No Act to be sped but in open Court ib. 124 No Court to have more than one Seal ib. 125 Convenient places to be chosen for the keeping of Courts 56 126 Peculiar and inferiour Courts to exhibit the Original Copies of Wills into the Bishops Registry ib. Judges Eccleslastical and their Surrogates 127 THe quality and Oath of Iudges 56 128 The Quality of Surrogates 57 Proctors 129 PProctors not to retain Causes without the lawful Assignment of the parties 58 130 Proctors not to retain Causes without the counsel of an Advocate ib. 131 Proctors not to conclude in any cause without the knowledge of an Advocate 59 132 Proctors pohibited the Oath In Animam Domini sui ib. 133 Proctors not to be clamorous in Court 60 Registers 134 A Buses to be reformed in Registers 60 135 A certain rate of Fees due to all Ecclesiastical Officers 61 136 A Table of the Rates and Fees to be set up in Courts and Registers 62 137 The whole Fees for shewing Letters of Orders and other Licences due but once in every Bishops time ib. Apparitors 138 THe number of Apparitors restrained 63 Authority of Synods 139 A National Synod the Church representative 64 140 Synods conclude as well the absent as the present ib. 141 Depravers of the Synod censured ib. FINIS