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A17571 The altar of Damascus or the patern of the English hierarchie, and Church policie obtruded upon the Church of Scotland Calderwood, David, 1575-1650. 1621 (1621) STC 4352; ESTC S107401 125,085 228

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they make twenty that cannot teach and so idle shepheards are set up in the roome of true Pastors They that can teach are bound hand and foot till they get a licence But sithence Christ bad his Priests preach who should forbid them preaching said Wickleffe in the exposition of his Conclusions exhibited to the Bishops When they have gotten licence either they loyter or if they preach their preaching is hedged in with penalties injunctions caveats canons advertisements that they may not deliver the whole counsell of God or else they play the part of prophane Orators with affected eloquence or make the people laugh with merry tales as the Authour of the Admonition to the Parliament doth relate To conclude then a bare Reader of the service booke in English is sufficient to be an English priest In the rest of his administration according to the prescript either of the Q. Injunctions so that they be not repugnant to the lawes or of the Liturgie set forth by publique authoritie This Liturgie maintaineth a Reading Ministerie for it requireth nothing necessarily to bee done by the Minister which a child of ten yeare old cannot doe as well and as lawfully as that man wherewith the booke contenteth it selfe Preaching is but accidentall and accessorie without the which their office doth and may consist And indeed boyes and senselesse Asses are our common Ministers for the most part for common reason may serve the turn and do this feat well enough It is indeed lesse busie then the Popish Priests service because the Kalender and the Rutricks of the book are fewer and plainer then his Portuise and Pic were So that lesse Clerkes then 〈◊〉 pri●sts which had but some blind Latine in their belly may serve for our store say the Authours of the Admonition to the Parliament The administration according to the prescript of the booke of Liturgie doth concerne either the Bishop or the Church or the Minister himselfe The Bishop to wit in confirmation of children The Church either in certaine rites as bowing the knee or in certaine answeres Of Bishopping we have entreated before The Congregations part standeth in some rites and gestures or in some answers Now the people sit now they stand up When the old Testament is read or the lessons they make no reverence but when the Gospell commeth then they all stand up they thinke that to be of greatest authoritie and are ignorant that the Scriptures come from one Spirit They make curtesie when Iesus is named either in Sermon lesson or otherwise uncovering their heads and making a leg with such scraping on the ground that the Minister or Reader cannot be heard for a space thereafter And yet saith the Author of the Petition to the Qu. The Bishops and their Chaplaines seldome use this unlesse it be at reading of the Gospell as if the Gospell were more holy then the rest of the Scripture especially they forget it when lustily and bravely they sweare by the name of Iesus The name of Iesus is more reverenced then the name of Saviour which is of the same signification or other titles of Christ as when he is named Messias Christ Mediator the Son of God c. or when God is named as if the Apostle had meant Philip. 2. that every knee should bow at the naming of Iesus when as he onely saith At the name of Iesus that is every creature shall bee made to acknowledge his power and authoritie which is his name as the word is often taken in the scripture It is not the sound of syllables but his divine power that is meant Then again for answers the people are appointed at divers prayers to rehearse word for word after the minister whereby an opinion is ingendred in their minds that other prayers do not so much pertaine to them as those which they utter with their own mouthes As the minister is the mouth of God from God to the people so should he be the mouth of the people from the people to God Sometime the minister saith one part and the people another And in sundry parts of the Letanie the people make the prayer and the minister onely directs them what to pray for At the communion one of the people is allowed to make the generall confession in the name of the whole congregation At some prayers they are enjoyned to kneele devoutly and not at others In the administration which doth concerne the Minister himselfe or to be considered either the substance of the booke it self or certaine directories As for the substance of the book it is taken out of the Popes portuis with some rubricks and glosses of their own framing The same matter which is conteined in the English is also contained in their service book with some little addition The same forme is also observed with a small alteration wheras our forme of service should be as different as may be from the Popish And for length it is so wearisome that many times it shutteth out Preaching viz. when Baptisme the Communion Marying Churching and Buryal con●urre together as often they doe in great Congregations as it is said in the Abridgement of Lincolne Ministers Divine service in the Apostolicall Church was not spent in reading prayers Psalmes Epistles Gospels c. but for the most part in doctrine and exhortation When the Congregation assembled their Pastor was with them and he spent not the time in reading lessons prayers collects c. but uttered some word of exhortation and doctrine upon the parcell of Scripture which was read as was the custome also in the Sinagogues And suppose it had bene omitted at any time in the Sin●gogue we reade not of any such lame Liturgie in the Christian Church in the dayes of the Apostles nor in many ages following till blindnesse ignorance and lazinesse made the chiefe part of divine service to be omitted and a prescript forme to be made for 〈◊〉 and ignorant Priests For shal we beleeve that as long as Pastors were able to teach and exhort that they posted over a number of prayers and lessons c. and no farther No The bels of Aaron should give a sound as often as the Lords Priest entreth into the Sanctuarie Or doe they thinke that their Pastor was abroad at his pleasures when the flock was at their pasturage as devine service and some other reading minister serving them The Apostolicke Church and purer Antiquitie knew no such minister Out of the lessons or Psalmes which were read the minister took the argument and ground of his sermon beginning after this or the like manner Ye have heard brethren the booke of c. read The booke is read wherein it is prophecied We heare brethren when the Gospell was read the Lord saying that c. The directories are contained either in the Kalender or the Rubricks In the Kalender to direct the minister in such things as belong either to the minister himselfe or to the
of Shires from Synodes to Nationall Assemblies they must step up a Popish ladder by Archdeacons Officials Bishops Deane of Arches Archbishops saving that at the top of the ladder they finde the Prince for the Pope to whom they must not appeale nor yet to any greater Councels of many reformed or unreformed Churches or to an oecumenicall Councell whatsoever they talke of Generall Councels Now the causes convoyed by these subordinate appellations are all Ecclesiasticall causes agitated in the Ecclesiasticall Courts Of which causes wee are to treat in the third chapter These which belong to Canons or Ecclesiasticall lawes concerne either the making of them or the administration and execution of them or the relaxation of them As for the making of them 1. in that the Prince may make new lawes anent ceremonies and rites with advice either of his Commissioners in causes Ecclesiasticall or of the Metropolitan 2 Synod provinciall or nationall may not be convocated without the Princes writ direct to the Metropolitan 3. Nothing may be treated or determined in the Synode till the Prince first be made privie and give assent 4. Nothing shall have the force of a law till the Royal assent of the Prince be given to those things which the Synod shall think good to decree Beza in his 8. Epistle to Grindal Bishop of London confesseth that he trembleth and shaketh at the first of these heads And in very deed it may turne upside down the whole government of the Church and outward forme of Gods worship overthrow the one and deface the other Did not the Bishops affirme at the examination of Barow that the Queen might establish what Church government it pleased her Highnes Because they dare not affirm that Princes may change any thing that is unchangeable by divine law therefore they make many unchangeable things both in government and externall ceremonies in Gods worship to bee changeable that they make a change at their pleasure and may bring in all that ever was hatched by the Antichrist a Popish Church government significant rites and symbolicall toyes and ceremonies For what may a corrupt Prince and a corrupt Metropolitan or some few corrupt commissioners not challenge for changeable Nay even rites of order and comelines and lawes of things indifferent for a religious use should be considered by the lawfull and ordinary assemblies of the Church how they agree with the generall rules prescribed in the word how they will edifie the Church how God shall be glorified Christian charitie entertained order and comelines preserved For we must not consider things indifferent onely in ●heir generall kinde but in their particular and circumstantiall use which if we permit to Princes they may abuse indifferēt things to the great hurt of the Church Synods ought not to be convocate without the Princes privitie or the warrant of the law in generall but if the Prince be wilful in denying his assent and the Church be in extreame danger ready to be overwhelmed or greatly disturbed with heresies schismes divisions enormities we may use the benefit of the law and if the law of man be wanting yet the Church should not cease from doing her dutie and exercising that power which is granted her by Christ who hath also promised his presence when but two or three are convened in his name Salus Ecclesiae suprema lex esto The power of Christian Princes in the Church is cumulative to aid her to execute her power freely not privative to deprive and spoile her of any power Christ hath granted to her And by the same reason the Church may entreate determine and strengthen her decrees and constitutions with Ecclesiasticall censures and punishments notwithstanding the Prince will not assent approve ratifie the Canons of the Church nor confirme them by his lawes and fortifie them with temporal punishments Prudence I confesse is required in the Church to weigh the case of necessity when to put this ●er power in practise As for the administration and execution of lawes in that the Prince may 1. visit the Ecclesiasticall state and their persons 2. reforme redresse and correct them and whatsoever sort of heresies schismes errours abuses offences contempts and enormities of any whomsoever 3. to assigne nominate and authorize when and as often as it is his pleasure such persons being naturall borne subjects as he shall think meet 1. to exercise and execute all manner of jurisdictions privileges and preeminences in any wise touching or concerning any spirituall or Ecclesiastical jurisdiction 2 to visit 3 to reforme correct and amend all such excesses or defects whatsoever which by any maner of Ecclesiasticall power authority or jurisdiction might been have been reformed ordered corrected amended or restrained The Princes power in visiting reforming and correcting abuses enormities errours heresies c. may be seen as in a liuely picture in the high commission to be not onely a temporall power but also a spirituall to inflict Ecclesiasticall censures punishments For the Prince could not communicate this power to his Delegate Commissioners except he claimed it to himselfe as Principall For none can transferre that to others which he hath not himselfe It must follow therefore that the Princes power is Ecclesiastical not onely in respect of the object and matter whereupon it worketh as heresies errours abuses c. but also formally in respect of the manner to wit by inflicting Ecclesiasticall censures and punishments unlesse we will affi●me that suspension deposition excommunication are not Ecclesiastical but civill punishments and censures which were absurd We shall entreat of the power of the high commission in the next chapter severally by it selfe As for the relaxation of the Canons or lawes in that 1. first for ever when as they are altogether abrogated by the Prince 2. for a time onely as when hee granteth remission of any crime or transgression of the Canons for times by gone and to come when both infamie is abolished and the transgressor is restored to his former state 4. When the grace of the Canon is granted for time to come to any certaine person upon speciall occasion the cause being tried which grace they call dispensation which is for the most part done when the faculties of this kinde granted by the Archbishop of Canterbury upon whom this office doth lye by statute are confirmed with the great seale of England or when if he without just cause refuseth the Chancellour of England granteth them primarily according to the statute made thereanent If the Prince may abrogate the canons of the Church without consent of the church in vain were the Canons of the Church made Or that the Church may not abrogate any canon when they finde it proveth inconvenient is as great an inconvenience In vaine likewise are canons strengthened and guarded with censures and punishments and the black markes of infamie set upon heynous crimeswith the legall effects thereof if the Prince may abolish the crime as simoniacall paction or any the like
seemes by the 36. article to be that wee are required to subscribe unto and which it may be some of the Bishops doe still use there are other corruptions as that the coape albe surplice tuni●le and pistorall staffe are appointed to be used in ordination and consecration There the elected is presented by two Bishops to the consecrator who is sitting and the elder of the two Bishops sayth Most reverend father in God c. So here he is presented by two bishops to the Archbishop or any other bishop having commission to whom one of them sayth Most reverend father in God we present unto you this godly and learned man that he may be consecrate bishop There none is consecrate till the commission be shewed here likewise the Archbishop is carefull to have the Kings mandate anent his consecration to be produced and read There the elected taketh an oath upon his knees to the Pope and another of obedience to the Archbishop so here they must take one oath concerning the supremacie another of canonicall obedience to the Archbish. There the Archbi demandeth some questions so also here There is sayd or song Veni Creat●r so here There the Archbishop together with the Bishops then present laying on their hands say Receive the holy Ghost so here also as if the one could give and the other receive the holy spirit from his finger ends By the book of ordaining Prists and Deacons the Archbishop should lay the Bible upon the bishops neck that is to be ordained and put a pastorall staffe in his hand sayth the authour of the petition to the Queenes Majestie but they put the Bible in his hand and observe not the former direction or else follow a later booke of ordinations After these things being done the consecrator and his assistants communicate with the new consecrated bishop so here also The Gospels the Collects the Epistles the Letanie which are here used for the most part are borrowed from the same Pontificall and the Letanie interrupted here also as there There the consecrator sayth nothing more ordes●e then is set down in the booke either when he prayeth or demandeth or consecrateth so here There the consecrator putteth gloves on the hands of the consecrated Here the consecrated Bishop dealeth gloves as I heare to his friends for why now he is maried and the mariage betwixt him and the Church which was begun by the election is consummate they say by consecration Should not then the bridegroome deale gloves among his friends That day that our Bishops were first consecrated at London their bride at home understood nothing of the matter In respect of his function either in things concerning Episcopall order or concerning iurisdiction Concerning Episcopall order as 1. to ordaine Deacons and Ministers according to the prescript of the booke of ordinations 2. to dedicate Churches and buriall places 3. to confirme children The power of order as they call it that is a power and authority which is given to men sanctified and set apart from others to performe such acts as belong to the service of God and the discharge of the pastorall function it acknowledged by D. Field as also by the sounder sort of the Romanists themselves to be equall the same in all pastors and that there is not a greater power of order in the Bishops then Presbyters If the power of order and authoritie to intermedle in things pertaining to Gods service be equall and the same in all Presbyters who hath power to abridge this their power and limitate the exercise of it To reserve the exercise of it to the Bishop as if he alone may give orders or if other ministers joyne either casually or by Canon with him that it is not for consecration but for consent and approbation onely or that a whole Presbyterie cannot ordaine that is sanctifie dedicate or set apart any person to the ministery unlesse there be a Bishop present to utter the words of consecration is not onely absurd because it imports that God hath bestowed on them a facultie which they cannot put in execution but also dangerous for the Church of God as experience of the last age hath manifested For then all the Ministers in France and other reformed Churches who received not imposition of hands by bishops should not be lawfull Ministers Their shift of the case of necessitie is no shift at all For if they have that power by divine right as they pretend the other may in no case usurpe it Further seeing nature giveth not faculties in vaine wee must not thinke that Christ gaue a power or facultie to be idle The gifts and faculties he gaue hee gave them to be imployed not onely in time of necessitie but at all convenient times and occasions offered Where do they finde in all scripture this exception of the case of necessitie Where the law of God doth not distinguish ought man to distinguish The prayer out of the mouth of a divine bishop a minister appoynted by the presbyterie to moderate the action is it of lesse efficacie then the prayer out of the mouth either of an human or Satanicall Bishop As for imposition of hands it is a rite onely which is common to all and not essentiall Seeing then to ordaine ministers belongeth to the power of order as to preach the word and minister the sacraments doth and that this power is common to all pastors the validity or invaliditie of ordination ought not to depend upon a bishop set up by mans appointment and invention and that it was but an invention of man is clear in that this reservation restraint came in but by corrupt canons In the councell of Ancyra a canon was made to forbid the presbyters of the Citie to ordaine presbyters and Deacons without the bishops permission wherby appeareth that before that Canon was made they had ordained some without the Bishops either presence or permission and yet their ordinations were not made voyd and that after the making of the Canon they yea it is confessed that this is reserved unto them potius ad honorem sacerdetij quam ob legis necessitatem rather for for the honour of their Priesthood then the necessitie of any law at Hierome sayth Beda sayth in plainer tearmes that for pride aud arrogancie this as many other things were not permitted to Priests but reserved to Bishops That which the Iesuite Swarez sayth concerning confirmation Si prestyteri ex visuae ordinationis haberent sufficientem potestatem ordinis ad hoc sacramentum ministrandum sine causa in universum prohiberentur illud conferre may be applied to that which I affirmed of ordination that God gave not faculties and powers to be idle I have as yet onely supposed this their confirmation to be lawfull But let us now see what it is The bishop or such as he shall appoynt apposeth the children in some questions of a short catechisme for hee taketh not the paines to
was made there was a binder and a bond but none present or known to bee bound When the offence is committed there is one to be bound but where is the binder And yet in their latest Canons made in the first yeare of the Kings entry they have made excōmunication ipso facto to be the sanction of many of their Canons excōmunicating ipso facto all such as shall affirme the forme of their Church service to be corrupt and superstitious the rites or ceremonies established by law to bee wicked Antichristian or superstitious the government of their Church by Archbishops Bishops Deanes Archdeacons c. to be Antichristian or repugnant to the word or that the forme and maner of making or consecrating their Bishops Priests and Deacons is not lawfull c. So that at this day the better sort both of the ministerie and professours amongst them do stand excommunicate by this Popish guise The next thing to be considered is the sole authoritie of bishops excommunicating by themselves alone or their Deputies Officials Chancellours Archdeacons the ministers and professors in whatsoever Church of their large Diocie When Christ sayd Tell the Church Math. 18. was this the meaning Tell my Lord Bishop or his Chauncellour the Archdeacon or his officiall Can this collective name Church by any shift be drawne to signifie one particular person Canterburies grace himselfe or the great Pope himselfe Is the Pope the universal Church or the Bishop the diocesan Church or his Chauncellour Christ maketh a gra●ation from one to two at last to many The Apostle reproveth the Corinthians because they had not already excommunicated the incestuous person And do yee not judge them that are Within sayth the Apostle 1. Corinth 5. 12. In the second Epistle chap. 2. v. 10. hee declareth that they ha● power to forgive and reconcile the same incestuous person And writing to the Thessalonians hee willeth them to note the man who obeyed or harkned not to his Epistle and to have no companie with him that he may be ashamed 2. Thessal 3. 14. Now there was no Bishop at all either at Corinth or Thessalonica as they themselves will grant far● lesse an usurping Prelate drawing all the power to himselfe It is one of the weightiest judgements in the Church and therefore not to bee permitted to the pleasure of one man It is not onely the Bishop tha● hath this power alone to excommunicate by himselfe or his Deputie but also the Deane Prebendaries and Canons in welnigh all the cathedrall and collegiat churches throughout the Realme having certain Parochiall churches exempted from the Bishop within their exempt and peculiar jurisdidictions by meere Pastorall authoritie for Episcopall authoritie by the lawes of the Church they haue none may exercise all manner of spirituall censures and that as wel by their substitutes as by themselves Nay i● hich is more in Cheshire Lancashire Yorksire Richmondshire and other Northern parts there bee many Whole Deanries exempted from the Bishops jurisdiction wherein the Deanes and their substitutes have not onely the prohate of wills and granting of administrations but also the cognisance of Ecclesiasticall crimes with power to use the Ecclesiasticall censures yea this authority of the execution of Ecclesiatsticall censares have those Deanes either long since by some Papall priviledges obtained or else by long use prescribed ag●inst the Bishops Whereby againe it is clearly convinced that Episcopall excommunication used in the Church of England is not of divine institution but onely by humane tradition for were it of divine right then could the same no more be prescribed or by papall immunitie be poss●ss●d then could these Deanes prescribe power or be infranchised to breach the word or to administer the ●acraments Yee see Cathedrall Deanes Canons and Prebendaries in cathedrall and collegiat churches and some rurall Deanes may use the Ecclesiasticall censures But the Pasto●s of the Churches set over their flocks to govern rule with power of the keyes are deprived of the other half of their pastoral charge and the pastorall staffe as I have sayed is taken from th●m Thirdly they excommunicate for trifles The last petition which was made the first yeare of the Kings entry reporteth thae th●y excomunicate for trifles and twelvepennie matters If a man pay not the fees of their Courts he shall be excommunicate For the Chancellors Officials the Registers the rest of that rable must not want their unreasonable dues They doe not excommunicate in the congregation where the offender dwelleth but in their Courts in forme of a writ in Latine proclaimed in the Bishops or Archbishops name as Barrow reporteth and so also is their absolution The excommunication may perhaps he intimated a long tyme after in the congregation and the people warned to beware of the man who was excommunicate in their Court perhaps for a trifle The Admonition to the Parliament sayth that whereas the excommunicate were never received till they had publickly confessed their offence Now for paying the fees of the Court they shall by M● Officiall or Chauncellour easily be absolved 5 The manner is that if the apparitor cannot persanally cite the person to be summoned he useth leave word at his house If he come not at the day he is forthwith excommunicate as the defender of th● last Petition ●oeth report 6. They transf●rre this power of excommunication to lay men their Chauncellours and officialls whereof we shall intreate in the owne place The curse Anathema some doe not distinguish from the great excommunication but onely in some solemnities because it is uttered with some externall signes and ceremonies to strike a greater terrour Others do distinguish it and Mucket defineth it to be that censure whereby a pernicious heretick as Gods publick enemie reiected cursed execrate is adjudged and given over unto eternall judgement and damnation This is answerable to that anathema which the Apostle calleth Maranatha or the Talmudists schamatha But such a censure cannot be inflicted unlesse it be revealed to the church that the offender hath sinned against the Holy ghost Besides the censures common to lay men and ecclesiasticall persons already mētioned there are these two reckoned by Mucket corporall pennance and deniall of buriall in sacred places Corporall pennance is inflicted upon the outward man For to the publick confession of the offence there is some bodily pennance adjoyned and enioyned the offender As for example to stand upon a Lords day bareheaded and barefooted cloathed with a white sheet having a white wand in his hand at the porch of the Kirck and when he entreth into the Kirck to prostrate himself to kisse the ground and then to come to the midst of the church crave forgivenes This manner is descrived by Mack Lindwood in his Provincial reckoneth for corporall pennances thrusting in a Monasterie imprisonment striping and the imprinting of a mark upon the person Many moe ●ere the popish pennances which turned into
Chauncellour are even faine to laugh it out many times when they can keep their countenance no longer Suppose our high commission were never so odious yet the Bishops shall bee sure of such servile varlets Commissaries Officialls and Chauncellours to sit with them for why they shall be their own creatures It is no wonder they be bribers for the Bishops and Archdeacons set in farme their jurisdiction to them Some Chauncellours and officialls pay 20. some 30. some 50. pounds yearly for their place Registers some an hundred some two hundred pounds some more How then is it possible but they should extort in their office and by unreasonable and untollerable exactions make up their hard rents as it is sayd in the Defence of the last petition for reformation Many greivous complaints have been made against Officialls Commissaries and Chauncellours from time to time in Germanie France and other countries which I might produce to make this bondage yet more sensible CHAP. 6. Of Suffraganes Deanes and Cathedrall Churches WE have seen in the former Tables what persons have judiciall administration Now follow Persons having no Iudiciall administration Those are either Ecclesiasticall persons or lay-men Ecclesiasticall persons are the Deacon and the Minister and they have their function either without perpetuall title as Curates or with title The second sort either have a peculiar function beside their common function or have not a peculiar function These who have a peculiar function beside the common either have it through the whole ●●iocie or but in a part of it Through ane whole Diocie as the titular Bishops who were of old called Chorepis●opi that is Rurall Bishops now they are called Suffraganes They are to bee considered either according to the place which they hold in the Common-wealth to wit next unto Barones or according to the place which they have in the Church to wit that they are Bishops both in calling and order but wanting jurisdiction 2. Dedicate Churches 3. confirme children instructed before in the Rudiments of Christian religion and that in a Diocie allotted unto them That which is here sayd of Suffraganes that of old they were called Chorepiscopi is controlled by Mucket himselfe For hee sa●th that the Rurall D●●nes are like the old Chorepiscopi De●●ni 〈…〉 is Ecclesiae Chorepiscopis A●chipresbyteris Regionarijs haud absimiles And so doth Bleynianus also in his introduction into the theorie and practique of benefices At the first where the Gospell was spread through the Countrey townes and villages as it was through Cities so they had Coun●rey or rurall Bishops as well as Bishops in cities But ambition and pompe in Citie Bishops increasing it was thought a disgrace that such a dignitie should bee obscured with a meane place of residence Therefore it was decreed that it should not bee lawfull to ordaine any Bishop either in villages little forts or small Cities lest the name and authoritie of a Bishop should waxe vile Sathan was advancing this way the great mysterie of iniquitie Because he would make of Bishops young Princes hee went about as is well observed by Mr. Cartwright with robberie of the rest to lift up the head of one otherwise the great pompe which they were striving for could not be maintained At the first the countrey or Rurall Bishop had the same power in his circuit which the Citie Bishop had in the citie and suburbs of it Hierome sayth that the bishop of an obscure citie hath as much authoritie as hee of the most famous citie The Presbyters who were ordained by them their ordination was not made voyd and reversed untill they were throwne downe through the pride and dispite of citie bishops to the order of priesthood which is an argument sufficient that they were in estimation and judgement of the Church bishops of that same sort and kinde that the citie bishops were Beeing spoyled of the greatest part of their power and name also they there called Archipresbyteri at the last Countrey or Rurall Deanes and were made subject not onely to Bishops but also to their Archdeacons No propter subrogationem in locum Chorepiscoporum superbirent Archipresbyteri idem sibi quod antea Chorepiscopi arrogarent si immediate Episcopis supponerentur sayth Bleynianus a Papist This is his conjecture that the Archpresbyters were thrust downe to a degree lower then Archdeacons lest if they had been immediatly subiect to Bishops they might perhaps have claimed the power of the old countrey Bishops to whom in place they succeeded For justly Archpresbyters may claim by their order that which Archdeac cannot do For howbeit they be inferiour to Archdeac in Popish dignitie yet they are greater then Archdeacons in respect of their order Countrey Bishops at their first erection being equall to Citie Bishops were not their Deputies In the later and corrupt ages proud Prelates and loytering Lords addicting themselves to the world seeking ease or intangling themselves with wordly affaires as they commited the Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction to Chauncellours and Commissaries so that which is most proper to them as they pretend as ordination of Priests and Deacons confirmation of children and dedication of Churches they committed to Suffraganes that they might give themselves to ease and wait upon Councells Parliaments and other civill Courts and reserved nothing belonging to their owne charge that might trouble their ease or draw them from attendance upon Princes Courts and civill employments D. Field alledgeth against these Suffragane Bishops Melchior Canus a papist Such Bishops Melchior Canus entreating of Councells and the persons wherof Councells consist sayth they are so farr from having any place or voyce in councells that they neither have nor ought to have any place in the church at all The Bishops he speaks of he calleth annular Bishops happely for that whereas full Bishops had both staffe and ring expressing their jurisdiction as well as their espousing to the church these had the ring onely That Suffraganes may ordaine Priests and Deacons and confirme in their Church is evident by their latest Canons Now if Bishops may transferre these things which belong to their order to one Suffragane they may transferre it also to moe and consequently to all the Cathedrall and countrey Deanes and restore the countrey Deanes to their old liberties againe It dependeth onely upon some new Canon The Bishop of Spalato sayth Imo si vult Epis●opus canones non prohiberent potest suos parochos plene Episcopos facere ordinare ut omnes sui or dini● actus pl●ne possint explere simul ac in soli 〈◊〉 cum ipso Ecclesiam gubernare The Bishop may make all his parish priests not onely halfe but full Bishops that they might governe the Church in common with him sayth he if the Canon law were not an impediment The parish priest may curse this Canon law that h●ndreth them of that which Gods law alloweth them But that which Divine law hath given
Ministerie a whole yeare when the Bishop shall finde good cause to the contrary but that there being now foure times appointed everie yeare for the ordination of Deacons and Ministers there may be ever some time of triall of their behaviour in the office of a Deacon before they be admitted to the order of Priesthood Yet they are not so nice but this order may be dispensed with and that one may take on both the orders upon one day as Mucket doth record When the time of giving orders draweth neere the Bishops Bull is set up upon the Church doore to give warning that if any be minded to receive orders let them repair to the Bishop at such time and place This is sayth Mr. Cartwright like the sound of a trumpet to gather an Armie But the Bill which is set up upon the Church doore is in latine so that the people cannot understand the sound of the trumpet This Bill doth not desire the people to come object against the persons to be ordained And suppose that were the end it wer but a deluding of the people for either they have a Priest or Curat already and then they have not need to object or else the place is voyd but they know not against whom to object for amongst 40 50 or 100. perhaps they know not who is the man that is appoynted for them The Bishop and the patron out of the whole number wil choose afterward when and whom they thinke meete And howbeit there were not one voyd Church in all the Diocie but incumbents in every one of them yet the Bishop will give orders And againe if none of them have ever been conversant in these vacant parts how can they stand up and object against them The day of giving orders being published which is ordinarily upon the Lords dayes after the Ember weekes then there is repaire to the citie or village where the Bishop is to give orders He that can purchase the letters commendatory of some nobleman or knight shall come best speed Then is he to be tried by the Archdeacon who is but a Deacon onely in respect of his Archdeaconrie Howbeit sometimes the Archdeacon be also a Priest beside that it is a confounding of distinct offices it is not by vertue of his Priesthood but of his Deaconship that he trieeth the persons who are to be ordained They are tried by some questioning but as the Archdeacon pleaseth Their pastorall gifts of utterance doctrine and exhortation are not tried either by the Archdeacon or any particular church may these gifts are not needfull in an English priest for a bare reader is sufficient to bee an English minister The Archdeacon is sometime in one part of the countrey and the bishop in another The Bishop making ministers at Exceter and his Archdeacon at Oxenford or the Bishop making ministers at Leichfield and his Archdeacon at Durham When the day of ordination is come after an exhortation made the communion celebrated the Epistle and Gospel read and the hymne Veni creator sung or sayd the Archdeacon presents to the Bishop all those who are to take on the order of Priesthood that day with these words Reverend father in Christ I present to you the persons here present to be admitted to the order of Priesthood Then after some demands and answeres of the Bishop and the other who is to be admitted he demandeth of the people who are present there where he giveth orders if they know any impediment which may hinder any of these present to bee admitted to the order of priesthood which is a manifest mockage For it may be that none there present ever heard or saw any of them or all of them before that day But these words import that ordinations of old were performed before the congregation whereunto he was to bee appoynted Thereafter the oath of the Kings supremacie is taken then againe after an exhortation follow other demands an answers After that the people who are present are desired secretly to commend the businesse to God for which cause they are all silent for a little space After that the Bishop readeth a prayer which being finished they who are to be ordained sitting on their knees at the Bishops feet the Bishop and the rest of the Priests who are present lay hands severally upon the heads of every one of them the Bishop uttering these words Receive the holy Ghost whose sinnes thou doest forgive they are forgiven and whose sinnes thou doest retaine they are retained and be thou a faithfull dispenser of the word of God and of his holy sacraments In the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost Amen Hee commandeth the ordained to receive the holy Ghost as our Lord and master did when hee breathed on his Disciples bestowing in very deed the gifts of the spirit when hee breathed upon them Ordinary pastors cannot con●erre the gifts of the spirit whether breathing as Christ did or by laying on of hands as the Apostles did They may as well imitate Christs breathing as they may usurpe these words Whether the ordained receiveth the holy Ghost or not let the world judge Calvin sayth of the Popish Priests ex equis fieri asinos ex fatuis phre neticos quicunque in sacerdotes consecrantur Is any of their Curats after the pronouncing of these words either the holier or more apt to teach and yet beside this blasphemie they will the ordained to dispense the word of God who cannot divide and cut it aright Where it is sayd whose sinnes yee forgive shall be forgiven c. a power to reteine and forgive is given them separate from the preaching of the word as in the Roman Church an infinite number of Priests cannot preach yet all have power to absolve from sins So may the blind English Curates Sicklike it is a mockage ●hen after that the bishop delivereth to each of them the Bible in his hand saying Take thou authoritie to preach the word of God and to minister the holy sacraments in the congregation where ●hou shal● be appointed He should rather have put the service-book in his hand For either they are ignorant and cannot preach yea not tried in that facultie or if they can they may not till they get a licence of the Bish and whether they shal be appointed to any congregation or not they are uncertaine because it dependeth upon the p●trons pleasure So that if either the forethinking himselfe like the shop better then the Church or if the Patron will keepe the doc●e shut against such insufficient men which the Bishop opened so wide or as somtime falleth out they cannot agree of their market it commeth to passe that he is made a minister which either cannot or will not not onely not fulfill but not so much as lay hand of that Ministerie whereunto hee was appoynted sayth Mr. Cartwright When all this is done the companie convened sing the Creed and they goe
communicate also as was the custome in time of blindnesse where every holy action behoved to have a Masse and so that action which should be common to the whole Congregation who are members of one body is made private and particular to a few howbeit in a publique place Then againe they have their forbidden times to marie in yea moe then the Papists have at least so many as have embraced the decrees of the Councel of Trent from Advent to the Epiphanie from Septuagesima sunday to the octaves of Easter from the Rogation weeke to the octaves of Pentecost amounting in all to the third part of the yeare as if marriage which is called honourable did prophane these holy times The councell of Trent hath dispensed with the Pentecost and the second they beginne at Ashwednesday Now notwithstanding of these forbiddē times they may get a dispensation for some money and then it shall be lawfull enough and these holy times shall receive no pollution for mony hath a great vertue with it 2. Thankesgiving after childbirth This is commonly called the Churching of women I● standeth more in Psalmes suffrages and collects wherein help is craved at God not notwithstanding he take upon him authority to 〈◊〉 from sins Then there is a Psasme and 〈◊〉 prayers read The silly curat can give no more comfort then the few set words which he must read can minister to the departing soul. If the 〈◊〉 person can get some to communicat●●● with him 〈…〉 as being ashamed to looke-up for some folly committed When she commeth to the church shee must kneele downe high unto the place where the table standeth that is nigh unto the Quire dore as the Rubrick in 2. Edward beareth as the women did who after the dayes of their purification were ended were appointed to bring their offering to the dore of the Tabernacle Levit. 12. 6. unto the Priest who shall make attonement for them Then the Priest readeth over her the 121. Psal. and assureth her that the Sun shall not burn● her by day nor the Moone by night Is not this a very pertinent Psalme for the purpose The Lords prayer being sayd and some versicles and answeres and then another prayer she doth offer her accustomed offrings and if there be a communion she receiveth the communion Call this churching a thankes-giving yet what reason is there of publick thanksgiving in the Church more for deliverance after childbirth which is ordinarie then from drowning or other extraordinary dangers or diseases and of womē more then of men were not that the imitation of the Iewish purification is the Mysterie of it And so was this service intituled in the booke 2 Edw. The order of the purification of women as is reported in the Survey This superstitious service is not voluntarie but enjoyned When they come to the grave while the corp● is made ready to be laid into the earth they sing or say againe another parcell of Scripture out of Iob then while the earth is cast upon the body by some standing by the Priest again saith something and confidently affirmeth that God hath taken his soule and is of assured hope 〈…〉 3. The visi●a and comfort of the sick The Priest entering into the sickmans house sayth peace be in this house and to all that dwel in it When he commeth to the sickmans presence he kneeleth downe and prayeth his prescript lines for forgivenes of sinnes with two kyrie eleesons and one Christe eleeson the Lords prayer and some other versicles and responsories when as yet he hath not spoken a word to the diseased or understood whether hee bee sleeping or waking After the exhortation read which he may break if need be and the Creed rehearsed he desireth him to make his will and also declare his debts what he oweth and what is owing him Thereafter he moveth him to liberalitie Then shall the sick person make a speciall confession if he feele his conscience troubled with any weightie matter after which confession the priest shall absolve him When he absolveth he sayth By his that is o●r L. I. Christ authoritie committed to me I absolve thee from all thy sinnes in the name of the father and of the son and of the H. Ghost Amen He absolveth like a judge as the Popish Priest doth giving out a definitive sentence and absolutel doth forgiue not by way of deolaration This absolution is seuered from the preaching of the word For the dumb Gurat cannot preac● in thansgiving This help is to live and walk● faithfully in their vocation as if they were made uncleane by their childbirth to enterprise any thing Shee will not stirre out of the house suppose she were never so strong till the compleate time be expired that is a month commonly When she commeth forth she is muffled 〈…〉 him the communion If others may not conveniently come neere him yet the minister and he alone may communicate together and for shortnesse of time they have but one collect pistle and Gospell Thus are the people nourished in an opinion of the necessitie of the sacrament and the action which should be publick and solemne as the institution beareth and the practise of the Apostolicall Church declareth is made private administred peculiarly in a corner as if there were no other meane to eat the flesh and drink the bloud of Christ of that grace were tied to the externall signes 4. The Buriall of the dead They have a threefold peale enjoyned in their latest canons When any is passing out of this life a 〈◊〉 is to be tolled after the parties death a short peal is rung another before the buriall another after the buriall When the time of the funerals draweth neere the Priest the clearks make them ready The Priest putteth on his surplice and then commeth to the Church stile to meet the corps Then the Priest shall say or the Priest and cleark shall sing and so go either to the Church or towards the grave The words which are sayd or read alowd by the Priest or sung by the Priest and clearkes are 2 or 3 small sentences of scripture For any part of scripture is sung by thē as well as Psalms in their services and the Bishops haue punished women for not being churched sayth the authour of the petition to the Queen Some are churched at home by the Priest and therby saith the Surveyer They confirme women either in pride if they be able to goe to church and will not or in superstition if being not well recovered they yet must needs be chur 〈…〉 of his resurrection to 〈…〉 againe is said or sung a sentence out of the Revelation after the lesson two Kyrie eleesons with one Christe eleeson betwixt them after that the Lords prayer then the Priest prayeth that God might histen his kingdome that we with our brother and all other departed in the true faith of thy holy name may have our perfect consummation and
THE Altar of Damascus OR THE PATERN OF THE ENGLISH HIERARCHIE AND CHVRCH-Policie obtruded upon the Church of SCOTLAND 2. KING 16. 10. 11. And King Ahaz went to Damascus to meet Tiglath Pileser King of Assyria and saw an Altar that was at Damascus and King Ahaz sent to Vrijah the Priest the fashion of the altar and the patern of it according to all the workmanship thereof And Vrijah the Priest built an altar according to all that King Ahaz had sent from Damascus so Vrijah the Priest made it against King Ahaz came from Damascus Anno 1621. TO THE READER I Have drawen this paterne of the English Altar obtruded upon us out of their owne Tables of the Hierarchy and Church policie Muckets book their Canons and Constitutions Ecclesiasticall the statutes of the Realme the admonitions petitions assertions treatises answers and replies of those who sue for reformation the confessions of their opposites in their own defences I have followed the order of the Tables translated out of Latine and printed with a letter different from the rest I intended not a full refutation for I thought to discover it onely was to refute it sufficiently to any man of sound judgement saving that sometime there i● a light touch or poynting at any corruption where I suspected the simpler sort migh● be miscaried CHAP. 1. Of the Kings Supremacie IN the Ecclesiasticall policie of England generally are to be cōsidered 1 Persons 2 possessions 3 constitutions concerning both Persons to bee considered are either such as haue some kinde of administration or such as have none at all The persōs that have some kind of administratiō have it either as supreme or not so ample The supreme or more absolute administration which is called the Kings supremacie is to be considered 1 generally 2 particularly Generally by which authority the Prince as supreme governor under God can set down in all Ecclesiasticall causes within his dominions whatsoever is not repugnant to the word of God By causes Ecclesiastical are meant not onely matrimoniall and testamentary causes and others abusively called Ecclesiasticall but also these which are in a proper sence Ecclesiastical subject to Ecclesiastical cognition and jurisdiction By the title of Supreme Governour is understood the same power which before was expressed by the title of Head of t●e Church of England in the dayes of K. Henrie the 8. and Edward the 6. For howsoever for removing of offence taken at the metaphorical title of Head it was changed in more proper termes of supreme governour under the reigne of Queene Elizabeth yet the sense remaineth still In the first yeare of her reigne it was enacted and ordained That such jurisdictions privileges superiorities and preeminences spirituall or Ecclesiasticall as by any spirituall or Ecclesiasticall power or authority hath heretofore been or may lawfully be exercised or used for the visitation of the Ecclesiasticall state and persons and for reformation order and correction of the same and of all manner of errors heresies schismes abuses offences contempts and enormities shall for ever be united and annexed to the Imperiall crowne of this Realme And that the Queens highnes her heirs and successors shall have full power authority by vertue of this act by letters patents under the great seale of England to assigne name and authorize when and as often as her highnes her heirs and successors shall think meet and conve●ient and for such and so long time as shall please her highnesse her heirs and successors such persons being naturall born subjects as her Majestie her heirs and successors shall think meet to exercise use occupie and execute under her highnes her heirs and s●ccessors all manner of Iurisdictions priviledges and preeminances in any wise touching or concerning any spirituall or Ecclesiacticall iurisdiction within the Rea●●es of England or Ireland or any other her highnes ●●minions or countries and to visit reforme redresse order correct and amend all such errors heresies schismes abuses offences contempts and enormities whatsoever which by any manner of spirituall or Ecclesiastical power authority or jurisdiction can or may lawfully be reformed ordered corrected restrained or amended And for the better observation of this act it was further enacted that every Ecclesiasticall person officer and minister all and every temporall judge Iustice Maior and other lay or temporal officer and minister and every other person having her highnes fee or wages within the Realm of England or any of her highnes dominions shall make take receive a corporall oath upon the Evangelist before such person or persons as shall please her highnes her heirs or successors under the great seale of England to assigne and name to accept and take the same according to the renor and effect hereafter following I A. B. doe utterly testifie and declare in my conscience that the Queens highnes is the onely supreme governour of this Realme and of all other her highnes dominions and countries as well in all spirituall or Ecclesiastical things or causes as temporall and that no forreigne Prince person prelate state or Potentate hath or ought to have any iurisdiction power superiority preeminence or authoritie Ecclesiasticall or spirituall within this Realme and therefore I doe utterly renounce forsake all forraigne iurisdictions powers superiorities and authorities and doe promise that from henceforth I shall beare faith and true allegeance to the Queenes highnes her heirs and lawfull successors and to my power shall assist and defend all iurisdictions privileges preeminences and authorities granted or belonging to the Queenes highnes her heirs and successors or united and annexed to the Imperiall crown of the Realme So helpe me God and by the contents of this book The title then of Supreme Governour in the oath is explained by the preceeding words of the statute to which and for observation of the which the oath is subjoyned viz. that the Prince hath all manner of spirituall or Ecclesiastical jurisdiction and all manner of privileges and preeminences any way touching or belonging to the same which was before or may be lawfully exercised for visitation of the Ecclesiasticall state reformation order and correction of the same and of all manner of errors heresies schismes abuses offences contempts and enormities and that he may commit the exercise of the same to any of his naturall born subjects whom it shall please his highness to constitute commissioners in causes Ecclesiastical to judge discern and correct in matters of Idolatry simonie errour and heresie and all other causes Ecclesiasticall whatsoever This oath of supremacie is different from the oath of fidelity or allegeance devised of late That requireth no further thē to acknowledge the king to be lawful righteous king and to sweare obedience and fidelitie to him notwithstanding he be excommunicated by the Pope to acknowledge that the Pope notwithstanding of his excommunications cannot depose kings and dispose of kingdomes at his pleasure The Papist is straitned with this oath of
allegeance but not with the oath of supremacie for feare of troubling his tender conscience The statute of the supremacie was explained the same year of Qu. Elizabeths raigne in an admonition added to the injunctions as followeth That her Maiestie neither doth nor ever will challenge any other authority then was challenged and lately vsed by the noble kings of famous memory king Henry the 8. and king Edward the 6. which is and was of ancient time due to the Imperial crown of this Realme that is under God to have the soveraignty and rule over all manner of persons born within these her realmes dominions and countries of what estate soever they be either Ecclesiasticall or temporall so as no other forraigne power shall or ought to have superiority over them In this admonition the subjects are made to understand that her Maiestie did not claime power to minister divine offices in the Church as to preach the word and minister the sacraments They have been too simple who have construed the statute in such a sense For no wise man will thinke that kings and Queens will take upon them either the paines or worldly discredit to preach the word minister the sacraments intimate to the congregation the sentence of excommunication The statute doth make no mention of divine offices in the Church but of jurisdiction Ecclesiasticall which is and was in time of papistrie exercised at visitations and in Ecclesiasticall courts This explanation therefore of the admonition annexed to the Injunctions and ratified by Parliament in the fift yeare of Qu. Elizabeth derogateth nothing from the former statute but onely summeth it in more generall tearmes To challenge no more then was challenged and lately used by the noble kings of famous memory K. Henry 8. and Edward 6. is to challenge to be head of the Church to have all jurisdiction Ecclesiasticall flowing from the possessour of the Crowne as from the head and fountaine Mr. Fox in his Acts Monuments relateth that in the 34. of K. Henry the 8. it was enacted That the king his heirs and successors kings of that Realme shall bee taken accepted and reputed the onely supreme head on earth of the Church of England and shall have and enjoy annexed and united to the Imperiall crowne as well the title and stile thereof as all honours dignities preeminences iurisdictions priviledges authorities immunities profits and commodities to the sayd dignitie of supreme head of the same Church belonging and appertaining and that they shall have full power authority from time to time to visit represse redresse reforme and amend all such errors abuses offences contempts and enormities whatsoever they be which by any manner of spirituall authority or iurisdiction might or may lawfully be reformed repressed ordered redressed corrected or amended In a rescript of Edward the sixth it is thus written to Cranmer Archbishop of Canterburie Seeing all manner of authoritie and iurisdiction as well Ecclesiasticall as secular doth slow from our regall power as from a supreme head c. we give unto you power by these presents which are to endure at our good ple●s●re to give and promove to the sacred orders even of the Eldership or as they use to speake Priesthood any within your Diocie Anno 1. Edw. 6. cap. 12. an act was made That the Bishop should bee ma●e by the Kings letters patents and not ●y election of Deane and Chapter and that they should make their proces and writings in the Kings name and not under their own names and that their seales should be the Kings armes This act repealed in the 1. of Queen Mary was revived in the 1. of K. James It was objected to Bishop Farrar in the dayes of the same yong king Edward that hee deserved deprivation because hee constituted his Chancellor by his letters of commission omitting the kings majesties stile and authority and that he had made collations and institutions in his owne name and authority without expressing the kings supremacie His answer was that howbeit there was some default of formalitie in the commission yet his highnes stile and authority was sufficiently expressed in the sayd commission Neither did the sayd Chancellor offer to visit but in the Kings name and authority to the sayd Bishop committed And as to the other poynt that hee made his collations and institutions in his owne name not by his own authority nor by any others save the kings authority expressing in them the kings supremacie with the Bishops own name and seale of office Whitgift sometime Bishop of Canterburie sayth We acknowledge all jurisdiction that any court in England hath or doth exercise be it civill or Ecclesiasticall to be executed in her Majesties name and right and to come from her as supreme Governour And againe in another place The Prince having the supreme government of the Realme in all causes and over all persons as she doth expresse the one by the Lord Chancellor so doth she the other by the Archbishops Dr. Bancroft who was afterward made Bishop of London and at last Bishop of Canterbury in a Sermon made at Pauls Crosse anno 1589. maketh her maiesty a petie Pope and assigneth unto her not some of the Popes power but all honours dignities preeminences iurisdictions privileges authorities profits and commodities which by usurpation did at any time appertaine unto the Pope belike relating the words of the act made in the 34. Henry 8. Our Bancroft Mr. Spottiswood pretended Archbishop of Saintandros at the pretended deposition of N. in the high commission sayd likewise I say unto you N. the king is now Pope and so shall be To be supreme governour in all causes Ecclesiasticall then is not onely to be an avenger with the sword as Bilson would make the Iesuits beleeve in his book of obedience but also to be judge in matters of errour and heresie superstition and idolatry and all other causes Ecclesiasticall and as a supreme governour to communicate this power to auy naturall borne subject In the Parliament holden at Perth anno 1606. where a number of the Nobility consented to the restitution of the Bishops to their 3 estate and old privileges that they might get the other prelacies erected in temporall Lordships it was declared in the second act That the whole estates of their bounden dutie with most hartie and faithfull affection humbly and truely acknowledge his Maiestie to be soveraigne Monarch absolute Prince iudge and governour over all persons estates and causes both spiritnall and temporall within his sayd Realme He is then not onely governour but judge also over all causes But the nature of the supremacie may be yet better conceived when we have taken a view of the particular rights of the supremacie and of the power granted to the high commission The Kings supremacie considered particularly consisteth either of things which are granted onely by statute or restored by statute as due of right to the Royall Crowne Granted first by
commission In England if a man stand wilfully fourty daies together excommunicate and be accordingly certified by the Bishop into the Chancerie that then he is to be committed to prison by vertue of a Writ directed to the Shriefe as it is sayd in the Apologie of certaine proceedings in courts Ecclesiasticall And in a wr●● de excommunicato capiendo it is sayd quod potestas regia sacrosanctae Ecclesiae in querelis suis deess● non debet The ordinarie lawfull courts Ecclesiasticall farre more then should be aided and assisted by the secular power and not molested or stopped The truth is that this high commission is erected to suppresse the libertie of the Kirk to maintain the usurped power and tyrannous domination of our perfidious Prelates over Synods generall Provinciall Presbyteries sessions to effectuate the intended conformity which they know they will never get done in Synods and Presbyteries unlesse the terrour of this high commission were standing above their heads And therfore when they urge conformity they haue their recourse to this weapon or in Synods and Presbyteries men are terrified with the feare of it This is their strong castell out of which they command and hold in slavery bondage the whole citie Here the Bonifacian Prelats stoutly draw the two swords fine consine suspend deprive imprison c. But the couragious souldier fighting the Lords battell will not bee borne downe with any such outrages and terrours Now as they receive appellations from inferiour courts no appellation can bee made from these three or our five suppose their injustice and tyranny cry never so loud I wonder if the heart of any faithfull Patriot let be conscientious professour can digest this These three Commissioners may appoynt inferiour Commissioners from whom also as subdelegates they may receive appellation I will add out of the record of the grievances of the house of Commons these considerations First out of the statute that the said act is found to be inconvenient and of dangerous extent in divers respects for that it inableth the making of such a commission as well to any one subiect borne as to more Item for that by the sayd Statute the King and his successors may howsoever your Maiestie hath beene pleased out of your gracious disposition otherwise to order make and direct such commission into all the Countries and Diocesses yea into every parish of England and therby all causes may be taken from ordinary jurisdiction of Bishops Chancellers and Arch-deacons and Lay-men solely be inabled to excommunicate and exercise all other spirituall censures For that limit touching causes subiect to this commission being onely with these words viz. such as perteine to spirituall or ecclesiasticall jurisdiction it is very hard to know what matters or offences are included in that number And the rather because it is unknown what ancient Canons or lawes spirituall are in force and what not from whence ariseth great uncertainty and occasion of contention Out of the commission grounded upon the statute That the commisson giveth authoritie to inforce men called into question to enter into recognisance not onely for appearance from time to time but also for performance of whatsoever shall be by the Commissioners ordered And also that it giveth power to enjoyn parties defendant or accused to pay such fees to ministers of the Court as by the Commissioners shall be thought fit As for the execution of the commission it is found grievous these wayes among other 1. For that lay men are by the commissioners punished for speaking otherwise then in iudiciall places and courtes of the simonie and other misdemeanours of spirituall men though the thing spoken be true and the speech tending to the inducing of some condigne punishment 2. In that these commissioners usually appoynt and allot to women discontented at and unwilling to live with their husbands such portions allowances for present maintenance as to them shall seem fit to the great encouragement of wives to be disobedient and contemptuous against their husbands 3 In that their pursevants or other ministers imployed in the apprehension of suspected offenders in any things spirituall and in the searching for any supposed scandalous bookes use to breake open mens houses closets and deskes rifling all corners and secret● custodies as in cases of high treason or suspition therof Their commission is grounded upon a statute and act of Parliament howbeit it agreeth not with the statute Wee have not so much as a shew of a statute for commission of jurisdiction in causes Ecclesiasticall and yet our usurping Prelates tyrannize over loyall subjects faithfull Patriots conscientious professours deserted by these who will be counted fathers of the Common wealth left open and naked to their violent rage without any protection of the law as if they were but the vile off scourings of the land Will not the estate in Parliament redresse this proud usurpation Shall the house of Commons in their Parliament bee grieved not onely at the exorbitant power of this high commission but also at the statute it selfe and shall our nobles and inferiour estates not be grieved at our usurped commission Or will they suffer the like statute and make the countrey mourn and groane for it the next day as our neighbours have done Can Princes or estates give power of spirituall censures either to lay or spiritual men Or may they lawfully put the temporall sword in the hand of Pastors Or may spirituall men as they call them accept it If neither can be done how can the estates erect ratifie or suffer such a commission What is this but the Spanish inquisition Set me up this throne Satan shall set up Papistry or any other religion whatsoever in short processe of time For they sit at the rudder and may turn religion as it pleaseth them and when they see fit occasions and themselves to have able power CHAP. 3. Of the dignitie and power of Archbishops in England THis proud name of Archbishop is not to be found in all the Scripture It was not attributed to any common Metropolitans at the first but to the renow●ed and mightie Giants the Patriarches of Constantinople Antioch Alexandria and Rome who were mounted farre above Metropolitanes when the time was neere that the Antichrist should be mounted on horsebacke But after that he was mounted then Metropolitanes that they might keepe some proportion with their head were lifted up to a degree of power above other Bishops invested into an office that the book of God the Apostolical Church never knew to consecrate Bishops to convocate Synods to receive appellations frō the courts of inferior Bishops to visit the Diocies of other Bishops within the Privince A Diocesan Bishop that is a Bishop over many flockes and Pastors of one Diocie was unknown to the Apostles far more a Bishop of Bishops a provincial Bishop an Archbishop having iurisdiction and power over the comprovinciall Bishops The Church being for the most part within
the bounds of the Roman Empire the governours framed the government according to the forme of the Empire and made degrees in the Church like to degrees in the common-wale They intended not to set up the Antichrist but being led partly with carnall wisedome partly with ambition and vainglory wittingly and willingly did that which brought in the Antichrist and so the mysterie of iniquity which began to work in the Apostles time wrought on still till Antichrist come to his full strength and perfect age While they were framing degrees according to the fashion of the Romane Empire first Bishops then Metropolitanes then Primates then the foure great Patriarches they were but forming the second beast according to the image of the first beast and the Bishop of Rome one of the foure Patriarches became the head Neither was the Bishop and Metropolitan so great in power before the Antichrist come to his perfect age as they were after and have been ever since even to this day They hatched him and he hath rewarded them with greater authority and power But giving and not granting the Diocesan Bishops to bee of divine or Apostolicall institution we will in this chapter onely let you see the Archbishops unlawful superiority over them Persons having lesser ample administration having eyther iudiciall administration or administration not iudiciall eyther constitute by law or introduced without law constitute by law as the administration of the ordinarie Iudges They doe execute it under the Prince either in their owne name or the name of others In their owne name as Bishops so called either with addition as Archbishops or simply Bishops Archbishops being in England two Canterburie and York are considered eyther in respect of their peculiar Diocies in all respects as other Bishops or in respect of the whole province according to the place which they hold eyther in the ecclesiasticall state or the civill In the ecclesiasticall estate eyther according to the place which they hold cōmon to both the Archbishops or that which is peculiar to Canterburie According to the place which is common they are to be considered eyther as in their ordination or as after their ordination In the ordination it selfe it is to be considered that if they the Archbishops haue not been heretofore Bishops they must be consecrated by some Bishops If they haue been Bishops then their election onely is cōfirmed by some Bishops Metropolitanes were chosen confirmed and consecrated of old not by some but by the whole Synode of the comprovinciall Bishops But the English Bishop have no Provinciall Synods to any such purpose They have neither the Discipline prescribed in Gods word nor the Discipline of the old Bishops and Metropolitanes but the Discipline and policie which was in use in the time of greatest darknesse under the Antichrist Here also wee see a signe that they make the Bishop and their Priest of a different order For a Priest when he is made a Bishop must receive a new consecration But a Bishop when hee is made an Archibishop is not consecrated of new howbeit hee bee in degree of power and jurisdiction above other Bishops After ordination they are to be considered either as Metropolitanes or as Archbishops or as Primates or as lesser Patriarches The English Metropolitanes have onely Bishops under them yet sayth Mucket they enjoy the titles and discharge the functions of Archbishops and Primates also Metopolitans at the first were not called Archbishops as I have sayd but the Patriarches greater and lesser onely to whom appellation was made from the Metropolitane But when Metropolitanes began to receive appellations then this proud stile descended to them also as we will see incontinent that as Bishops they received appellations They will extoll the wisedome of the ancients in framing degrees in the Church and yet they themselves confound these degrees and offices and make one man to bee a Metropolitan an Archbishop and a Patriarch Many degrees were made to the Pope to climm up to his throne that beeing done then was there confusion againe We have this confusion then out of Babylon As Metropolitanes 1. in confirming the elections of the Bishops of his Province 2. in consecrating these Bishops together with other two Bishops By the auncient Canons it was ordained that all the Bishops of the Province should assemble to the election confirmation and consecration of the Bishop also and the Metropolitan was present with the rest as one of the number and moderator onely of the convention and the action was common The Bishop of Spalato confesseth that by divine law one Bishop hath no greater right to consecrate another Bishop then another hath By their own book of orders it is not needfull that the Archbishop consecrate a Bishop but an inferiour Bishop may do it for him yet a Bishop may not suffer a minister to ordaine or say handes one a minister for him How can they then bee so shamelesse as to say that Archbishops bee of divine institution if another may consecrate a bishop as well as hee whether it bee with his consent or without it Abbots who have been but simple Priests have of old ordained bishops without either commission or consent of Archbishops as Beda restifieth Of the forme and rites of their consecration wee shall entreat in the next Chapter This that they call consecration of Bishops was not known to the purer Church The ministers chose one of their number to bee a perpetuall moderator of the common actions and called him Bishop as at Alexandria where he was first hatche● and made at the first but onely perpetuall president and this was all 3. In convocating Provinciall Synods according to the Kings rescript 4. in moderating Synods and giving the last voyce Their Provincial Synods are not like the provincial Synods which wee wont to have For ours were but Synods of Shires 4 5 or 6 classicall Presbyteries assembling together twice in the yeare But their Provinciall Synode is a Synod of the Bishops of one Province All the Diocies of the Archbishop and of his suffragane or comprovinciall Bishops which are under him make but one province And seeing they have onely two Archbishops they can have but onely two Provinciall Synods The Metropolitane convocateth the Provincial Synod upon the Princes letter which happeneth very rarely If the Prince direct his letter to any Bishop as sometime hee hath done what need is there of a Metropolitan For they say we cannot have Synods unlesse we have Metropolitanes to convocate them and this is a chiefe part of his function If so be why doth he not exerce his function without a particular letter of the Prince as well as the Bishop doth in convocating his Diocesan Synod If that be a part of his ordinary power to him as this to the other why doth it depend on the Princes letter and how dare a common Bishop take upon him notwithstanding of the Princes letter that which of office apperteineth to the
Metropolitan Ye may see that this part of his function also is not of divine institution that is so dependant and changeable at the pleasure of princes as they confesse themselves Neyther is it requisite of necessity to haue a Metropolitane to convocate Synodes for Synodes at the first assembled without Metropolitanes And in our age both in our owne and other reformed Churches Synods have assembled where there is no Metropolitane Nay rather Synods would be more frequently convocated if they were altogether removed it is so farre from the truth that either we cannot have Synods unlesse we have Metropolitanes or that God hath ordained in his word that they should convocate Synodes For we haue no Synods Metropoliticall but onely Diocesan since Metropolitans have beene set over our heads nor yet national but seldome and dressed before hand for their purpose If it be not of divine institution that the Metropolitane should convocate Provinciall Synods neither is it to moderate And as for necessity there is none as experience of our owne and other reformed Churches can beare witnesse yea in their owne last Synode Ban●roft Bishop of London was president It may be that it was his Papsticall office which hee had of old For in the Catalogue of the seventy Archbishops Canterbury is made the head of all ●ur Churches all Bishops sworn to Canonicall obedi●nce of that Archbishop and defence of all privileges and liberties of that seat Where the Bishop of London is his Deane to call Synods to publish his decrees to make returne of the execution Wincheste● his Chancellour Lincolne his Vicechancellour Salisbury his Chaunter Worcester his Chaplaine Rochester his Crosse-bearer As Archbishops 1. in receiving of and answering to appellations interposed made from his Suffragane Bishops 2. In visiting the whole Province according to the lawes and custome As the Bishops haue suffragane Bishops under them so the Bishops themselves are Suffraganes to the Archbishop They are not his suffraganes as he is Metropolitane but as he is Archbishop So that as Archbishop he hath greater authority then he hath as Metropolitan For as Metropolitan he must doe nothing without a Synode in the Dioces of another Bishop neyther by receiving appellation nor by way of visitation But as Archbishop he may receive appellations and visite the Dioces of his Province without a Synode as being not onely superiour in honour and prioritie of order but also in power of jurisdiction And for this his greatnes which he attained unto he beareth the proud title of Archbishop The old Bishops knew no other but a Metropolitane the Provinciall Synode assembling twice in the yeare to the which appellations were made It is troublesome say they to call Synodes so often Dioces are so large and the Synode should be wearied to stay till all the appellations of inferiour Courts were decided Here a notable tricke First they say it is needfull to haue Synodes and therefore needfull to haue a Metropolitane This againe they crosse and say there is no need of Synods it is difficile and incommodious to have two provinciall Synods in the yeare as of old The Archbishop may doe all that the Synode did receive appellations visit and correct the excesses and defects of other bishops onely he may not make Canons and Ecclesiastical lawes without a Synod Neither is there any need of new Canons the old are sufficient But I would demand why Synods may not be so easily and so often convocated as of old Is it because they have their Diocies extended over one two or three Shires and the province extended almost as farr as the kingdome as Canterburies province in England and Saintandros in Scotland Their wings should be clipped their Diocies and provinces contracted and multiplied if that the Discipline of the old Bishops were to bee preserved that Synods may assemble But before they loose any part of their extensive power and large impire they will rather reteine the corrupted discipline brought in under Antichrist If they will say on the other side the Diocies were as ample of old then why doe they pretend to their loytering in their owne or the Kings palaces the distance of their Diocies And if they will not convocate Provinciall Synods twice in the yeare what is the reason that they will not convocate once in the yeare or as was concluded in the Councell of Basile once in three yeare Yee may see that this corruption is so grosse that it was palpable in the time of most palpable darknesse Againe Synods did not assemble onely to make Canons but also for to put order to all causes Ecclesiasticall Farther there is continuall occasion to make new Canons and also to reforme or repeale old corrupt canons Neither doe Synods need to stay long upon appellations if the Church should meddle onely with causes properly Ecclesiasticall and the ancient judicatories inferiour were restored of presbyteries and consistories But to medle with tythes testamentarie and matrimoniall matters and to set up Archdeacons Officials and Chancellours and the rest of that ●able it may well procure moe appellations then a grave and godly Synode should be troubled with When all is done yet Canterburie doth not nor will not take the pains as by himselfe to decide the appellations Hee hath ● Court which they call the Court of Arches wherein sitteth as Iudge the Deane of the Arches he hath to doe with appeales of all men within the province of Canterbury Advocates there be in this Court 16. or moe at the pleasure of the Archbishop all Doctours of law two Registers and ten Proctors And another Court not unlike unto this which they call the Court of Audience which entertaineth the complaints causes and appeales of them in that province So yee see what way the ancient Synods are gone Neither to direct by making Canons nor to execute them being made should bee permitted to the pleasure of one man And yet by the way remember that the Prince with advice of the Metropolitane may make Canons also Howbeit the Archbishop be made up with the spoiles of the provinciall Synode his grace may not attend on the ●●scharge of the Synods care and jurisdiction And whereas he may visit if he please the whole Diocies of his province doe yee thinke hee will take the pains himselfe who then shal● attend on Court and Councell Yea I suppose that seldome hee sendeth his Chancelour or any other for him By the Canons of the Councell of Trent the Archbishop may no visit the Diocie of another bishop unlesse the cause and necessitie be first tried in the provinciall Synod so that the fathers of that superstitious and bloudy councell were ashamed of the Archbishops exorbitant power which the English retaine And the English say that during the time of the Archiepiscopall visitation whereby the jurisdiction of the ordinary is suspended that Ecclesiasticall iurisdiction which hee practiseth hee doth exercise from and under the Archbishop as his
voyce in the house but onely sit there to answer of their knowledge in the law when they be asked if any doubt arise among the Lords sayth Sir Tho. Smith in his common-wealth This place if any better becommeth them then to sit high each in his ranke over against the Dukes and Barons and to answer only of their knowledge in the law of God when they shall be required for any matter of Religion But this as I sayd may be better done in the convocation house In time of Poperie the Spirituall Lords might not sit in Parliament whensoever any statute was to be made touching felonie or treason or the losse of any member or shedding of bloud If they might haue been spared then at such times may they not be as well spared in matters of possessions and unheritances Our Prelats entred in parliament notwithstanding the cautions and conditions condiscended upon were never insert in the act of their admission upon which condition onely the generall assembly after great opposition made to the Churches vote in Parliament was induced for the most to consent To bee Lords in Parliament and Councell to governe countries to sit in the Starre-chamber to bee Iustices of peace and Quorum to goe in Embassage to forraine princes and to exerce other civill functions in the common-wealth as is here sayd is to exerce offices incompatible with their spirituall calling to beare rule and dominion among the nations to intangle themselves with the affaires of this life and to neglect that spirituall calling to which they were sanctified and set apart from the rest of the citizens and subjects of the kingdome It was said of old that the Psalter should never bee out of their hands They take the charge of a great Diocie more then they are able to compasse within the fadome of their armes and yet turne it over to their Vicars officialls Chauncellours Archdeacons Commissaries and take upon them offices which they confesse are not Episcopall but delegate onely by the Prince O what a confusion hath the pride and ambition of Clergie-men brought into the Church of God! In jurisdiction by ordinarie law attributed unto them in their owne Diocie is to be considered either the sinewes of exercising it or the jurisdiction it selfe The sinewes of exercising their jurisdiction are Ecclesiasticall censures which may either be infl●cted upon laymen and Ecclesiasticall persons or peculiarly upon Ecclesiasticall persons onely Of the first sort are 1. interdiction of divine service 2. admonition 3. suspension ei●her from entrance into the Church or from partaking of the sacraments 4. excommunication 5. the great curse Anathema against a pertinacious heretick Of the second sort are 1. sequestration of the fruits of a church 2. suspension either from office or office and benefice 3. deprivation 4. deposition that is either verbal by sentence or reall which is called degradation Of all which censures one to wit excommunication is inflicted for contumacie either for not comp●iring in judgement or not obeying the mandates of the Church The rest are inflicted as well for contumacie as for other actuall offences By interdiction sayth Mucket a communaltie for some publick offence is deprived of divine service buriall administration and receiving of the sacraments Interdiction of a certaine place as of a citie or whole countrey for some publicke and common offences committed by them or the superiour Magistrates to whom they adhere whereby Churches are closed divine service is substracted c. The Bishop of S●alato sa●th it is an impious invention not known nor heard of in the Church for a thousand yeare and that it bred in Pope Hildebrands brain and concludeth after some reasoning ●on ergo legitima est sed spuria haec cens●va ac 〈◊〉 abominanda quam Ecclesia pro sua 〈◊〉 ignosit Excommunication is distinguished by the Canonists in the lesser or greater excommunication The lesser sayth Mucket is suspension from intrance into the Chur●h or onely from partaking of the sacrament which Cyprian calleth Abstentio and it is inflicted for contumaci● and other offences but chiefly for contumacie in not compeiring in E●●lesiasticall Courts or not obeying their ordonances D. Field saith that lesser excommunication excludeth onely from the sacraments which when it is pronounced against them that stubbornly stand out and will not yeeld themselves to the Churches direction or disposition is properly named excommunication but when it is pronounced against then that yeeld when they have offended and seeke the blessed remedies of the evils they have committed it is not so properly named excommunication but it is an act of the discipline of repentance This suspension from entrance in the Church is against all reason for even persons excommunicate should not be debarred from hearing of the word for the word is the meane and powerfull instrument whereby offenders are recalled The greater excommunication sayth Mucket is whereby the offender is not onely debarred from receiving the sacrament or entrie in the Ch. but also from the fellowship of the faithful Doctor Field describeth it thus The greater putteth the excommunicate from the Lords body and bloud and depriveth them of that comfort and strength of grace which from it they might receive it denieth unto them the benefite of the Churches publick prayers and so leaveth them to themselves as forlorn and miserable wretches without that assistance presen●● and protection which from God she obtaineth for her obedient children The tearmes being thus unfolded we haue to consider in the use of this censure these special poynts First the lawes made under the pain of excommunication ipso facto For in time of Poperie there were two sorts of excommunication one inflicted by the law or Canon when a man committing the offence and fact inhibited by the law was made subject to excommunication without the ministerie and proceeding of a judge which was called also excommunicatio latae sententiae The sentence was not left to the judge to pronounce but was esteemed pronounced in the very law it selfe The other excommunication is inflicted by a judge after citation and cononicall forewarning wherin the sentence condemnatorie is pronounced by the judge The former leaveth nothing to the judge but the sentence declaratorie to declare that seeing he is gultie of such a crime hee is already excommunicated The Bishop of Spalato howbeit their great friend otherwise condemneth this kinde of excommunication as absurd and perceiveth in it magnum Papatus arcanū latere cui et rudes imperiti Canonistae seu potius Decretistae spiritum robur addere sunt conanati For sayth hee Excommunicare etenim est actu aliquem ligare non potentia Non enim ligatur qui potest aut debet ligari sed qui reipsa ligatur How can a man as yet invisible indemonstrable unknowne to him that bindeth be bound This bond cannot bind without a binder and the presence or knowledge of him that is bound When such a Canon
of conjunction and dissolution in the word the Church is to see that that order and these caveats bee observed which are contained in the word For it may fall out that both in binding up of marriage they may commit incest and in dissolving without a just cause may offend also It is the Churches duty to prevent and remove such offences But of other lawes civil and municipal they are not executors These lawes which are divine are of a mixt nature These which are civill belong onely to the civill Magistrate The Churches part is transferred to the cognisance of officials to whom it doth not belong And therfore Beza concerning this abuse writeth thus Sed quorsum hoc ad officiales promotores procuratores totam denique illam procorum colluviem quae Ecclesiam Dei i●mpridē devastat quorsum hoc ad illa non Ecclesiae tantūmodo Christianae verumetiā universi mundi de But what maketh this sayth he for officialls promoters Proctors and all that filth of swine which now a long time doth waste the Church of God What is this to these shamefull staines not onely of the Christian Church but also of the whole world Further beside the Churches part which is to take heed to offences and breach of Gods law they have taken the Canon law for the rule of their proceedings both in spousalls mariages and divorces And thirdly have taken in debts and dowries goods and chattels which are accessorie to marriage to judge upon and this must be called Ecclesiasticall cognisance Lastly these causes are of such weight that they are not to be committed to the skill or conscience of one base officiall It is observed by the author of the Assertion for Christian policie that mens inheritances many times hang in suspence upon question of l●gitimation or illegitimation of their children to be allowed or disallowed by the Canon law and that many Knights Esquires and Gentlemen doe complaine and bewa●le the stealing away and mariages of their daughters neeces neere kinswomen or wards Couples have been married and lived together 4 6 or moe yeares as man and wife and upon a new and sudden dislike and discontentment or upon a surmised precontract pretensedly proved by two suborned witnesses by vertue of the Canon law the husband was adiudged no husband the wife no wife Another example he relateth of one solemnly maried to a wife and after by reason of a precontract solemnly divorced from the same wife and compelled by censures of the Church to marry her for whom sentence of precontract was adjudged and yet authorized by the same consistorie about ten or twelve yeares after the divorce to resummon recall and rechallenge his first wife she having a testimoniall out of the same consistorie of her lawfull divorce and being againe solemnly maried to another husband Licences of mariage have been granted out of their Ecclesiasticall Court with a blanke So the partie licenced was enabled if it had been their pleasure to marry another mans wife or his wives sister Many moe grosse absurdities are there alledged by th● learned authour which the Reader will s●arce beleeve But I omit them and many other things which might be sayd anent the particulars set down in this Table Succes●●on to the goods of the deceased is either or him who hath made his testam●nt or who hath died intestate The first 〈◊〉 her universall when the plea is for proving or improving the testament exhibited or particular when the suit is for to obtain a cer●ain lega●ie The s●cond is either properly when no testament is made or by way of in●estate as when there is none who will take upon them the burthen of executorie In either of the cases the action is either to obtaine the administration of the goods and that eithe● simply or with the later will annexed that it may be fulfilled or wit● the tutorship and to the use of the Min●r● or else the action is against him that ingyreth himselfe into the administration and intrometteth with the goods of the deceased not being inabled with any warrant Causes testamentarie and their appendicles are meere civill and temporall and therefore do not belong to spirituall Courts It is by the grant of Kings not by Ecclesiasticall right that Church consistories have medled with such causes Because Bishops were supposed to bee men of good conscience and that they would be carefull to see the later will of the deceased performed then others therefore they were reserved to Episcopal audience and cognisance of Ecclesiasticall Courts But this respect was not founded upon Gods word For we must not looke so much to conscience as to a lawfull calling or else all civill causes pleaded before a Iudge should be referred to Church-men because of their supposed good conscience And the truth is it is but supposed indeed For a Bishop or pastor that will medle in matters impertinent to his calling hath but a bad conscience Such a man will never make conscience of it more then another religious Christian. And what conscience they made of the matter may bee seene in that they transferred that which was committed to their trust to a base Officiall who hath as bad a conscience as the Bishop himselfe and badder if badder may be And as for skill in deciding such causes no man will deny but the civill judges are more able to cognosce and determine in them then Church-men By the common law sayth Lindwood these causes were not committed unto the Church but by the free grant of Princes And therefore in the lawes alledged by him approbation and insinuation of testaments are forbidden Clergiemen Et ratio redditur in juribus illis allegatis quia opprobrium est clericis si peritos ostendere vel●●t rerum for ●ense●●● May not matters of legacies and bequests of goods as well as of lands bee determined in remporall Courts Cannot the Iudges in temporal courts discerne upon proofes and other presumptions whether the testator was of perfect memorie or distracted as they doe in questions of lunacie madnesse or idiocie in men living Can they not define of two wills which is the first which is the later will whether the legacie remaine or bee recalled whether it bee pure or conditionall If a creditor may recouer his debt due by the testator in the tēporall Court what should hinder a legatarie to recover his legacie in the same Court This poynt is made cleare and amplified in the Assertion of true and Christian Church policie To conclude then probates of wills committing of Administrations sequestrations of the goods of the intestate recovering of legacies taking up of inventaries c. belong not to a Church Consistorie and it is a very great abuse that such Consistories should be called Church consistories and that spirituall censures should bee put in execution by them Ecclesiasticall dues and rights are 1. tithes which are either Praediall Personall or Mixt. Praediall tithes are such as come of the
de accusat c. 1. in glossa and is ordained to this speciall end that hee suplieth the Bishops jurisdiction and office in the out places of the Diocie or else in such parishes as be peculiars to the Bishop and exempted from the iurisdiction of the Archdeacon For where either by prescription or composition there bee Archdeacons that have iurisdiction within their Archdeaconries as in most places they have there this commissarie is but superfluous and most commonly doth rather vexe and disturbe the countrey for his lucre then of conscience seeke to redresse the lives of offenders And therefore the Bishop taking praestation money of his Archdeacons yearly pro exteriori jurisdictione as it is ordinarily called doth by superonerating their circuit with a Commissarie not onely wrong the Archdeacon but the poorer sort of subiects much more as common practise daily teacheth to their great woe The Bishops Chauncellour and Commissarie and the Archdeacons official are all three termed officialls in the canon law the Chauncellour the principall officiall the Commissarie Officialis foraneus the third the Archdeacons officiall or by the generall name of officiall In the lawes and statutes of England the first is called Chancellour the second Commissarie the third by the generall name of Officiall The name of Chauncellour in this sense is not so ancient as that of Officiall sayth D. Field and that in a generall signification it is used for any one that is employed for the giving of answer to sutors for keeping of records and notes of remembrance and generally for the performance of some principall duties pertaining to him whose Chauncellour he is sayd to be The principall officiall that is the Chauncellour howbeit he be but onely a Deputie yet by fiction of the law when hee cognosceth any cause hee is interpreted to bee but one person with the Bishop and to make but one consistorie with him So that howbeit the Bishop be not present there yet it is his consistorie Such fictions of law have been made by cosening and deceitfull Prelates to deceive the world And therefore say the Canonists there lieth no appellation from the principall Officiall to the Bishop but to the Archbishop yet from the Commissarie who is Officialis foraneus there lieth appellation Regularly appellation also may be made from the Archdeacon and other inferiour Prelates to the Bishop sayth Canisius unlesse the custome of the countrey hath brought in another order The Archdeacon hath a certaine circuit of the Diocie wherein he exerciseth his office and iurisdiction For everie Diocie is divided into certain Archdeaconries comprehending about the fourth part of the Diocies if they be great Diocies But if they be lesser Diocies they haue but one Archdeacon as Canterburie Rochester Glocester Bristow Worcester c. The Archdeacon by vertue of his degree and order hath no jurisdiction but onely by prescription of time that is a papall custome which is yet retained in the English Church In Hieroms time at Rome the Deacons began to exalt themselves above Ministers against which usurpation evil custome of the Church of Rome he inveigheth with great vehemencie as a thing unsufferable that the ministers of tables and to widowes should be lifted up with pride aboue the minister of the word and sacraments and opponeth to the custome of the church of Rome the custome of all the churches in the world And yet the old corruption of that one church wherin ther institutions ye see if they were excellent hath spread over the whole church and grown to a great height So that the Archdeacons will not sayth Mr. Cartwright take the best Ministers of the church as their equalls They are called Archdeacons not of one particular Church but of a whole shire whereas Deacons were appoynted in several churches It is true that many of their Archdeacons are also ministers but yet they exercise their iurisdiction over a whole shire ministers and others within the bounds of their Archdeaconrie not as Ministers but as Archdeacons When the Bishop should have visited his Diocie and inquired into needfull reparations of the church and what other things were out of order hee sent his chiefe Deacons to visit for him At the first they were sent onely to visit and make report but not to sententiate in any mans cause sayth D. Field or to meddle with the correcting and reforming of any thing but afterwards in processe of time they were authorized to heare and determine the smaller matters and to reforme the lighter and lesser offences Hence in time it c●me that Archdeacons much used by Bishops as most attendant on them in the visitation of their churches and reforming small disorders at length by prescription claimed the correction of greater things at having of long time put themselves into the exercise of such authoritie So the Archdeacons in the end became greater then the Deanes let bee common Ministers The lazie Bishop sent his Deacon to enquire into the life and conversation of the Clergie and Ministers which was not his office yet ye see from what a small beginning he is risen to so great a height It is dangerous to depart from the right paterne shewed upon the mount Againe to make a Preacher of the word a Deacon is to conioyne these two offices which the Apostles did separate Archdeacons then almost through all England by papall prescription have jurisdiction within their bounds and power to visite to inquire into offences to receive presentments to punish with ecclesiasticall censures to substitute officialls to supply their roomes in their Consistories whereby it hath happened that the subjects haue been molested for one and the selfe same fault by the Bishops Chauncelours and the Archdeacon or his officiall In a Canon lately made anno 1603 they haue transacted the matter so that they shall not medle with the presentments received at others visitations how the transaction is kept I cannot tell It is to be observed that Chauncelours and officials are Civilians Ministers doe sometime also beare these offices but utterly ignorant in these faculties For these Courts being confused Courts wherin matrimoniall testamentarie and other causes of temporal matters are handled not belonging to ecclesiasticall cognisance no wonder the Minister be ignorant in them But on the other part it were a shame if a Civilian should know better how to deale with an offender and to bring him to repentance Againe what a grosse absurditie and intolerable abuse is it in the Church of God that Chauncelours Commissaries officialls being Civilians should meddle with the censures of the Church The Bishop hath vendicate to himself the whole power of excommunication and then he transferreth this his power by a generall commission to another which he may not lawfully doe no not to a minister far lesse to a Doctor of the Civill lawe whom he appointeth to be his Chauncelour or the Archdeacon to him whom hee appoynteth to bee his Officiall They
to every pastour neither Canon nor civill law should take from them In a part of the Diocie as Archpresbyters whom they call rurall Deanes and now they are imployed for the most part to convocate their Classis 2. to intimate to them something directed by missive from the ordinarie as occasion shall require 3. to Induct into benefices in place of the Archdeacon being busied in some remote part There were two sorts of Acchpresbyters of old The citie Archpresbyter who is now called the cathedrall or citie Deane the Countrie Archpresbyter who is called now the rurall Deane who was at the first institution moderator of the classis or countrey Presbyterie thereafter made a countrey Bishop or Chorepiscopus within his owne circuit as the citie Bishop was at the first but President or moderator of the Presbyterie of the citie and suburbs For we must not think that the country Bishop ruled alone without his classicall Presbyterie more then the citie Bishop did In processe of time the citie Bishop grew to this great statelynes which now we see and the o●● Chorepiscopus decreased and was throwen dovvne by degrees till at last he is come to this poore estate of a rurall Deane He it not ranked in this hierarchie amongst the persons having iudicial administration but among those vvho haue none as ye see to intimate to the Priests with in his Deanrie what is the Bishops pleasure eyther severally or to convocate them togither to that effect or to put any person in possession sometime of his Benefice for the Archdeacon Every Diocie in England as vve heard before out of Mucket is divided in Archdeaconries moe or fevver according to their extent Achdeacour into Deanries The Deanries comprehend ten Parishes sometimes moe seldome fewer But cathedrall and collegiat churches are exemed out of the Archdeaconries and rurall Deanries Over these Deanries are set rurall Deanes qui●us praeficiuntur Dec●nirurales antiquis Archipresbyter is non multum ●issimiles sayeth hee Then againe in every Diocie there are iurisdictions exempt eyther from the Archdeacon and subiect immediately to the Bishop or exempt from both or from the whole Province of the Arch-Bishop and subject immediatly to the King in respect of appellations They want no corrupt order of governement which they had in time of Poperie no not so much as their exemptions To returne then to the rurall Deanes These rurall Deanes upon the Bishops or his deputies warrant cited such within their Deanries as were to compeir before the Bishop or his deputie and this their citation under the seale of their office they were to certifie to the Bishop or his deputie But Lindwood sayth quod per eos potius quam per alios qui hibent sigilla authentica multae multae fiebant fraudes and that they colluded with the partie in sealing the certificates of their citations when as they had not made any due citation and therefore Iohn Peccham Archbishop made a constitution that every yeare they should svveare to give out no certificates without due citation They were sworne every yeare sayeth Lindwood quit quolibet anno mutantur Decani et fiunt noui They were to hold Chapiters in a sett course foure times in the yeare and at other times as often as occasion should require sayth D. Field out of Lindw But Lindwood writeth thus Et horum capituloru● quaed●m tenentur de tribus hebdomadis in tres qu● dam semelin quarta anni haec dicuntur Capitul● principalia propter majorem confluen●i●m Cleri quia in his de negotijs arduioribus tracteri consuevit Some did meet every three weekes some every quarter of year Their Chapiters convening every three weeks were our presbyteries which doe meet in some place every weeke in other places in two or three weeks especially in winter These chapiters were called capitula ruralia countrey or rural Chapiters sayth Lindwood because they were assembled in the countrey towns In these Chapiters the Deans did publish the decrees of Provinciall and Episcopall Synods For the Bishop himselfe did not demit himselfe so farre as to be present and therfore sent one to make intimation or to the Deane to doe it Praesertim cum non deceat statum pontificalem in singulis capitulis hujusmodi interesse sayth Lindwood D. Field proveth that of old they had power to visit their circuit twice every yeare and to suspend laymen from the sacraments and clergie men from the execution of their offices This was a remainder of the old power of the Countrey Bishop Now his office is onely to intimate decrees of Synods or the Bishops will in any matter without any iurisdiction reserved either to him or to the ministers of the Deanrie assembled together in chapiter or as wee speake in scripture language presbyterie So that their Deanries are a footstep of that which have beene and a shadow of that whereof we had the substance This alteration of government among us will in the end turne to the same desolation There are some Deanes exempt which are subject immediatly to the Archbishop and these have Archi●●aconall jurisdiction sayth Lindwood Wee have before made mention of some rurall Deanes exercising spirituall jurisdiction but that is not common next it is Episcopall for they doe it by themselves without the Chapiter Those which beside the common have no peculiar function are placed either in so●e cathedrall or collegiat Church or in a parish Church In some Cathedrall or Collegiar Church whereof they are members or no members Of those who are members the chiefe is the Deane then in some Churches of ancient foundation other dignities also as the Subdeane the Chauncellour the chiefe Chaunter the Thesaurer Lastly the Canons or Prebendaries of which in the Churches which are more ancient some are Residentiaries some not The greater Residentiaries administrate and governe in all things with the Deane in that Church and they have a seat in the Quire and the power of a voyce in the Chapiter Canons or Prebendaries no● Residentiaries have a seat in the Quire but not a voyce in the Chapiter Those who who are not members serve either to the administration of the publick Liturgie or Sacraments as the pettie Canons or Vicars chorall or by assisting those who do celebrate as the Pistler the Gospeller There are also others bearing office in cathedrall Churches but they are ranked among the lay sort by the composer of the tables such as are singing boyes vergerers Ballifs and others set down afterward The authour of the admonition to the parliament doth thus muster the Droanes of these Cathedrall Churches Wee should be too long to tell your Honours of the cathedrall Churches the dennes aforesayd of all loytering lubbers where Mr. Dean M. Vicedeane Mr. Canons or Prebendaries the greater M●pettie Canons or Canons the lesser M. Chauncellour of the Church M. Treasurer otherwise called Iudas the Purse-hearer the chiefe ch●unter singing men special favourers of religion
squealing Qui●isters Organ players Gospellers pistlers pensioners vergers c. Wicl●ffe sayth there ●e 12 disciples of the Antichrist Popes Cardinals Patriarches Archbishops Bishops Archdeacons Officialls Deans Monk●s Canons Friers Pardoners He reckoneth yee see the Deans and Canons among the disciples of the Antichrist And in truth what are they else but idle lubbers lying in the cloysters of their Cathedrall Churches having either no necessary or profitable charge in the cathedral church where they loyter or else have a charge in other places but under colour of their prebends absent thēselves from the churches where they are bound to a cure of soules and that which they spoyle and raven in other places there sayth M. Cartwr they spend and make good cheere with And againe he sayth they should indeed be the rewards of learning if they were converted unto the maintenance and bringing up of Scholers where now for the most part they serve for fat morsels to fill if might bee the greedie appetites of those which otherwise have ynough to live with and for holes and dennes to keep them in which are unworthy to be kept at the ch●ge of the church or else whose presence is necessarie and dutifull in other places and for the most part unprofitable there The Deane and Canons or Prebendaries are not sustained with the Ecclesiastical rents and possessions of the citie where they loiter but for the most part of the rents and possessions of their charges in the countrey to their ruine and desolation the great steeples devouring the little steeples the great Quires overthrowing the finall pulpits It was done no doubt in a foolish and pretensed imitation of the temple of Ierusalem to appoint such idle serving and singing men to uphold in the cathedrall Church daily chaunting and singing as was the custome in the temple of Ierusalem But all the people in the land had communion of worship in the sayd temple and repaired to it thrice in the yeare to that effect and purpose beside that the daily worship was for the use of all those who were upon severall occasions to repaire unto the sayd temple and therefore the whole people of God is called the church of the Iewes because they had communion of worship in one place But there is no such place in the Christian churches appointed either for countries counties or shires Every church even the meanest hath as great interest priviledge to all the points of Gods worship as the greatest cities lett be the Cathedrall seats which are not ever the greatest Then againe their curions singing and chanting serveth not for edification of the soule but rather to hinder true devotion and carie away the mind from heavenly meditation with a carnall and sensuall delite He that singeth should be liker pronuncianti quam canenti to one who pronounceth the word then to one that singeth Psalmes as sung by course side after side some few singing the rest of the people resrayned from singing One half sung with the hart the other half with hart and voice Then again their musicall instruments were unknowen to the church of God for 800 yeres Yea it appeareth that they were not brought in in the dayes of Aquinas For he sayth sed instruments musica sicut cytharas et Ps●teria non assumit ecclesia in div●nas laudes ne videatur iudaizare The Church then it seemeth used no musicall instruments in his time lest it should seeme to Iudaize Yea amongst the Iewes themselves these musicall instruments were not used in their synagognes but only in the temple which was the theater of all the ceremonies of the leviticall law Againe that one should read the gospel another the epistle what an idle distinction of idle officemen in the church is this for by this reason they may make a third sort also for reading of the law The Treasurer Chancelour Vicedeanes offices are not all alike in every cathedrall church sayth Mucket but divers according to the different statutes of divers places It is hard therefore distinctly to define particularly their offices The Deane of the cathedrall Church succeedeth in the roome of him who was called Archipresbyter urbanus the citie Presbyter as the rurall Deanes doe the Countrey presbyter But the cathedaall chapter doth not consist of the presbyters of the citie as the rurall chapiter did consist of the presbyters within the rurall Archpresbyter his praecinct yea they were bound to sit in chapiter with the Deane sayth Dr. Field But all the Presbyters of the cathedrall citie doe not at any time sit in chapiter with the cathedral Dean as I gave a lively example before of the citie of London where the Ministers of the severall parishes doe not sit in chapter with the Deane of Pauls but onely Canons and Prebendars who for the most part ought to serve at parishes perhaps 20. or 30. miles from the citie The cathedrall seat of Canterburie hath 12. or 13. parishes but not 4 able preachers sayth the author of the Assertion for true and Christian Church policie I have been in some of their cathedrall cities where they have no parish minister to preach but onely the watering of some prebendarie who commeth to attend on service in the temple and neglecteth his owne charge with cure of soules Againe suppose this chapiter did consist of parish ministers within the citie yet that some should bee made cardinall to sit in chapiter either with Bishop or Deane and others secluded having as great interest in the common government of their stocks as it is not grounded on the word so it was not known to puret antiquitie as wee have already made evident And it is acknowledged also by Bellarmine howbeit hee doeth conjecture upon a false ground what was the cause of it Nam à tempore Apostolorum per multos annos imo etiam per aliquot soecula quia pauci erant Presbyteri Diaconi omnes simul ad electionem Episcopi ad concilia vocabantur neque opus erat tunc distinguere à Cardinalibus non Cardinales sicut etiam in alijs Ecclesi●s non disting●ebantur Canonici à non Canonicis And yet there were many Presbyters at Rome in Cornelius time as they themselves confesse yet even then this distinction was not made as Bellarmine in that same place doth acknowledge Farther this same chapiter hath not any medling with jurisdiction in common with the Bishop The Deane and Prebendaries in many places have power severally to excommunicate in their parishes which belong to them in peculiar but they convene not chapiterl●e to exercise spirituall jurisdiction and inflict spirituall punishments and censures upon every delinquent within the Diocie yea or cathedral seat onely either with the Bishop or without him Alienation of church lands or setting of takes and such like which concern the possessions of the Church may not passe without them but for spiritual jurisdiction they are content that the vicar
to the communion which all they that receive orders take together and remaine in the same place where the hands were layd on them untill such time as they have received the communion The celebration of the supper went before in the beginning of the action as is enioyned in the book of ordering Bishops Priests and Deacons but they communicate not till the end of the action The first celebration then was nothing but a consecration as they call it of the bread and wine without the pertaking of the communicants all the rest of the action must intervene before they partake for to what end els is there made twice mention of the communion So the first is like the offering of a sacrifice the last is liker to the supper Is not this great cōfusion betwixt the first and second part of that holy action to intermingle another action yea as some say another sacrament confounding two sacraments together Their Letanies and Collects for brevities sake I passe by The external calling to the benefice or certaine place of the ministerie is either to a parsonage or a vicarage In each of them is to be considered 1. nomination either when the right of presentation is in another person nor his who doth nominate as somtime it falleth out or when the right both to nominate present belongeth to him 2. The Bish. triall of his gifts qualification whether he be capable or not of such a Benefice 3. Admission either to the title it selfe as when the Bishop doth institute at the presentation of another which is called Institution or when the Bishop himselfe who doth institute hath the right of patronage which is called Collation or else admission is to the possession it selfe by inducting which is either done by the Archdeacon himselfe or by his deputie After they have thus received their order of Priesthood and are ordeined at large in nubibus they pay for their letters of Orders for their admission to their Ministerie must not be free of fees and runne abroad through the whole Diocesse where they please preaching any where if they have gotten after their Ordination another licence to preach For they must not preach by vertue of their order of Priesthood in the intendment of the Prelates but must have the Bishops warrant to that end They are put in remembrance at their ordination in the Bishops interrogatories exhortations in the Gospels and Epistles and at the deliverie of the Bible in their hand of the dutie of preaching and teaching But that is onely for a fashion for they read of the booke these Gospels Epistles Exhortations which were used of old and are reteined still in the booke rather to be a monument of that which hath been then for their right use and end For in the Romane Church when the Masse Priest is to receive orders by the Epistles and Gospels c. he is put in remembrance that he must blesse governe preach baptize 〈…〉 doctrine should be spirituall medicine to the people of God that the Church of God is to be edified both by preaching and good example These are peeces of the ancient order which was in the Church lying still in their corrupt pontificals to be rehearsed in the forme of a service But when they come to the action it self wherin the order of Priesthood is actually conferred at the laying on of hands there are no such speeches used So in the English much is said of preaching and teaching before they come to the laying on of hands but then there is a generall word used Be thou a faithfull dispenser of the word of God not mening to dispens by preaching for they know that many of them cannot teach but to dispense it as it is divided set in order to be read sung in the service book Or else they mock God his word and his Church after the old Popish manner not intending the right dispensing of the word by preaching When he is to be set in a certain place he seeketh the Patrons favour or maketh some simonicall paction with him as we have alreadie heard out of Brightman and a little before out of M. Cartwright The Patron presenteth the man whom he thinketh fittest for his own humour and the Bishop doth try his gifts and qualification Heere the liberty of election is taken from the Congregation and given to the Patron and the Bishop That the Patron should be some way acknowledged for his liberalitie toward the Church we doe not gainesay Therfore jus utile that is if he be redacted to poore estate that he be relieved with the rents of the Church and jus honorisicum right to a fear in the Church and jus onerosum to have a care that the rents be not dilapidate as also to be gardian and keeper of the rents of the Church during vacancie or what other thing else not savouring of superstition or ostentation wee grant unto them but the right of presentation of Clerkes to the pastorall office we cannot grant The Church may not resigne this liberty of election in the hands of another man but is ever bound to retaine in her own hands the freedome to choose the fittest person to have charge of their soules This liberty of Election was acknowledged to be so equitable grounded upon the principles of nature that there should be more Clerkes then one tryed when a Church was vacant where this order might be had that in the Councell of Trent some others also chosen by the Synode beside the Bishop were ordeined to examine and chose the fittest of those who offered themselves or were offered to a tryall and this is called examen per concursum But in our neighbour Church they have no such constitution The Bishop himselfe tryeth or appointeth whom he pleaseth none is depute by a Synode to joyne with him And where the Bishop himselfe is Patron of a benefice he maketh not nor yet receiveth any offer of a leite of many that the worthiest may be chosen but the Church is under the same bondage whether the Bishops or Lay-men be Patrons Now what is this examination of the Bishop surely very superficiall and imaginarie The request of any in authoritie is able to obtain the Bishops institution suppose he be unsufficient And indeed there is no extreme suite the doore is not so hard locked sayth Mr. Cartwright there needeth but the lifting up of the latch And in another place he sayth that many say that for a dish of fruit of the golden griffe they lease out and make all manner of marchandise of the Lord Orch●rds that he which hath no gift in the heart yet if he have a gift in the band need no other key to open the Church doore and enter into a benefice He that came to the Bishop of Winchester to serve in his Diocesse borne at Norwich and made a Minister at Peterborow knew not how many Sacraments there were and requested a dayes respite
G●spels and Epistles In a word all the dayes dedicate to Christs severall acts are all humane inventions some later some more ancient Iewish formes wherwith that people was brought up under the pedagogie of the law a rudimentarie kind of instruction not beseeming the Christian Church nor answerable to the cleare light of the Gospell The Iewes anniversarie dayes were abolished not onely for their peculiar service or signification of things to come but altogether howbeit memorials of by-past benefits Christ and his Apostles did institure no day for remembrance of a particular benefit no not the weekly sabboth let be an anniversary day For the weekly Lords day was not appointed for remembrance of the particular benefit of Christs resurrection but for the whole worship of God If the Lords day were referred directly and expressely to the commemoration of the resurrection then should it be the proper and peculiar service of the Sabboth then should we not have at all a day determinate in the new ●estament and institute to worship God for himselfe and all his workes in generall There was then no memoriall dayes appoynted in the new testament but a morall day for the worship of God The sacrament as often as it is celebrate it is a memoriall of his passion When the word is preached Christ is crucified before our eyes But dayes of particular commemorations of some speciall actions with solemnitie and cessation from worke we have none nor was it the intention of Christ or his Apostles If there be no warrant to dedicate anniversarie dayes to Christ farre lesse to the virgin Mary and the rest of the Saints and of Angels Their holy dayes of Saints are called the Saints dayes as well as Christs dayes are called his And they have their collects gospels epistles as well as Christ hath his and what reason have they to have some anniversarie remembrances of so many Saints of the new testament and never one for any of the old Can they give any reason of this difference but a ●opish one And among these of the Christian Church why is Timothy and Titus and many ●oe not remembred as the rest are Is the 〈◊〉 purification of our Lady upon the candle●masse day a matter of such moment that it is to be honoured with some speciall day and actions of greater importance are not so to be celebrate This night the Maior of London kneeleth downe at S. Edwins tombe in P●ules Church and sayth a P●ter noster as Barro● reporteth If I should insist upon every particular day and rip up their collects gospells pis●les hymnes and songs I should be too pro●ixe For we should fall upon many fooleries and impertinent application of the word of God In the collect from Christmas to New-yeares day they are appointed to say that Christ was borne upon this day when as it be●oved him to be borne onely upon one day 〈◊〉 it is grounded upon an erroneous conceit of Zacharies high priesthood that he was born ●n the 25. day of December In the collect upon Innocents day it is sayd that the infants whom Herod murthered were Gods witnesses Athanasius creed is to honour the high dayes 〈◊〉 not the common creed and is appointed to be read onely upon certaine holy dayes it must not grace other dayes Venite may not serve at Easter as it doth all the yeare before and after follow Domine labia mea They have no reason for these and other like superstitious vanities but such as Durandus or any other papist can give them out of their reasonless● Rationalls What holynesse they place in their holy dayes may be seene in that they haue a stricter rest enjoyned upon them not they urge for the sabbath whereas the Lord required a stricter rest upon the Sabbath then upon other dayes appointed by himself Then againe their principall feasts haue Eaves and devout fastes going before Thirdly they say they will not change them to let us see that they may be changed but retaine the same dayes which the papists observe and which they say were consecrate and made more holie then other dayies be the actions which were wrought on these dayes as the manger and crosse of tree was with the truth of Christs body Even howbeit this reteyning without change doeth nourish in the people both a superstitious and popish conceit of the holynes of the day and the erroneous conceits that Christ was borne on such a day Iohn Baptist on such a day that Zacharie was high priest etc. To let passe other popish opinions of worship and merite The most part observe it with masking dancing gluttonie games enterludes For the which superstitious and erroneous conceits and incorrigible abuses they ought to be abolished suppose in themselves they had bene never so indifferent Besides their Eaves they have their ordinary fridaies Ember weeks and lent fast And if they say that abstinence from flesh onely is cōmanded for some politicall respects I would demand wherefore is the minister or Curate enjoyned after sermon homilie or exhortation to declare unto the people whether there be any holy dayes or fasting daies the week following Are not the people commanbed likewise to repaire to the Church to pray and to heare divine service Their lent beginneth as the popish doeth upon Ashwednesday with a terrible cōmination where are pronounced many bitter curses and the people answer ratifie every one of them with their own mouth saying Amen The priest before he utter the curses after the lettanie is sayd goeth to the pulpit to imitate the levites who pronunced curses upon mount Ebal and never but once he saith Brethren in the primitive Church there was a godly discipline that at the beginning of lent such persons as were notorious sinners were put to open pennance and punished in this world that their soules might be saved in the day of the Lord and that others admonished by their exāple might be the more afraid to offend In stead wherof untill the same discipline may be restored again which thing is much to be wished etc. it is thought good that at this time should be read the generall sentences of Gods cursings against impenitent sinners Yee see that corporall and afflictiue penance is commended for good discipl for the disci of the prim church for the discipl of lent and espetially on ashweonesday that it is wished to be restored again I beleeve thē It is displing ashes shriving and such other gear that they would haue In the last collect upon the first day of lent or ashwednesday the priest or Curate sayth Be favourable to thy people which turne unto the in weeping fasting and prayer Is this to fast for ciuil respects onely for the main tenance of sea faring men and preservation of cattell The Priests and Clerks kneeling say the Psalme miserere mei Deus The prayers and special exhortations tend to begin their repentance that day The week before Easter hath a prescript service
infection of the plague and indeed it renueth the memorie of the Leviticall priesthood which did with-draw himselfe from the people into the place called the holiest place where he talked with God and offered for the sinnes of the people The chauncel distinguished from the body of the Church is their holy place for the Priest and He hath a peculiar dore to this chancell through which none might passe but himselfe saith Borrow For the ch●piters and letanie there is commandement given that they should be read in the body of the Church saith M. Cartwright in his first Reply In his second Reply he saith I am assuredly perswaded that the tenth Church in England hath not all the service said in that place where the whole Church may heare it They will rather stick to the Iewish or popish rites and imitate Masse priests then edifie Gods people For mariage he commeth to the bodie of the Church for Baptisme to that part which is over against the Church-dore and so trudgeth from place to place The Letanie must not bee used but upon Sundaies Wednesdaies and Fridayes except the Ordinarie appoint other dayes the Minister propoundeth things to be prayed for or against the people performe the prayer saying with a lowd voyce Good Lord deliver us we beseech thee to heare us good Lord and this they often repeate And yet one suffrage is put out of the letany which was in it before to wit From the tyrannie of the Bishop of Rome and all his detestable enormities good Lord deliver us They say certaine Psalmes and prayers over the corne and grasse and certaine gospels at crosse-waies saith Barrowe In the service booke the Curate is thus directed anent Homilies After the Creed if there be no Sermon shall follow one of the Homilies alreadie set forth or after to be set forth by common authoritie Who knoweth what is hereafter to be set forth The Survey of the booke of common prayer doth relate that many points of Poperie and Lutheranisme are broached in Court and citie pulpits and yet not called into question as be Doctrines tending to the Reformation of Popish ceremonies Iudg then what corrupt Homilies may be set forth And yet Ministers are urged to subscribe to the book of common prayer notwithstanding of the foresaid Rubrickes It is the office of a Pastor to preach and not to reade Homilies Hee ought to cut and divide the word aright and apply it to particular sores which cannot be done by homilies What was said against Apocripha bookes may be throwne against them The reading of homilies is a cushion for idle or blind Priests to rest upon What say you to the Vicar of W. who upon an holy day in stead of preaching the Word which he could not or reading of homilies which he would not to terrifie his Parishoners with the judgements of God and to move them to repentance solemnly read and published a counterfeit fable out of a little pamphlet intituled Strange newes out of Calabria pretended to be prognosticated by M. Iohn Doleta The parts of the Liturgie which concerne onely certaine persons are ●nens 1. Celebration of matrimonie In the first words uttered to the married persons by the Priest it is said that Matrmonie signifieth unto us the mysticall union which is between Christ and his Church Then againe in a Collect after the conjunction it is said O God which hast c●nsecrated the state of matrmonie to such an excellent mysterie that in it is signified and represented the spirituall marriage and unitie betwixt Christ and his Church Is not this to apply these words Ephes. 5. 32. This is a great Mysterie to the conjunction of man and wife which the Apostle uttereth of Christ and his Church by which interpretation the papists have made mattimonie a Sacrament and the band betwixt the married persons inseparable and not to be dissolved but by death In the first part of their homilie of Swearing Baptisme and Matrimonie are called Sacraments The minister receiving the woman at her fathers or friends hands is to cause the man to take the woman by the right hand and give his troth to the woman Then are they to loose their hands againe and the woman taking the man by the right hand giveth her troth Then shall they againe loose their hands and the man shall give unto the woman a Ring laying the same upon the booke with the accustomed duty to the Priest Clerke And the Priest taking the ring shall deliver it unto the man to put it upon the 4 finger of the womans left hand And the man taught by the priest shall say with 〈…〉 thee wed with my bodie I thee worship 〈…〉 worldly goods I thee 〈…〉 name of the Father Son and H. ghost Then the man leaving the ring upon the fourth finger of the 〈◊〉 left hand the minister shall say set us pray O eternall God c. In the prayer the ring given and received is said to be a token and pledge of the vow and convenant made betwixt them Is there not heere an heap of toyes and yet never one wanteth a signification The ring must be put upon the fourth finger of the left hand because say they there is a nerve which runneth from that finger straight to the heart The ring must be layed on the service booke I know not to what end except it be to sanctifie it in stead of that blessing and sprinckling with holy water which the Popish Priest used as may be seene in the Romane Rituall Then againe what sense can be made of these words with my body I thee worship One of a thousand doth not understand them their P●elats have not explaned them The words of the Apostle Peter 1. Epi. 3. 7. giving honor to the wife as to the weaker vessell doe signifie onely honest care and follicitude and to beare with her infirmities she being the weaker vessell For honor after the Hebrew phrase is largely taken To give honor as to the weaker vessell and to worship her with the body is farr different as the word worship foundeth in our Language The Apostle 1 Cor. 12. 23. saith And those members of the bodie which we thinke to be lesse honourable upon these we bestow more abundant honour that is with greater carefulness we cover then wee doe other members But we are not to worship the members which are lesse honourable The Priest is appointed to say to God in his prayer that the ring is a token pledg of covenant made betwixt them If the ring had beene used onely at the contract as a civill rite it might have been comported with but to bring it into the Church I meane to divine service is either to prophane the same with civill ceremonies or pollute it with Popish and superstitious rites rather as these are For they were counted in time of poperie holy and religious rites of a holy Sacrament The married persons must
the Gospel is read the minister together with the godfathers and godmothers say the Lords prayer Then he asketh of them the questions whereof we made mention before in publike baptisme If these who bring the infants doe make uncertaine answers to the Priests demands as that it cannot appeare that the childe was baptized with water in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost the Priest baptizeth the child Then howbeit that it appeare not that a lawfull minister did baptize that shal not move the priest to baptize the child wherby we may see that baptisme by lay men and women is not made null by their service book but standeth for good and sufficient When after uncertain answers the priest baptizeth he useth this forme of words If thou be not already baptised I baptise thee in the name of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Amen But what if the child be already baptised is it not now re-baptised in publique Again in private baptisme the Congregation is neglected The Church hath interest in the baptisme of the child as well as the Minister for the child is received into the Congregation to be a member thereof And therefore the confession of the parents should be given publiquely before that the childe receive the seale of the covenant Wee see then what are the fruits of private baptisme baptisme by private persons lay-men and women unworthy handling of such a Mysterie for feare and hast baptisme by supposition and rebaptization c. Adde that it doth foster an opinion of the necessitie of baptisme or rather is grounded upon it It is said in the Preface before Confirmation It is certaine by Gods word that children being baptized have all things necessarie for their salvation and be undoubtedly saved Yee see they affirme that all baptised children be undoubtedly saved and againe doe imply in these words that for all such as are not baptised we have no sure warrant hat any of them shall be safe The Bishop of Canterburie in the Conference at Hamp●on Court affirmed that If an Infant die baptised there is evident assurance that it is saved wheras the state of an infant dying unbaptised is uncertaine Is not this sound Divinitie The Surveyer of the booke of common-prayer relateth that by occasion of private baptisme many children be baptised by Masse-priests after the Popish manner and many bastards concealed Many pretend infirmitie when they need not and the solemnizing of private baptisme in publique is often omitted 2 The Holy Supper The Sacrament of the Supper as also of baptisme may be ministred amongst them without any Sermon made or doctrine upon the Sacrament which is to be ministred yea it is ministred by such as cannot teach In their latest canons it is said plainely that both the Sacraments be equally effectuall whether they be ministred by a Minister that is no Preacher or by one that is a Preacher In the same Canon they are are said to be seduced by false Teachers who refuse to have their children baptised by a minister that is no preacher and to receive the holy Communion of his hands in the same respect as though the vertue of these Sacraments did depend upon his abilitie to teech And therefore it is ●r●a●●ed in that canon that they shall first be suspended persisting in their wilfulnesse and then after a monthes obstinacie excommunicated A Minister it is true is no part of the essence of the Sacrament as a Sacrament is defined to consist of outward signes and invisible graces yet is a Minister necessarie to the right and lawfull ministration of the Sacrament and is of the essence of it that is he is of the essence of the Sacrament as it is defined to be an holy and sacred action for he is appointed by Christ to be the minister of the action Now we acknowledge none to be a lawfull Minister but him who is able to teach Christ joyned preaching and baptizing in his commission Matth 28. To whom he committed the dispensation of the charter and the word of reconciliation to those also he committed the dispensation of the Seales and to those onely Tryall and particular examination of the communicants they have none to try their knowledge in the mysteries of religion and growth in Christianity It is enough that they were once bishoped when they were little children as in time of poperie The communion table is not onely covered at the time of ministration with a faire linnen cloath but also in the 82 canon it is ordeined that the same tables shall from time to time be kept and repaired in fufficient and 〈◊〉 maner covered in time of divine service with a carpet of silk or other decent stuffe thought meet by the Ordinarie of the place as if the communion table were to be regarded more the other common tables after the action is ended wheras the very elements themselves extra usū out of the use of the Sacrament are but comon This is done in imitation of the popish rich altar cloths The table being covered with a fair linnen cloth placed in the Church or chancel where morning evening prayer are appointed to be said the Priest must stand at the northside of the table he must not stand at the head or the southside He beginneth with the Lords prayer a collect then he rehearseth distinctly all the to comand the people kneeling after every command ask forgivenes The people of Israel kneeled not when God himself pronounced the Law from mount Sinai howbeit they saw the mountain smoking and lightnings c. Gods word uttered by man then should not bee received with kneeling VVheras the last praier is sufficient to conclude with the repetition of it at every commandement is superfluous battologie Then the Priest saith the collect of the day and another for the King standing up After the collects he readeth the Epistle and the Gospell The epistle and the gospell being ended he saith the Creed after the Creed if there be not a Sermon he readeth some Homilie alreadie set forth or that shall hereafter be set forth After Sermon or homilie the people is fore-warned of the Holy-daies or fasting daies of the next weeke following and are earnestly exhorted to remember the poore Then the Church-wardens or some other by them appointed gather the devotion of the people for so is the almes called and upon the offering dayes appointed every man and woman payeth to the Curate the due and accustomed offerings then the Priest prayeth that God would accept of their almes for some other things Then he readeth a short exhortation then a generall confession is made in the name of all those that are minded to receive the Communion And this is allowed to be made either by one of th●m who are to communicate or one of the Ministers or the Priest himselfe So a Lay man is allowed to pray in the Church in name
of the rest This confession is made kneeling Then he standeth up againe and turneth him to the people and prayeth some few words again So they have prayer following immediately after prayer without any new actiō intervening standing at the one kneel at the other so comely is their disorder The after some versides and answers and proper prefaces for holy-daies the Priest kneeleth down againe sayth a prayer in name of all them who are to receive the communion As soone as that is ended without any other action intervening he standeth up againe and sayth another prayer In this prayer he rehearseth the words of the institution to God as the preist doth when he consecrateth the bread and wine in the Masse For he doth not first end this prayer and then turne him to the people to informe them of the institution by rehearsall of the words but uttereth them in a continuall tenour with this prayer speaking to God O horrible prophanation of the Scripture and superstitious consecration Then without any farther he and they communicate kneeling after the Popish manner that is with a gesture of Adoration when they are beholding the signes taking eating drinking and inwardly in their minds should be meditating on the signification and the fruit and benefite which they reap by Christ crucified and consequently cannot without distraction of mind from this employment of the soule and meditation pray a set and continued prayer to God or cannot meditate and be employed in the present action without distraction of minde from the prayer and therefore either they pray unreverently which they will not grant or doe communicate this gesture of adoration to the other imployments of the soule and of the outward senses and members of the body about the objects presented which they must grant and so nill they will they must be forced to confesse that they commit idolatrie Kneeling is no decent gesture for a table for commoditie they say maketh decencie but this gesture is confessed not to be commodious as sitting is It is then enjoyned for another reason to wit fot reverence but to kneele for reverence and religious respects is ever adoration in the highest degree To kneele for reverence that is to adore is not enjoyned here for prayet neither may prayer lawfully be enjoyned in time of another action and part of Gods worship to bee performed by the same person And suppose it were enjoyned for the short prayer uttered by their priest yet are not the outward senses and inward faculties employed principally on that prayer but upon another action principally and directly intended in the Institution whereas the other is onely superadded by man Let them frame their canons and acts as they please and suppresse that they kneele for reverence of the Sacrament common sense may teach us that it is done for that respect either totally or principally But let it be in the least part yet that least part is idolatry Beside the idolatry of this gesture it cannot stand with the right manner of celebration and rites of the institution For when they kneele for adoration they cannot carie the cup from hand to hand nor divide the elements amongst themselves as Christ hath commanded In many places the people are raised from their kneeling to come about the table there to receive kneeling and then are directed to their places again saith the Authour of the Survey The Priest giveth the bread and the wine to every one severally out of his own hands When the cup is to be caried from one to another the communicant is too prophane to reach it the priests holy hand must take it from one and give it to the other But Christ willed his Disciples to divide it among themselves it was carried from hand to hand indeed after the manner of the last paschal cup which was changed in this communion cup. When Christ therfore gave the bread and the wine he sayd in the plural number Take yee eat yee c. The English priest speaketh in the singular number when he giveth the elements he annexeth not Christs words containing a comfortable promise and uttered in an enunciative form but other words invented by man and in form of a prayer converting one part of Gods worship in another or else confounding them Then the Prisayth the L. prayer the people repeat every petition after him Is not the minister the mouth of the people in prayer to God And now they wil with their own mouths pray again When the minister prayed did they not in hart pray with him if they did wherfore repeat they every petitiō And when they repeat doth the minister pray againe the same words in his hart which before he uttered with his tongue Or is the toung in this exercise both of minister people divided from the heart exercing their functions severally at distinct times this is the second pater noster So I must speak seeing they use the L. prayer as the Popish priest doth his pater After the L. prayer they have another prayer At westminster the communion is ministred in wafer cakes as the author of the Survey reports who also doth conjecture by this that the prelates intend to advance superstition by peecemeal in all places The like may be said of some superstitions used in the K. Chappell Wee have seen the particulars of the Priests function whereunto Mucket doth subjoyn that he must weare a surplice in the administration of the particulars foresaid that is in reading morning and evening prayer churching of women celebration of matrimonie at burialls administration of baptisme and the Lords su●per And if he hath taken on any degree in the Vniversitie he must weare such a hood as appertaineth to that degree In cathedrall and collegiat charches the communion is to be administred upon principall feast d●●es sometimes by the Bishop if he be present and sometimes by the Deane and at somtimes by a Canon or preben darie the priacipall minister using a decent cope and being assisted with the Gospeller and Epistler The rich cope then is not a vestiment for common kirks and ordinary priests No minister being no graduate may weare a hood under pain of suspension Notwithstanding it shall bee lawfull for such ministers as are not Graduats to weare upon their surplices in stead of Hoods some decent tippet of blacke so it be not of sil●k For their ministring garments we say first they cannot be sayd to be enjoyned for distinction For the place they occupie in the time of their ministration doth of it selfe distinguish them from all others who see them at service They serve not for comelinesse and gravitie but are rather ridiculous and stagelike meeter for fooles and comedians then for ministers And if gravitie were respected in them they should be worn ordinarily and out of the true ministration For he must not cast off his gravitie when he hath ended divine service It is then for mysterie or