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B20451 Justice vindicated from the false fucus [i.e. focus] put upon it, by [brace] Thomas White gent., Mr. Thomas Hobbs, and Hugo Grotius as also elements of power & subjection, wherein is demonstrated the cause of all humane, Christian, and legal society : and as a previous introduction to these, is shewed, the method by which men must necessarily attain arts & sciences / by Roger Coke.; Reports. Part 10. French Coke, Roger, fl. 1696. 1660 (1660) Wing C4979 450,561 399

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subjection to them which are created by Gods will so revealed are not created by the Law of nature 11. All offices which are created by Divine Law whether by the Law All offices of commanding and obeying are not Gods ordinance immediately of Nature or by divine positive institution being from higher then humane causes are indelible and cannot be aliened transferred or communicated by any humane act for ejus est nolle cujus est velle and therefore cannot the power and obedience of Parents and Children of Husband and Wife of King and Subjects be aliened dissolved communicated or transferred but the offices of Masters and Servants of Magistrates and those subject to them are alienable communicable and transferrable and sometime are and sometime are not they are not therefore from any immediate ordinance of God either positive or natural But the offices of commanding and obeying as Masters and Servants and Magistrates and those subject to them are but temporary and determinable by the laws of him that made them therefore not Gods ordinance 12. Humane laws create Magistrates power two ways Immediately How many ways power and subjection happens by humane laws to Magistrates and those subject to them as when Supreme powers which are the fountain from whence all Temporal laws are derived constitute any Magistrate giving him jurisdiction over the inhabitants of any place or when the Laws or Higher powers enable such men to nominate their Magistrate there the Nominators are the instruments by which the Law does transfer this Magisterial power 13. The mutual offices of power and subjection between Masters and How many ways humane laws create the power and subjection of Masters and Servants Servants happen two ways either created by the contract or pact of the Master and Servant and we have before shewed that all pacts and contracts receive their obligation from Humane laws as the means by which Humane laws do create these offices or else without any pact or contract of the parties commanding and obeying as in the cases of Slavery where prisoners are taken in war or men condemned thereunto for some offence or of Apprentiship where children are bound for such a term by the Laws of their Country or Parents And I do grant Mr. Hobbs Grotius and White that this power and subjection Humana voluntas introduxit but not the parties obeying as they most senslesly feign but the Supreme powers or the parties commanding And where they are not so created all men are originally free I do much wonder at those men who make all Supreme or Regal power to have Annot. its origination from the consent and aggregation of many families For they not only confound the Masters power with the Fathers which in the nature and cause we have already shewed and shall more fully hereafter in their proper Chapters shew but also make the Masters power to be from the Law of God and Regal power to be a Humane institution whereas the contrary is true in both And what it is should move men to imagine that after Adam's and Noah's posterity dilated themselves into many families that they should give Adam and Noah more power then God gave them I am sure no such thing or the least probability thereof appears in Scripture or that after Adam's and Noah's deaths their Posterities became free and independent from all Government which was no body can tell when brought in by the Pacts of Men or by consent and submission of Families to it 14. That power or right of command which God jure divino hath as All power and subjection from what causes solely and absolutely over all his creatures as the Creator first and efficient Cause of them and therefore by highest right all obedience is chiefly due to them before any creature in all things Or else power and subjection are caused from the Laws of Nature or from the Law of God revealed in the Scriptures or from Humane positive Laws All Society which is not contained in these causes is Tyranny in the party commanding nor is any obligation in Conscience to such Commands from the party commanded Having thus far treated of the Causes of Power and Subjection conjunctly we shall hereafter in their several Chapters treat of them severally and more at large And we insist more largely hereon in regard these Powers and Subjections are either so confounded in their Causes by other men or such wild things begged for Principles that so far as I understand no ingenuous man should grant CHAP. II. Of Regal and Magistrates power 1. THere is no question but one of Mans chiefest happinesses in this Introduction life consists in the contemplation of God in his works to contemplate the Heavens and the Earth the workmanship of his hands and the admirable order and motion of them all being by him so made and created Nor is God less seen in the generation and birth of Man and other creatures then in the creation of the Universe And as admirable is the preservation of every Man as his generation For abstracting from the internal cause Spiritus intus alit totamque infusa per artus Virg. Aen. 6. prop. fin Mens agitat molem How God does renew and preserve every Man and every part of Man by a perpetual motion viz. the Systole and Diastole of the Blood If a Man considers his outward preservation not only from the violence of other creatures who are of much more force then himself but also from the force and violence of his own kind for were he not restrained Homo homini lupus And what are the People in general but a sudden rash and furious Beast carried hither and thither upon every wild fancy raging to have this thing done and presently lamenting because it is done He must needs As the Athenians did in their sentence on Socrates and the Captains at the Fight at Arginusae confess there is no power under heaven which can restrain the raging of the sea and the madness of the people The Psalmist therefore Psal 77. when he calls to mind the works of God and his wonders of old Thou thundrest from heaven thou shakest the earth thou dividest the sea and at last as the greatest wonder of all he says Thou leadest thy people like sheep by the hands of Moses and Aaron It is not therefore from any pacts and inventions of Man that he may hope for any security but by submitting himself to what God hath ordained for his preservation 2. Upon a survey taken in Scripture how often Christi Domini are Regal power cannot be created by the People used they are found to be thirty three two of which are spoken of the Patriarchs one of our Saviour and all the rest of Kings only Once of our Saviour Luk. 2. 26. twice of the Patriarchs Psal 105. 15. and 1 Chro. 16. 22. all the rest to Kings only and expresly And though others were anointed yet none
power which is not restrained The Father hath power of life and death over his children by the Law of Nature the power is absolute But it is evident that the Law of Nature gives Fathers a power over their Children without restriction Therefore the Fathers power is absolute and by consequence he hath power of life and death over his Children See Bodin cap. 4. pag. 21. de rep where he says That the Persians the people of Higher Asia the Hebrews Romans Celtae Gaules the West Indians before the Spaniard subdued them did use this absolute power And see pag. 23 24. how he makes all the strife disorders and contentions among Brethren their Father living the wantonness luxury and riot of youth without fear of punishment the contempt and scorn of the Fathers person and power and the decay of the glory and ennobled virtue of the Romans to proceed from the taking away of the Fathers power Examples of the Fathers power of life and death are hard to find because it cannot easily be imagined a Father should give judgment upon himself his son being part of himself to cut off any part of himself which he hopes might by any means be cured Yet Quintus Fulvius did adjudge his son to death for being of Catelines Conspracie Salust de conj Cat. And see Deut. 21. 18 19 20 21. where it is most evident that the Father hath power of life and death for the People do but execute the judgment of the Father and Mother That such a son is stubborn and rebellious c. The exercise of this power is restrained generally among Christians by positive humane Laws but from what ground I cannot tell 6. The Fathers power arising from generation and the person of the The Son hath propriety against his Father Son being only generated the Fathers power can extend no further and therefore whatsoever the Son does acquire it is his own excluding his Father 7. Though the Son out of wedlock is alike subject to both parents Why out of wedlock the Fathers commands are to be preferred before the Mothers because he is alike part of both yet if the Father and Mother command contrary things whereby it becomes impossible for the Son to obey both there the command of the Father is to be preferred because of the excellencie of his sex CHAP. VII The Husbands Power 1. THe Husbands power doth not arise ex concubitu for then a man hath power over all the women which he hath or shall have known which is absurd besides one woman known by several men should be alike subject to them all which is impossible 2. The Husbands power does not arise from his Wifes being a part of his family for any part of the family may become no part of the family but the Wife can never be out of the power of her Husband therefore the Husbands power does not arise from the Wifes being a part of his family 3. The Husbands power does not arise from the Wifes submission or subjecting herself to her Husband for that is but an act of her will unumquodque dissolvi potest eo ligamine quo ligatum est and therefore by an act of her will she may when she list set herself free 4. It does not arise from the Husbands accepting of the Wifes will for that makes the Husband obedient to his Wife obedience being no other thing but the accepting the will of another which is unnatural 5. The Husbands power does arise from the law of God or Nature by From whence the Husbands power doth arise the conjunction of Man and Wife in wedlock For these two individual persons by the law of God are made one mystical person of which the Husband is head and the head is the directive and ruling part of the body therefore the Husband is the director and ruler of his Wife Object But if the Law of Nature by Marriage gives the Husband a power or right of command over the Wife why may it not be that God by the Civil pact might give a Prince or Court a right of command over those Men who made it Answ I answer That first a Similitude proves nothing Secondly The cases are nothing alike For Marriage was an institution of God in Paradise and the power of the Husband over the Wife being due by the Law of Nature hath been ever since attributed by Mankind to the Husband yet so that after the death of the Husband the Wife becomes free from such subjection until by Marriage she again subjects herself In none of these respects does this hold in the Civil pact for no such thing was ever instituted by God nor any such thing ever constituted or done by Man but only a Chimera invented by capricious men to palliate sedition Nor did ever any man become free from subjection to Supreme powers by the death of him or them to whom they made their subjection by virtue of the Civil pact Nor was it ever known in the world that Men were free before they made their Civil pact as Women are before they marry 6. God gives a power to the Husband without restriction viz. Thy The Husband hath jus vitae necis over his Wife desire shall be to thy husband and he shall rule over thee Gen. 3. 16. And therefore the Husbands power over the wife is without restriction and by consequence the Husband hath power over the life of his Wife Antiently among the Gaules this power was not restrained The Romilian Law restrained the Husbands Caesar lib. 3. de bel Gal. power to put his Wife to death for four causes only This power was used by the West-Indians before they were subdued by the Spaniard and is generally among the Idolaters and Mahumetans But the exercise of the Fathers and Husbands power of life and death over their Children and Wives is restrained not by any law of God that I know of but by the Temporal laws and yet no wrong done to the Fathers or Husbands neither For though their Children and Wives be in their power by the law of Nature yet by the law of Nature are they in the power of their Soveraign and subject unto him And though the Fathers and Husbands power be from the law of Nature yet the exercise of it is humane politick and voluntary and the exercise of all Subjects voluntary actions may be restrained and determined by him who hath the supreme power therefore the Fathers and Husbands exercising their power over their Children and Wives may be restrained by him who commands by the highest right which is the King But supposing the Husbands and Fathers power to be from the law of Nature and Regal power but a politick and invented thing and made only by the will of Man it were then a violence upon the law of Nature that any thing which hath no origination but from the inventions and wills of Men should restrain the exercise of that
I confess all sins of my body of skin and flesh and bones and nerves and of kidnies and gristles and of my tongue and lips and of my jaws and teeth and hair of my marrow and of every other thing which is soft or hard wet or dry I confess I have observed my Baptism worse then I have promised to my Lord and the profession by which I was bound to keep for the praise of God and his Saints and the eternal health of my self I confess I have often neglected my Canonical hours and have often forsworne the Life of God and taken his Name in vain 9. I ask and beseech my Lord for remission of all these that the Devil may never by his snares prevail against me lest at any time I should die without confession and amendment of my sins even as to day I have confessed all my sins before our Lord and Saviour Christ who governs heaven and earth and before that Altar and those Reliques and before my Confessor and Mass-priest of the Lord and as I have given a pure and true confession and am ready to correct all my sins and as much as in me lies with all carefulness hereafter to avoid them 10. And thou O Jesu Christ my Saviour have mercy upon my soul and forgive I pray and blot out all my sins and transgressions which I have ever either heretofore or lately committed and lead me into thy heavenly kingdom that there I may be conversant with the Elected and thy Saints without end and for ever Now I humbly beseech thee O Priest of God that thou be a witness for me in the day of Judgment that the Devil hereafter may have no power over me and that thou mayst be a pleader for me to the Lord that I may amend my sins and transgressions and desist from committing the like again May God enable me to perform this who liveth and reigneth without end in everlasting Amen The manner of injoining Penance 1. If an old man or young man rich or poor man sound or infirm shall unwillingly offend another of any order it shall not be so taken as if he had wilfully done it or on set purpose And also if any one compelled by necessity shall have committed any sin for this thing because he did by necessity commit it he shall always rather deserve forgiveness and milder censure 2. Each Deed is to be carefully distinguished for Gods and Mans sake These Services are observed in Parts beyond Sea viz. 3. That every Bishop take his Episcopal seat upon that Wednesday which is called the head of the * Fast and then let every one in his Diocese come unto him who is guilty of any grievous crime and when he shall have Ashwednesday confessed this his Confessor shall teach him penance proportionable to the crime he is guilty of And if any one be worthy of a more grievous sentence he shall separate him from the communion of the Church yet shall he grant and exhort him that he follow his necessary imployment and so at length he may return home having obtained pardon 4. And after that upon Maunday-Thursday let all be called together to the same place and the Bishop singing over them some of the Hymns pronounce absolution to them and give them leave to return home with his benediction to them This is to be observed of all Christians 5. Yet ought the Priest diligently to enquire with what contrition and with what perfection and plenitude every one hath fulfilled the penance enjoined him and accordingly grant this remission 6. If a Layman without cause kill another let him fast seven years in bread and water and four of them as his Confessor shall appoint and also the seven years penance to boot and alwaies bewail his sin all he can because it is unknown to men how much his penance hath prevailed with God 7. If a man desire to kill another and cannot fulfil it let him fast three years viz. one with bread and water the other two as his Confessor shall injoin him 8. If a man shall unwillingly slay a Layman let him fast three years one with bread and water the other two as his Confessor shall appoint and let him always lament his transgressions 9. If he were a Subdeacon let him fast six years if he were a Deacon let him fast seven years if he were a Mass-priest ten years and if a Bishop twelve and always lament 10. If any man so chastise his son that he thereof die although against his will let him fast five years with bread and water ut supra 11. If a Bishop or Mass-priest shall kill any one let him lose the dignity of his Order and his penance be always 12. If a woman shall kill an infant either in her womb or after it shall be born whether by taking a potion or any other way let her fast ten years viz. three in bread and water and the other seven accordingly as her Confessor shall in mercy impose and always bewail the fact 13. If a man without cause in his rage slea his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let him fast 3 years 14. If a husband shall out of any impious jealousie beat his wife so as she therefore dies guiltless yet let him fast three years and always bewail his misdeed 15. If a man shall of his own accord have killed himself whether with a weapon or any other devilish instigation it is not lawful for any man to sing a Mass for such a man nor to bury him with singing Psalms nor to cover him with earth being laid in a lawful sepulchre The same Judgment is to be given upon him who mischievously ended his life with pain as also a Thief Murderer or Betrayer of his Master 16. If any one of twenty years of age hath defiled himself with a beast be it male or female let him fast fifteen years And if he hath a wife and be forty years old and shall have done such a thing let him both abstain and fast all his life long nor let him presume until he be ready to die to take the body of our Lord. A young man or foolish shall be grievously beaten who shall commit any such fault 17. Whosoever shall break wedlock be it wife or husband shall fast three days in every week with bread and water for the space of 7 years 18. Whosoever repudiates his wife and takes another dissolves the wedlock No man ought to cast off though for life or death any of those things which by due right belong to Christians neither may he be buried who does this among Christians And concerning a Wife let the same thing be done And the Kindred who were present or gave counsel to these things let them be punished with the same sentence unless they sooner repent and diligently amend 19. If a man hath a Wife and also a Concubine let no Priest give them any thing belonging to Christian rights unless he penitently return
deceive them who take not heed whenas the Law of Nature which is immutable is not changed but the thing of which the Law of Nature does work receives some mutation For example If a Creditor to whom I am obliged takes what Lowe him now I am not bound to pay not because the Law of nature leaves to command to pay what I owe but because what I did owe ceases to be And to prove this he brings Greek in Epictetus Observ It is true that universal causes in nature produce nothing but as meeting with particular material causes the law of nature therefore of it self produces nothing but as meeting with particular material causes apted and disposed for the law of nature to work upon and therefore when these particular causes cease the obligation which the law of nature creates ceases also As Thou shalt honor thy Father and Mother is the law of nature but then there must be Parents Children or the law of nature creates no obligation and therefore when the particular cause ceases the obligation of the law of nature ceases also as when Parents are dead the law of nature in that particular can have no obligation upon their Children And so in the instance which Grotius gives a Debtor is by the law of nature obliged to pay his Creditor but this Debt being paid the particular cause ceasing the obligation of the law of nature ceases also What need therefore was there of Arrianus his Greek out of Epictetus to prove a prime and necessary truth which is of more authority then forty Arrianuses and all the Greek in Epictetus Grotius and all his Authors and Poets to boot Grotius goes on So if God commands any man to be killed or to take away any thing that is anothers It is not lawful that Murder or Theft be done which terms involve vice but it is not Murder or Theft which is done by God the Author of life and all things They say Nulla similitudo quatuor pedibus currit I am sure this similitude Observ 2. runs not upon one foot for in this last the particular cause remains whereas in the former it is taken away and if the law of nature be immutable by God and Thou shalt not kill or steal be from the law of nature then it is Murder and Theft although commanded by God Thus hath Grotius instead of clearly propounding his principles and orderly reasoning from them thatched a company of equivocal and contradictory principles with Poets and Authors brought in by head and heels so as not any one proposition is clearly stated and disputed but the whole Treatise a most perplexed and unsignificant thing God conferred upon Mankind generally Jus Right immediately after Lib. 2. cap. 2. Para. 2. the Creation and again when the world was repaired after the flood over all the things of this inferior nature There were as Justin saies all things common Lib. 43. Lib. 1. Para. 16. de jure Belli c. and undivided to all Men even as one Patrimony should be to all Men. God was pleased peculiarly to give rights dare jura to one only people viz. the Hebrews Observ Which is absurd and impossible by the ninth Notion of the first Book of Euclid viz. a part equal to the whole the Hebrews not being all mankind but a part Grotius goes on Hence it came to pass that every man gathered whatsoever Lib. 2. cap. 2. Para. 2. he could snatch to their own uses and consume what could be consumed and whatsoever any man had so snatched that could no man take from him but by injury but this State could not long continue Observ How 's this This is more monstrous and absurd then the other what God gave a Right to Mankind and that so immutable that it is unalterable by God himself and yet not possible long to continue To prove this first Common Right of all things common and undivided to Mankind he refers to Gen. 1. 29. 30. And God said I have given 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Septuagint has it to you in the plural number when Adam only was created every herb bearing seed which is upon the face of the earth and every tree in the which is the fruit of a tree yeelding seed to you it shall be for meat c. Now how could God speak to Adam in the plural number when Adam only was created It is said verse 27. So God created Adam in his own Image in the Image of God made he Man Male and Female created he them And therefore God speaks here to Adam and Eve Now whether God gave this Right to Adam and Eve in Community to both alike as Grotius would have it or to Eve in subordination to Adam I refer it to any Christian Man to judge Let the Woman learn in silence with all subjection c. and the 1 Tim. 2. 11. reason the Apostle giveth is Man was first made then Eve But suppose that God gave this Right not only to Adam and Eve but to all Mankind in Adam verse 13. and Eve yet by the authority of the Holy Ghost had Adam dominion over all Mankind because Adam was first made and therefore God at the Creation of Man made Government with Mankind Let us see whether Grotius has any better luck with his common and undivided Right of all things c. immediately from the time of the world repaired after the flood which to prove he refers to Gen. 9. 2. 3. And the feare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of you and the dread of you shall be upon every beast c. every moving thing that liveth shall be meat for you even as the green herb have I given you all things Observ Now then if this were not given to Noah his Wife and Noahs Children in subordination to Noah but as Grotius would have it in community to all alike then had Sem as much Right to all things as Noah Ham as Sem Japheth as Ham Sems wife was an intercommoner with Noah Ham with Japheths wife and Noahs wife with them all if this be true Mr. Hobbs makes Noahs Sons in an ill case where he saies filium in statu naturali intelligi non Annot. art 10. cap. 1. posse no Son can be understood in the state of nature and Sem Ham and Japheth are Bastards and not Noahs Sons Well if Noah and his Wife his Son and their Wives had all things in common that is every one of them get what they could snatch to their own uses and consume what might be consumed from whence did Noah snatch his Vineyard and drank the wine thereof untill he was drunken If you beleeve Grotius it was Sems Vineyard Verse 20. as much as Noahs Japheths Wives as much as Sems and Hams Wife had as much right to it as any body else Poor Noah thou hast taken great pains here to little purpose if Hugo be thy Judge Well Mr. Hobbs rather then he
c. was publickly worshipped and served And men who were of no Religion were always stigmatised with the most opprobrious name of Atheists as the most vile of Men. * Flaminem assiduum Jovi Sacerdotalem creavit Liv. lib. 1. Numa Pompilius therefore in the first place took care for the institution of a Religion among the Romans and to this end he created a Priest who should daily offer Sacrifice to Jupiter And so zealous were the * Selden Annal Angl. lib. 1. c 4. Caesar de Bell. Gal. lib. 6. Gamb Brit. p. 12. Druides in the old age of our Ancestors before Christianity was planted among us in their Religion or Publick Forms of Worshipping of God that none but the Priests and Schollars might learn them nor would they commit them to Letters both because they would not have them divulged least they should grow contemptible by being exposed to the view of the rude and ignorant multitude as also that their Schollars might the better retain them in their memory * Nicias Orat. Thucid. lib. 7. Nicias as the chief Argument of his justification and hope of belief from the gods in his greatest adversity says 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I have worshipped the gods frequently according to Law And heretofore in the Church of England set Forms of Prayers were not onely ordained that her sons of her Religion might meet at publick times to worship and serve God but the Minister or Priest was obliged every day to offer up the publick worship and service of God whether there were any present but himself or not for all sorts of men in their several vocations and stations That as the fire upon the Altar among the Jews might never go out so among us Christians might no day pass wherein the Publick Service of God was not offered up for all sorts of men 2. That Men honor and obey their Superiors Subjects their Soveraigns Children their Parents Servants their Masters 3. That Men be not Tale-bearers or Back-biters but avoid evil communication 4. That Men do not make advantage of anothers weakness to his damage 5. That Man in all things keep his Integrity that is not to answer so Integrity to another as to deceive him by equivocation or mental reservation if it does not appear that there is evil intent in the question 6. That Men perform their promise made although it be to their hinderance Promise 7. That Men bear a grateful minde for benefits received that is that Gratitude they do not suffer him from whom they receive a benefit to be in a worse condition then he was before he conferred it And if they have not in their power wherewith to satisfie yet that they bear it so in their mindes as to be ready to satisfie to their power Some Creatures who are not endued with Reason do imitate this Virtue the Storks when their Parents are viete and broken with age do relieve them by feeding and providing for them wherefore the Greeks called the Stork 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Beneficiorum retributorem See Grotius Annotations upon his Preface De Jure Belli Pac. 8. That men do well to their Wives Children and others as by nature and affinity allied unto them 9. That men be merciful wherein men ought not so much to observe the quantum as the cause of shewing mercy or pitty 10. That in revenge men do not respect the evil past but minde the future good which may happen from the punishment 11. That they neither by deeds words or countenance use another contumeliously 12. That they be not high-minded or over-conceited of their birth person or parts 13. That they be lowly minded and modest 14. Not to accept or respect persons in judgment 15. Where no Law gives propriety there ought community to be 16. Those things which can neither be divided or used in common that the decision be by lot 17. That the first-born be preferred and the Male before the Female 18. * That no man endeavor c. For that which is any mans by Divine Institution cannot be aliened neither by his will nor the will of all the men in the world and therefore cannot Episcopacy or Priesthood after Consecration and Imposition of hands be transferred because they are by Divine Institution Yet whatsoever Bishop or Priest shall endeavor for reward or price to alien it or deny it for safety of his life may as well be esteemed a prophane person as Esau was That no man endeavor to transfer or alien by Pact or Promise that right which God by the Law of Nature or Divine Institution hath given him 19. That Protection be granted to Ambassadors and Mediators of Peace 20. That no man seek private Revenge for any supposed Injury 21. That Judgment be pronounced without hope of reward or for applause of men 22. That where Evidence of Fact does not clearly appear that they take information from Witnesses 23. That the Judge be indifferent not byassed to either party either by Natural relations or by any precedent Obligation 24. These Moral Virtues are commanded by the Moral Law and are most truly and properly so as they are revealed and declared to mankinde by God in the holy Scriptures For the Will of God commanding in the Scriptures that is in the Old and New Testament is in all things by highest right to be obeyed and followed And because God hath created man with an immortal and eternal Soul and does not will the death that is the eternal death of a sinner he offers every man grace who does not refuse it by preferring some other things to lay hold of those means which he hath revealed in them for the obtaining of his eternal happiness 25. But because a man cannot well bear all these Virtues in his minde The sum or cause of all Moral Virtues contained in the Second Table in every action which a man intends if he would know whether it be against the Law of Nature or not Let him suppose himself in place of him with whom he intends this action and if he be not willing that this thing should be done to him let him not do it to another for upon this short and easie rule Whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you do ye even so unto them depends all the Law and the Prophets Matth. 7. 12. CHAP. V. Moral Virtues are commanded by God in the holy Scripture 1. THe Lord said Speak unto Aaron and unto his sons saying On this wise Religion or the worshiping of God in a Publick set form was instituted by God under the old and new Testament shall ye bless the children of Israel saying unto them The Lord bless thee and keep thee The Lord make his face shine upon thee and be gracious unto thee The Lord lift up his countenance upon thee and give thee peace And they shall put my name upon the children of Israel and I will bless them Numb 6. 22
23 24. c. and on this manner pray ye our Father which art in Heaven c. Math. 6. 9. c. And the Apostle 2 Tim. exhorts that First of all prayers and supplications because there can be no Religion without it be made for all Men especially for Kings c. And that the end of it is Religion or the uniting or binding Men to a publick and formal worship of God is plain by the Apostle himself Where he saies That men may with one mind and one mouth glorify God Rom. 6. 15. 2. I council thee to keep the kings commandment and that in regard of the That men honor and obey their superiors oath of God Eccles 8. 2. Feare God Honor the King 1 Pet 2 17. The feare of a King is as the roaring of a Lyon and who so provoketh him sins against his own soule Prov. 20. 2. Honor thy Father and thy Mother Exod. 20. 12. He that curseth Father or Mother shall surely be put to death Exod. 21. 15. Servants be obedient to them that are your Masters Ephes 6. 5. Let as many servants as are under the yoake count their masters worthy of all honor 3. Speak not evil of another hee that speaketh evil of his brother and That men be not Tale-bearers judgeth his brother speaketh evil of the law and judgeth the law Ja. 4. 11. Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth but that which is good Ephes 4. 29. The words of a talebearer are as wounds and they go down into the innermost parts of the belly Prov. 18. 8. VVhen David asketh the Lord the question Who shall abide in his Taberuacle Psal 15. 1. He answereth ver 3. He that backbiteth not with his tongue nor doth evil to his neighbour nor taketh up a reproach against his neighbour 4 Oppress not the widdow nor the fatherless the stranger nor the poor Not to defraud Zach. 7. 10. 5. Lord who shall dwell in thy Tabernacle who shall dwell in the holy Integrity hill He that walketh uprightly and worketh righteousness and speaketh the truth from his heart Psal 15 1 2. He that walketh righteously and speaketh uprightly c. shall dwell on high Jsa 33. 15 16. 6. That which is gone out of thy lips thou shalt keep and performe Deut. To keep Promise 23. 23. 7. Withhold not good from whom it is due when it is in the power of thy Gratitude hand to do it Prov. 3. 27. And what can man give back again to God for all the benefits he hath done for him Psal 116. 11. 8. Fathers provoke not your children to wrath but bring them up in the To do well to them nurture and admonition of the Lord. Ephes 6. 4. Husbands love your wives even as Christ loved the Church and gave himself for it Ephes 5. 25. 9. Whosoever shall give you a cup of cold water to drink in my name because Mercy ye belong to Christ verily I say unto you he shall not lose his reward Mark 9. 41. Blessed are the merciful for they shall obtain mercy St Matth. 5. 7. 10. Thou shalt not avenge nor beare any grudge against the children of Revenge thy people Levit. 29. 18. 11. I say unto you whosoever is angry with his brother without cause shall Contumacy be in danger of judgment and whosoever shall say unto his brother Racha shall be in danger of the councel but whosoever shall say unto his brother thou fool shall be in danger of hell fire Matth. 5. 19 He that uttereth a slander is a fool Pro. 10. 18. A soft answer turneth away wrath Prov 14. 21. 12. Every one that is proud in heart is an abomination to the Lord. Pro. Pride 16 5. There be six things which the Lord doth hate yea seaven are an abomination unto him a proud look c. Pro. 6. 16 17. 13. Blessed are the poore in spirit for theirs is the kingdom of heaven Modesty Math. 5. 3. With the lowly there is wisdom Pro. 11. 2. Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self Levit. 19. 18 Whosoever will be great among you let him be your minister and whosoever will be chief among you let him be your servant even as the sonne of man came not to be ministred to but to minister and give his life a ransome for many Matth. 20. 26 27 28. 14. Of a truth I perceive that God is no accepter of persons Act. 10. 34. Not accepting of persons There is no iniquity with God nor acception of persons Chro. 19. 15. Common waies accession to Maritime places St. August lib. 4. quest What things ought to be common 44. upon the book of Numb affirms The Children of Isarael had just cause of war against the Edomites Numb 20. 18. because Edom would not let them passe by the kings highway 16. And they gave forth their lots and the lot fell upon Matthias and he Decision by Lot was numbred among the Apostles Acts. 1. 26. The lot is cast into the lap but the whole disposing is of the Lord. Prov. 16. 33. 17. This is so evident as wheresoever God did not interpose in holy writ Primogeniture the first borne male was alwaies preferred And from the authority of the Apostle 1. Tim. 2. 23. Adam was first formed then Eve wherefore Adam had the dominion jura sanguinis nullo jure civili dirimi possint 18. God pronounced Esau a despiser of his birthright Gen. 25. 34. Because Not endeavor to alien what they claim by divine Law he to save his life sold his birthright and Hebr. 12. 16. a prophane person 19. David had a just cause of war against Hanum for his evil intreating Protection to Embassadors of his Embassadors 1. Sam. c. 10. 20. Revenge is mine I will repay it saies the Lord. Ro. 12. 29. Revenge 21. And thou shalt take no gift for the gift blindeth the wise and perverteth No reward for judgement the words of the righteous Exod. 23. 8. 22. At the mouth of two witnesses or three witnesses shall he that is worthy Witnesses of death be put to death Deut. 17. 6. But if he will not heare thee then take with thee one or two more that in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established Matth. 18. 16. 23. Thou shalt not wrest judgement thou shalt not respect persons neither Indifferent Judges take a gift Deut. 16. 19. 24. It is easier for heaven and earth to pass then one title of the law to faile Divine Laws are immutable unless by God himself Luke 16. 17. Thy word is true from the beginning and every of thy judgments endureth for ever Ps 119. 160. Yet God may alter his judgements when he pleases as Gods judgement pronounced against Nineveh Yet within forty daies and Nineveh shall be destroyed Jon. 3. 4. was changed by God cap. 4. 11. It was
might not be aliened or made worse by the Possessor yet so that she left a gap open for herself and her Favorites to prey upon it which was after shut by King James and with great care secured by King Charls All this while grew up a Faction in Church and State which became the ruine of both For not only in the Church the Publique Liturgy Communion or Religion was vilified and defamed but the Governors reviled with all opprobrious names of Tyrannical Antichristian c. It is true the Majesty of the King was not so openly reviled yet was it insensibly daily undermined by them in which they were much assisted by a company of half-headed Lawyers who in all Assemblies distilled this doctrine into ignorant men That the Law was above the King and that they had Property against him in their estates and goods Whereby not only Citizens and Great places became generally inclined to this new doctrine of the Teachers and Lawyers but the Country-Gentleman thought himself independent from the King both in his life and estate the Yeoman cared not for the Gentleman and as little regarded the King so that the veneration of the Royal Name became every day more contemptible and despised all honor and reverence due to the King Church was converted unto these Patriots of their Countries Liberty and New Lights Nor could the Church relieve the Crown although the Governors were well-affected towards it being by all the Faction more hated than the King became despised until in the end the chief Governors both of Church and State not only became Victims to the rage and lust of seditious men but the Revenues of both a prey to their avarice And now what is left for this miserable Nation to expect having forfeited all Piety and Allegiance to Gods Church and his Anointed but after all this consumption of the Blood and Publique and Private Revenue of the Nation and having lost all Reputation and Commerce abroad for the future to be Turk-like governed by armed and hungry Soldiers without any probable hope of Redemption Object It may be it will be here objected That though poor and contemptible Princes be rarely long obeyed especially where their Subjects are opulent yet had the Church never so great veneration both for power and piety as when in the Primitive times it was poor whereas afterward when it became rich and mighty it did degenerate into many vices and heresies and lost much of estimation and piety which it had in its poverty Answ I grant that God did by his grace and power originally by a company of poor men and Fishermen against all the greatness of worldly power miraculously plant a Church and that those poor men sent by God were supernaturally inspired by his grace which not their poverty was the cause of their piety and sanctity and that they were so highly honored by primitive Christians yet sure when God hath supernaturally planted his Church it cannot be in reason expected he should preserve it always by miracle And sure those are very ungrateful men not to contribute ordinary means for the preservation of what God hath extraordinarily planted Nor is there any thing more vain then to imagine that men are better for being poor or that according to the ordinary course of things they will not be by men in general esteemed vile and contemptible who are so Nil habet infaelix paupertas durius in se Juveual Quâm quod ridiculos homines facit CHAP. VI. Of the Fathers power 1. UNumquodque resolvitur in id ex quo componitur Dust shall return to the Introduction earth as it was and the Spirit to God who gave it Eccle. 12. 7. It is not the good will and pleasure of the All-prepotent God that only the individuals of one age should see the greatness of his Majesty and power therefore he was pleased to create man as well as other Creatures in this inferior or be in a * If Adam had not been created in a Mortal State the Sacrament of the Tree of life had been a vain institution mortal state yet he endewed him generativa facultate that though he does dye in his person yet he should live in his posterity and as one generation passeth away so another commeth but the earth abideth for ever Eccle. 1. 4. 2. There is nothing more evident then that in perfect Creatures of The power of Parents alike over their Children which man is the most perfect that God is the prime and efficient cause or God working by naturall causes the Sun is the efficient cause and Male and Female the Instrumental Sol per hominem generat hominem See Harvey de generatione Animalium Cap. 33. Man and Woman therefore being the means whereby God does renew the species of Mankind and all Creatures having power over themselves in all things wherein they are not restrained by some natural or humane Law and every Child being alike part of either of his Parents the Power of Father and Mother is alike over their Children and so by consequence the subjection and obedience of every Child is alike due to Father and Mother And to honor thy Father and thy Mother is the First precept of the second Table of the Decalogue 3. Man and Wife being but one person and the Husband being the Why in Matrimony the power is in the Father head of the Wife and the Wife being in the power of the Husband the Husband hath the power and command as well of the Children as of the Mother yet the piety and observance of Children to their Mother is as much due as to their Father 4. Grotius cap. 5. art 2. de jure belli pacis out of Arist pol. 1. cap ult Grotius his opinion of the Fathers power eth 5. cap. 10. distinguisheth the Fathers power over Children into three times viz. 1. The time of their imperfect judgment 2. The time of their perfect judgment 3. The time when they are out of the Fathers family In the first all the actions of the Children are under the command of the Parents In the second time whenas judgment is matured by age and are of the family they are subject as part of the family In the third when he is matured by age and out of the family the Son is in all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of his own right Yet he says and truly parag 5. The Fathers power so follows the Fathers person that it can never be pulled off nor transferred to any other for the Fathers power arising from generation is due to him by the Law of Nature and so always the same if not aliened by the act of God And therefore * Confuted Quando Ubi make no alteration in the Fathers power for it is the same when the Son is an Infant and when adult when he is part of the family and when not 5. Where the Law of Nature gives a
power which God hath given Fathers and Husbands by the law of Nature 7. The Husband being the head of the Wife she is in all respects of law The Wife has nothing proper against her Husband deemed civiliter mortua nor can take or purchase any thing during the coverture but whatsoever is given to the Wife is ex facto the Husbands Yet Marriage being a Sacrament by the institution of our Saviour and Ephes 5. 25 32. a Mystery of Christ and his Church and so the cognisance thereof due to the Ecclesiastical power the Church upon the penalty of Ecclesiastical censure may compell the Husband to allow his Wife Alimony if without sufficient cause he shall refuse to cohabit with her 8. If Poligamy had not been lawful before our Saviour Christs time Poligamy was lawful before our Saviour then had our Saviour been illegitimate being descended of Bathsheba when David had many other wives Nor can the argument drawn from the necessity of propagating Mankind take place when David reigned for there never was in so small a Continent so great a number of people as the Israelites were when David reigned as appears by the Number which Joab took and for which David was punished with so great a pestilence If it were before the divine law of our Saviour lawful every where for Annot. Men to have many Wives I do wonder why Mr. Hobbs cap. 17. art 8. de Cive says That our Saviour made no laws but the institution of the Sacraments which are Baptism and the Eucharist And if Matrimony be a Civil institution as he affirms then Poligamy is lawful for all Christians who are in subjection to the Turks c. where by the Temporal laws it is permitted and the Kingdom of Congo rejected Christianity for no other reason but because they were not allowed plurality of wives which Mr. Hobbs could easily have dispenced with I do challenge Mr. Hobbs to shew any one instance where ever in the Christian world before all things ran riot here in England since 1642. the Temporal power took cognisance of Marriage 9. Matrimony is the act of two free persons viz. neither precontracted What Matrimony is nor married nor within the degrees prohibited by God Levit. 18. of different sexes capable of performing the end of marriage mutually taking one another for Husband and Wife I N. take thee D. to be my wedded Wife I D. take thee N. to be my wedded Husband But this must be done publiquely and Banns of both parts publiquely pronounced three Holidays or a Licence procured from the Ordinary for dispensation with all the rites and solemnities injoined by the Church or else the Church takes no cognisance of it 10. Where the Matrimony is subsequent to the allegation there the Whether Matrimony be dissolvible Vinculum is dissoluble As if one man marries another mans Wife or a Husband his Wife living marries another or if the parties contracting or marrying be within the degrees forbidden by God or if either party were Lev 18. precontracted or frigid these necessarily preceding the Matrimony do dissolve the bond But where the matter or allegation is subsequent to the Matrimony there the bond of Matrimony cannot be dissolved but only a Divorce upon just cause is grantable to separate the Complainant à mensa à thoro The reason why in this latter case the Matrimony cannot be dissolved is because Marriage being an institution of God it is in the cause superior to any Humane law or act and so by consequence cannot by them be dissolved And indeed in proper speaking where the Matrimony is subsequent it is rather not done then dissolvible the persons marrying being personae incapaces for such an action 11. The Holy Ghost Ephes 5. 25 c. shews the duty of Husbands The duty of Fathers and Husbands And Cato though no lover of women did think it sacrilege in the Husband to strike his wife Plut. vita Caton cens No question the right and careful education of Children is the onely means by which Parents may hope to have any comfort of them here or hereafter for Train a child in the way when he is young and he will not depart from it when he is old says the Preacher Nor can Parents expect to have their Children virtuous if they be vitious themselves for with what face can any Father condemn his Child for any thing which he allows in himself Besides there is nothing ill which naturally Youth doth not more suddenly apprehend then Men therefore Maxima debetur puero reverentia si quid Juveval Turpe paras And ill habits are soon gotten by Children if they be not carefully observed and restrained and hardly if possibly left when they are Men. CHAP. VIII Of Domestical power 1. THere are three sorts of Families either by Affinity or Alliance How many sorts of Families there be or by Consanguinity or a Legal or Houshold-Family Of such a Family and of its Cause and Jurisdiction we shall in this ensuing Chapter treat 2. A Family is not the cohabitation of divers persons in one house A legal family is not the cohabitation of divers persons in the same house for then Inmates and Travellers c. were subject to the power of the Master and Host Besides subjection cannot be where it depends upon the will of the Subject when he will he may choose whether he will obey But it is evident that Inmates and Travellers may when they will cease their subjection by leaving of the house 3. A Family is contained in the mutual offices of commanding and What a legal family is obeying of several persons under one head in the same house And the same head may be of divers Families as when a Master keeps servants in two or more different houses 4. A Family may consist of Paterfamilias who is Father and Husband Of what persons a family in the largest sense is compounded and the head or commanding part of the family of Wife Children and Servants who are the obeying part of the family or of the Mistress of the family who commands and of Children and Servants who obey 5. But because a Family may consist where as parts of the Family In the more proper sense there is neither Father nor Mother Husband nor Wife nor Children A Family is properly where several Servants obey the same Master or Mistress in the same house 6. Servants are twofold either voluntarily serving with their consent Of Servants first given such as are those servants who for such wages serve their Masters for such a terme or where they serve whether they give consent or not as where men are slaves or apprentices The power which the head of the family has over his Servants is called potestas herilis or despotica the Masters or Mistresses power We speak first of Masters power over Servants serving for wages 7. It is impossible that any
St. 27 H. 8. cap. 15. Spiritual and sixteen Temporal to examine the Laws and Constitutions heretofore made according to the Statute of 25 H. 8. 9. But no Laws or Constitutions shall be made without the Kings assent nor contrary to the Kings Prerogative or the Laws of the Land If any person shall extoll the Authority of the Bishop of Rome he shall 28 H. 8. c. 10. incur the penalty of a Praemunire provided Anno 16 Ric. 2. Every Ecclesiastical and Lay-Officer shall be sworne to renounce the said Bishop and his Authority and to resist it to his power and to repute any Oath taken in maintenance of the said Bishop or his Authority to be void And the refusing of the said Oath to be Treason Makes all Bulls and Dispensations from the Bishop or See of Rome to 28 H. 8. c. 16. any of the Subject of this Realm void The King may nominate such number of Bishops Sees for Bishops 31 H. 8. c. 9. Cathedral Churches and endow them with such possessions as he will 1. If any person by word writing printing ciphering or otherwise do preach teach dispute or hold opinion That in the blessed Sacrament 31 H. 8. c. 14. called the Statute of the Six Articles of the Altar under form of bread and wine after the consecration thereof there is not really the natural body and blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ conceived of the Virgin Mary or that after the said consecration there remains any substance of bread or wine or any other substance but the substance of Christ God and man Or that in the flesh under the form of bread is not the very blood of Christ Or that with the blood under the form of wine is not the very flesh of Christ as well apart as though they were both together Or affirm the said Sacrament to be of other substance then is aforesaid Or deprave the said blessed Sacrament Then he shall be adjudged a Heretick and suffer death by burning and shall forfeit to the King all his lands tenements hereditaments goods and chattels as in case of High Treason 2. Or if any person preach in any Sermon or Collation openly made or teach in any Common School or Congregation or obstinately affirm or defend That the Communion of the blessed Sacrament in both kinds is necessary for the health of mans soul or ought to be administred in both kinds Or that it is necessary to be received by any person other then by Priests being at Mass and consecrating the same 3. Or that any man after the Order of Priesthood received may marry or contract matrimony 4. Or that any man or woman which advisedly hath vowed or professed or should vow or profess chastity or widowhood may marry or contract marriage 5. Or that Private Masses be not lawful or not laudable or should not be used or be not agreeable to the Laws of God 6. Or that Auricular confession is not expedient and necessary to be used in the Church of God He shall be adjudged suffer death and forfeit lands and goods as a Felon If any Priest or other man or woman which advisedly hath vowed chastity or widowhood do actually marry or contract matrimony with another Or any man which is or hath been a Priest do carnally use any woman to whom he is or hath been married or with whom he hath contracted matrimony or openly be conversant or familiar with any such woman both man and woman shall be adjudged Felons Commissions shall be awarded to the Bishop of the Diocese his Chancellor Commissary and others to enquire of the Heresies Felonies and offences aforesaid And also Justices of Peace in their Sessions and every Steward Under-Steward and Deputy of Steward in their Leets or Law-day by the oath of twelve men have authority to enquire of the Heresies Felonies and offences aforesaid See the 7. Chap. of B. Bramhalls Just Vindication of the Church of England where he endeavours to shew that not only the Emperor the King of France nay and the King of Spain have in effect done the same things with Henry the Eighth upon occasion or at least plead for it although for their interests they have not continued the exercise of their Jurisdiction as the Kings of England have done A short view or reflexion upon Henry the Eight and his Reformation How zealous a Defender of the Pope and See of Rome Henry the Eight K. H. 8. a zealous defender of the Pope and Papacy was in the beginning of his Reign is evident by his book written against Martin Luther For not being born Henry the seventh's eldest son his Father being a wondtrful frugal Prince and observing good natural parts in him bred him up in literature and destinated him to the Archbishoprick of Canterbury as being the cheapest and highest preferment he could give him But his elder brother being dead and after him his father The King esteeming it a great honor to imploy himself in so famous a controversie as was then maintained by the Wits of Christendom in defence and opposition of the Church of Rome wrote a book of the Seven Sacraments defending also the Papacy and oppugned the Doctrine of Luther This thing was so grateful to the Pope that Leo 10. honored him with the Title of Defender of the Faith But after he had been married to his brothers wife above twenty years and inflamed with lustful affection to Anne Bullein a Paragon and Minion From what cause the King became estranged from the Pope of the Court he became he said troubled in conscience for having married his brothers wife and therefore desired that the Pope would examine the case and satisfie his scruple of conscience It is a very remarkable thing that this ungodly Dispensation of Julius 2. for H. 8. his marrying with his brothers wife should be the cause of the King and Kingdoms defection from the Papacy under Clement 7. The Pope to satisfie the King gave the Cardinals Wolsey and Campeius a power Legatine to hear and determine the validity or invalidity of the marriage but the Queen refusing to submit to their determination appealed from them to the Pope The Pope had now a Wolf by the ears whom he could neither keep nor well let go For in pronouncing the marriage void he feared to incense Charls the Fifth being Nephew to Queen Katherine and the most potent Prince in Christendom and in confirming it he feared to lose Henry the then most beloved Son of the Church and great Defender of the Papacy not only in writing but also in joining with and assisting the French King Francis the First for freeing him from captivity being a prisoner under Charls The Pope therefore desires the advantage of time and proceeds slowly towards a determination The King as impatient in his desires expects a sentence from the Pope which not being to be had he procures Instruments from the Universities of Cambridge Oxford and Paris together
with the Opinion of Learned men That the marriage with his Brothers wife was contrary to the Law of God and void The King not expecting the Popes sentence anno 1533. marries his beloved Anne but such love is usually too hot to hold for about two years after he cut off her head yet the King did not wholly renounce the Papacy but still expecting the Popes sentence The Pope for the reasons aforesaid not desiring to end the business The slow proceedings of the Pope but to expect advantage from time reduces the matter into several points or heads which he would have particularly disputed and at the time of the Kings marriage with Anne was not got further then the article of Attentates in which the Pope gave sentence against the King that it was not lawful for him to put away his wife by his own authority without the Ecclesiastical Judge For which cause the King in the beginning of 1534. denied the Pope his obedience commanding his Subjects not to pay any money to Rome nor to pay the ordinary Peter-pence This infinitely troubled the Court of Rome and they daily consulted of a remedy Some thought to proceed against the King with censures and to interdict all Christian nations all commerce with England But the moderate counsel pleased best to temporise with him and to mediate a composition by the French King K. Francis accepted the charge and sent the Bishop of Paris to Rome to negotiate a Pacification with the Pope where they still proceeded in the cause gently and with resolution not to come to censures if the Emperor did not proceed first or at the same time with his forces They had divided the cause into twenty three articles and then they handled whether Prince Arthur had had carnal conjunction with Queen Katherine in this they spent time till Midlent was past when the 19. of March news came that a Libel was published in England against the Pope and the whole Court of Rome and besides a Comedy had been made in presence of the King and Court to the great disgrace and shame of the Pope and every Cardinal in particular For which cause all being inflamed with choler ran headlong to give sentence which was pronounced in the Consistory the 24. of the same month That the marriage between Henry and Katherine was good that he was bound to take her to wife and that in case he did not he should be excommunicated But the Pope was soon displeased with this precipitation For six days His rash censure repented of after the French Kings letters came That the King was content to accept the sentence concerning Attentates and to render obedience upon condition that the Cardinals whom he mistrusted should not meddle in the business and that persons not suspected should be sent to Cambray to take information ●and and the King had sent his Proctors before to assist in the Cause at Rome Wherefore the Pope went about to devise some pretence to suspend the precipitate sentence and again to set the cause on its feet But the King so soon as he had seen it said It was no matter for the Utterly loses the obedience of England Pope should be Bishop of Rome and himself sole Lord of his Kingdom And that he would do according to the antient manner of the Eastern church not leaving to be a good Christian nor suffering the Lutheran Heresie or any other to be brought into his Kingdom From that time forward Henry the Eighth of a zealous Assertor of the No anger lost between the King Pope Papacy both by pen and purse became the first and greatest Opposer of it of all the Western Christian Princes for the Eastern Christian Princes except sometimes the Emperors of Greece and the Kings of Holy Land did seldom or never submit to the Papacy in her Spirituals yet did he afterwards seed to be reconciled to the Pope even by means of his Nephew Charls the Fifth Nor were the Popes much behind hand with him For besides Clement's petty Excommunication Paul the Third Anno 1538. thundred out such a terrible Excommunication against him as the like was never heard of which deprived him of his kingdom and his adherents of whatsoever they possessed commanding his Subjects to deny him obedience and Strangers to have no commerce in the kingdom and all to take arms against and persecute both him and his followers granting them their states and goods for their prey and their persons for slaves But the Popes anger ended in words whereas the Kings deeds took place against the Pope But what there was in all the Kings reign which might be called Reformation What was the Kings Reformation I do not understand For whatsoever the King took from the Pope except Peter-pence he ascribed to himself If the Pope would be Head of the Catholique Church the King would be Head of the Church of England If the Pope challenged Annates and First-fruits of the Bishops and Clergy the King would do no less If the Pope did give Abbots and Priors power being Ecclesiastical persons to make divers Impropriations to their benefit the King will take a power to take them all away and convert them into Lay-fees and incorporate them so into particular mens estates that they shall never return to the Church more Nor had he any love or desire of Reformation of the Church but only to the Church-lands for all the Rites Ceremonies and Religion of the Church of Rome was continued and that with such bloody cruelty that a Stranger going over Smithfield one day and seeing two men there executed one for denying the Kings Headship of the Church and another for subscribing to the Six Articles cryed out Bone Deus quomodo hic agunt vivi hic suspenduntur Papistae ibi comburuntur Antipapistae And so zealous did he continue herein that Pope Paul the Third after he had fulminated so dreadfully against him Hist Conc-Trid fol. 90 proposed him for an Example to be imitated by Charls the Fifth Although such was the temper of this Prince that he never spared man The exclusion of the Papai jurisdiction was an act of the King Kingdom and Church of England in his rage woman in his lust nor any thing which might be called sacred in his avarice yet so absolute was he that his Divorce was attested by both the Universities at home besides that at Paris abroad his freeing himself and the Nation from the jurisdiction of the Pope was not only assented to by a Synod and Convocation of all the Clergy of England but the English and Irish Nobility did make their submissions by an Indenture to Sir Anthony Sellinger then chief Governor of Ireland wherein they did acknowledge King Henry to be their lawful Soveraign and confessed the Kings Supremacy Bram. Vind. of the Church of England p. 43. in all causes and utterly renounced the Pope But Divorce banishing the Papal authority
seized into the Kings hands for his Recusancy or any part thereof Every covicted Popish Recusant not married in some open Church or Chappel or otherwise then according to the Church of England by a Minister lawfully authorized shall be disabled to have any estate of Freehold by Curtesie of England And every woman being a popish Recusant convict which shall be married in other form then as aforesaid shall be disabled not only to claim any Dower or Joynture but also the Widowes Estate and Frankbanck in any customary Lands whereof her Husband died seized and likewise from having part of her husbands goods by virtue of any custome of any County City or Place And if a man be married contrary to the true intent of this Statute to a woman who hath no Lands or Tenements whereby he may become Tenant by Curtesie he shall forfeit 100 l. to be paid as aforesaid Every Popish Recusant which shall have a child born and shall not within a moneth after cause it to be baptized by a lawfull Minister according to the Lawes of the Realm in some usuall place of Baptisme or if by infirmity the child cannot be brought to such place then to be baptized by some Minister within the moneth if he beliving by the space of a moneth or if he be dead then Mother of such Child shall for every such offence forfeit one hundred pound one third part to the King the other to the Informer who will sue for it the other third part to the poor of the said Parish to be recovered in any of the Kings Courts wherein no Essoine c. shall be allowed If any Popish Recusant not being excommunicated shall be buried in any place other then the Church or Church-yard or not according to the Ecclesiasticall Lawes of the Realm That the Executors or Administrators of every such person so buried knowing the same or the party that so burieth him shall forfeit twenty pounds to be paid as aforesaid If the children of any of the Subjects within this Realm the said children not being Souldiers Mariners Merchants or their Apprentices or Factors shall be sent or goe beyond seas without licence of the King or six of the Privy Councell whereof the principall Secretary to be one under their hands and seals that very such child shall take no benefit by any gift conveyance descent devise or otherwise untill he being above the age of eighteen years take the oath mentioned in an Act made that Session intituled An Act for the better discovery and repressing Popish Recusants c. before some Justice of Peace of the County where such Parents of such Children as shall be sent did or shall inhabit In the mean time the next of kin who is no popish Recusant shall enjoy all the said Lands c. untill the person so sent shal conforme himself and take the said oath receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and then he who hath received any profit as aforesaid shall restore the goods or value to him who shall so conform himself He that shall so send his child beyond seas shall forfeit one hundred pounds to be recovered as aforesaid No convict popish Recusant shall present to a Benefice with Cure Prebend or grant an Advowson or collate or nominate to any Free-school or Donative whatsoever The Chancellor and Scholars of the University of Oxford when any such become void shall have the nomination presentation collation and Donation of any such Benefice Prebend or Ecclesiasticall Living School Hospitall and Donative in the Counties of Oxford Kent Middlesex Sussex Surrey Hampshire Barkshire Buckinghamshire Gloucestershire Worcestershire Staffordshire Warwickshire Wiltshire Somersetshire Devonshire Cornwall Dorcetshire Herefordshire Northamptonshire Pembrokeshire Carmarthenshire Brecknock-shire Monmothshire Cardiganshire Montgomeryshire and the City of London so long as the Patron shall remain a Recusant convict The Chancellor Scholars of the University of Cambridge shall have presentation c. to all such Benefices aforesaid being in the Counties of Essex Hertfordshire Bedfordshire Cambridgshire Huntingtonshire Suffolk Northfolk Lincolnshire Rutlandshire Leicestershire Derbishire Notinghamshire Shropshire Cheshire Lancashire Yorkshire the County of Durham Northumberland Cumberland Westmorland Radnorshire Denbyshire Flintshire Carnarvonshire Angleseyshire Merionethshire Glamorganshire so long as the Patron shall continue a Recusant convict If the Chancellor and Shollars of either University shall nominate or present Quaere who shal have the next presentation nomination to any such Benefice c. any person who hath any other Benefice with cure of souls every such nomination and presentation shall be void A convicted Recusant shall neither be Executor or Administrator nor Gaurdian in Chivalry or Socage The next of kin of the children of Recusants convict to whom the Estate cannot descend who shall usually resort to Divine Service according to the Lawes and receive the Sacrament shall have the Guard and education of the children and of the Lands and Tenements holden in Knights-service untill the full age of 21 years and of the Lands in Socage as Guardian in Socage and of Customary Lands by copy of Court Roll so long as the custome shall permit the same and in every of the said places shall yeeld an account of the profits to the Ward All Grants of Wards either of the King or any other to any Popish Recusant shall be void No person shall bring from beyond Sea print sell or buy any Popish Primers Ladies Psalters Manuels Rosaries popish Catechisms Missals Breviaries Portals Legends and lives of Saints containing superstitious matter upon penalty of fourty shillings to be forfeited as aforesaid viz. one third part to the King an other to the Informer who will sue the other to the poor of the Parish where such book shall be found Justices of peace in their Limits Mayors Bayliffs chief Officers in Corporations may search the hous of every popish Recusant convict the hous and lodging of every person whose wife is a popish Recusant convict for popish books and Relicks of Popery And if any Altar Pix Beads Pictures or such like popish Reliques or any popish books shall be found as in the opinion of such Officers shall be thought unmeet for such Recusants they shall presently be defaced and burnt if meet to be burnt All Armour Gunpowder and Munition whatsoever any popish Recusant convict hath or shall have in his own house or in the hands of others shall be taken from them by warrant of four Justices of peace at their Generall or Quarter-sessions other then such necessary weapons as the four Justices shall think meet for defence of the said Recusants in defence of their houses and the said Armour and Munition so taken shall be kept at the costs of the said Recusants in such places as the four Justices shall appoint If any such Recusant which hath such armour c. or any person who hath any such armour c. for the use of such Recusant shall refuse to declare unto the