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A00282 An abstract, of certain acts of parliament: of certaine her Maiesties iniunctions: of certaine canons, constitutions, and synodalles prouinciall: established and in force, for the peaceable gouernment of the Church, within her Maiesties dominions and countries, for the most part heretofore vnknowen and vnpractized Stoughton, William, fl. 1584. 1583 (1583) STC 10394; ESTC S101664 176,465 272

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commaunded generally by the bishop to be taught vnto the youth of the realme in all schooles of their Diocesse yet notwithstanding the minister contrary to a vowe made by him at the commaundement of his Ordinarie appoynted thervnto by lawe is very iniuriously dealt with for that he is not permitted to exercise any discipline at al our Bishops and Archdeacons challenging vnto themselues a principal prerogatiue to punish al malefactors within their seuerall iurisdictions An other reason that this statute hath appoynted as well the discipline of Christ as the doctrine and sacramentes to be ministred as the Lord commaunded onely and none otherwyse is this namely for that this statute was made to refourme as well the disordered discipline vsed in the time of popery amongst the popish idolatrous Priestes as it was to reprooue their false doctrine and prophanation of the sacraments so that neither the one neither the other should be ministred by the ministers of the Gospell for otherwise this branch of the statute should ordayne nothing so contrary to the nature of a Law be Lex absurda an absurd Law And therfore what open wrong intollerable iniury is offered the Saintes of God loyal subiects to her Maiestie calling for discipline at the cheefe Prelates handes commaunded by the Lord and in trueth established by the Lawes of her highnesse Empire euery indifferent man may easily discerne It followeth in the Booke of making of Ministers Bishop Will you be diligent to frame and fashion your owne selues and your Families according to the Doctrine of Christe and to make both your selues and them as much as in you lyeth wholesome examples and spectacles of the flock of Christ Answere I will Byshop Will you maintain and set forwards as much as lieth in you quietnesse peace and loue amongst all Christian people and specially amongst them that are or shall be committed to your charge Answere I will In the end when hee layeth on his handes he sayth to euery one Be thou a faithfull Dispenser of the worde of God and of his holy Sacraments And againe Take thou authority to preach the word of god and to minister the holy Sacramentes Which action and Speeches of the Bishop are to bee well wayed and considered The words which the Byshop pronounceth Be thou a Faithful dispēser c. Take thou authority to preach are wordes appoynted him by the whole State to bee pronounced What was it trowe you the meaning of all the States and Nobles of the Realme or was it our most excellent Soueraigne the Queenes Highnesse her pleasure to haue enacted by Parliament that a Byshop should commaund an Apothecarie not exercised at all in holy scriptures and altogeather vnable to teache to bee notwithstanding a faythfull dispensor of the worde of God and to take authoritie to preache No no they verie well knew that the outward sound of the bishoppes wordes in the eares of such a man coulde not worke any inwarde grace or giue any inwarde vertue to the perfourmaunce of so high a calling or of so holy a function And therefore as it becommeth a true and loyall subiect I dare not for my part so dishonourablye conceyue of their wisedomes much lesse I take it shoulde the Bishop so disloyallye abuse their credite and authoritie Was their intente and purpose trowe you that the bishop by these his demaundes and the minister by these his aunsweres shoulde not bynde the minister him selfe to perfourme by him selfe this duetie to preach but that the same should be done by a thirde personne I trowe no. For my maisters and Doctors of the Canon and Ciuile Lawe Burgesses in the house of Parliament know Institu de invtili stipu § si quis that Promssio facti alieni mutilis est quod si testator iusserit aliquem in certum locum abire vel liberalibus studiis imbui vel domum suis manibus extruere vel pingere vel vxorem ducere per alium id facere non potest quia haec omnia testatoris voluntas in ipsius solius persona intelligitur conclusisse A promise made of an other mans fact is vnprofitable and that if a Testator shall will any to goe to a certayne place or to be furnished with the liberall Sciences or to buylde an house or to paynt a Table with his owne handes or to marry a Wyfe that he can not doe any of these thinges by an other man because the will of the Testator hath concluded all these thinges onely in his owne person Was their meaning that the bishop pronouncing these wordes Be thou a dispensor was their meaning I saye by those wordes to haue the bishop committe the office of reading Homilies to a minister or to iudge reading of Homilies to be preaching No no Their proceedinges appeare to bee of greater wisedome knowledge iudgement discretion and Godlinesse They appoynted by the same their consultation three kindes of offices to bee in the Church Deacons Ministers and Bishoppes appoynting seuerally to euery officer his seuerall duetyes and hath expresly appoynted reading Homilies to bee the office of a Deacon For in the ordering of Deacons the Bishoppe by vertue of the Statute pronounceth these wordes vnto the Deacon It pertayneth to the office of a Deacon in the church where he shall be appoynted to assiste the Priest in deuine seruice and speciallye when hee ministereth the holye Communion and to helpe him in the distribution thereof and to reade holye scriptures and Homilies in the congregation c. I take it and holde it for a principle that the Bishop hath no authoritie by his Lordship to alter or transforme an Act of Parliament and therefore I take it that I maye safelye conclude without offence to his Lordshippe that he can not by lawe appoynt anye minister to reade anye Homilies in anye Church Statute lawe is Stricti Iuris and maye not be extended What will you then by lawe positiue barre reading of Homilies in the Churche No. But I woulde haue the Lawe positiue obserued and so barre reading of Homilies from a Minister because the Lawe positiue hath appoynted that office to a Deacon For it is not lawefull for one priuate man and fellowe seruaunt to transpose from his fellowe seruaunt an office committed vnto him by publike authoritie And it is verily to be thought the bishop him selfe will challenge as much vnto him selfe by this statute from the minister and plainly tell him that by this statute he alone hath authoritie to make Deacons and ministers and to gouerne them and that therefore it beseemeth not a minister to be ordered otherwise then according to the forme of the booke no otherwise to preach then as he shall be licensed therevnto by him the Bishop As touching the iniunctions the aduertisments and the articles of religion wherein mention is made sometimes that Parsons Vicars and Curates somtimes that the minister shall reade Homilies they may easely be reconciled by this statute For the iniunctions
rites ensignes and ceremonies c. yet now foras much as we are certaynely infourmed that they bee altogeather Antichristian and therefore expresly against the worde of God we maye and ought to vrge the generall intendement of the statute generally to take them awaye Secondly were not the foresayde popishe rites ensignes and ceremonyes Antichristian and expresly against the lawes of GOD and therefore by this braunche of the statute might bee ministred vsed and exercised yet notwithstanding it is manifest that the sayde rites ensignes and ceremonies haue not beene appoynted by the prerogatiue of anye of the Kinges of this Realme but haue beene transferred from Italye vnto Englande by a forren and vsurped power and therefore by the seconde braunch of the statute as thinges authorized contrarye to the Lawes of the Realme are not anye more to be vsed or exercised In the time of King Henry the seconde we haue seene before that this priuiledge was graunted to Archbishops and Bishops that they shoulde holde their possessions of the King as a Baronie and shoulde be present in the Kinges courtes as other of his Barons If in these dayes they did sitte them selues in their owne Consistories and exercise gouernement by the lyke authoritie their Courtes happely woulde not be so contemptible as they bee nor their iudgement seates so abused as they are The people woulde be better quyeted in those places and offer lesse iniurie to the magistrate then now they doe And therefore I conclude that though hir highnesse and the lawes indirectly and as it were alatere tollerate these men to rule and gouerne according to those forreigne lawes whereof they haue the execution yet the more faythfull and loyall euery subiect is the more he should and doth contende to haue the whole and entyre gouernement of the Church and Common weale directly immediately and absolutely to spring from hir highnesse as from the heade and fountaine vnder Christe of all gouernement to be executed amongest hir subiectes In dooing wherof they shall dutifully and Christianly more and more mayntaine hir prerogatiue The Emperour forbidding Ecclesiasticall men to vsurpe Ciuill offices lost no whit of his imperiall prerogatiue ouer the subiectes yea rather hereby he openly declared the magnificence of his Empyre and the absolute authoritie he had ouer them and that as well by forbidding things not to be doone as by commaunding thinges to bee done Enemies of reformation enemies vnto hir maiesties prerogatiue For though he spoyled them of vnlawfull preeminences yet he enriched them with lawful liberties I know not the inward intent and meaning of such as mislike to haue ciuill gouernment translated frō Archbish Bish and Archdeacons vnto the ciuill magistrate But if I may speake that which may shrewdly be suspected they may seeme to be greater enemies to hir highnes prerogatiue then others be For though outwardly in wordes they seeme to graunt vnto hir all libertye in the disposition of ciuill offices whervnto the others do likewise agree and condiscende yet they seeme in deede to be loath she shoulde drawe the sword of hir prerogatiue cut a sunder the coards of their cōsistories They graunt hir authoritie to make them selues iustices of peace and ecclesiasticall commissioners and so wage law for hir prerogatiue An easie matter for them to stande in plausible to flesh and bloud their outwarde man delighteth with outwarde pompe and credit But suppose the case stood between the Archb. Bish and Archd. and hir maiesty for hir prerogatiue in abolishing their iurisdictiō trāslating the same to others that the matter were to be decided by the gretest part of their own voyces that their voyces were to be giuen in scrutiny not any waies to be knowen who had giuē his voice with or against hir prerogatiue in this case I feare me rather then their Lordeshippes shoulde take the foyle they woulde lay hir prerogatiue in the dust selfe loue woulde haue a strooke and fleshe and bloud woulde be loath to loose any liberty The history of Henry the fifth and the Oration of Henry Chychuby Archbishop of Caunterbury made in the Parliament house to alienate the Kings minde and to disswade his Nobles from the enterprise whereof hee and they had consulted touching the ouerthrow of irreligious houses and to draw their endeuours to make warre and to leauie an armie against the French king might be a forcible argument to anye to perswade him selfe the same thing in this case though he had no other reason to induce him therevnto But the vnciuill intreaty of hir highnesse owne schollers elected by hir gratious commaundemement from Westminster to hir owne Colledges in Cambridge and Oxenforde euen by such as would seeme in words to set vp mightie propes vnder hir prerogatiue argueth manifestlye the same thing For otherwise hir maiesties schollers in all respectes as well qualified as their owne and alwayes elected halfe a yeare before their owne might once in the space of twenty foure yeares though not for their owne sakes yet for their honorable Lady and mistresse sake haue receiued some more fauourable intertainment and preferment in those houses then hitherto they haue done The maisters of those houses woulde not haue placed them next vnto the screene and set them next vnto the Porters lodge as by elections vnto fellowships in the one schoolerships in the other they a long time haue doone Whereas on the contrary side it is apparantly knowen that sometimes the Dean of Christ church in Oxenford a great friend to reformation and a man for his excellent knowledge and wisedome in gouernment singularly commended euen by his enemies in these small matters gaue an apparant and rare example of his humble dutie and loyaltie vnto hir highnes For the reuerent estimation he had caryed of vnto hir highnes ordinance and institution he placed a scholler sent thither by hir maiesties appointment firste and senior vnto all those that were elected into the house at that time he him selfe brought the same hir scholler to his chamber and placed him in a Chamber and studie commonly appoynted for the ancients of the house all his owne schollers were inferior vnto hirs and placed beneath hirs Since the departure of which man if the Audite or butterie bookes of that house were sought you shall finde hir schollers names written alwayes in the latter ende of the booke the last of forty and placed after his scholler whom hir highnesse but the day before had preferred to be a Deane or prebendary in that house The Deanes schollers they goe and sit and are placed foremost the prebendaries in the middest and hirs hindermost and if they were to go a procession as in the time of popery hirs must go foremost as vnworthiest to go next to the crosse And because hir maiestie sometimes by hir letters heretofore requested the Deane and chapiter to receiue into hir Colledge such as she thought meet to be placed Now forsoth to preuent hir bountifulnes
them not with his manners and examples for that Diluere aliena peccata non valet is quem propria deuastant Hee cannot put away other mens sinnes whom his owne Sinnes deuour And againe Pericutosum est decentiae ecclesiae in scandalo populari It is dangerous for the Decencie of the Church to be in any publique slaunder or offence 83. distinc nihil Agayne Malus praelatus dicitur lupus rapiens praedam An euil prelate is sayde to be a Wolfe rauening his Praie 2. q. 7. Qui nec He is sayde to be Canis impudicus propter defectum regiminis A shamelesse dog for want of gouernment 2. q. 7. Non omnis He is sayde to be Coruus propter peccatorum nigredinem As black as a Rauen for the foulenes of his sinnes He is saide to be Sal infatuatus ad nihilum proficiens Vnsauory Salt profitable for nothing 40. dist In mandatis Glos lind de offic Archipres c. fin v. canss He is sayde to be Porcus A Swyne He is sayde to be Capo A Capon because as a Capon can not Crowe no more can a dumb Praelate preach And to conclude Praelatus qui in doctrina mutus est non est verè praelatus cum officium praelati non exerceat c. A Prelate which is mute in teaching is not in trueth a Prelate in so much as he exerciseth not the office of a Prelate These Canons constitutions not contrariant or repugnant to the lawes statutes or customes of this realme neither derogatory to her hignesse crowne and dignity ●…d therfore authorized by act of Parliament ought to haue beene better knowne and better executed by our chiefe Prelates then by the space of these 25. yeares they seeme generally to haue been But yet besides these former decrees lawes and ordinaunces and the seuerall reasons principles and maximes whervpon they were first grounded there remayneth somewhat more behind diligētly to be cōsidered the which thing the more earnestly euery man shal rightly weigh the more may he be astonished A thing don in Israell at the doing whereof it is a wonder that the eares of the hearers tingle not and the very hayre of the heades of the standers by stare not for feare least the Lorde in his righteous iudgement should execute his terrible vengeaunce vpon them Thus standeth the case some pastorall church or churches being destitute of a Pastour or Pastours to feed the people a solemne assembly and conuocation of the chiefest of the gouernours of the church must be gathered togeather and that not in an angle of a poore country Village but in the chiefest city of the Diocesse that not on a workday but either on the Lordes day or on some other of their own festiuall dayes and that for no small matters or to no small purpose but euen to present and offer vnto the Lorde an holy sacrifice and to call vpon his most holy name To present I say vnto the Lord a present meet and acceptable for his maiestie euen men meet to serue him in his spirituall warres and to be Pastours to feede his people with spirituall food of his holy word men meet to take vppon them the most highest and most noblest callinges that he hath appointed to the sonnes of men the office and dignitie of the preaching of his holy gospell This I say is the action wherof deliberate consideration is to be had and whereof followeth a discourse and wherin when all is done as it is imagined that can be done yet in truth there is nothing so nor so done they doe but flatter them selues bleare the 〈◊〉 of others and which is most execrable as it were mock and delude the Lorde to his face Well then let vs consider what is done herein In the time of that vertuous king Edwarde the sixt an order and forme was appoynted by act of Parliament for consecrating Archbishops and bishops and for the making of Priestes Deacons and Ministers Which statute is reuiued and the same order and forme approoued in the eight yeare of hir most excellencies raigne The wordes of the statute are these And that such order and form for the consecrating of Archbishops and Bishops and for the making of Priestes Deacons and Ministers as was set foorth in the time of the sayde late King and authorized by Parliament in the fifth and sixth yeare of the sayde late King shall stande and be in full force and effecte and shall from hence foorth be vsed and obserued in all places within this Realme and other the Queenes maiesties dominions and countreis The title of the booke is this Ordering of Deacons The forme and maner of making and consecrating Bishops Priestes and Deacons And first to intreat of Deacons according to the forme of the booke you shall vnderstande that in the order and forme of making Deacons three thinges principally are to be obserued First the qualities requisite to be in him that is to be made a Deacon Secondly the circumstaunces in making him a Deacon And thirdly the proper duetie and office belonging to him that is made a Deacon Touching his qualities they must be such as were requisite for the same First he must be a man of vertuous conuersation and without cryme Secondly he must be learned in the Latine tongue Thirdly he must be sufficiently instructed in the holy scriptures Fourthly he must be a man meete to exercise his ministerie duely Fifthly he must beleeue all the Canonicall scriptures Sixthly he must be diligent in his calling Seuenthly he must be inwardly mooued to that office by the holy Ghost And as touching the circumstaunces First he must be called Secondly tryed Thirdly examined Fourthly he must be twentie one yeares of age at the least he must be presented by the Archdeacon or his deputie Fifthly he must be made on a Sunday or holy day Sixthly he must be made openly in the face of the Church where must be an exhortation made declaring the dutie and office as well of the Deacons towardes the people as of the people towardes the Deacons Lastly touching the office committed vnto him it is First to assist the minister in deuine seruice Secondly to reade holy scriptures and Homilies in the congregation Thirdly to instruct the youth in the Catechisme ●ourthly to search for the sicke poore and impotent of the parrish and to intimate their estates names and places to the Curate that they may be relieued by conuenient almes The forme of ordering Priestes COncerning the making of Ministers not onely all those things before mentioned in the making of Deacons but other circumstances and solemnities are required also these demaundes and answers following must be made and giuen Bishop Doe you thinke in your heart that you be truely called according to the will of our Lord Iesus Christe and the order of this church of England Answere I thinke it Bishop Be you perswaded that the holy scriptures contayne sufficiently all doctrine required of necessitie
licēce of the Bi. vnder his Seal though hir Maiest most excellent name be vsed by the publishers of the saide aduertisemēts for confirmation of thē that they affirme hir M. to haue cōmanded them therevnto by hir highnes Letters yet because the book it selfe cōmeth forth without hir M. priuiledge is not printed by hir M. printer nor any in his name therfore it carrieth no such credit and authority with it as whervnto hir M. subiects ar necessarily bound to subscribe hauing other laws other Iniunctiōs vnder hir M. name authorized by hir M. priuiledge cōtrary to the same For hir M. by hir Iniunctions cōmādeth euery minister to preach within his own cure without licence as before you haue hard But let vs go forwarde It hath bin shewed before that euery one to be made a Deacon or a minister ought to be called tried examined known to haue such qualites as were requisite that mentiō also hath bin made of the face of a church of the latine tong of many other circūstances necessary to that actiō al which things set down rather generally thē particularly described require a larger discourse Panormitan the Doctors vpon the ciuile and Canonicall law haue these conclusions Ex. n. ca. dictus de consuetu nu 2● Statuta debent interpretari secundum 〈◊〉 commune siuè debent interpretationem recipere à iure communi statuti verba dubia debent interpretari vt minus ledat ius commune quàm sit possibile Statutes ought to be interpreted according to common law or statutes ought to receiue their interpretation from common law and doubtfull wordes of a statute ought to be so construed that they be as little preiudiciall to the common law as is possible Out of which conclusions I collect this rule Namely that where a statute shall establish an office practized and had in vse before the making of the statute and shal require a calling a triall an examination and qualities in an officer meete to execute that office and shall not specifie and declare any particular kinde of calling of tryall of examination and such qualities c. That then such maner of calling of tryall of examination such qualities are requyred by that statute to be in such an officer as by common right were requisite for such an officer before the making of that statute And because by the viewe of the former order it selfe it is very apparant that the same forme and order was appoynted by men very desirous to promote as much as in them lay the honour and glory of God and to abolish all superstitions and trumperies brought into his Church Therefore because I ought by dutie to conceiue their meaning to the best and most agreeable to their profession I say that they ment herein onely such calling such triall such examination and such qualities as are requisite to be in a Deacon and in a minister by the lawe of God Which is euident both by the order of prayer vsed at the time of their orderinges and also by the scripture read for that purpose The prayer followeth Almighty God which by thy diuine prouidence hast appoynted diuers orders of ministers in the Church and diddest inspire thine holye Apostles to choose vnto this order of Deacons the first martyr S. Steuen with other mercifully beholde these thy seruauntes nowe called to the like office and administration replenish them so with the trueth of thy doctrine and innocencie of life that both by worde and good example they may faythfully serue thee in this office to the glorie of thy Name and profite of the Congregation thorowe the merits of our Sauiour Iesus Christ who liueth and raigneth with thee and the holy Ghost now and euer Amen After this prayer followeth the Epistle out of Timothie Likewise must the Ministers be honest not double tonged not giuen to much wine neyther greedie of filthie lucre but holding the Misterie of the fayth with a true conscience And let them first be prooued and let them Minister so that no man bee able to reprooue them Euen so must their wiues be honest not euil spekers but sober and faithfull in all things Let the deacons be the husbands of one wife and such as rule their children well and their owne houshouldes For they that minister well get them selues a good degree and a great libertie in the faith which is in Iesu Christ c. or else this out of the 6. of the Acts. Then the twelue called the multitude of the Disciples together and sayde It is not meete that wee shoulde leaue the worde of GOD and serue tables wherefore brethren looke yee out among you seuen men of honest report and full of the holy Ghoste and wisedome to whome wee may commit this businesse but wee will giue our selues to continuall prayer and to the administration of the worde And that saying pleased the whole multitude and they chose Steuen a man full of fayth and full of the holy Ghost and Philip and Procorus and Nicanor and Timon and Parmenas Nicolas a conuert of Antioch These they set before the Apostles and when they had prayed they laide their hands on them c. The Communion ended shall be saide this Collect Fol. 1. pag. 8. ALmightie God giuer of all good thinges which of thy great goodnesse hast vouched safe to accept and take these thy seruauntes vnto the office of DEACONS make them wee beseeche thee O Lorde to bee modest humble and constaunt in their Mynistration to haue a ready will to obserue all Spirituall Discipline that they hauing alwayes the Testimonye of a good Conscience and continuing euer stable and strong in thy Sonne Christe may so well vse themselues in this inferiour office that they may bee founde worthye to bee called to the Higher ministeryes in the church thorow the same thy sonne our Sauiour Christ to whome be glorie and honour world without end Amen The Epistle appointed at the time of ordering of ministers shal be read out of the twentie chapiter of the Acts. Fol. 8. pag. 1. From Mileto Paule sent messengers to Ephesus and called the elders of the congregation which when they were come to him he sayd vnto them Yee know that from the first daie that I came into Asia after what manner I haue bene with you at all seasons seruing the Lord withall humblenes of minde and with many teares and temptations which happened vnto mee by the layings awaite of the Iewes because I would keepe back nothing that was profitable vnto you but to shewe you and teache you openly thorowe euerye house witnessing both to the Iewes and Greekes the repentaunce that is towardes GOD and the fayth which is towarde our LORD Iesus And nowe beholde I goe bounde in the spirite vnto Ierusalem not knowing the thinges that shall come to mee there but that the holy Ghoste witnesseth in euerie Citie saying that bondes and trouble abide mee but none of these
the lawes are not onely vnprofitable but also are to be accounted for thinges vndon And thus much concerning the causes circumstāces of dispensations for many benefices It followeth thē in the description of a dispensation as you haue seen that the same ought to be granted cum causae cognitione with knowledge of the cause the reason is this Glos Extrauagan de prebend dig c. execrabilis ver vltima Duo sunt in dispensatione necessaria authoritas dispensantis factum per quod dispensatur Nam in quolibet actu considerari debent duo factum modus Two things are necessary in a dispensation authoritie of the dispenser and the fact whereby he shall dispence For in euery Act two thinges are to be considered the fact and the maner of the fact And therefore a magistrate hauing authority to dispence ought not vpon the bare assertion and simple allegation of any person disirous to be priuiledged and to haue the Magistrate to mitigate the rigour and extremitie of common right graunt any such mitigation vnlesse the partie first alleadge and by some lawfull proofe make manifest vnto him that both touching the abilitie of his person and the necessitie of his cause there ought in equitie an exemption and immunitie be graunted vnto him For Priuilegia sayth the Lawe ff de minori l. de etate d. ex de priuil c. sane 7. q. 1. potuisti bast l. 1. de col l. ver are preiudicialia magnum pariunt preiudicium ideo sunt cum plena causae cognitione tracta●…de priuilegium non est dandum nisi certa ratione inspecta non subito sed cum magna deliberatione Priuiledges are preiudicall breede great preiudice and are for this cause to be handled with a plenarie decision of the cause And a priuiledge is not to be giuen vnles the certain reason therof be foreseen and not sodenly but with great deliberation aduise In which deliberation aduisemēt taken by the iudg first the allegation or petitiō of the party agent or suppliant secondly the prone manifestation of the same his periō is to be cōsidred For no dispensatiō ought to be graunted at the proper motion and pleasure of the iudge alone but euery Dispensation ought to be granted at the instance and petition of the party alone § Hoc autem iudiciū ff De dam. infect ff De regni sur l. inuito extra de Symo. Licet heli Cod. de fidei com li●…ent l. si Quiae laxari i●… non debet nec solui nisi parte postulante inuit● non debet beneficium conferri Et sententia debet esse conformis petitioni Et index semper debet indicare secundum allegata probata Because the Lawe ought not to be released or remitted but at the petition of the partye and a sentence ought to bee conformable to the demaunde and a iudge ought euermore to giue sentence according to thinges alleaged and thinges prooued And therefore sithence no other cause by Lawe may be alleaged in the Court of faculties for the graunting of any dispensation for many benefices then the very apparant vtility and vrgent necessity of the Church I conclude that the iudge his duety office is in any wise not to admit any other māner of allegation but to pronounce the same altogether friuolous and to be of no valew in Lawe The Doctorship the Chapplainship the worship of any ecclesiasticall person are not sufficient causes in this behalfe alone vnlesse also together with the same meete and concurre the profite and necessity of the Church And if the said allegation as vaine and friuolous be to be reiected then no Dispensation thervpon ought to be graunted for otherwise the Iudge should of necessity eyther allow other causes then the Lawe doth allowe or else pronounce iudgemente otherwise then according to the demaund both which were too too greate absurdities And therfore out of the former rules and principles of Lawe I argue thus 1 Whatsoeuer is hurtfull and preiudiciall the same ought aduisedly and vppon consultation to bee graunted 2 But Dispensations are hurtfull and preiudiciall 3 Therefore dispensations ought aduisedly and vppon consultation to be graunted Extra de priuilig c. sane And if euery dispensation ought to be graunted by sentence vpon some consultation had that then euerye sentence vpon some consultation had ought to be giuen according to thinges alleadged and thinges demaunded Extra de simo c. licet heli IN which allegation and demaund to the ende the sentence may be conformable to the demaunde and so effectuall in law must be foreseene two things First that there be expressed no false or erronious cause Secondly that the same hide or conceale no truth Glos in extrauag execrabilis de prebend ver ex dispensatione For Ea dicitur legitima dispensatio in qua nihil tacetur vel nihil exprimitur quo expresso vel lacito princeps verisimiliter duci potest ad dispensationem denegandam That dispensation is reputed lawfull wherein nothing is concealed or nothing is expressed that beeing concealed or expressed the prince may be likelihood be induced to deny the said dispensation If then euery sentence must be conformable to the allegation and euerye iudgement agreeable to the demaund and that neither out of the sentence for a dispensation any knowen truth or manifest equitie ought to bee concealed neither in the same any salse or erronious cause ought to be expressed it followeth of necessitie that euerye allegation made for a dispensation ought to be of the same nature and of the same condition and that euery allegation not of the same nature and condition is an vnlawfull allegation and an vnequall petition Moreouer euery one that hath authoritie to dispence ought to keepe this rule Glos in extrauag cōi col 3. ver Vt statuat vel disponsit contra ius aut contrascriptum si aequitas quae mouet ipsum mouisset legislatorem si casus nunc emergens esset sibi expositus That they ordayne or dispence against law or against writ if such equitie as mooueth him might haue mooued the Law-maker himselfe to haue graunted a dispensation had the case now growing bene proposed at the time of the law making to the law maker It followeth then againe that equitie beeing the cause of the sentence for a dispensation the same equitie must also bee the cause of the allegation for a Dispensation For if the iudge must giue a dispensation where equity requireth the party must then demaund a Dispensation where equity requireth For equity is always the foundation and groūdwork of a dispensatiō And what equity euē such equity as might iustly haue mooued the Lawemaker to haue graunted a dispensation Nowe then because the Lawmaker authorising the Archbysh of Cant. to giue Dispensations hath beene the high Court of Parliament It followeth that the Archbysh may dispence onely in such cases as wherein the high
worthinesse of a person to be priueleged may easily be prooued yet can I not imagine by which of these proofes the causes required by Law as vrgent necessity and euident vtility of the Church destitute of a Pastor shoulde in these our dayes be manifested the Church it selfe Viz. The congregation I suppose will neuer confesse it behoouefull for them to haue their pastor absent and to giue their temporall things to enioy spirituall thinges and yet to be depriued of both spirituall and temporall As concerning proofe by Witnesses or by publique instrument because Witnesses must yeelde a reason of their sayings and a publique Instrument ought to be made by a faythfull man at the request of the party and because no witnesse can yeelde any reason why his neyghboure shoulde not be taught and euery Faythfull man will doe all things for the trueth and nothing against the trueth and because the truethe is that his Neyghbour should be taught and no man will desire to bee vntaught therefore as concerning these proofes I cannot imagine I say how they should be made It resteth then that the euidence of the fact must bee the proofe whereon plurified men relie that the vrgent necessity and euident vtility of the Church for the hauing of many benefices is a thing so notorious and euident to all the worlde that none may denye the same Wherein howe grosse and palpable their erroure is I leaue to the consideration of indifferent men thorow out the whole world Now if you ad this last part of the definition of a Dispensation suppose that it must be granted Cum causae cognitione with knowledge of the cause that is by alleadging and proouing things iust and equall in the sight iudgement of the Parliament house you shal find either all or the most part of dispensations granted in the Court of faculties for many benefices not to be the things defined so to be nothing in effect at all and therfore though they as yet seeme to stande good by Lawe yet to be such as ought to bee reuoked and made voyde by Lawe Distinct 10. c. vides Quicquid contra leges accipitur per leges dissolui meretur Whatsoeuer is admitted against Lawe deserueth to be loosed by Lawe Extra de priueg c. porro c. p● Et sic eos volumus priuilegiorum suorum seruare tenorem quod eorum metas transgredi minime videantur And we will them so to keepe the tenor of their priueledges that they seeme not in any cause to passe their boundes Extra de priuelig Nam qui permissa sibi abutitur potestate priuilegium meretur amittere Et qui malitiosè priuilegium principis interpretatur infamis efficitur Cod. de leg constitu l. 2. For he that abuseth power graunted vnto him deserueth to loose his priuiledge and hee that maliciouslye interpreteth the priueledge of a Prince is made infamous Besides these there are diuerse and sundry other causes for the which also a priueledge as vnlawfull is reuocable 3. q. b. c haec quippe 1. 1. q. 3. priuelegium Extra de Decret Suggestum 25. q. 1. c. de ecclesiasticis ff de vulg pupill Substitu l. ex pacto gloss c. imperator ver quod non 25. q. 2. XCIX distinct ecclesiae ff de constitu princ l. penult De glos in c. quid per. nouale Extra de ver 6. signifi c. magis lib. 6. De rescrip statutum Priuatur quis priuilegio propter scandalum qui non exercet ad subditorum vtilitatem sed ad suam voluntatem c. A man loseth his priuiledge if an offence grow by means of his priuiledge and he that doth not exercise his priuiledge to the profite of such as are vnder him but at his owne pleasure such a man loseth his priuiledge And a rescript ought to be such that it hurt none and at what time soeuer a priuiledge turneth to iniquitye it foorthwith preuayleth not neyther ought the Pope for the increase of his owne honour diminish the right of the church or of any other And the reason is this Propter euidentem vtilitatē enorme damnū receditur ab eo quod diù vsum obtentū est For some common profit some inordinate hurt we forgoe that that a long time hath bene vsed obserued Now whether the lawfull bounds of dispensatiōs be passed whether they be abused or maliciously vsed whether any offence growe by them whether they be vsed rather to the profit of the people then to the pleasure of the parson whether any iniustice be commited the right or title of any other bee impeached or any great domage ensue by thē I refer it to the iudgmēt of men of experiēce in our time Sure I am that the Lordes seruauntes speake againste them preach against them and writte against them Sure I am that the vices growing by them are as rife as euer they haue beene in any age heretofore Sure I am that the prosperous state of the Mynistery is impouerished by them Sure I am that the people are vntaught by them And sure I am that the Lord is dishonoured by them and his Gospell hindred by them And therefore I conclude thus against them Cessante causa cessàre debet effectus the cause ceassing the effect ought to cease The assumption is manifest For equity grounded vppon vtility and necessity of the Church was the cause of Dispensations but the equity ceaseth therefore the other should cease What is more contrary to natural reason saith a lawyer of singuler iudgment then that one and the selfe same man shoulde take vnto himselfe diuers stipendes of the Churche in diuers and farre distant places What common wealth of man sayth hee suffereth her Iudges her rulers her notaryes and other officers to gadde abroade and in their absence to enioy theire stipendes What man though his House be ample and very rich doth pay to his seruaunt absenting himself the wages due to many seruauntes or admitteth to serue in his roome whom soeuer the same his seruaunt shall appoynt him in his roome onely the house of God the holy Church is by such inordinary dealing depriued of her ministery and defrauded of her lawfull duties What shal the Church of God the best beloued Spouse of Iesus Christ which he hath redeemed by whippings by buffets by the sheading of his bloud feede Haukes bring vp Doggs pamper Horses nourish Whoores Flatterers and seditious men which trouble the common wealth Rebuff de dispēsatione ad plura benefic fo 149. 64. and in the end concludeth thus Effectus dispensationis est vt si perperam concessae sit tam animam concedentis quam dispensantis ad infernum deducat The effect of a Dispensation is that if it be graunted vnorderly it carrieth the soule as well of him that giueth it as of him that receyueth it to Hell Whereas it may bee supposed that fees payde into the Hanaper
may he lawfully exercise the Ciuill iurisdiction of an other man Again 88. distinc c. epis conc glos lib. 6. de regu iur c. potest quis EPISCOPVS TVITIONEM c. A bishop ought not to take vpon him selfe the defence gouernment and charge of Widowes and Orphanes and straungers but he ought to dispatch these businesses by some other chiefe Elder or chiefe Deacon But contrary to these Canons lawes principles our Prelates not hauing so ruly and stayed a will as were requisite make a hotche potche of the Cleargie and layetie a gally maufrey of magistracie and Ministery and a mingle mangle of Pastours and people They turne cat in the pan as we say and maintaine the tumbling of the office of a Minister vppon one of the people and the office of one of the people vpon the minister so that by this their iumbling of offices togeather there can be nothing but confusion and disorder as well in their gouernement as in their iudgement Bishops gouernment in ecclesiastical causes being ●uill that argueth the same in ciuil causes not to be good For my part if I as well knew their gouernement in ciuill causes where they may be in commission might hereafter be good as I am sure their iudgemente in Ecclesiasticall pollicie hath hitherto beene naught I woulde wishe them rather to be Magistrates in the common weale then superintendentes in the Church But because it may easely be coniectured by the fact of the one what the effect of the other woulde be it is to be wished that they still were barred from the first hauing so shamefully abused the latter For besides the manyfest contempt and abuse of all lawes positiue in force committed to their fidelities whereof in the former treatizes mention hath beene made if a man shall peruse their aduertisementes and their Canons set foorth for due order in the publique administration of Common prayer and concerning certayne offices of the Church and certayne dutyes belonging to those officers he shall finde they haue bestowed but little labour in making them and lesse fidelitie in executing them For the aduertisementes besides the preface the whole Treatise is not fiue leaues and a halfe of Paper with the subscription of their names and all In which fiue leaues their is not anye one thing mentioned and commaunded to be done but the same was either commaunded by hir maiesties Iniunctions in the firste yeare of hir highnesse raign and therefore needlesse to be repeated againe Or else is translated out of some latin Canon and so made an englishe article halfe an howres study for a bishops Chappleine Title Articles for administratiōs of prayer sacraments Or els is directly against hir maiesties Iniunctions and therefore sauoreth of supremacie Or els is superstitious and therefore smelleth of Poperie And so contrary to the commaundement of the Lord. Hir maiestie by hir iniunctions commaundeth euerye Deane Archdeacon Parson and Vicar to preach in euery of his cures by him self euery moneth 43. Iniunction And because none should be excused as vnable in this behalfe she hath commaunded the bishops that none vtterly vnlearned be admitted to any cure or spirituall charge and she by hir singular and excellent wisedome accounteth him vtterly vnlearned that coulde onely reade to saye mattens or Masse but by the aduertisements and Canons the bishops pronounce it sufficient that a Parson or Vicar preach once a quarter and that not by him selfe but by an other and that one vtterly vnlearned euen as by hir wisedome an vnlearned man hath beene adiudged be admitted to the ministerie and afterwardes sent to the Archdeacon or his officiall to school and to conne his taskes of scripture and to learne his Catechisme Againe Hir maiestie hath commanded euery one to preach within his owne cure without a licence they commaunde that none preach within his owne cure except he haue a licence vnder the bishops seale The article that the minister shall weare a cope with Gospeller and pisteler agreeably smelleth rancke of superstition and as far as I can finde both against hir highnesse Iniunctions and besides the booke of Common prayer The booke of the bishops Canons is of somewhat a larger volume it contayneth 14. leaues you must consider the whole conuocation had an oare in that Boate it intreateth of Bishops of Deanes of churches of Archdeacons of Chauncellors Commissaries and Officials of church wardens of Preachers of residence of Pluralities of schoolemaisters and of Patrons of benefices In the description of which offices as it is manifest they had but little regard to the word of God so is it apparaunt also to euery one learned in the Canon lawe that for the most part they are translated thence here a pece and there a pece and all not worth their labour because if it be not againste the lawes of the Realme or preiudicial to hir highnes prerogatiue then is the same already confirmed by act of Parliament 25. Henry the 8. 25. Henry 8. c. 19. and if ther be any thing in their sayde Canons which is not thus translated out of the Canon law whatsoeuer the same is if it be good then was the very same established before by hir highnesse Iniunctions For as touching the erectiō of new offices belonging to an Archdeacon and the Bishops Commissaries and officials in teaching the ministers their Catechisme and hearing them say their lessons without booke and to take an account how they haue profited in Scripture I thinke if the prerogatiue of the conuocation house were well searched and made knowen it might not erect any new office or promulgate any new Canon without hir maiesties speciall consent first had and obtayned therevnto And I am sure that neither by lawe neither by custome this office did euer belong to an Archdeacon or his officiall before the booke of these Canons was published Booke of Canons and title of bishops Touching the not making handy craftes men and such as haue no title to liue by to be ministers and the not making any minister at any other time but when it shall chaunce that some place of ministration is voyde and that none be suffered to be occupyed in the administration of the Church that is called by the idle name of a Reader Title residence Or that is made a minister vnder the age of foure and twenty yeares or vnderstandeth not the Latin tongue hauing no giftes of teaching or the absence of the sheephearde from the Lordes flocke and diuers other thinges specified in the Bishops Canons If the translator had not beene more faithfull in his translation then the Bish in the execution a meere English man should neuer haue knowen any such thing to haue beene written in the Latine Lawe And therefore because NEMO negligens in re sua presumitur diligens in re aliena No man negligent in his owne cause can be presumed to become diligent in an other mans I can gather no